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LearningTranscript
00:00 When we talk of climate change, the word anthropogenic is the most important.
00:11 It's a basic thing, but I'm reiterating because that's the thing we give the least attention to.
00:19 We are treating climate change as if it is something outside of us.
00:25 As if some asteroid from outer space came over and delivered all the gases and trapped
00:34 all the heat in our atmosphere.
00:39 I want all of us to pay attention to the fact that we have done it.
00:46 It is our action and every action is representative of the state of the actor.
00:54 We are in a particular state internally and therefore we are doing what we are doing externally.
01:01 Now our internal state has brought about this external action, this external state and we
01:10 are not addressing the root cause, we are not addressing the way we are and the way
01:15 we have been probably all throughout our history.
01:18 We do not want to address that because probably that's too painful and that would cause too
01:24 tectonic shift in our entire life system.
01:29 So we want to treat it as one of the problems that face us.
01:35 That's a very fragmented approach.
01:40 Hence the solutions that we are thinking of are also pretty external in nature.
01:46 So we want to move to greener technologies, we want to have carbon sequestering mechanisms,
01:54 we want countries to pledge for reforestation, we want auto manufacturers to come up with
02:04 newer technologies and such things.
02:08 And countries quabble with each other, who should be at the brunt and then issues of
02:12 climate justice and such things crop up.
02:17 The thing is, I want us to inquire into it.
02:21 Are we even understanding where the whole thing is coming from really?
02:26 And if we do not understand that, is it not a fundamental conclusion that we will never
02:33 be able to solve this problem and all the actions that we are trying to have as remedial
02:40 actions would just be consolations.
02:45 We would be entertaining ourselves and we would be rather gratifying ourselves that
02:53 we are doing something meaningful and fruitful and nothing would come out of it.
02:58 And I am not just hypothesizing in a vacuum.
03:02 You see, we started taking this thing a bit seriously in 1990, that's the watershed year.
03:10 And we are more than three decades from there now.
03:15 And not only have we failed to reduce or neutralize carbon, the fact is today, we are releasing
03:25 20 to 40% more carbon than we used to do three decades back.
03:32 And that's with all our climate action.
03:35 And there is really no hope that we are going to achieve carbon neutrality any soon.
03:43 My country, India, for example, even as a matter of pledge has quoted 2070.
03:51 Now, that to me is just too far off.
03:57 And this kind of action is just too insufficient.
04:02 So we are doing it, we are doing it and there are two things about us that are causing it.
04:10 They are so fundamental that we don't even talk about them.
04:14 Those two things are the numbers that we are and the numbers that are represented by our
04:24 per capita consumption.
04:27 And even these two are fundamentally one.
04:31 The inbuilt human tendency to take consumption as an indicator of the fulfillment or success
04:43 of one's life.
04:44 That's the reason we multiply.
04:48 And that's the reason we want to consume more and more.
04:52 And climate change is hardly anything but a function of our numbers on this planet,
04:59 our population and the per capita consumption by each person of our species.
05:07 Unfortunately, irrespective of the variations in culture, thought, religion, ethnicity,
05:15 all that we have across the world, about one thing, we all are fully in agreement.
05:24 And that is that we all need to have a good time by consuming more and more.
05:31 Be it the Indian, the Chinese, the American, the African, anybody, we all want to have
05:36 a happy life and about a happy life, the thing is consumption.
05:42 Consume more and let there be more people who can consume more.
05:46 So the slogan really is, more to consume more.
05:51 And nobody seems to want to address that because that is just too explosive an issue probably,
05:55 especially in a democratic setup.
05:58 The fundamental thing is we are just too many.
06:01 And if we remain as many as we are, then I don't want to sound nihilist or something,
06:09 but I don't really see hope unless we address that one thing.
06:13 Equally, if we can address that one thing, especially to youngsters, then obviously there
06:19 is a lot of hope and great possibility and that possibility will then not relate only
06:24 to climate change, but to everything that we do.
06:26 As human beings we will be able to lead richer, deeper, more meaningful lives, more loving
06:31 lives, lives of compassion, lives of less strife and lives that have a certain fulfilment.
06:39 Thank you.