Modern Wisdom - #743 - Hannah Ritchie - Why Does Everyone Believe The World Is Doomed?
Episode Date: February 10, 2024Hannah Ritchie is a data scientist, senior researcher at the University of Oxford and Deputy Editor at Our World In Data. Climate alarmism dominates headlines, painting a grim picture of impending glo...bal catastrophe. But what if the actual data reveals a less worrying situation, one where we don't all end up in a fiery inferno? Expect to learn why everyone thinks the world is doomed due to climate change and what we can do about it, why people are more pessimistic about the world than the data suggests, what the actual research shows about climate change, whether concerns about ocean plastics are being over exaggerated, if we're in a mass extinction event, Hannah’s thoughts on population degrowth and much more.... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/modernwisdom (discount automatically applied) Get an exclusive discount from Surfshark VPN at https://surfshark.deals/MODERNWISDOM (use code MODERNWISDOM) Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first box at https://www.drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: http://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: http://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: http://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello friends, welcome back to the show. My guest today is Hannah Richie. She's a data scientist,
senior researcher at the University of Oxford and deputy editor at Our World in Data.
Climate alarmism dominates headlines, painting a grim picture of impending global catastrophe.
But what if the actual data reveals a less worrying situation, one where we don't all end up in a fiery inferno?
Expect to learn why everyone thinks the world is doomed due to climate change and what we
can do about it, why people are more pessimistic about the world than the data suggests, what
the actual research shows about climate change, whether concerns about ocean plastics are
being over-exaggerated, if we're actually in a mass extinction event, hannah's thoughts
on population degrowth,
and much more.
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that's drink lmnt.com slash modern wisdom. But now ladies and gentlemen please welcome Hannah Richie. Why do you think that there's so many people who believe the world's doomed?
I think because we're facing a pretty broad range of what are potentially existential
are very catastrophic problems.
So like from my domain, the big one is climate change.
And that's what I write about most of all, but there's also other ones.
There's nuclear war.
There's the rise of AI.
I think there's now a host of problems that in the past might not have seemed existential,
but to many people today seem very existential.
If you are knee-deep in the data, why aren't you in agreement?
So I can't speak on AI or nuclear war, but my background is environment and climate change.
And I think actually probably I was in the similar position a decade or so ago,
where I did really feel like in the depths of there's no way that we're going to solve this problem. This is an existential
problem. We are all doomed. I think that was a lot of the message that was coming through.
My perspective on that has changed. Not that climate change isn't a big problem is. That's
why I study it. But there's a really broad spectrum between climate change
is not a problem. And we're all doomed. And there's nothing we can do about it. I think
there's a big space in the middle. And that big space in the middle is determined by what
we do about it. So I think like my stance on it is, it's a big problem and it's an urgent
problem. But there actually are things that we can do about it. And there are ways that
we can adapt to a changing climate.
When it comes to climate change in particular, why are more people pessimistic about the world than the data suggests that they maybe should be?
I think one of the key misunderstandings on climate is that, you know, we've kind of set these climate targets that we want to keep temperature
rise below 1.5 degrees if we can, and especially below 2 degrees.
Now, I think some of the message that's come out of that is that 1.5 degrees is this tipping
point where once we're past 1.5 degrees, it's the point of no return and we're doomed.
That's definitely not the case.
Climate change is more of a spectrum
than an immediate tipping point.
So 1.5 degrees, the impacts are worse.
And at 1.6, they're worse again, and 1.7.
And you can get escalating risks
where the change is not necessarily linear
with every 0.1% degree.
But there's nothing particularly special about 1.5 degrees.
So I think it's very clear that we are gonna pass 1.5 degrees. So I think it's very clear that we are going to pass 1.5 degrees.
But if your mindset is that once we're past 1.5 degrees, there's nothing we can do and it's kind of eternal tipping point.
Then I think that breeds a lot of this kind of apocalyptic thinking.
What's legit and what's bullshit about tipping points and stuff?
So there are big tipping points where in the kind of climate system there are,
we don't know.
There are like a lot of unknowns
about when we might hit a tipping point
and what that tipping point would be.
There are some potential like quite near term tipping points
where you're in the kind of between 1.5 degrees and two degrees range. There are a-term tipping points where you're in the between 1.5 degrees and 2 degrees
range, there are a couple of tipping points that could be breached.
What happens?
What do people mean when they talk about tipping points from a functional, climate functional
perspective?
I think the definition of a tipping point is that you change a system from one state
into another.
It's very hard, if not impossible,
to take it back from that. Now, I think one of the misunderstandings of tipping points is that
people think that it's kind of abrupt and immediate, that it's almost like a domino effect, whereas
once it's set off, it's like within a year, the whole thing kind of blows up. And I think
some tipping points can be fast, but often they're quite slow on kind
of human time scales. So some of these tipping points will evolve over, you know, centuries
or thousands of years. It's not just like the entire ice sheet just immediately melts
in the space of a year. So I think that's one of the key differences there. But there
are some near term potential tipping points where you will shift the system into
a different state, and that will contribute to more warming.
But it won't necessarily set this full chain where it's unstoppable and there's nothing
we can do about it.
Well, this is one of the common talking points around coastal cities.
Miami.
Miami is going to be underwater if we go over this. I'm going to guess that Miami may be
underwater, but in 1,200 years, not like 2030.
Yeah, some of the, some of the sea levels are rising and the rising at pretty steady rate, that could
accelerate. Yeah, but a lot of the very extreme level rise scenarios tend to be on the order of centuries, for example.
Extreme takes centuries, so at least there's a little bit of time.
You have a time to, yeah.
I mean, I think the risk of sea level rise around coastal cities is very valid.
And there could be some near-term displacements, but a lot of them could be on a longer time scale
than we imagine.
I read an article from you where you said,
many young people feel like their future is in peril.
To make progress on climate change,
we must move past doomsday scenarios.
Why?
Because I think it lows us into a kind of state of paralysis.
Like I speak to a lot of young people,
a lot of people email
me and they're in a very dark place. They're in a place where they don't even know whether
they should go to college. They don't know whether she'd actually invest in a future
because they've kind of received the message that there's no point because they're kind
of doomed from climate change. And I think one thing that's just like bad for people's
mental health. But I think the second is that, I think it paralyzes us and stops people
from taking action. Like if we're doomed, then what's the point in actually taking action against
it? So I think in some ways it hinders progress in terms of taking action. And then I think there's
another dimension to it where I think some of these really extreme scenarios have been used by
people on the other end.
So kind of more on the climate denial end, when they see the really extreme scenarios,
it's just the perfect ammunition. They just think, oh, this is so ridiculous.
And so often like pushes people away at the other end of the spectrum that might normally engage.
Yeah, it seems like in an attempt to try and convince people that this is something we
need to pay attention to, something which is important, which needs resources and time
and energy spending on it, that encouragement to try and get people to work harder is done
by over exaggerating or creating more catastrophe where there perhaps isn't quite so much,
but the actual reality is it just makes people sad and anxious and believe that their efforts are futile,
which is like from a net effect is actually the opposite of what you want.
Right. I mean, I think that there's also like a really broad spectrum on communication.
I mean, I think most climate scientists are very good on the communication.
They're very careful about how they communicate.
I think they're often messages are weaponized by some people.
And actually, they put in front of it the science says and they say a statement
that the science doesn't say.
And I think for some people, probably a small segment of the population
that actually does work, that does that fear, it does drive them.
They do get involved.
I think there's like a much larger part of the spectrum that
puts them off.
Yeah, I watched a video that you spoke about in that article from Roger Hallam, founder
of Extinction Rebellion. The video is titled, Advice to Young People as They Face Annihilation.
Hardly inspiring stuff.
No, and I think any say, he's kind of a big point of the video. I think he says like young people should just have no hope for the future.
And that's not in line with the science.
I mean, the science is very clear that the climate change is a big problem.
There are really big potential risks, but you know, it's not a, an all or nothing.
Like there are things that we can do about it.
So this, the notion that we should have no hope because there's nothing we can do is just false.
What was that story of the group called The Last Generation?
Yeah, so there's an activist group,
I think in Germany called The Last Generation.
And I think the message there can be interpreted
in several ways.
One is very valid, which is we can be
The Last Generation to solve climate change. And I think that's true. We're talking about solving climate
change. We're talking about the next few decades or 40 years. So, yes, we are the generation that
will have to solve this. But I think the other interpretation is this notion that if we don't
solve it, then we will literally be the last generation.
That's very similar to the kind of Extinction Rebellion activist group where it is very
much geared towards, we will be kind of the last generation and we're kind of doomed.
Yeah.
And they did a month-long hunger strike that resulted in a ton of them going to hospital.
Yeah.
Yeah, there was a hunger strike that resulted in a ton of them going to hospital. Yeah, there was a hunger strike.
Yeah.
So when it comes to climate change, what are the most salient concerns that you have and
what are the ones that you think are most exaggerated or most misrepresented?
So I think for me, there are a few big concerns.
One is just exposure to heat.
I mean, I think they're just the very, the most obvious
and most well documented link between rising temperatures
is just exposure to extreme heat waves, as you would expect.
And I think that will be a significantly growing problem.
It will also be a really big problem because many of the people that will be exposed to
this will be people closer to the equator, typically in lower income countries, where
they don't have a conditioned house. So 10 will also fall disproportionately on people
on lower incomes, where they might not have the money and luxuries that we would have to just adapt to that.
I think then the other big concern for me is agriculture, where we've got a growing population.
Climate change there could be a significant problem.
One in terms of extreme weather events, so floods, droughts, you could lose like a whole harvest for entire season,
but also crops and it varies across the world depending on where you are and what crop harvest for entire season. But also crops, and it varies across the world,
depending on where you are and what crop you're working with.
But increased temperatures could start to reduce yields.
So some of the scenarios you could see, for example,
a 30% drop in yields.
Now, a time when we need to be increasing food production,
because we will have a growing population,
that could be a significant
concern. So for me, those are the two biggest direct impacts, I think.
What about the efforts that have been made over the last few years? It's not just now that people
have started talking about climate change, even if maybe the discourse is getting more heated all the time. It's not
like this is a new thing. And there's been many initiatives that have been put in, in
the UK, in the US, trying to counter this. How effective or ineffective have those been?
I think we are getting there. We're just not getting there fast enough. I think people
have the notion that we're still in the same position on tackling climate
change as we were a decade ago.
And I think that's not true.
I think what's really fundamental to addressing climate change is that humans need energy,
they need energy for development, and that has been a massive driver of human progress
over the last few centuries.
So our basis of producing energy has been fossil fuels.
Now, in order to tackle that, there are billions of people still trying to move out of poverty,
still trying to increase their energy use quite validly, and they're not going to stop
doing that.
You're not going to stop them doing that.
So you need to substitute.
There's a substitution exercise.
You need to substitute fossil fuels with a low carbon energy source. Now, the problem
in the past has been that these energy sources were way too expensive, right? So you're never
going to use solar or wind or batteries or electric vehicles because they were just way
more expensive than fossil fuels. What's been a really dramatic change, especially in the
last decade, is that the prices of these have plummeted.
Electric cars are growing now and they're getting very cost competitive with petrol or diesel cars,
but they were really far away a decade ago. Same with solar and wind. They were extremely
expensive. They're now undercutting the cost of fossil fuels. Now, that's completely and fundamentally
changed the position that we're
in because we're no longer asking people to make a trade-off of, do you want to escape
energy poverty or do you want to keep your CEO to emissions low? Because they were always going to
move out of energy poverty. I think we've reached a position now where there's no longer that trade-off
such that often people just go for the low-carbon energy source because
it's the cheapest. I think to me that's fundamentally changed the equation. So the overall story on
carbon emissions there is that rich countries over the last few decades have tended to reduce their
emissions whereas middle and low-income countries are still growing there. So we kind of this tug
of war at the global level which means that global emissions are kind of now hovering around a peak.
Yeah, I think this is another sort of the fact that we have a shared environment, but
individual actors acting independently of each other to contribute to it means that there is always going to be this sort of push and pull, right?
There is going to be a group of people in developed countries that are going to be told you need to reduce energy emissions.
And it's very easy to say, well, they're not.
They're not going to do it.
And yeah, this, what's it called the tragedy of the commons?
And yeah this what's it called the tragedy of the commons.
Yeah, there is always going to be some equivalent of a free rider problem or something else it's always going to be there and i think it's always going to make people feel uncomfortable about making sacrifices i guess.
If they were to go and live in a country that didn't have access to reliable energy was burning wood or dong to be able to do it they think, maybe I'm not making that much of a sacrifice. But humans are creatures of relativity. We have anchoring biases.
I remember how much my refrigerator energy fee was last year, and I've seen it go up this year,
and I've been told that I can't water my garden or whatever. Like, you know, we anchor off where our lifestyle was previously, not off someone in the Sudan.
Right. And I think, yeah, I think that's been a key stumbling block has been these divisions.
I think for me, there's so much finger pointing in this,
that's kind of young people pointing at old people or old people pointing at young people
or left pointing at right and right pointing at left.
And rich countries pointing at China or India. And I think that's created a lot of divisions. I think in general, what's worked
better on climate is that the way international climate processes used to work was it was a very
like top down where basically there's kind of global coalition and the kind of would set,
try to set and impose targets from the top down.
And actually, it didn't get us that far, and countries didn't really like it.
What's actually been more successful has been a bottom-up exercise, where countries have
decided this is the pledges or the targets that we're going to put on the table, and
they nominate it themselves.
Now, you might think, well, they'll all just not put anything on the table. And to some extent, there's much room for them increasing these promises, and we hope
they do.
But you do start to get like a little bit of a competition exercise where it does start
to put pressure on different countries.
So I think the bottom-up approach of people volunteering what they're willing to do has
actually counterintuitively worked better than a top down. This is what you have to do. And I think in general, that also works
at the individual level. I think there's a lot of pushback against people trying to tell others
what you should and shouldn't do. Often that's the best way to get someone to do exactly what
you don't want them to do is to try to force them to do it.
Yeah, what... I mean, I'm interested in this stat that you put up about in the UK,
carbon emissions per person are half what they were when our grandparents were our age,
and we haven't just offshored all of these either. That seems like quite a big win.
Yeah, so carbon emissions in the UK have fallen a lot.
They've fallen by around 50%.
A big driver of that has been the reduction of coal.
So like most of our electricity used to come from coal
and we're basically now coal free.
So we've kind of got rid of the dirtiest fuel
in our electricity mix,
which has pushed down emissions a lot.
Now, the caveat there is that the 50% exaggerates the total amount of reductions that we've incurred
because we've offshored some of them. So we've got rid of a lot of our manufacturing industries,
so we import goods from other countries that reproduce them. And it's very valid to say that
the UK's carbon footprint should say that the UK's carbon
footprint should be what the UK consumers are actually consuming. So the total drop on that
basis is not as big as 50%, but there is still a decline in emissions are still falling. And
that's a general trend that we see across most high-income countries that domestic emissions
have reduced, but they've also reduced when we take off-shoring into account.
Got you.
How difficult is it going to be to provide a good quality of life for 8 billion people
while still being sustainable?
It's a big challenge.
Yeah, it's going to be big.
I think it's achievable.
I think for me, what's key is the timescale.
I think it's just inevitable that we will just move
to clean energy. I think how long we take to do that will be the big question, and that will be
the big question about what temperature rise we get to. Can we do it in the next 30 years?
It will be a big challenge, but I would expect that we would do it in the next 50 or 60 years,
so the emphasis is on the speed,
which is going to be very difficult, but to me is not completely unachievable.
What do people mean when they talk about degrowth?
So I think there's two terms here. I think one is focused on population. So it's more like depopulation. So kind of an environmental movement, especially
in the past, like a big point was that the problem is just there's just too many people.
And the planet cannot possibly provide for so many people. So the solution to this problem
is to have less people. And then there's more of a kind of degrowth movement where the argument there is that the driver
has been overconsumption.
And therefore in order to reduce our emissions,
we need to literally shrink our economies.
Right, and what are your thoughts on degrowth?
My thoughts are you cannot do degrowth at a global level
because you would leave billions of people
in poverty and that's to me just morally unacceptable and you just won't achieve it, right? Like,
you're not going to stop people in low-income countries from trying to move out of poverty.
Now, there's a question of should you keep GDP in rich countries the same or should you shrink
the economies of rich countries?
I don't think that's going to be a political reality. I do not see any political leader
standing up and saying our main policy is that we're going to reduce our economy in order
to reduce our CO2 emissions. And it's definitely not going to happen on the time scales that
we're talking about. We need to get moving on this in the next decade.
And to me, I do not see it being politically feasible that one, that a leader would stand up and promote that, I think it would kind of be political suicide, but also that they would
actually get elected into government. And then you've got the long time period where even if you
did get that and people voted for it and they went into government, then you've got the time that it takes to actually implement that.
And we don't actually know how effective that would be in reducing emissions.
Like, no one's tried kind of deliberate degrowth.
So I think there's like tons of unknowns there.
And for me, it's kind of a political non-starter.
I guess over a long enough time horizon, the next 100 years, the people calling for antinatalists or depopulation,
they're going to get the outcome that they want. It's just going to happen due to declining
birth rates. I know you made a really good clarification at the very beginning of this,
which is the difference between existential risk and just a big problem, basically. Existential
risk, permanent, unrecoverable collapse. It's
a very specific category of risk that shouldn't be thrown around incorrectly. I don't think
that declining birth rates are one of those either, but they're definitely going to be
the sort of thing that will impact human life front and center very, very harshly, very
quickly, within what? When we're going're gonna peak 2100-ish, 2019?
I think the latest UN projections
was that it would, global population would peak
around the 2080s.
And they've actually brought that forward.
Like the first project, the prediction before that
was still increasing past 2100.
And actually because fertility rates,
which is just the number of children that women would have,
average women would have,
is falling quicker than we expected.
That's actually what being brought forward to the 2080s.
Yeah. So by the end of this century,
the degrowth from a population standpoint,
I'm aware that we're going to have to gain
2 billion before we start to come back down toward where we are now.
But how concerned are you about that? If we presume that what we're going to have to gain 2 billion before we start to come back down toward where we are now.
But how concerned are you about that?
If we presume that what we're trying to do here, I don't know the basis of your philosophy.
I don't know if it's seeing the earth as something that needs to be protected, whether
it's trying to maximize human flourishing, whether it's trying to...
There's a variety of reasons why people don't want the world to go to shit.
But if we presume that in amongst that is the flourishing utility, you dim only
a happiness of the conscious humans that live on it, reducing that number down precipitously
is dangerous. That doesn't seem to be in alignment either. So how much time do you spend thinking
about birth rates and what's your concern with population collapse? I don't spend much time at all thinking about birth rates in a climate context.
And I don't think it's effective in any way to try to use climate or environment to promote
lowering birth rates.
I mean, I think the basic story of falling fertility rates and falling birth rates is that as countries develop, as
they get richer, as girls go to school, women go into education, women go into economic
opportunities and jobs, fertility rates tend to decline.
So you see a very clear relationship, but as countries get richer, they decline. And I think one of the key parts of development
is that fertility rates will actually just continue to fall. The countries,
like low-income countries where birth rates are still quite high, like maybe like four or five
or six, those will just fall because they will develop. girls will get to go to school, women will get
going to work and have economic opportunities. And I think those are all fantastic developments.
Actually, don't think you need the climate lens as part of that. I mean, if you're a list of priorities
of what would be the driver of declining birth rate, I think climate change is very, very
low on that risk. I'm all for promotion of girls
going to school just because they should have the opportunity to go to school, not because we should
reduce the population in order to address climate change.
Right. Okay. That would be like a five-dimensional chess move to try and speed up the education
of girls in low-income countries in an attempt to reduce down birth rates. That would be an impressive strategy.
You said, I saw another quote from you that said, we should use data to understand the world and make better decisions.
That seems to be like a nice tagline. How effective have you found data
being at nudging beliefs and culture and debate? Do you
part of this great website, are welding data,
and you put this stuff forward. But I would guess that the vanguard, like the front lines of trying
to convince people by data might be more difficult than we would think, given that data is like
truth, as long as it's right. Yeah. Yeah. And I mean, it's very mixed. I mean,
I mean, I think there's
some people that are so immune to data that there's nothing, there's no data you could
throw in front of them that would make them change their mind. And they'll always be,
you know, an excuse why that data doesn't fit with the narrative or why that data is
flawed. I think some people are swayed by data and can make good decisions based on it.
I think, I mean, a range of people use their work, like the general population user work,
but also journalists, policy makers use their work.
And then I think in those fields,
data can actually make a difference to informed decisions.
What's happening with air pollution?
So there have been a couple of big air pollution problems. There have
been a couple of what we'd call like trans boundary problems, which is more again the tragedy of the
commons problem where it's not just pollution in your own country, it kind of crosses across many
countries. And you kind of need several countries or the whole world to work together to solve it.
And one of the big ones there was the ozone layer. So kind of before climate change, the big environmental problem
was the ozone layer and the growing ozone hole. And at the time, it was really politically
controversial, a bit like climate changes today. There were kind of pushback against scientists.
There was really politically controversial. But we actually managed to solve it.
We brought in what was called the Montreal Protocol, and we reduced the emissions of the
gases that were destroying those only or by more than 99%.
So we've basically got rid of them, and the ozone hole should just repair itself in the
next few decades.
There was another big problem of acid rain, which when you burn coal,
you tend to produce what's called sulfur dioxide, and that can dissolve in rainwater and you can
get acid rain. Again, that was a big problem, and we've been pretty successful in solving it,
especially across Europe and North America. And then there's the other problem of what we call
local air pollution, which is like the pollution you'd find in your city from like cars and burning fossil fuels and home heating and stuff.
Now the story there is mixed. Rich countries have gone through this process where as they tended to get richer air pollution increased. So if you think about London or Edinburgh, where I am, go back to the beginning to mid-20th century,
these cities were so polluted, really unimaginable from what you would assume today. I mean,
there are stories of the Great Smog in London where you couldn't see even see a few feet in front
of you, they're kind of shuffling trying to find the curb with their feet. So these cities were
incredibly polluted. And we've actually been really successful over the last 50 years or so,
and dramatically reducing the amount of local air pollution, especially in rich countries.
So a little bit of a different story in low and middle income countries, they're starting to kind
of going up that curve that London or Edinburgh went through kind of 50 years to a century ago.
And air pollution in general is a big killer in the world. So there are a range of estimates,
but they're all in the range of millions of premature deaths per year. So it is a big,
big problem. In some sense, today, in terms of number of lives lost, it's arguably bigger than climate change,
although that could change in the future.
Wow.
What do we do?
How do you help air pollution now?
You can, I mean, the key one is stop burning fossil fuels.
You can put kind of strict air pollution kind of standards on power plants. Like, that was the big thing of acid rain. It's not that
we necessarily just stopped burning coal. We managed to put what was called scrubbers on the
power plant where it took the sulfur out so you didn't get the sulfur emissions. A big driver in
rich countries has been just increased air quality standards for cars. So the amount
of pollution spewing out the back of a car today is much, much less than it was in the
past. And actually, a move to electric vehicles would decrease that even further. So even
in rich countries, the estimated deaths attributed to air pollution in the UK, for example, is
still tens of thousands. So we know that we can still bring that down further.
And that would be by, for example, moving away from petrol and diesel cars.
What about deforestation?
Again, it's a bit of a story where countries tend to go through a transition where they
would initially cut down forests for wood for energy, like before they
have fossil fuels. But then the biggest driver of deforestation is just expanding farmland. That's
by far the biggest driver of deforestation. You need more land to grow food, therefore you cut
down forests. Now, the UK, for example, we cut down our forests like a long time ago, like centuries
and centuries ago. And actually, there was really, really very little forest left. But then we stopped doing that. And in many rich
countries, forests are regrowing. And most of the deforestation that's happening today is
happening in the tropics. And it's happening because we're, again, we're still expanding
agricultural land. So deforestation rates today are still very, very high, but we think
global deforestation rates have fallen since around the 1980s, but we still have a big
challenge in our hands because deforestation rates are still high.
What's the truth about the cycle between raising or rising CO2 levels with like re-greening and the increase in plant growth and tree growth,
forest growth based on that increase in carbon.
Yeah, there again, it's a little bit mixed. On terms of like greening forest and natural habitat,
not natural vegetation, it can't like CO2 can increase regrowth to an extent.
I think this is often also discussed in terms of agriculture.
Like I was saying earlier, one of the big risks of agriculture is climate change.
And it is true that to a certain extent more CO2 can mean more higher yields and more crop growth. But it's about how much of that is outweighed by the
detrimental impacts of drought, of floods, of temperatures. And for many crops, the increased
temperatures will just outweigh the increased benefits of CO2. So even if you increase CO2
a bit, you would still see negative effects from the temperature effects.
Mason It's interesting that everything's so interlinked here that, for instance, deforestation is
intrinsically linked with food and hunger and agriculture.
So, what progress has been made with food and hunger as well?
So, food and hunger, again, global hunger rates have declined substantially over the
last 50 years in particular.
We've kind of plateaued in progress there and actually in some regions that has started
to regress.
So we have around 800 million people in the world, nearly one in 10, just don't get enough
food to eat.
And that's the key challenge with deforestation and these problems is that, again, there
you have this tension between people just need more food and we need more agricultural land and there's wild habitat and there's forest
in the way. So that's the big challenge. One of these big solutions to that is just to make
agriculture much more productive. So if you can increase crop yields by, if you could triple crop
yields, then you can produce the same amount of food on
a third of the land. So one of the big necessities there is to just increase crop yields and
productivity. And I think in many regions, there is still a lot of scope to do that.
I think the other big link to deforestation there is like animal agriculture. So a lot
of the deforestation of the Amazon, for example, is clearing land for pasture,
for cattle grazing, for beef production. And by far that's the biggest driver of deforestation.
And in general, beef is just a really inefficient way of using land to produce food.
What is the, you're talking about crop yields there, how much truth is there in
What is the you talking about crop yields that how much truth is there in top soil degradation and the quality of what we're growing plants out of.
Yeah, so the was sad to just
would back that up. Across the world, you have a mixed, again, a mixed picture, like
some soils are stable and are doing fine. Some are actually growing. So they're actually
growth topsoil is growing. And there are others that actually are degrading over time.
And as a serious worry, but we're
not going to get to this single point where just the whole in 60 years, the world's harvest
just stopped because of topsoil.
There's just a really large variation in soils across the world where you could never just
put a single figure on when this would happen.
What about biodiversity?
That's something else that I've seen talked about an awful
lot that the fifth great extension or the set whichever one we're in, this is the beginning
of the sixth, whatever that one, sixth, sixth great extinction, we're in the middle of that.
And we've lost more species in the last X number of years than in the whole bigger number
of years before that.
Yeah. I mean, the trends on biodiversity loss
are not good. I think they're like the area where I'm most pessimistic. So yeah, there's been five
previous mass extinctions on earth. And there's a question of like, are we in the sixth mass
extinction? Now, in order to qualify as like a mass extinction, you have this threshold of you need to lose 75% to
80% of species.
It's called a fast time scale, but it's like 2 million years.
It's fast on geological time scales, but on human time scales, it's obviously not.
Now, we're obviously very, very far away from losing that percentage of species.
But what you can do is you can look at the rate of change and say,
we know roughly how many species have gone extinct over the last few centuries,
for example, or 500 years or a thousand years.
And you can say, OK, what's the rate of extinction there?
And then you can compare that to what was the rate of extinctions in the previous
five mass extinctions.
And actually what you find when you crunch those numbers is that we are actually losing species at a faster rate than we were in the five previous mass extinctions.
Now if we just continued to lose species at that rate, then yeah, it would qualify as being in the sixth mass extinction.
My optimism there is that we won't just continue to lose species of that
rate because we will hopefully address deforestation, we will hopefully curb climate change, we will
hopefully be able to restore natural habitats. So this kind of, I think it's reasonably fair to say
that the trends point towards a sex mass extinction if we just continue as we are,
but my hope is that we won't continue as we are.
What is driving this loss in biodiversity?
Where's it coming from?
I mean, it's often referred to as death by a thousand cuts.
So there's no like single driver of biodiversity loss.
It tends to be a mix.
I mean, the biggest driver is food production.
So it's either like like either overall exploitation, which
is just like direct hunting or direct overfishing or kind of logging of forests, or it's destruction
of habitats for farming and agriculture. And that can be either cutting down forests
or moving into wild grasslands, but it can also be, you know, losing insects because of the use
of fertilizers or pesticides on agricultural land. That's a very, to me, that's a very,
very tricky problem to solve because there's a kind of, there's kind of two camps on how you
produce food in a kind of biodiversity friendly way. Like one, you could just use lots of fertilizers,
lots of pesticides, get really productive
land. You could use less land by doing that. So basically, say we're going to accept that
we're going to have lots of biodiversity loss on this smaller bit of land. Or you can go
for another approach, we're going to lose less biodiversity, but we're going to spread
it over a larger area. And I think the kind of jury on that is still out on how you have
best to manage that. Yeah, that's a difficult, a really difficult balance to strike.
Have you got any idea what types of animals have contributed most to this
biodiversity loss?
Has it been segmented out?
Has it been the fish?
They're all falling off, but mammals are fine.
Or is it mostly insects and reptiles are fine?
Have you got any idea?
It's kind of mixed.
The mammals are not doing well in particular.
I mean, if you look over the course of human history, the big change has been what we call
the downsizing of mammals.
So we've tended to just lose the big mammals such that they're getting smaller and smaller
over time.
That's because we predominantly hunt larger animals and they tend to go extinct. And they also take longer to
reproduce. So smaller animals can kind of recover because they can reproduce really quickly, whereas
larger animals take much longer. So we've tended to lose the largest mammals. Birds are not doing
particularly well. Neither are amphibians. Insects, like the general
trend there is not looking good. I think insects in general are just harder to count. It's very hard
to get really long-term data on insects. Like you can kind of count elephants like pretty well
and kind of get good historical records, but it's really hard to do for insects. I think insects are pretty uncertain, but I think they're definitely in decline.
They're very few, very few, like good, good trends here in biodiversity.
I was trying to find a silver lining in the biodiversity loss,
but it doesn't really seem to be that.
No, I can give you one.
Like in some regions, like Europe, for example, we lost a lot of mammals,
but we're actually bringing a lot of them back now. There's been lots of restoration programmes and the European Bison is on its way back.
So I think there is stuff that you can do and it is possible to restore a lot of these
populations, but the overall trend is down.
I had a conversation a couple of months ago with a guy who is bringing woolly mammoths back to life.
Right, was it a strip brand?
No.
No, it wasn't.
I can't remember the name of the place.
Colossus, Colossum, Colossus, I think,
is the name of the company.
And yeah, they've sequenced it from a bunch of frozen bone and I think maybe something else samples and then they're going to use an.
Asian elephant maybe and they're going to implant and then over time they will have this and then maybe they can go up north and they're good at compacting down the earth and compacting down the earth changes the way that heat hits it and then they
help with fertilizing and moving so that's and he also wanted to do he had this really cool idea of wanting to bring back
the dodo bird and the reason he wanted to do that was as a symbolic gesture to
remind people about biodiversity loss so thinking
remind people about biodiversity loss. So thinking, basically explaining this huge process
that you would have to go through and we'd have to do this,
and we'd have to do this, and we'd have to do this,
and then finally we would get something
that looks like the dodo, but I think there was one other
type of tiger maybe that he was thinking about doing it with.
And then to basically use that as the tip of the spear
to say, do you see all of this work that we've just had to do
to try and bring
this bird back to life? Like just try not to try not to kill it this time type thing.
Yeah, I mean, it's a little bit the same story with forests where I think we often think about
like planting trees and regrowing forests. Whereas like the best thing we can do with forest is
just like not to cut them down in the first place. And in some sense, it's the same biodiversity where, you know, it would take a massive effort
to be able to bring back a species or even restore a population. So, you know, the best
thing is like not to push it to extinction in the first place.
What about ocean plastics? I'm aware that microplastics like we can Alex Jones our way
into phthalates in the water all that we want. But Ocean Plastics, I had heard this story about this island the same size as Texas that's
somewhere and it's swirling around. And then there was that guy that made the ocean scraper thing.
And he was doing really great work. But what's the story there with Ocean Plastics?
Yeah. I mean, I can't solve the plastic problem. Like I think plastic is a really tricky one.
It's like a really amazing and viable material, which I think is why it's, we produce so much of it, it's so hard to get off of it.
But the simple problem of like, plastics flowing into the ocean is a very, very like tractable one. We do have a significant amount of plastics flowing into the
ocean. The latest estimates are around 1 to 2 million tonnes a year. Now, for perspective,
that's about 0.5% of the plastic waste we produce. So, I think the notion that all of our plastics
are flowing into the ocean is not correct. It's quite a small percentage, but in absolute terms, it's quite big.
The key problem with ocean plastics is not necessarily using plastics, it's like how
they're managed.
So if you can store plastics in landfills or they're recycled or they're incinerated,
then they don't leak out into the environment and they don't end up in the ocean, rivers or ocean. The problem is often that in many countries,
the waste management infrastructure is not there to deal with the amount of plastic that's there,
such that it's often dumped or it's in an open landfill and blows into the ocean.
Now, to some extent, that then is, the social listening is quite simple.
Like, and it's not sexy, it's just like, build landfills or build waste management structures.
But like that doesn't tend to get a tonne of investment because it's not like flashy.
But there is also projects trying to do the opposite.
One is, as you said, there's a guy called
Boy in Slat and he created the ocean cleanup project where they are basically trying to
scoop plastic out that's already in the ocean and get it out. I think they're doing a really
good job. They haven't got all the plastic out yet, but they are being quite successful
in getting some of it out. Then they they've also generated a kind of separate project
which is trying to stop it going into the ocean
in the first place.
So a lot of this waste tends to come down through rivers.
And what they've done, they've like modeled
to try to work out like what are the biggest rivers
that are contributing to the ocean plastics.
Then they have what's called an interceptor
where they basically try to like stop the plastics going in at the end of the river before it reaches the ocean.
So I think he's done an amazing job and he's kind of came out of nowhere and decided, I
mean, we always just watch and say, oh, that's really bad that there's plastics in the ocean.
And he's like, no, there doesn't have to be plastics in the ocean.
And he's kind of tried to engineer a solution out of it.
Have you got any idea which were the rivers that were contributing heavily?
I mean, it's changed a lot. Our understanding has changed a lot over time. I think initially,
you know, there was estimates that, you know, most of it was coming from like 20 rivers.
Now, actually, that's quite good because then you only need 20 interceptors. But I think more recent studies have shown that actually it's coming from like a
thousand different rivers, which is a much trickier problem to tackle.
Like most of these rivers from the latest study from, you know, the boy in
Slat and his colleagues, tend to show that a lot of them tend to be in Asia or
South America or Africa. They tend to be in
middle income countries where people have got richer, they're now using much more plastic,
but again, the waste management infrastructure hasn't managed to catch up.
Rich enough to buy the things that are in the plastic, but not rich enough to be able to
work out how to deal with it once you've used it. Right, exactly. What about overfishing?
Again, there's a little bit of a split where overfishing is a tractable problem.
It is a problem that you can manage.
The key for that is being able to balance fish populations
such that you know how much you can catch without massively reducing the population
of the fish. You want to be in a state where for fishing, you're fishing and the population
is not decreasing. Now, if you've overfished, so if you fish too much, that population will
start to decrease and decrease and decrease.
And actually, even from an economic perspective, that's only good in the short term, right?
Because in the medium to long term, the amount of stuff that you can fish will just decline
over time.
So it's like a really short-term benefit for a medium to long-term detriment.
Now, in many regions, fish populations are actually doing fine because we can do
that quite well and we have policies in place and quotas on how much fishermen can catch.
In other parts of the world, that's just not there. And you would expect often that the
fish populations there are declining. So the estimates that are around a third of the world's fish populations are being
overfished. Now, there is a slightly different story to that, where in the past, our only way of
having fish was to catch wild fish. What we've seen over the last few decades is the rise of what
we call aquaculture, which is fish farming. Now, a little bit like on land where
we would normally just hunt animals, we then decided, you know, we'll grow animals. So
we'll have livestock and we'll raise our own animals. That's kind of what fish farming
is all about, where rather than only catching wild fish, you basically farm your own fish.
And actually now fish farming produces more than wild fish. So most of the growth in global fish production over the last few decades has come from fish
farming, it's not come from catching wild fish.
Mason It seems to me like thinking about all of the stuff that we've spoken about today.
This tragedy of the commons thing really just comes back to the fore that we are individual nations who are not always even coordinated internally but definitely not coordinated
effectively externally between all of us and that by trying to improve the quality of the
shared environment that requires different actors and agents to behave in different ways.
And it can feel to some like they're having the brakes pressed on them while other people are getting away on a free ride.
You've got this free rider problem.
How do you suggest that especially developed countries that are going to have to potentially go to their citizens and say,
hey, your quality of life is going to stagnate or perhaps even get more difficult, more expensive,
more whatever. Have you thought around necessarily from a public messaging standpoint, but just
like culturally, how do you deliver this message to people? Because we're not,
like culturally, how do you deliver this message to people? Because we're not, it's not in our nature to say,
oh, like, sorry, the people in Chad or Zimbabwe
or whatever needs to have better access to whatever.
Don't worry, people of Chad, like, I've got you.
Like, that's just not, that's not in our nature.
And it's very difficult in an age of the internet
and sort of quippy sound bites and TikTok length videos,
it's way too nuanced and subtle to get across.
But the alternative is to kind of use a more doomsday scenario,
which kind of just blanket coverages everything with fear and terror.
And that also is not only not accurate,
but doesn't necessarily have the desired outcome.
So have you kind of conceived this?
What a like climate culture
3.0 would look like?
Yeah, I mean, I think part of this has come down to the fact that I think we've often
not been very good on our messaging on this. I think coming from and I'm part of kind of
the environmental movement, I think often it's framed as a sacrifice, right? It's like,
you have to sacrifice this in order to solve
this problem. And I think again, again, I think in the past, that might have been true. I think
the only solution in the past would have been you just have to use less energy and you have to have
less stuff and you have to solve about less, less, less, less. And I think we're moving to a stage
with the development of many of these technologies where you can switch and it's not necessarily less and it's not necessarily a sacrifice. This is better.
So there are technologies where you could actually just reduce energy bills. You could create
employment opportunities. Like in many of these growing industries, they are creating a job boom
and they are creating employment opportunities. You could get
lower energy bills. The cost of running your car would be lower on electricity. So I think there
are a range of solutions there where it's not necessarily a massive sacrifice. It actually
can just benefit and enhance life. So I think we've done quite poorly on the messaging on that
because it's all been about less, less, less sacrifice, sacrifice, sacrifice. I think in terms of the role of rich countries and how they contribute to this
dilemma in lower income countries is that, I think the responsibility of rich countries is
they need to get their emissions down first and foremost, right? They've had high emissions.
In the UK, we've had high emissions for a really long time. We've managed to get to a stage where
we're rich. We have really high living standards. In some sense, I think it's just our responsibility
to get our domestic emissions down. But having the role that they all, rich countries, can also play
as that they can also be the drivers of innovation and deployment of these low-carbon technologies
that we need. And these tend to follow what we would call a learning curve
where solar or batteries or wind, for example, the more you deploy them, the lower the price gets.
So it's like a self-fulfilling trend where prices fall, deploy more. So what that means is that by
pushing these technologies and innovating on these technologies, we basically drive down the cost for the rest of the world.
So we can we can we can invest money, we can deploy them, we can make solar batteries, electric vehicles really cheap, such that people in lower income countries don't need to face that trade off anymore.
They can develop, they can follow a pathway to a really high standard of living, but they won't follow the pathway that the UK or the US
followed because they won't have really high coal emissions. They won't necessarily drive a petrol or diesel car. So I think that's the big role that rich countries can play. And again,
I don't think it's necessarily this big sacrifice that's often made out to be.
Mason What about China? Obviously, it's often brought up in this discussion as a country that is quite developed, but also
I have no you will probably know how much truth there is in it. They built more
coal plants or
whatever plants in the last however many years then
it's done and so forth the point being that the that the free rider of free riders would be China
What what's the truth about that?
I don't think China is a free rider. I mean, it's true that they're in the highest emitter and they
produce a lot of coal and they are still building coal plants. But I think the kind of paradox
there is that they are actually just leading completely on low carbon technologies. They're building solar and wind so fast.
They are pushing really hard on electric vehicles. The biggest electric car company now is not Tesla,
but BYD, which is a Chinese company. They are dominating the supply chains for these minerals.
They are seeing this as an economic opportunity. And in some sense,
they're going to start pushing a lot of Western manufacturers out of the market because they've
been slipping. And I think that's the general trend of where that's going. So China is deploying
these technologies really quickly. As an example, last year, China produced or installed enough solar and wind to
power the UK or France, and they're adding that in one year. So they are building this stuff
really, really quickly. And to the extent where, and we're really bad at predicting peak, so I'm
not going to put a definitive peak on it. But some people have been talking about whether China's
emissions could peak this year or next year, just because they're building low carbon technology so quickly. So that's the paradox
of China, or that they are still producing lots of coal, but they're also really leading the way
on low carbon technologies. Again, not necessarily because they really, really care about climate
change. They're doing it for the economic opportunities. They're doing it for employment.
There's an opportunity there.
Which to me in some sense is a positive, right? Because it's really hard. I would love everyone to be really passionate about climate change, but that's just not the reality. So you need to
create other incentives for people to act. And the key point there is that people will just act
because it's economic to do so. And you get the side benefit of, yes, we reduce carbon emissions and we also reduce air pollution.
So for me, in some sense, that's also a positive.
I mean, this seems to be the kind of like one of the,
I don't know, one of the laws of physics of climate change
or of impacting it in an effective way,
which is show me the incentives
and I'll show you the outcome.
You know, before Tesla came along, at least in the West, driving an electric car wasn't
a status symbol. So the incentive of I want to buy a vehicle that I look cool in and it
gives me prestige and people think that I'm trendy or whatever for driving it wasn't happening
so much with a Prius. It was like a political
statement to drive a Prius was a political statement. Whereas if you can make the thing that
you want people to do, also the thing that they want to do, then you're swimming downstream.
And yeah, totally. If this is the way that it is, and if getting reliable energy from solar,
from wind, from other stuff, I've heard a lot of criticism
around the reliability of it.
Germany's problem that they've had,
where they've had to retrofit gas,
and then obviously they became super dependent on
an area of the world that was dominated by a war
for two years, and then that meant
that their prices were going up,
and that all the Germans are gonna freeze
in the winter and all this stuff.
But presumably all of these are just, I
would imagine, teething problems that are only going to be made by one country. And moving forward, it's like,
don't do a Germany. Like if you ever make yourself into, you know, like one of those quotes, that's if you've
memed yourself into an energy, energy strategy, that's probably a bad idea. But yeah, if we can get it to the stage where it's both more economically viable and
also impact the environment in a positive way that
That's literally the best if if the people that we and
I know I've been super critical of China, but I do sometimes find myself like leaning into the
They're almost like immoral. It's like an immoral country somehow.
And that, you know, that they, because they're antagonistic or adversarial with the West,
that they're doing things to try and, you know, they're completely disregarding the environment.
Like that's not necessarily the case. Like, so I need to kind of fact check my thought,
check myself when I do do that. But the point being that we presume China has more priorities than simply the climate.
And yet, if they've managed to build sufficient renewable energy to power the UK or France in the last year,
you're okay. If we can encourage them to do it, then countries that are part of the G20 or whatever other organisation,
it should be pretty easy.
Yeah. I mean, there's a range of examples that like I, I in the book, I give
an example of like on a personal level, like my brother, now my brother bought
a Tesla and he didn't buy a Tesla because like you really, really cared about
climate change. He just bought a Tesla because a Tesla was cool and it was a
really nice car to drive. Like he sat on one and was like, this is the best thing
ever. I'm going to get a Tesla. Obviously, he massively cut his carbon
footprint, but it wasn't necessarily because of climate. Another clear example there is that
in the US, there is a very quite strong partisan divide on climate where left are really pro-climate
policies and a lot of people on the right are less so.
But then you look at which states in the US are producing the most renewable power,
and the top five states with the largest amount of wind in their energy sector are all Republican.
And again, they're not doing that for climate. They're doing it just because landowners can
make money. There's an economic opportunity. The community starts to get behind it. And actually, when you look at messaging
around climate in these contexts, the language you use is so important. So if you just talk
about clean energy, many more people are behind it. On the left and the right, everyone loves
clean energy. What they don't
like necessarily is talking about climate. And actually, you ruin the chances of the clean
energy being deployed if you try to push the climate message too far. So I think really
gearing the climate message to whoever you're talking to is so important. If you're talking to
someone that's really into climate change, of course, talk about climate. But if you're talking
to someone that's a bit skeptical, but they're pretty in favour of clean energy, then you actually can
actively push them away from it if you try to force the climate message too hard.
Yeah, use the right language with the right audience. Very interesting.
Let's bring this one home, Hannah. I really appreciate you for today. Where should people go?
They want to keep up to date with all the stuff that you do? Why should you send them?
I have a newsletter called Sustainability by Numbers,
and I try to break down all this stuff by numbers. I have a new book out called Not the End of the
World, where I discuss all of this. And then I work at our Odin data, where you can find all
of this data and research on how all of this stuff is changing. Hell yeah. Thank you, Hannah. Thank you.