Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - The Wildfire Crises: The Causes, Consequences, and Solutions w/ Steven Kotler | EP #144
Episode Date: January 22, 2025In this episode, Steven and Peter discuss the damages caused by the LA wildfires, how to prevent them, and the chemical air and water fallout.   Recorded on Jan 19th, 2024 Views are my own though...ts; not Financial, Medical, or Legal Advice. 19:57 | The Role of Insurance and Government 36:14 | Technological Advances in Fire Prevention 47:14 | The Environmental Fallout Post-Wildfire Steven Kotler, Executive Director of the Flow Research Collective, is a New York Times bestselling author and leading expert on human performance. He has authored 11 bestsellers, including The Art of Impossible, The Rise of Superman, Bold, and Abundance with his work translated into over 50 languages and nominated for three Pulitzer Prizes. His insights have been featured in top publications like TIME, Wired, and Harvard Business Review as well as academic journals. Wildfire XPRIZE: https://www.xprize.org/prizes/wildfire Read Steven’s white paper: https://docs.google.com/document/d/1PUarBMUiTD4tXZWqXtd9s5iefPBTK6bf/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=109240726690129119612&rtpof=true&sd=true The Fires’ Webinar: https://youtu.be/gdHMOgJfiyM?si=dn1V2VnpmOgkADj_ _____________ I send weekly emails with the latest insights and trends on today’s and tomorrow’s exponential technologies. Stay ahead of the curve, and sign up now: Blog _____________ Connect With Peter: Twitter Instagram Youtube Moonshots
Transcript
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Most experts believe that almost all the forests in the American West are going
to burn over the next 10 to 20 years. This is not the first fire. This is just
the canary in the coal mine. The downstream health consequences are
really really severe. Here I am every day working out, being healthy, watching
what I eat, you know, my sleep, all of those things.
And I'm like, I'm sitting here consuming
all of these poisonous chemicals
that are gonna take years off your life.
We need support for the government to get out of the way
of these entrepreneurs because they can solve this
and they can make wildfires a thing of the past.
Everybody, welcome to Moonshots, a special episode with my dear friend, my co-conspirator
Steven Kotler.
We're talking about the disaster after the disaster.
While the world has almost forgotten about the Pacific Palisades fire here in LA, the
disaster is just beginning. We'll talk
about how, first of all, you should be incredibly pissed off that all of this
could have been prevented. Number two, that we're on the verge of the American
Northwest burning, not just LA. We're talking about the entire American
Northwest as well as portions of Canada potentially being destroyed in the next five to 20 years.
We'll talk about the data there.
We'll talk about the incredible toxins released
when hundreds of thousands of Teslas and flat screen TVs
go up in smoke, melted and go up in smoke.
And when you're looking at the AIQ index and it's blue skies above and there's little smoke
particles, low ozone, well, honestly, that is something that doesn't really matter because
what you're not measuring is all the volatile chemicals in the atmosphere, all the metals,
everything that is not being measured by today's systems.
And we're gonna talk about all that. Stephen, welcome buddy.
Hey Peter, it's good to be with you.
Terrible circumstances, but good to be with you.
So I'm working at my desk the day the fire starts and it's about 11 o'clock.
I look out my window and I see black plumes rising. I'm like, what the hell is going on?
I'm on a Zoom.
I'm trying to Google.
I call Frankie, who's our domestic support at the house,
over and say, can you find anything?
And nothing's being reported for the first half hour.
And ultimately, this becomes the Palisades fire.
And the numbers are traumatic.
The fact that it started in the first place is no surprise.
We can get into the details there.
But I'm pissed.
I'm pissed that we are not putting the tech in place to get this figured out.
And while the world was watching, I was getting WhatsApps and text messages and emails from abundance members,
singularity members, XPRIZE members from around the world because this was
front page news day on day on day as LA burns. And of course, it's out of the news now.
We've moved on to the inauguration and Bitcoin and other things.
But guess what? This is not the first fire. This is just the canary in the coal
mine. Stephen, let's talk about this. Most people know you as my
co-author and an incredible author of a multitude of books. Brilliant writer and
I'm grateful for you in my life.
But you've been studying this field, you've written an incredible white paper, which we're
going to link to in the show notes.
What's the potential future here?
Let me put a little context around this.
When I lived in New Mexico for two different summers, our house was, we lived in the country,
our house was completely surrounded, we had country, our house was completely surrounded.
We had fires.
Three says it was raining ash down.
This was in a really rural poor community.
Structures were burning.
It didn't, we ended up, we were saved, but our neighbors were not as lucky.
And then in Nevada, three, four years ago, my wife was evacuated.
I was actually out of town and she's evacuated.
The fire got within kind of a half mile of our house.
And then the next summer was the summer
that most of Tahoe burned.
And after two years in a row of being evacuated
of living under black skies for three months
and just the friends who lost their everything
like many friends in LA
have at this point, it just spurred me into action.
I really took the – I took a singularity university, abundance, like what can entrepreneurship
and technology bring to this problem?
I brought 25 years of my journalism skills and I don't think I'm an expert,
but I sat in the room with experts for three years
and I tried really hard to move the needle on this.
Let's just start with what,
like the simple things that I learned
because it was sort of startling.
The first thing I learned is that most experts believe
that almost all the forests in the American West
are going to burn over the next 10 to 20 years.
That's California, Arizona, New Mexico, Utah, the Dakotas, Montana, Wyoming, up into Canada,
Seattle, Washington, Oregon, like all of it. And the craziest thing about it is when you actually
get in the rooms with the experts, they're resigned to this fact.
They're resigned to the fact that literally the entire American West is going to burn.
And honestly, if you own a home in the American West, they sort of think your home is going
to burn too.
And the only disagreement about the data I found, people nitpick it and look at it, but
was it 10 years or was it 20 years?
But what all the studies show is that once cataclysmic fires start, they don't stop for
over a decade until all the fuel is consumed.
And the fires started, right?
Over the past five years in California alone, forget the other states that have also been
plagued.
We saw 12 of the largest wildfires in history were recorded, right?
In 2020, two fires crossed the Sierra Nevada mountains, which experts have believed for
hundreds of years was impossible.
They didn't think it could happen, and it happened twice in a summer.
And obviously, by 2025, the problem had become a cataclysm when the palisades and the Indian
fire burst out.
The burning of the forest is just the beginning,
right?
Because it is just, no, it is, it is, it is absolutely just the beginning.
It's worth like, the number you want to think about is it's sort of like woody biomass,
right?
That's all the crap in the forest between the healthy trees.
Yeah.
And what we know is if you can get woody biomass below 59% content in a forest, the fires will
put themselves out.
They won't explode.
They'll put themselves out.
Unfortunately, like fuel loads are basically north of 60% throughout the entire American
West.
In Lake Tahoe, where I live, it's 248 million bone-dried tons of wood that need to come
out of the forest before it's safe.
You got to start it.
You got to process that.
And that's just Tahoe, right?
It sounds like you're sitting on a powder keg of dynamite.
Well, that was...
So the first thing that I learned when I dove into this space is, oh my God, the American
West is a powder keg.
And it's very clear going to explode.
And the experts, they all know it's going to explode.
That was what was so astounding to me is we have technological solutions.
We have everybody says LA is going to, like everybody had been saying for five years,
it was going to happen.
In my experience, I think I spent three years with a team, an amazing team of people, really
talented people trying to start efforts in LA, in Nevada, in Utah. We did meeting after
meeting after meeting and couldn't get anywhere. I have never failed so good, completely in
an effort ever.
And it fires massively.
It's hard.
It's just a hard problem.
There are a lot of stakeholders.
Well, here's what I want people to be hearing here.
This isn't over.
This is just the beginning and it is going to get worse.
Number two, you know, first of all, you can read the white paper.
We'll put in the show notes here that Stephen has written.
It's brilliant and provides all the data.
Number two, there are things we can do to prevent it.
And preventing it, we'll talk about this,
includes a number of businesses,
a number of approaches and strategies,
multimodal surrounding it that Stephen outlines as a white
paper. It also includes our $11 million X-Prize wildfire that we launched. I had my equivalent
moment to you five years ago when I live in Santa Monica right on the border of Santa Monica and
Palisades. Again, you can see the fires and the smoke from the house. And thank God our house was spared.
And I'm living here in a friend's home,
Giorgios' home here in Northern Beverly Hills.
And I'm grateful for his lending it to the family.
So going back to five years ago,
we're being evacuated and evacuated and I'm like, WTF is going on here.
Why aren't people catching these fires at the beginning?
So my first reaction on things like this is let's solve a problem.
This is it's always a solvable problem and the technology we have in hand should be able to solve it.
And that gave birth to the X prize
I'll tell us we'll tell a story a little bit more later because it took five years to get that prize funded
Which is pathetic and ridiculous that more resources aren't going. I mean, I don't you know the estimates right now
What do you hear the estimates at for the losses in?
Yeah, so I like I that numbers in the white paper, but I went or that number was in the
white paper and I pulled it out.
The number that I've seen the most consistently is $250 billion worth of damage.
Now that and I put that that's the number that put it in the white paper.
The numbers and the damage in the American West are hard to come by.
CAL FIRE, who may have the,
some of the best numbers says it's 70 to $150 billion a year up till now.
But even those numbers, it's what's uninsured, what's insured, the downstream health, you've just pointed out,
the downstream health consequences are really, really severe.
I was from the fires in Nevada, I ended up with double pneumonia and then I got COVID
and that was really complicated.
Yeah, we're going to get to this if you can stick with us over this hour.
We're going to talk about the disaster after the disaster.
Which means we've dealt with getting the fires out and people losing their homes
and there's a whole slew of mental health issues and stress that comes along with that.
But the reality is here we burned, you know, how many total structures were...
12,000.
12,000.
Is that count right now?
Right. how many total structures were 12,000? 12,000. Is the count right now?
Right.
And so an equal number of cars, if not double the number of cars,
and probably four times the number of flat screen TVs
and all kinds of electronics.
And when those things melt and the fumes go up in smoke, they are not detectable by normal air quality systems.
The systems that are measuring 2. severe disease and damage, you know.
And so here I am every day working out, being healthy, watching what I eat, you know, my
sleep, all of those things.
And I'm like, I'm sitting here consuming all of these poisonous chemicals that are going
to take years off your life.
So we'll talk about that because I think people need to realize there's a real tragedy that
comes thereafter because there's this incentive to get back into your home, put the kids back
in school.
And honestly, I've been wearing an N95 mask.
They're not easy to wear for long periods of time and they're painful. Thank God my Tesla's got HEPA filter mode so I can crank it up to the top.
Let's begin with some of the stats on this fire.
I know people have heard a lot of it, but what originated the Pacific Palisades fire, maybe it was arson.
The numbers I've heard, the details I've heard is it's winds causing above ground power
lines to spark, it's tree branches falling on power lines causing those to spark.
The fact that we've got these high tension power lines
running through wooded areas seems insane to me. Your thoughts? Well I have
no more information than you about causes of the fire but the winds you
know the winds that started there came by the time they reached here, we had 200 mile an hour winds at the top of the
mountains, which like, you know, that's unprecedented. Yeah. And
it was unprecedented. I was with you in Los Angeles, right, right
before the fire started. And when the airplane took off, it
was that it was actually the most frightening. I've been on a
plane in a while because the wings nearly hit the tarmac the wind hit it so hard the wings
dipped and takeoff was really crazy and I and that windstorm that morning was
frightening those were you know some of the worst Santa Ana's I've seen and
but you know having fires are most of the time are down power lines and winds.
You know, 150,000 people have been displaced.
I just this morning, my family and I went to Santa Monica College and we were volunteering,
sorting clothing for people who've lost everything.
And by the way, if you live in LA this Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
and Sunday, San Marcos College has got incredible resources that they're distributing. So please
consider going there if you need help. 12,000 structures destroyed, entire neighborhoods
reduced to ash. I won't go into the fact that State Farm, the largest insurer in LA dropped
1,600 policies in July of 2024. Did they know anything? I'm not a conspirator, but what they
knew was the winds were coming and LA wasn't prepared. They've been doing, they've been,
most of the big major insurance companies have
been bailing on the American West more and more and more each year.
And it's, if there was ever, you know, if there is ever a need for a blockchain based
new kind of fire insurance, we're certainly, we're certainly looking for it. Let me share a rant with you about insurance. I think insurance is a perverse and inappropriately
incentivized institutional structure. What do I mean by that? Today, fire insurance pays
you after your house burns down. Life insurance pays your next-to-kin after you're dead.
Health insurance pays you after you've gotten sick.
There's a new approach and we wrote about this in Futures Fast When You Think,
in which insurance prevents that from happening.
Imagine if you bought fire insurance and they were able to use technology and the best,
and we'll talk about these things, to prevent your house from ever burning down.
That's their first goal.
What if life insurance prevented you from dying and help you treat it pretty?
Here's something, this is something, like let me give you like just a really amazing quandary
because this is why I had to deal with this.
My house is on the edge of BLM land,
which means myself and my neighbors were the firebreak.
And so everybody who lives on the fire line
has responsibility.
So you're either your house is fireproof.
We buried $20,000 gallons worth of underground water storage
and put in industrial sprinklers that face in and out to create a fire break for it.
We didn't want to do that.
We wanted to put sprinklers on our roof because that's what the data shows is the very best
thing to do.
And if we were really smart about it, it'd be like a fountain where the water is recycled,
right?
And it would be a closed-loop system. But if you put sprinklers on your roof,
it voids your homeowner's insurance.
Because it's an aftermarket addition.
So it voids your roof insurance,
and then it voids your homeowner's insurance.
So you can lose your homeowner's insurance
for not being fire ready,
but you can't get fire ready,
because by the way, that was what your home orders policy.
So insane.
Listen, I am so pissed off at the state government and LA government for their misappropriation
and their lack of intelligence bluntly.
I mean, honestly.
It's funny.
Let me say something. Yeah.
I'm annoyed and I'm annoyed actually at like our people,
entrepreneurs, I'm annoyed, I'm really the venture
capitalists, like all the people, our community,
that's who I'm annoyed by.
And the reason is this, you and I have said this
for a long time,
when your deal, governments move slowly, there are all kinds of entrenched stakeholders and
entrepreneurship is faster into these things and you know, can produce a lot of change
and the fire technologies have been developing for 10 years now, there's one fire fund,
there's literally one venture fund for it. I think they're funded to the tune
of like $35 million. So $250 billion worth of damage is the figure for LA.
And there's one fucking fund trying to solve this problem. And somebody gave
him $35 million. I mean, to me, you know, like that's I mean, the state
government is being, government is
behaving the way government seems to behave.
And I wish it were different, but it does, I don't seem to have any, any power here where,
you know, I've seen, you know, things change just through entrepreneurship, but I don't
like, there are so many climate funds.
Great.
Fantastic.
What about like, why aren't we seeing the same attention
play to disaster mitigation? Because we've been watching, we've been watching the disaster
year after year, whether it's, you know, flooding in the American South versus fires in the
wet, like we're watching the extreme weather mountain, mountain, mountain. And I look at
this and I'm like, okay, this is entrepreneurship
to the rescue and I'm not seeing the response. And so it's a massive marketplace, just to be
clear. It's a trillion dollar marketplace. So let's make a call out to entrepreneurs.
Let me tell you my reaction to this and then I want to talk about the business ideas in your white paper, which are elegant.
So five years ago, thereabouts, I'm on my third evacuation.
It was never this close, never this bad. And I'm like, there's got to be something we got to do here. And I said, obviously,
the way you fight a wildfire is you put it out at inception.
wildfire is you put it out at inception. You know, when the fire begins. When's the best time to find a cancer? At the very beginning, at inception, not when it's a
stage four metastasized cancer that you're fighting at all fronts. And that's
what we're doing today with wildfires. We're not fighting at the beginning.
We're fighting them when they're at conflagration and we're trying to fight
them with everything we've got. And we've got incredible heroes out there,
just to be very clear, the men and women who are on the front line.
You know, fire truck technology is amazing.
All of the helicopters and aircraft.
And I'm like, I snuck into my house in Santa Monica,
don't tell the cops, to go and gather one of my kids medicines and some clothes
because I didn't take it seriously
when I first heard about it.
We went with minimal stuff.
And I'm seeing the helicopters doing drops
and I'm seeing the planes and it was like,
go, yes, go, it was amazing.
But why aren't we finding it at inception?
So I had the idea for an XPRIZE that was monitor a thousand square acres of land.
And if you detect a fire that's three meters, nine feet or larger,
or if it's moving, put it out within 10 minutes.
That's the rules.
Super simple.
I'm not able to fund this any place. And you know, people are saying it's a natural
part of fire control that you know forests need to be have controlled
burns. I'm like that's not the point. There are places in our society where
you should not have something that's three meters or size or a fire moving.
Like in downtown Pacific Palisades. Just don't expect it there.
So let fires burn where they should burn in natural,
you know, natural cycles of nature.
But let's protect other parts. And so one day I finally got a hold of Dick Merkin,
an incredible physician and entrepreneur. Michael Milken introduced me to him.
And I said, Dick, I need you to fund the design of a prize.
And I explained it to him.
He said, sure.
And that's what I love.
Elon Musk said, sure, instantly to $100 million carbon removal
prize.
And Dick Merkin gave us a half a million to design this prize.
And the prize is very simple.
There are two parts of it.
One part is from space, can you monitor the earth for any sign of fires?
That's one part. Global monitoring. The second part is, can you provide a system that monitors a given thousand square acres, call it Napa Valley, call it Pacific Palisades, whatever you want, and if it detects any fire within that area, again not a, you
know, not a person roasting weenies on a grill, something that's three meters or
moving, put it out within ten minutes. And that put it out within ten minutes is
probably the most important rule, because in high winds, if you're waiting more than 10 minutes, you've lost it. So long story short,
it took a while to get this prize funded. We ended up getting the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation
as a co-title sponsor along with Pacific Gas and Electric.
We got Minderoo Foundation out of Australia, the Hilton Foundation, the Lockheed Martin Foundation,
the American Family Mutual Insurance Company,
Temes out of Greece,
because Greece was being decimated by wildfires,
the Roddenberry Foundation, Fairfax Financial,
a couple individuals, Scott Painter,
who had lost his home, committed a million dollars to this prize, and I just learned a couple days ago that in the Palisades fire, he lost his home
for a second time. We've had a number of people, Steve Brown, my chief AI officer lost his home for a second time.
And it's kind of insane. Long story short, we announced the prize.
We have had 135 teams enter the competition.
We're down to a final 29 teams that are in the semi-finals.
And these teams are going to be using aerial drones,
are going to be using sound cannons, are going to be using aerial drones, they're going to be using sound cannons,
they're going to be using high lift UAVs,
they're going to be using swarms of drones.
They're going to be attacking this from every way possible
in order to go to the fire at inception
and put it out immediately.
See, that's what I think fire insurance
should be in the future.
They should be installing that if you buy insurance.
I like your insurance ideas for sure.
You definitely have my vote.
Okay.
So, by the way, one of the things I,
you know, it's interesting because
when I wrote the white paper, I paid kind of the
least amount of attention to fire extinguisher because I knew you were starting the X-Prize.
I was like, okay, Peter might have this one.
Like, he's got that element, you know, in it.
Though some of the, you know, I know, and the satellite, I don't know, like the satellite
stuff is kind of amazing.
We're already like, I think...
Like Planet Labs...
In 2000, yeah.
Cal Fire, I think Cal Fire said that like, it's an...
Or NASA fire detection is 95% accurate.
Like, we definitely...
The accuracy from the satellites is there.
Planet is definitely well positioned.
Will Marshall is well positioned.
This is definitely a job for CubeSats.
You said something before we started this podcast
that I think was prophetic about this is a job for robots.
Yeah, that maybe we'll start there
with the technological discussion.
The reason I was thinking about it is you and I were talking maybe two or three
days ago about melting Teslas and flat screen TV and, and the pollutants and the
level of toxicity.
And the first thing I thought was if there was ever a job for Elon and the,
and the optimist robot, it's this.
And then the reason is for you to look at cleanup. Pardon me. Well, yeah, if you
look at so many of the developments in robotics, early
ones were coming out of Japan and they were disaster
responses, right? The Fukushima, Fukushima, thank you, right?
The Fukushima and Elton really triggered a whole new generation of disaster.
Am I wrong, but didn't Boston Dynamics start out making disaster response robots?
It was for the military, including disaster response.
The Fukushima nuclear disaster, where they couldn't get anybody into the reactor to turn
the damn thing off, spawned the DARPA challenges, robotic challenges.
Right, that was it, thank you.
That's exactly it.
So yeah, I mean, we've just,
obviously we're working on a new book
and we've just finished a couple of chapters
on the future of robots and you and I know
that humanoid robots are really the next frontier.
They're here, they're now, it's just about getting them to scale and here's a phenomenal
opportunity.
You know, we launched this wildfire prize.
It's $11 million purse.
It should be $100 million purse.
By the way, 10x the purse size.
Just give me a call please. And we announced it at the capital
and Palmer Lucky was there from Anderil, the founder of Oculus, but really has built a massive
multi-billion dollar defense company and he got it. And he said, listen, at the end of this competition,
we're gonna make wildfires a thing of the past.
And I've seen the technology that he plans to use.
There are other companies that are using these aerial jets,
which can literally fly to the point of fire
in a couple of minutes and then land and then blow those fires out.
That's the kind of technology we're seeing.
I think we'll have ground UAVs.
I think we'll have humanoid robots on the ready.
I mean, honestly, there's no reason that these should exist.
So just to provide a few more details on the timeline here,
April of 25,
semifinals for the
Track A, which is the orbital portion,
August of 25 is the finals for
the
ground detection and extinction. Let me do a call out here to anybody from the FAA listening,
anybody from state government, federal government listening. I need your help. Right now,
we do not have permission to run this competition in the United States because all of these teams are going to be
flying aerial drones at high speed to be able to demonstrate and win this
competition. You're monitoring a thousand square acres and you need to get from
one location to the next at high speed and be able to put out a fire and when
we run this competition it's going to be real fires being lit. There'll be decoy fires like a grill or a small campfire that the teams need to avoid
and hit the fire that's nine feet, three meters or moving.
We need permission to do this.
I remember, Steven, you were there with me at the early days of the Ansari X-Price for space flight.
I had to go to the head of the FAA to get permission for the teams to compete.
We need that again.
Otherwise, we're taking this wildfire prize outside the US to a permissive government
and we would much rather since the majority of the teams are United States.
We need support for the government to get out of the way of these entrepreneurs
because they can solve this and they can make wildfires a thing of the past.
I'm thinking it sounds like somebody needs to donate an Air Force base. You need a thousand,
right? That sounds like a job for an Air Force base.
Sounds good. Okay. So any Air Force base commanders listening,
like a job for an Air Force base. That's good.
OK, so any Air Force base commanders listening,
we'll need you to donate your base
and allow us to fly operations there.
And light fires.
You could squirrel off the UFOs someplace else.
We can go after those.
But let's get the fires lit and put out instantly.
I'm excited about this competition.
I've seen a lot of the technology. It's
incredible. Let's talk about the ideas in your white paper and listen up. If
you're an entrepreneur looking for a moonshot, here you go. I think there are
incredible ideas for companies to be started, technology to be built, and
solutions to be had. This is a multi-trillion dollar. Let me just begin this way. If I owned
a large vineyard and you had built technology to be able to monitor my vineyards and put out a fire
at inception, I would pay for that service. I think cities and towns should pay for those services.
Right? I think cities and towns should pay for those services. It's the way we should be ensuring our future here.
Let's jump into some of your ideas here, buddy.
Where do you want to start?
I guess, you know, you've got a general high level plan before we get into technologies.
I always love starting with technologies, but we can go wherever you want.
Yeah, I mean, I'll just like, yeah, let's start with the
technologies then. That's fine. I the the thing that you the
thing I want to I want to say here is with the technologies I
was looking at in the planet itself, like I saw, like I'm
interested in trying to solve any problem. And I learned this
from you. I why this is literally stolen from Peter
Diamandis. When you decided you were going to open the space
frontier, you built the company everywhere around the space
frontier, you could possibly start you just surrounded the
space frontier. And I watched you I was like, Oh, so that's
how you do this. Peter figured it out. Okay. So when I you know,
was looking at the fire space, I was like, no, no, no, we got to absolutely
surround the problem. There's a lot more going on as you as you
pointed out, fire is a healthy part of an ecosystem. So if
you're if you don't want fires to burn up the American West,
you have to solve a lot of other problems along the way you have
to deal with drought, you have to deal with a lot of stuff. So I
just wanted to surround the problem. So when we go into these technologies,
some of them are at different levels. The cool one is because we talked about like
woody biomass loads are ridiculous. So when I first got into this space, there were zero
solutions really. And in the past five years years there are now two really cool
robotic burn bot and tree mech are both tree clearing autonomous robots.
They've been using a friend of mine helps work with the Tahoe Fund who is
charged with protecting Tahoe and they bought some of these and the
robots are amazing. They can do in two days what teams used to do in two weeks.
So these are robots, they're trying to...
These are robots, they climb up the trees, they will take dead trees, they will leave
living trees, they will take brush and they reprocess the whole thing and like mix it
with the soil.
So you get the woody biomass gets mixed in with the soil. So it's better for soil health that gets destroyed
and integrated in and just clears out the brush,
integrates what it can into the soil load.
And they've got LIDAR, right?
They're using AI terrain mapping.
They target fire prone vegetation, right?
One of the big issues in LA, well, in California
is that in the early years when the fires happened,
what did we do?
We imported eucalyptus from Arizona or from Australia
because it grows really fast.
And it turns out you can't build houses with it
and it explodes in fires, right?
It's deadly.
And we've planted it all over California
in reaction to fire actually.
We saw there was a burn but I think it was demonstrated in Colorado and I think it was
like a 30% reduction in fuel load in forests, which is what you need to get it below that
hazardous cataclysmic level.
The other thing about it is if you see the terrain that's got to be cleared it's really I mean it's super steep it's
super rocky you need technical climbing skills to be in there and work it's not
easy to get in there so the fact that there's now robots that can help here is
a really big deal but just those have to go to scale on this note Stephen I'm
assuming that there's
plenty of room for innovation and improvement on this. There's so much room for innovation
and improvement. And yeah, and there's there we need and they have to be taken to scale,
right? Like, you've got two companies that are making these things. We need like a competitive marketplace and you know,
what's the CubeSat version of a, you know,
that kind of robot.
One of the other technologies, again, didn't exist
back when I was first started looking at it.
One that's most interesting to me is you can basically
take a jet engine and use it to steer wildfire.
So a company called Fire World that came out of the University of Alberta sort of started this.
And you can reduce, and they tested it in 2022, and they found they could reduce spread by 50%.
This is like steering,
you're steering a fire with a jet engine
and they mount them on tank tracks and move them around.
So again, needs to go to scale.
These should be on the fire, like LA for example,
Topanga Canyon, which has one entrance in
and one entrance out, like guard the edge of the forest
with these jet engines that blow it, you know, in a place
that it's safe and not in a place where everybody lives is one.
You'd think that officials would be like all over this tech, right?
That they would be just, you know, so an incredible member of the X-PriE team, Peter Houlihan, runs our biodiversity track of prizes
and runs this wildfire prize.
He just finished running our XPRIZE in the Amazon, which was going into large tracts of land and finding by DNA across all species how to
value that land from the DNA and a different species that are in the land
versus clear-cutting it and he's bringing a well credible technology to
this competition I was just speaking to him this morning he's this guy travels
around the planet more than I do he's's circumnavigating. He's
somewhere in Southeast Asia at the moment. It's insane.
But one of the other things you really have to talk about is this is one of the... So
when I said earlier that fire has all these like weird entrenched stakeholders and everybody
said the odds. So one of the reasons we're having such problems in our forests is it's not even if you clear
the fuel, it's what do you do with it once you get some of this stuff out of the forest?
There are not enough sawmills all over the American West.
They've closed.
Pardon me.
They've been shut down.
And now you've got this weird, it's these weird things.
Like you've got wealthy people who are like, no, no, not in my backyard.
We can't have a sawmill here.
And environmentalists hate sawmills
because they think, okay,
because for years the lumber companies
were just raping the Western forests
and they've changed and they're better
and all this stuff has gotten smarter
and more environmentally friendly,
but there's
residual anger.
So a lot of the sawmills closed through one, people were moving to the American West and
not in my backyard.
But like, just to give you an example, we recently got, we meaning the communities in
and around Tahoe got a couple of sawmills open.
Finally, one on the Washio Native Res reservation, amazing work they're doing there.
And another, we got an old mill to reopen, but otherwise they were having to take lumber,
I think it was 100 to 200 miles away.
So like you're trying to get the fuel out of the forest and like you're putting carbon
into the atmosphere to do it and you're just, you're creating more of the problem.
So how many sawmills,
how many sawmills do we need?
Well, that's an interesting question based on like,
throughput, right?
Put it this way, the sawmill industry between
85 and 2016, 1985 and 2016,
there was a 40% decline, right?
So, if you're looking for a single number of why, what happened in the American West, 40% of the sawmills went away.
And so we have no place to take a lot of the wood now.
What you need are, you don't, and you don't,
you don't want to create a single sawmill.
That doesn't make any sense.
What you want is modular sawmills, for sure.
You want modular construction.
You want, we were thinking about it when I,
and I talked about this in the white paper, you could build modular sawmills. For sure. You want modular construction. We were thinking about it when I talked about
this in the white paper, you could build modular sawmills and franchise them. They have to
be environmentally friendly as possible. They have to be carbon neutral, water-wise, waste-free,
flexible design. All this stuff has been done. Like this is not, the innovations are ready, like people have figured this out, it's just
not at scale again.
So the solutions are actually there.
This is why I was so mad at Venture Capital.
I was like, wait a minute, the West is going to burn, it's a trillion dollar opportunity,
the solutions are there, all we actually need is money and innovation incubators, really.
So listen, to the entrepreneurs out there, I love this one, right?
If you build modular sawmills that can be on demand and can be repositioned as the forests are cleared,
you know, if some entrepreneurs can build it, I think it's a great XPRIZE opportunity as well. Here, the better XPRIZE might be, this is where there's really cool innovation coming,
but it really needs it.
You want a market for woody biomass, right?
The stuff that gets processed, there's no current really good market for it.
There's a way to take these softwoods and turn them into what's known as cross-lateral timber.
That works.
A really cool thing that we were looking at is biochar.
Cause you can take these,
you can use a lot of these soft words to make biochar.
Biochar is amazing, right?
For forest health, if you pre-process biochar,
the forest, it starts absorbing moisture
and brings back forest health. But there are, there's a company, I want to say Korea, Japan, we were talking to
them three or four years ago, they had found a way, a non-toxic, eco-friendly,
medical and molecular way to get, treat softwoods, to get them to behave like
hardwoods. So all again, the technology is there.
And what I wanted to do was sort of surround
the problem with stakeholders.
So I was like, why don't we have Home Depot and Lowe's
and all these kind of target, right, all these companies
in the conversation?
Their stores are in the American West, right?
They're going to burn too.
And they should be in the conversation from start,
from the beginning.
This is like everybody can sort of win here if everybody's at the table.
There's another idea that you had in your white paper, which I think is either an X Prize or it's a business,
which is the biodegradable fire retardants.
Talk about that.
Yeah.
So those already exist, right?
This was a really like it's a big issue, right?
When you're fighting fires all over the West and you can't poison the ecosystem afterwards
or you're, well, you're LA right now, right?
Like that's the issue.
So Perimeter Solutions has developed an eco-friendly fire retirement made from plant-based polymers.
And you can spray it from drones and aircraft and it uses, creates temporary fire breaks.
And in 2021, Cal Fire used it to protect,
I think it was 20,000 acres of redwood,
and there was minimal long-term damage.
So like we've tested this at scale already.
And again, this is sort of,
there's a lot of innovation that can be done here,
because one of the things that you really want to think about is not just, okay, we've got
eco-friendly fire retardant. The question I would start asking is, how do we make fire retardant
that's actually good for the ecosystem? Like if we're going to have to spray this all over the
place, why aren't we using this as a way to restore forest health? Which like, if you want
to solve the problem in the American West, restoring forest health, which like if you wanna solve the problem
in the American West,
restoring forest health has to be a huge part of it.
You have to restore aquifers and forest health
and all this stuff.
So we like you want, I say this in the white paper,
entrepreneurship alone will solve this problem,
but it won't solve it fast enough.
So you need a lot of money, a lot of capital,
a lot of entrepreneurship,
but you need multi-tool solutions.
A single solution that will solve six
or seven problems at once.
So if we know we have to restore forest fire health
and we know we're gonna be putting out wildfires,
let's put it together, right?
That's where, and you know this from all your work
with innovation, whenever these things come together into a new category, that's where that and you know this from all your work with innovation. Whenever these things come together into a new category,
that's where you get kind of the most opportunity for innovation and money really.
Yeah, and you've made the request for is there a venture fund that can be built around this technology?
If there's any time, I mean, if people realize,
listen, the American West is going to burn.
It's not a matter of if, it's only a matter of when.
Is it five years, 10 years?
Is it on the outside, 20 years?
And if you live there, are you prepared
to use the existing lack of systems as your protection?
Or are you gonna to use that?
It's funny, Peter.
I want to mention that somebody called me up recently
when the LA Fire started.
Somebody I worked on this original project with.
And they said, do you want to reboot this project?
Are you ready to do it again?
I was like, somebody else will build it.
I'm happy to be the figurehead.
But I spent three years.
I got nowhere.
All I learned is that I'm not the guy for this.
But that's not my point.
So the next question was, okay, if I rebooted this, who should be at the table?
And I was like, who should be at the table?
Well, for starters, like the governor of every single Western state,
like every major company in the American West, the governor of every major Western state, that everybody...I mean like what?
It's gonna burn and so it's either LA or we fix it.
Like that's...it's an either or.
And honestly, if you're hearing this now and you ignore this, you can't.
You have to say, we've got to change the game here. So as an entrepreneur, you build tech. As an investor, you back tech. As a citizen, you vote in politicians who are going to support a change here. things and they completely screwed up environmental regulations and building
regulations that prevent you from doing what's intelligent and smart. It just is
beyond me. Listen, I want to talk about something that is near and dear to my
heart right now which is the disaster after the disaster. It's the
environmental fallout of in the in the air and water. It's toxic exposure.
I don't think people realize this. There's an overwhelming urge, and I'm fighting it right now,
to go back to your old way of life, to be able to wake up in your bed and go and do your exercise
routine and your normal everything. There's this desire to go back into your exercise routine and you know your normal everything.
And so there's this desire to go back into your house and you're just not going to wear
a mask and do the type of cleanup that you need to.
So let's talk about what's in the atmosphere.
So you've mentioned this before, right? Fire smoke contains particulate matter, PM2.5 and PM10.
And that's what typically can be measured.
My kid's school bought a device to measure that particulate matter.
And I'm saying, honestly, that's not what I'm worried about.
It's the dioxins, it's the furanes, it's the heavy metals
that there isn't the technology.
I'm looking online to find machines
that can detect that accurately.
Because that's what I care about.
The stuff that you can measure, sure.
Let's minimize that.
Hopefully the rains and winds will slowly move that away. But it's the other
stuff. Thoughts?
You know, it raises a lot of like a high level. It made when we first started talking about
this, what I started thinking is, does that, like, does disaster preparedness in the face of climate
change mean that we have to start building things that can be flooded, be burnt, right? Like, these
things, unless we're actively solving climate change at the rate that we need to be actively
solving climate change, the other option is need to be actively solving climate change.
The other option is, right, these seem to be the options.
Either we create stuff that can be waterlogged and burnt without poisoning all species.
Or I don't know what Los Angeles does because everything that doesn't get cleaned up is
going to leach into the groundwater,
which is already, I mean, it's not like LA
has an abundance of groundwater.
If this is, you know, I think one of the things
that you're gonna see out of this,
and at least that, you know, the good news is,
five years ago, this didn't exist at scale,
but we can now build solar power diesel.
And I think, you know, I think this think this is gonna, that seems to be,
can we do that fast and at scale and modularly?
Right, that seems to be a challenge
that LA is gonna have to face very quickly
because the water supply, I don't have,
but thoughts are, oh, fuck, that's my thought.
Yeah, here's some numbers.
PM2.5, which is a pollutant in wildfire smoke,
was found to be 10 times more toxic and causing respiratory issues
compared to non-smoke PM2.5.
So, again, but this is nature going up in smoke.
And I get that. It causes asthma.
It's impacted you significantly from your fires, right?
Yeah, I've got good filtration indoors and I wore a mask, but I have dogs and I had to walk
the animals and definitely shorten the lives of my pets.
You know what I mean?
The other thing we need to say about LA is
the devastation for the plants, animals,
and ecosystems is just, it's awful.
We're already, the work we do with dogs,
we're bringing in dogs from LA.
We've got friends who are bringing them
to places all over America at this point,
but the fallout for the plants, animals, and ecosystems is...
And for the children who are going back to school, and I'm sorry, the kids are just not
going to be wearing masks in school. Here's another stat, right? Burning materials, these
are the materials that are in the homes, the materials that our modern world of abundance has given us,
release volatile organic compounds like benzene and methyl chloride,
which are incredibly harmful even in low concentrations.
So after the fires at Paradise, the benzene levels in the drinking water were a thousand times above
legal limit, which is
insane. The long-term risks involved increased cancer rates, cardiovascular
issues, neurotoxicity. These are the same sort of things that we found after 9-11
when the towers came down and all of the workers and all of the local citizens were out in
trying to support, this is the disaster after the disaster. Just to be clear, I want people to realize
that this is very real and as I drive around town here, if you're not seeing the devastated
parts of Pacific Palisades, it looks normal. It's a sunny sky.
People are out jogging without masks.
It's just not safe.
We've seen toxic particles like lead
that have traveled over 100 miles after a burn site.
And guess what?
Once we start doing the ash removal and the cleanup in the urban areas, this can scale
the pollutants in the atmosphere for up to two years.
So what do you do?
You know, I'm like, do I stay up here?
I don't know what you do.
I also, I mean, the other thing that, you know, we haven't talked about is there's a level of the mental health.
People lost their lives, their friends.
We lost everything.
Lost absolutely everything.
The mental cost of that is extraordinary.
Identity gets ripped away.
A lot of like really core human things
get ripped away really fast.
And even the solutions,
even from a mental health perspective,
before we even get into the long term,
just thinking on that side,
the salute, like there are a lot of mental health solutions,
flow, mindfulness, you know, all the things,
they seem insane in the face of the catastrophe.
You know what I mean?
Like fight back, but like it's the only way
to sort of get control of your life again.
And I think that rebuild alongside the, you know,
the rebuild of LA.
I just keep thinking about my wife,
who's from California, once said
that the California in the songs hasn't really existed since 1979, which is an interesting idea.
But what I thought was, essentially what burned was the California that has existed, like that's
like the California that I know, which is post 1979, I got to California for the first time in 86.
1979, I got to California for the first time in 86. Large swatches of that are like, it's gone. The whole memories are gone that, you know, and won't be back in our lifetime, which
is really...
Yeah, the stat that I'm reading here in the research is that there's a 23% increase in
suicide rates observed in the three years following disaster. Yeah.
One thing I want to say just so people know, not that this is very helpful, but this is
work that came out of the Flow Research Collective and it was published in Neuroscience and Biobihavior
Reviews if anybody wants to look at this, but it does, the evidence has been growing that flow is a very useful tool for overriding PTSD.
And I'm not going to go into that, but like if that's, and I don't know about you, but like the two times that we dealt,
like I had legit PTSD for a very long time. I was waking up in sweats every night with nightmares. I was, yeah, I was, I was, I was, I did not take the fire as well.
When we were threatened with them.
And flow was useful for myself.
So it sounds like a ridiculous thing,
like prioritize trying to get into flow,
but you have to prioritize your mental health
after a fire.
And the reason I'm saying this,
after everything you just said is,
I was like, fuck it, I don't want to wear a mask.
I want to go walk outside with my dog in the sunshine.
Because I hadn't prioritized my mental health and I was sort of like,
and I was making bad decisions.
And I did. I ended up very, very, very sick afterwards for a while.
I ended up with COVID and what should have been like a two week COVID battle
stretched into like three or four months before I was breathing right normally again.
I wanna summarize this for our listeners here.
First of all, I think the most important thing
that was said was, while the LA fires are no longer
on the national and global news
and people have moved on to the next disaster
and the next problem, this is not the end of wildfires.
The experts, as
Stephen said, predict that we're gonna see the American Northwest, not just the US,
America including Canada, Northwest burn over the next 5, 10, 20 years. And we need
to do something about it. If you're an entrepreneur, build tech and companies to
address this. It is all
solvable. That's the second point I want to make. You should be pissed off as I am
that this was not addressed and you know, the water supplies being
empty and the fire hydrants being dry and all of those things, yes, those were
issues here. I'm pissed at a higher level
that this has been known for a while and why isn't the resources going in to
address the technology that could solve this in the first place, you know, before
it begins to become a wildfire. So if you're interested in that, check out XPRIZE.org.
Please support the work of XPRIZE.
It's working to help reinvent the future.
And watch out for the XPRIZE semifinals coming this summer.
Hopefully, with technology, that's
going to solve it, hopefully, in time.
If you're an investor, hey, I think creating a wildfire tech investment fund would be a brilliant idea.
This is a problem that's only growing secondary to the climate crisis.
If you are impacted by the wildfires
here in Los Angeles, please realize this is the beginning of the disaster after the disaster.
You're you know, I came back to my home
with signs posted every place.
The water is dangerous.
Do not drink. Do not bathe in it even.
So we've got water issues, but no one's out there saying, listen,
don't breathe the air.
Put on not a KN95, put on an N95 mask.
And I went out and bought filtration systems.
These are both HEPA filters and ionization filtration systems
put in the house in the kids' bedrooms to try and clean up the air.
But guess what?
Every time you open the door and you trudge things in,
there's lots of people out there saying,
got to wet wash, no leaf blowers, no dry sweeping.
We're gonna have this gunk, this poisonous material
being floated up into our lives for months, maybe years
to come.
Yeah, I can't wait for figure robots and Tesla robots.
Yeah, I really, I think, well, I'm thinking, I listen to you and I'm just thinking, this
is a job for, like, Elon, you want a place to test your robots at scale, baby.
Yeah.
Anyway, listen, thank you for the white paper you've written, for your brilliance, for your
passion commitment.
Steven, I love you as a partner, as a friend.
Please go into the show notes, get a copy of Steven's white paper.
I'll put information in the show notes about the XPRIZE, Wildfire, Nushan Ansarie and Peter Hulahan. Thank you for all the work
you're doing to run that. Thank you to our sponsors of that competition and
support the XPRIZE if you can and please take care of your health. There's also a
great, it's a two-hour YouTube about the disaster after the disaster talking
about water and air. I'll put a link to that YouTube video as well.
It was a group of experts who were involved in other fire cleanups as well as the 9-11 cleanup.
Education is your best friend.
I don't want to cause fear-mongering.
That's not me.
You guys know I'm the abundance guy.
But longevity and health is, you know, the most important thing you can focus on.
Stephen, any thoughts to close this out?
Just that for all those impacted by the L.A. fire,
heart goes out to you guys, thinking of you.
Yeah, 150,000 displaced people.
I've met some incredibly strong individuals through this process.
People have lost their homes twice.
People with kids, people who have said, you know, we're learning what's important in our
lives and it's our family.
So all right, brother, be well.
Love you, Peter.
Thank you. Thanks for doing this Love you, Peter. Thank you.
Thanks for doing this one.
Of course.
Thank you.