TED Talks Daily - A bold plan to rewild the Earth — at massive scale | Kristine McDivitt Tompkins
Episode Date: September 20, 2024The first step to saving nature is the rewilding of our own minds, says conservationist and former Patagonia CEO Kristine McDivitt Tompkins. With an unwavering commitment to protecting ecosys...tems, she and her late husband Douglas Tompkins created vast conservation parks across South America that allowed ancient flora and fauna to flourish once again. Now, she's carrying that legacy and mission forward with a bold plan to connect parks across geographic boundaries, creating a system of continental-scale wildlife corridors — before it's too late.
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TED Audio Collective.
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where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day.
I'm your host, Elise Hu.
Christine McDivitt-Tompkins stepped away as CEO of Patagonia
to do crucial work of restoring ecosystems in South America. In her talk,
she explains how the work of restoring land and native species is healing and crucial
as so many creatures face extinction. That's coming up after the break.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb. If you know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs when I travel.
They make my family feel most at home when we're away from home.
As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs, I pictured my own home sitting empty.
Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it on Airbnb?
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And now, our TED Talk of the day.
I'm of the first generation in all of human history
to witness the decimation of wild nature
taking place in every corner of the planet.
This isn't a mystery. We know this.
At the end of the day, it's simple mathematics.
We humans expand our footprint,
habitat on land and sea shrink,
wildlife numbers fall,
temperatures rise,
and human communities suffer.
And this is what keeps me up at night.
But I'm also busy.
Edward Abbey, the godfather of environmental activism,
once said,
sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul.
And for me, the antidote to despair is to act.
And the most direct action at Tompkins Conservation is to be part of the global movement of rewilding the earth.
So what is rewilding anyway?
It means allowing ancient nature,
the space and the freedom to heal itself.
And when that's not possible,
actively restoring territories
and bringing back species who have gone missing.
Rewilding is both simple and miraculous. I know this because I have lived it. Here's what I think can happen if we take on
rewilding the continent at a massive scale, because frankly, we're kind of running out of time
saving the natural world.
So if there was ever a moment for a Hail Mary pass in conservation,
I think this is it.
Thirty years ago, when my late husband, Doug Tompkins,
and I began working on land conservation projects,
we weren't really sure what we were going to do,
but we knew we would invest everything we had
in terms of our time and resources
to slow down the freight train of development
that we saw destroying the natural world.
As climbers, ski racers, wildlife people,
we had long begun to witness with our own eyes,
and it was time for us to react to those things that were oh so clear to us.
For the two of us, that meant making a 180-degree shift of our business lives,
Doug as the co-founder of the North Face, and then Esprit.
And for me, it was retiring from Patagonia Company after 25 years,
18 of those years as CEO.
We moved to a roadless area at the tip of South America
at the foot of a very deep fjord in Chile.
We committed ourselves to saving as much wild habitat as we could,
at first by simply buying land, we committed ourselves to saving as much wild habitat as we could,
at first by simply buying land,
ultimately acquiring over two million acres of key habitat in Chile and Argentina.
Some of these tracts were still wild,
but some were deeply degraded after a century of livestock overgrazing and deforestation and other threats.
We formed teams on the ground and worked with communities
and local, regional, national governments.
And partnering with now 12 presidential administrations in the two countries,
we gave back everything that we put together in terms of conservation lands
by donating them in the form of new national parks.
Yes!
So far, we've initiated 15 new national parks
protecting over 15 million acres.
We came to know, without a doubt,
that landscapes can recover,
even those forests, grasslands, wetlands, hardest hit.
But the more we worked saving and restoring lands and seascapes,
the more we came to realize
that you can't have healthy ecosystems
if keystone species are missing.
As Lois Chrysler said,
landscape without wildlife is just scenery,
and we never saw ourselves as being in the scenery business.
Protecting large-scale territories is essential.
You can't paint a masterpiece unless you have the canvas.
But once the territory is secured long-term,
we had to commit ourselves to go beyond land conservation
and set our goals to leaving behind fully functioning ecosystems,
figuring out what species are missing
or whose numbers are low and fragile
and commit to bringing them back.
And that's exactly what we're doing.
Today, Patagonia grasslands, temperate rainforests are safe and whole,
and nearly two million acres of wetlands have been protected.
A total of 24 native species, which were nearly extinct,
are again roaming free and reproducing in their rightful territories,
from apex predators that influence entire ecosystems
to seed bearers, herbivores, smaller predators, each playing out their essential role in the theater that we call life.
In Chile, the population of the nearly extinct Huemul deer
is no longer losing ground.
And after a century of livestock grazing in the Patagonia grasslands,
which celebrated the killing of predators such as cougars and foxes.
They are back and they are thriving.
But all of this experience has shown us that this is still not enough.
The speed and power of the climate crisis and the extinction crisis
demand, I think, that we change our tactics again.
And this time, it's got to be on a massive scale.
Yes, the parks offer refuge from the forces of industrialization,
and we know ecosystems can be restored.
And very importantly, we know that when people reconnect with nature,
it inspires them to protect it.
But at the same time, if you think about it,
parks, even the massive, wild parks, are islands.
They're not connected.
And this is a huge problem,
because in order to survive and become resilient,
ecosystems need to be connected,
sometimes extensions of territories and sometimes as stepping stones.
One way or the other, flora and fauna
have to be able to expand over territories as they once did.
So how is this done?
It requires expanding strategies into the next 20 years.
We have to reconnect the wild fabric of South America,
both from Chile and Argentina.
Our 30 years of conservation work is radiating up and out now,
reconnecting habitat and species back into one full continent.
Luckily, and not surprisingly,
Mother Nature has already built the literal road map
to make this possible.
In Chile, this means going up the entire spine of the Andes
with endangered species
and down the currents to Antarctica,
following marine wildlife systems beyond,
and this is the point, human-made borders.
As an example of this in Argentina,
rivers are natural wildlife bridges.
So if we protect the rivers and the land around them,
we create these continental-scale corridors.
Think of them as wild highways.
In our kind of work,
there's a saying about the role of top predators
that I think helps make this clearer.
In our case,
if jaguars can expand their territory from north to south, east to west, then everybody else, animals, insects, flora, fauna, can, quote, walk under their legs.
And that's our goal.
And now, back to the episode.
So from Iberá National Park in Argentina,
we build connections across the borders in Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Bolivia,
and create biodiversity throughout the La Plata River Basin, the Yungas Cloud Forest, the Chaco forest, the Atlantic forest. There's no question
that this is a very audacious next and new step. I'm 73, and for the first time in my business and
conservation life, I know I'm not going to see the end of this new story. But that's okay with me.
In fact, a very wise and good friend of ours,
Wes Jackson, said to us years ago, if your life's work can be accomplished in your lifetime,
you're not thinking big enough. Thank you.
Today, the original teams we built have become independent organizations
known as Fundación Rewilding Chile
and Fundación Rewilding Argentina.
And they are continuing this work long into the future.
Sometimes people ask me what Doug would have wanted
and what I would hope our legacy becomes.
And I always say the same thing.
As proud as we are of what we've been able to accomplish thus far,
none of us spends much time looking backwards.
Rather, we see all the work that we've done as a foundation to build third, fourth generations of team leaders
who share a common vision with us.
And that is, we refuse to accept a future without wildness,
without abundance,
and dignified human communities.
So what started as a personal journey
has become a journey of many.
From several dedicated individuals to whole teams,
generations of teams and communities
who are joining the movement toward regenerative economies,
followed by their offspring and their descendants.
And finally,
this journey is about bringing back large-scale territories,
keeping them safe
and finding the species who were long gone, missing.
The jaguars, the weymouth deer, the Andean condors,
giant anteaters, pumas, pompous deer,
the bare-faced curacao, the Darwin's rands,
maned wolf, marsh deal, macaws, ocelots,
red-footed tortoises, giant river otters.
May they thrive long into the future.
They are the legacy long after our story is told. And remember,
the first step in saving nature is the rewilding of our own minds. Thank you very much.
Support for this show comes from Airbnb.
If you know me, you know I love staying in Airbnbs when I travel.
They make my family feel most at home when we're away from home.
As we settled down at our Airbnb during a recent vacation to Palm Springs,
I pictured my own home sitting empty.
Wouldn't it be smart and better put to use welcoming a family like mine by hosting it on
Airbnb? It feels like the practical thing to do, and with the extra income, I could save up for
renovations to make the space even more inviting for ourselves and for future guests. Your home
might be worth more than you think. Find out how much at Airbnb.ca slash host. That was Christine McDivitt-Thompkins speaking at TED 2024.
If you're curious about TED's curation, find out more at TED.com slash curation guidelines.
And that's it for today.
TED Talks Daily is part of the TED Audio Collective.
This episode was produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Brian Green, Autumn Thompson, and Alejandra Salazar.
It was mixed by Christopher Fazi Bogan.
Additional support from Emma Taubner and Daniela Balarezo.
I'm Elise Hugh. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feet.
Thanks for listening.
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