The Dr. Hyman Show - Is Our Food System a Solution to Climate Change? with Paul Hawken
Episode Date: December 5, 2018The news about climate change seems bleak and hopeless, but my guest on this week’s episode of The Doctor’s Farmacy is here to give us hope. Paul Hawken is an environmentalist, entrepreneur, autho...r, and activist who has dedicated his life to environmental sustainability and changing the relationship between business and the environment. He is one of the environmental movement’s leading voices, and a pioneering architect of corporate reform with respect to ecological practices. His work includes founding successful, ecologically conscious businesses, writing about the impacts of commerce on living systems, and consulting with heads of state and CEOs on economic development, industrial ecology, and environmental policy. Paul is Executive Director of Project Drawdown, a non-profit dedicated to researching when and how global warming can be reversed. He is on a mission to present real, already existing solutions to reverse global warming.
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Most of us know that climate change is a real problem and what we need are real solutions.
My guest on today's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy has spent his time studying fascinating
solutions that are designed to reverse the damaging effects of global warming.
Paul Hawken is an environmentalist, an entrepreneur, author, and activist who has
dedicated his life to environmental sustainability and changing the relationship between business
and environment. On today's
episode, we talk about real solutions to our most pressing environmental issues,
including global warming. You may or may not be surprised to learn that food and the way we
consume it, produce it, grow it is a major cause of global warming and is the number one solution
collectively to climate change. Drawdown is that point in time when the concentration of
greenhouse gases in the atmosphere begins to decline on a year-to-year basis. And Paul's book,
Drawdown, the most comprehensive plan ever proposed to reverse global warming,
is truly one of the most impactful books I've ever read. I'm so excited to share this extended
episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy with you.
Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy. I'm Dr. Mark Hyman. That's Pharmacy, F-A-R-M-A-C-Y,
a place for conversations that matter. And today's conversation really matters because our guest is Paul Hawken, one of the leading environmentalists and who's going to help us
learn about climate change, not from the bad point of view of how it sucks and it's all going to kill
us, but how to fix it, which is something that people really don't talk about. And he's got the street
cred to prove it. He started out in Boston in 1966 with the first natural food store where they had
whole grains in bulk and seeds, where they had cold pressed wells, the first place ever,
sold vegetables. It was the first kind of whole foods in a way. And you went on to do much bigger
work as an environmentalist,
as an entrepreneur, as an author, an activist. And you've dedicated your life to environmental
sustainability and changing the relationship between business and the environment. And your
books have been profound in that way. And I'm going to talk about them in a minute. But you're
one of the environmental movement's leading voices. You're a pioneering architect of corporate reform
with respect to ecological practices. Your work includes founding successful, ecologically conscious businesses, writing about the impacts of commerce on living systems, and consulting with heads of state and CEOs on economic development, industrial ecology, projects that's going on today in the face of our climate crisis.
It's called Project Drawdown.
It's a nonprofit.
It's dedicated to researching when and how global warming can be reversed, not just stopped, but actually reversed.
The organization maps and models the scaling of 100 substantive technological, social, and ecological solutions
to global warming. These are things that actually exist right now that people are doing that can be
scaled. Not to mention all the new innovative things that can also happen in the coming years.
Now, Paul writes articles, op-eds, peer-reviewed papers. He's written seven books, including four
bestsellers, The Next Economy, Growing a Business, The Ecology of
Commerce, and Blessed Unrest. The Ecology of Commerce was voted the number one college
tech on business and environment by professors in 67 business schools. That is no small feat.
And his book, Natural Capitalism, Creating the Next Industrial Revolution, co-authored with
Amory Lovins and other environmentalists, has been read and referred to by several heads of state, including President Bill Clinton, who called it one of the five most important
books in the world today.
That is quite a pedigree, Paul.
Thank you for joining us today in the doctor's pharmacy.
It's a pleasure to be here with you.
So what struck me was the first time I heard you speak at an event, you laid out a vision
of climate that was very different
than any I'd ever heard before. It was a vision that was hopeful as opposed to depressing and
made you want to run hot under a table, which we mostly hear that storms and floods and heating up
of the planet and people dying and ice caps melting and polar bears dying. I mean, this is
where we mostly reside when it comes to that. And then, of course, we have climate deniers and we have climate activists, and it's all a big mess.
And you crystallize it into this extraordinary story and narrative, which was that, hey,
we can do something about this. Not only can we slow global warming and climate change,
but then we can actually reverse it, what you call draw down carbon in the environment.
That is a big statement. And it's something that
most of us have a hard time grappling with. And yet these 100 solutions you mapped out
were pretty profound in their ability to be implemented and literally save trillions and
trillions of dollars and sequester giga and gigatons. I don't even know what's bigger than
a gigaton, but many gigatons of carbon out of the environment, which is not how we normally think of it. So how did this idea come
about? And what inspired you to bring together 100 of the top scientists and researchers in the world
to call out these solutions and make them practical? It came about, I think, for the same
reason that you just referred to, which is that primarily what people hear about is the probability of what's going to go wrong, how it is going wrong, how fast it's going wrong sooner than we thought it was going to go wrong.
Yeah.
And it's about impact.
It's about impact that's happening today more and more, but it's also about the impact that's going to happen and that is the mandate of the intergovernmental panel on climate change the un sponsored agent you know really collaboration that
was a new report they just released it's just worse than we thought it's 30 years old today
it started in 1988 the sixth assessment comes out and just last week the 1.5 c sort of report came
out uh which is if we don't reach again very cautionary very sort of which is if we don't reach, again, very cautionary, very sort of
apocalyptic, if we don't hit one, if we go over 1.5 C, we're in big trouble, and we have very
little chance of hitting it. That was sort of the report. And it really continued to repeat a pattern
of climate communication, which emphasizes gloom, threat, doom, fear, and lights up the amygdala, so to speak,
and fight or flight.
But it makes people disempowered.
That's the most important thing about it.
Not that the science isn't valid.
The science is good.
But it's kind of like you being a doctor.
What if diagnosis is not prognosis?
You know that.
First, you have to do diagnosis.
So IPCC does a really good job on diagnosis, but it conflates everything else with prognosis. You know that. First, you have to do diagnosis. So IPCC does a really good job on diagnosis, but it conflates everything else with prognosis. And that is where people get basically
not only disempowered, but numb, turn away. They'll deny it because this is really about life and
death. And so it's not surprising a lot of people say, screw you. It's not not true i don't believe it blah blah blah blah you know because
the science is so hard to basically take in it's very hard to take in and from my point of view
i saw al gore speak at a conference recently and he showed a slide a picture of an octopus in a parking lot in Miami
because the water levels have risen,
and now we see fish and seafood in the parking lots.
I mean, it's scary.
Well, just imagine somebody comes to you,
you're diagnosed, and they have first-stage cancer of some organ.
Okay, they come to you, and you say,
hey, you know, John, you have first-stage cancer.
And that's it.
And then John tells all his friends and they say john you know i heard you saw dr hyman you have first stage cancer you
know liverless liver cancer he said yeah and every week and day they keep telling him he has cancer
he has cancer and after a month you see john say god it's been a month it's probably you know worse
worse because it's mitosis that's what cancer likes to do yeah likes to and john's never going to get better to do. Yeah. Likes to, and John's never going to get better.
I mean, if he's third stage, second stage,
he's never going to get better,
because everything he hears is about how sick he is.
And that's pretty much what was happening with climate.
I was watching it for years and years,
and I realized that every problem,
every problem, without exception,
is a solution in disguise.
Yeah.
In disguise.
And the job of a doctor is to say, hey, this is the solution.
Yeah.
The problem is symptomatic, right, of a cause.
This is the solution to the cause, right?
So that's true with every problem we have.
And it's certainly true with climate change because it is the most super wicked, gnarly problem
ever surfaced in the history of civilization.
And therefore, within it is this plethora
of transformative solutions
that make this a far better place and world
for everyone than the one we live in now.
Yeah, that's true.
The Chinese word for crisis is two characters, opportunity and danger. Yes. So embedded within every crisis, like the
climate crisis or health crisis, are these issues. And the thing that struck me about this is when
most of us think of climate, we think of coal burning, we think of cars, we think of, you know,
energy use, we think of all these things that
are really about solving it through the energy sector, right? Wind, solar, nuclear, whatever.
The thing that struck me was that the food system as a whole is the biggest solution when you
aggregate all the solutions. And we're going to go into each of these solutions during this podcast,
so I want you to stay tuned. But it is stunning how many things are actually
already being done that have been proven scientifically. Because you didn't look at
anything that was a hope. You looked at things that were actually measurable, whether it was data,
where actually they could be implemented at scale, and they could save enormous amounts of money with
little investment and actually sequester enormous amounts of carbon.
So the food sector is huge.
How did that sort of come about that you had that insight?
Well, when we started this...
Because you didn't come in with a set of predisposed ideas.
We did.
You just looked at the idea.
Actually, we did.
I think everybody has them.
And the same predisposed ideas you just spoke of,
which is, well, you're going to solve the problem.
It's going to be solar and wind.
Right, the energy.
Elon Musk, right? We should was the Ron Preetus quote.
You're going to say, before he smoked a joint on Joe Rogan's show.
I mean, the point being is that we all thought of energy as, and it makes logical sense,
because two-thirds of the greenhouse gas emissions are caused by the combustion of coal, gas,
and oil.
So, duh.
But actually, how you get back from where you came from
is not the way you go.
That is to say, you can't just replace energy sources
and solve the problem.
They're crucial solutions.
Because that's only putting less into the environment.
It's not actually drawing down the car.
Not at all.
It's not reversal at all.
It's just slowing down. It's kind of like we're going to a cliff. Everybody slow down. It's not reversal at all. Yeah. It's just slowing down.
It's kind of like we're going to a cliff.
So it looks, everybody slow down.
I say, oh, great.
We're slowing down.
Where are you going?
Over the cliff.
You're just going slower.
And that's sensual.
That's what we call chronic disease management, not reversal of chronic disease, which is
what I'm all about.
We call it Thelma and Louise solutions.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Which is like, it doesn't make any difference.
You're going the wrong way.
So even you, when you came into this, you thought, oh, it's the the energy sector that's where the solution oh my gosh yeah i mean when we went into it all of us was all five of us but we had
a hundred you know over 200 actually other people but we all had our bias we all knew kind of what
the top five or ten were we could have written them down, we were all wrong. And what's interesting about that is that we kind of knew we were wrong.
We didn't know what the top ones would be.
Around Paris, around three years ago, in the Conference of the Parties,
the Paris Agreement was created at that time in December 15.
And I realized then that you had 30,000 people going to Paris
who were climate experts, scientists, activists, politicians, government leaders, et cetera.
And not one single person could have written down the top five or 10 solutions, not in
order, to reverse and global warming.
Right.
And isn't that astonishing, anthropologically speaking, that here we are-
30,000 experts and they weren't looking at the right question.
The greatest problem civilization has ever faced,
and nobody knows what the solutions are.
And it occurred to me once I was in Seattle, and I was giving a talk,
and I noticed several times that to my right were these young lads, 14, 15 years old.
I thought it was great that they were there.
But when I said that, I turned to them and said,
how old are you?
And they said, oh, I'm 14 I'm 15 I said
can you name the top five NBA teams and they said sure boom boom boom boom I thought okay
and nobody in the world can name the five top solutions so we did map measure and model them
we had a methodology that forfeited and prohibited bias because there was 200 of us and so
our bias was fine you could park it but the method didn't allow it had to be peer-reviewed science
had to be multiple scientific reports on that solution had to be scaling had to be robust
economic data from the iea or the world bank fa, FAO, Bloomberg Energy, IPCC.
So the data in Drawdown that we amassed actually isn't our data.
We were actually holding a mirror up to the world saying,
this is what we're doing, this is what we know,
and this is what it costs, this is how much we would save.
And what we did do is continue to scale, scaling solutions.
They're already scaling until 2050 at a rigorous
but reasonable rate to see if, in fact, we could achieve that point in the future where greenhouse
gases peak and go down on a year-to-year basis. That's drawdown. That's what drawdown means.
And that, you think, if these solutions were implemented at scale, would be 2050?
Oh, well, we just scaled them,
and then we started to tweak them,
say, well, let's just accelerate this one a little more
and do this a little, you know, and so forth,
and we can do it 2045, we can do it 2040.
I mean, we can do it even sooner.
It's interesting, but what we did
is just took the scaling rates that were there
rather than sort of imposing or projecting upon them and when
we hit the total button because you can't model a solution by itself nothing exists by itself
and every solution interacts with dynamically with so many other sectors of society you know
i mean food being probably the most complex in that sense. And so two months before the book came out, April 17th,
we had laid it out, we designed it,
we had the plates, not the publisher,
and we waited the last moment to put in the numbers
because you're never done with a model.
Every single model is wrong.
And every so often, you can make a model that's useful.
We try to make one that is useful.
It's about the future.
Nobody knows the future.
So we waited right until the end because the model gets better and better and better.
And we hit the total button in February 2017, and we were shocked.
We were so surprised.
We're going, oh my gosh.
Oh, yeah.
It's like this.
When we get down to pre-industrial times or how how far back can we get in what sense
well if we implement all these hundred solutions well what i was what i say is that when we hit
the total button eight of the top 20 were food related yeah that's what i want to get back to
food related like who knew right exactly was a shock to me i mean i always knew that climate
change was an issue right you hear about factory farming of animals and methane and the release of carbon dioxide,
the way we farm.
You hear about the use of energy through the fertilizers we use, the pesticides we use.
We're all petrochemical, transporting food.
So it's one-fifth of all of our fossil fuels are used to fuel animal production and also
agricultural production.
So that's a lot, 20%.
But I didn't think it was such a big solution.
Like you said, it was a big aha for me, and I've been in this business for a while. So
I was sort of shocked to hear that. What you're saying is that the food sector isn't necessarily
the biggest contributor to climate change, although it is. It's the second biggest,
right, after energy? After transport.
Transportation, which is a lot of energy, right after energy after transport transportation which is
a lot of energy right cars cars yeah buses ships yeah so that that's pretty big yeah number two
yeah and and yet it's the number one solution right to climate change which is because it's
a twofer yeah it does two things one is when you change agricultural practices and move away from
CAFOs confined area feeding uh feeding operations for ruminants um and pigs um you not only reduce
and avoid emissions you stop putting greenhouse gases up there yeah but you can actually sequester
them right and you know in regenerative agriculture you food forests, and goes on and on.
Getting rid of waste.
Staple tropical tree crops, et cetera, et cetera.
So no other sector can really do that, is stop emitting and pull it back home.
Because all the carbon that's up there that's in question in the sense that it's greater
than the approximately 280 ppm that was there up and down during the holocene period
for the last 10 000 years uh that carbon the extra carbon which is now co2 at 409 ppm
we put it up there yeah and so really drawdown is about can we bring it back home yeah because
it actually is ancient sunlight that's what coal gas, gas, and oil is. It's ancient sunlight.
It's ancient photosynthesis.
And it's photosynthesis that can actually bring it back home
and store it in the soil for centuries and thousands of years.
So I want to break the conversation down a bit.
There's the big picture of what are the top sectors.
And I just want to briefly go over those so people put it in context.
Then I want to talk about the food sector in the sense of
how is our food system contributing to climate change?
What are those big things that are happening that we're doing in our food system that are making it worse?
And then let's go through the solutions.
I'm going to try to walk you through it.
But let's start with the big picture.
You know, what are the top sectors that we're focused on in this book drawdown that you're going to sort of explain that are big drivers of...
Well, food's number one.
And interestingly, transport is number two causally.
That is to say, in terms of emissions,
it was last in terms of a sector.
You say, well, how could that be?
So we don't need to all drive a Prius?
It doesn't matter.
Even if you go to EVs and electrics and plug-ins
and so forth, the fact is that we use other people's data.
So we use the projections of the World Bank and the IEA
as to what the economy would be like in the next 32 years.
We didn't use our projections.
We used these esteemed international organizations,
and they project that vehicles will double in number by 2050 yeah there'll be
2 billion vehicles instead of 1 billion i personally radically disagree with that but
that doesn't matter what i think that's bias i have an opinion well they're just thinking it's
the same it's business as usual but i see with avs uh autonomous vehicles that mobility is becoming
a service not an ownership yeah and it's twice three four times
more efficient that's true for everybody it saves money who wants to have a car in new york really
no it's true i mean i you know it's interesting i heard this guy who was the top guy at uber speak
and he said the future of cars is going to be completely different no one's going to own a car
people might have one for fun with yeah but they're not going to be what we normally do and
you it's like a car sharing environment where you just hit the button and an auto driving car shows up and takes you where you
want to go it's great you don't have to pay insurance you don't have to pay parking and
they're going to be smaller and gonna be electric and be quiet and they're going to have wi-fi and
everything else you need and they're just going to go scoot around yeah and roads are going to
get smaller and more public space is going to be made available that used to be taken up by parking
lots and and highways i mean it's going to be made available that used to be taken up by parking lots and highways.
I mean, it's going to be transformative to the cities,
but that isn't what we used.
We used the IEA and the World Bank data.
So what happens is you double the fleet,
there goes all your savings from changing from an internal combustion engine to electric.
And so that is why it's the last sector.
The second sector is electrical generation
which is wind and solar for sure
so that's renewable energy
third was land use
which actually kind of is kissing cousins
with food
but it's land use that's not productive of food
tropical forests, indigenous people's
land management, coastal wetlands
peatlands, etc
it's helping bring back natural lands to their original state,
which helps sequester carbon.
Yeah.
And the fourth sector was girls and women.
Yeah, which I thought was fascinating.
You said that educating women and family planning
were combined among the top solutions, or if not the number one.
So food in aggregate is...
Well, top solution, number one solution.
Yeah.
And food in aggregate, you said also is...
As a sector is number one.
As a sector, is it?
Yeah, yeah.
The girls and women is number four as a sector.
Yeah.
But if you combine girls' education
and family planning together,
which they really are
because when you educate a girl,
support her to get her education,
she becomes a woman on her terms more or less, depending on the situation, but a lot more than
when she's yanked out of school and married early or put to work to put her brother through school
when she's 11 or 12 years old. And that girl has an average of five plus children. We've known this
for 40 years. This is not new data. But if she's supported to get her
high school education, the equivalency of that, she has two plus children. And not only that,
I mean, she earns more, she has a better education, she puts more resources into those children,
have a better health outcome. This is the girl effect that's been talked about. And those
children repeat their mother's behavior, boy or girl't make any difference and so you have a very different vector in terms of growth of population and so it's a pathway to
family planning but it is the pathway of empowerment it's a very important verb i remember once at uc
santa cruz i gave a talk just said what i just said about girls education at the end of a talk a professor raised his hand
and said yeah but how do we control population i said lose the verb control yeah yeah lose it
yeah it's about empowerment yeah and the fact is when women are supported they make decisions for
themselves that are very very sensible decisions and it's doable i mean i i
once heard the queen of jordan queen rania say americans spend the amount they spend on pets in
this country could ever educate every kid on the planet which is a stunning statistic yeah yeah
you know absolutely so there's 98 million girls by the way who are not in school who should be
yeah i'm not just in any school either but a great school it's a school with latrines for men and 98 million girls, by the way, who are not in school, who should be. Yeah.
I mean, not just in any school either, but a great school.
A school with latrines for men and women, you know,
or boys and girls, not just one.
Yeah. And, I mean, there's so many reasons that they are not enfranchised.
Yeah.
And none of them are good.
Yeah.
So you've got food, land use, energy, transportation.
Buildings and cities.
Buildings and cities, women. Materials and transport. Yeah. Seven sectors. So those've got food, land use, energy, transportation. Buildings and cities. Buildings and cities, women.
Materials and transport. Yeah, seven sectors.
So those are all the sectors. And when you look at the food sector, it was stunning. You put some
statistics in your book. So it's not just a bunch of narrative stories. You've got hard data. And I
was struck by when you look at the food sector as a whole, that by 2050, if all these solutions were implemented in scale, you could
reduce 321.9 gigatons of carbon out of the environment.
It would cost $777 billion, but you would save $10 trillion.
Now that's a good investment.
That's almost more than 10 times your money.
Yeah.
And so these are all implementation issues and they're political will issues and they're
governmental issues and there's competing political and economic and business interests
that are opposing some of these ideas.
But when you look at that sector, it's just unbelievable to me how our food sector is such a big factor.
And it's something that we actually have a lot of control over because we're the consumers of food.
We are all consumers of food on this planet.
And the choices we make, what we put on our fork, has huge impact not only for your health, but for your communities, for the environment and clearly for climate and it's it's
staggering when you think about it in that way it really is and the thing is human health uh soil
agricultural uh health land health and the atmospheric health are in complete alignment
there's not like a divergence whatsoever yeah the healthier the soil the more
carbon it sequesters and holds healthier the soil the healthier the plants if you eat the plants
instead of eating the people or the things that are eating the plants you're a hell of a lot
healthier than that i mean so it's it's kind of a solution that is emblematic of almost every solution in the book which is and which is that
if we had no idea of the cause of extreme weather if there wasn't even climatology as a science and
we were clueless yeah as to the atmospheric um uh influence on global circulation models and warming
uh we would want to do 98 of these 100
solutions because they have so many cascading beneficial effects on society good for everything
economy on human health on the future on our children on water you just go right on down the
line yeah so it is not as though we have this problem so therefore we should divert you know
and put these things away and go do that to save our ass you know which
is kind of the kind of rhetoric that has been around climate it's just the other way around
it's like if we want to reverse global warming let's actually save each other yeah let's actually
take care of each other yeah and all that comprises human need in this world and that is how you
reverse global warming so it's a very different narrative than the narrative of alarm bells, you're ringing and you're in trouble. And, you know,
I mean, even Al Gore, and he's just an amazing spokesperson. And certainly, his book, early book
in 1992, was, you know, his and Bill McKibben's book were just absolutely, you know, extraordinary
in terms of sort of breaking the news, you know,
within the balance was Al Gore's book.
But to this day, he's still saying, you know, solar wind, solar wind,
and EVs and so forth.
I actually just saw him two weekends ago.
Oh, did you?
And I said this to him.
Yeah.
I said, you know, it seems like you don't really focus on the food sector
as a solution to climate change.
Actually, we are now starting to think about it, and we are working on this yeah and i was like wow this is
awesome now yeah it's that's climate reality thing but it's like it's because of drawdown yeah i mean
with all due respect yeah no it's it's because people are saying hey hey hey because you know
they have the book they're reading the book and going you know this doesn't comport with what
we're saying it's not again that wind solar evs aren't crucial solutions of course they are but i mean
the fact that that when you go out into the public sphere and basically say you know when solar evs
you go what do you i hope they do it whoever they are who's going to put the solar farms who's going
to put the wind turbines that are bigger the eiffel tower who's going to make you know the electric vehicles not going to be me right and so therefore
it's another form of disempowerment yeah right you don't tell you but your fork you got that
right you got your fork well it's interesting i just want to break down what you said because
there's so much in there first you know there is a lot of connection between climate change and
health and and there are many articles and major medical journals like The Lancet on climate
change and health, everything from climate refugees, the effects of temperature and so forth
on human health. But there's another level, which is the food we're growing and the way we're growing
the food is contributing to climate change, whether it's depleting the soils through basically
mining the soil, depleting our aquifers, really depleting our water supplies, which leads to
floods and droughts
and on and on, and growing food that actually makes us sick. So we're destroying the environment,
we're growing food that makes us sick. 60% of the food that we eat in this country is commodities,
basically soybean oil, processed white flour, and high fructose corn syrup turned into various
forms of junk food. And the people who consume
that are the sickest. And yet we subsidize that. So our own government policies are perpetuating
this cycle. And so we've got a very real and tangible way to think about this. And it's not
just some abstract idea. The quality of the food that we grow, how we grow it impacts our health
and is destroying our health and also destroying the environment.
Absolutely true. And one of the real surprising things,
and maybe not so surprising when you think about it,
but when we wrote the book,
I mean, I wrote the book with Katherine Wilkinson,
and because we had to author the book in such a way
that it was readable, accessible, and that you wanted to read it,
we had 66, 7 fellows from 21 countries who did sort of white papers,
theses on each solution, and 10,000-word thesis.
So we had this amazing amount of information to draw from.
But at the end of the day, you have to tell stories.
10,000 by 100, that's a lot of paper.
It was a lot to read.
But in regenerative agriculture, one of the things that was true
almost without exception was that truly great regenerative agriculture, one of the things that was true, almost without exception, was that truly great regenerative farmers
are very conservative.
I mean...
They're not hippies running around with Birkenstocks and ponytails.
To the contrary.
I bet you everyone we interviewed was a Trump voter.
Every one of them hit the wall.
In other words, the bank came and said hey we're taking
your machinery or you got another year or had two three years of crop failure due to weather
i mean every one of them hit the wall as a farmer and these are second third fourth fifth
sixth generation farmers you know it's family land and pride and so forth and it wasn't until then that they actually turned and looked at another way of doing it.
In fact, I remember one farmer saying,
saying, oh, yeah, well, this kid in a baseball cap and tennis shoes came out here
and told me I should be doing this and that.
He said, well, I'll tell you something.
I don't listen to kids in baseball caps and tennis shoes.
Okay.
And then almost without exception,
every single farmer we talked to was a conservative, Republican, hardcore.
Heartland.
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. And some of them actually even were disinterested in climate.
But they had hit the wall economically. And their soil had turned to dirt. Their profits had turned to losses.
The bank was coming to take away their machinery.
They're going to foreclose on their land.
These are multi-generational farms where there's pride, familial pride.
And that is when they turn to other methods.
And I remember one farmer saying, my wife said I should talk to this kid about regenerativeative agriculture and he came out here with a baseball cap and tennis shoes and he said I don't listen to kids in
baseball caps and tennis shoes and then you see he said and like I don't know how many years later
he said I called that kid back you know and his farm is completely transformed and he's making
so much money now that he's buying land next to him you
know that has actually been degraded um and and as as gabe brown said he said i got tired of writing
uh signing my name on the front of the checks he said now i signed on the back of the check
now it was it was it was a direct like uh realization that where they were going was a dead end economically agronomical you
know in terms of agronomy no question about it in terms of yield in terms of quality in terms of
and they talk about my vet bills down 90 95 percent yeah you know things like that animals
because the soil is healthy the crops are healthy the process is healthy the rotation is healthy
they don't till the soil they got rid of
the tractor that the bank wanted to get because they don't need it anymore they you know irrigation
oh my god yeah essentially you know we we actually don't farm we mine yeah and we mine this so we we
got lucky in this country because we had 60 million bison generating tens of feet of topsoil
peeing and pooping on it, digging around, moving around,
creating this massive fertile country.
It's hardgrass prairie.
And all that soil holds carbon.
All that soil holds water.
And what we did was we started mining the soil.
Now, I've heard that we may only have topsoil enough for another 30 years.
Yeah, 30 to 60 years.
And the water, the same thing.
Our Aguadala Aquifer, the massive aquifer in the middle of the country
that does most of the irrigation,
we're depleting it at 1.3 trillion gallons faster every year
than we're replenishing it with rainfall.
That's not sustainable.
I remember reading about Saudi Arabia.
They said, we're going to be self-sustaining agriculture,
and they have these fossil aquifers that don't replenish
because there's no rain.
And they just had agriculture for five years, and then they ran out of water.
And they have to buy their groceries elsewhere now.
But we're in that situation.
It's just taking a little longer.
And the beautiful thing about the solutions you're proposing is they're not solutions
that are costing us anything.
They're saving us money.
They're saving health.
They're saving soil.
They're saving water.
They're saving climate.
It's a win, win, win, win all the way around.
Yeah.
And again, when you think from a nutritional point of view, that type of industrial mining,
aka farming, is intensely demineralization and demineralizing. That is to say, and I mean, the mineral content in, say, apples or berries or wheat crops and so forth today are, in some cases, 30, 40, 50, 80% less than they were for the same crops 100 years ago.
Yeah.
And so.
And we're seeing health consequences of those.
Absolutely.
Whether low magnesium or low selenium or low zinc.
And the human body is so extraordinarily complex.
You can't correlate directly outcomes that you're seeing today in terms of children's allergies, autism, etc., etc.,
with a certain mineral or this demineralization or that food or that fake food or whatever.
But you step back and you look at the two you go our children aren't
getting nourished and the mothers aren't getting nourished and you know and it's not their fault
in a sense it's not like their intention to be that way it is the result of the type of food
industry we have and the type of agriculture that the food industry demands it be supported by. So let's dig a little bit into
the way in which the food system today actually is driving climate change. We talked a little bit
about things like transportation and the use of fossil fuels in agriculture. What are the kinds
of things we should be aware of in terms of the food we eat, and how would our choices just in
that make a difference? What's the equivalent of driving a prius in terms of eating well first of all i mean there's about
10 calories uh of energy that goes into every one calorie of food and so there's your quick
calculation and it used to be the other way around it used to be we got 10 calories out
for every calorie we put in so there's been uh 101 if you
go 10 times 10 it's 100 times difference 100x difference in the um energy required to produce
food and the energy being well it can be diesel uh it can be the manufacturing of the tractors
and equipment it can be the uh the fertilizers the mineral-based
fertilizers that can be the pesticides the herbicides uh which all by the way are made
from fossil fuels they're petrochemicals right and you're not even counting for example the
dead zones in the gulf and other parts of the world from the runoff of nitrous you know oxide
from the fertilizer nitrogen that goes into the miss Mississippi River and ends up in the Gulf of Mexico.
It's so soluble.
The dead zone the size of New Jersey.
It's so soluble.
Nitrogen in the soil doesn't exist in that way.
The plants have access to it,
but it's not soluble in the sense of first rainfall,
it's in the river.
And so when you add all that up,
I mean, now you also then have to go to processing,
which is instead of eating whole foods
or eating foods that are processed at home so to speak you know they're sent to where they're sent
to you know obviously the elevators are clean but then they're sent to companies that mass produce
you know what white flour hydrogenated oil sugar etc those are sent to companies that manufacture
into michael pollan's famous food like substances,
which is not really food at all. And those things are then packaged in plastic and so forth and sent
to distributors and those sent to stores and those are sent, you know, people drive to the store and
pick those up and take them home and either eat it, which is bad for them or waste it, which is
bad for everything. So I mean, this is the food system we have today yeah people don't realize we're
cutting down rainforests to grow corn and soy in ways we'll talk about that deplete the soil further
yeah contribute to climate change and then produce animals that contribute further to climate change
yes to the cathos it's like this horrible i wouldn't say it's a virtuous cycle it's a vicious
cycle that leads to more and more degradation of the environment
and degradation of our health.
I mean, one of our solutions is women smallholders.
And what does it have to do with climate?
70% of the food in the world is produced by smallholders,
which is defined by the FAO as a farm that is smaller than two hectares or five acres.
And 43, depends, but 43, 42% of that is women.
Okay.
Those are the small holders.
Okay.
What we know is that Big Ag, you know, the CAFOs, the GMO, soy corn, et cetera,
Big Ag produces 27% of the world's food and you would think listening to them that if we didn't support what they want to do they would all starve but if you actually
look at what they produce actually it's producing big pharma yeah because it's producing obesity
diabetes strokes heart disease it's good for business and drug companies and probably
dementia and alzheimer's too far because they're all interrelated, as you know,
because they're all inflammatory diseases.
And so women, okay, let's go back to women,
43% of 70, do the math and so forth,
they're producing 31% of the food.
They're producing more food than Big Ag.
Yeah.
And they're a solution in drawdown
because if we give women, which we don't,
the same tools, seeds, and support that men get, smallholders,
in other words, just equal it out, they outproduce men 10% to 20%.
And if we so do—
You go to those cultures, you see the men are just sitting, playing games,
smoking, and the women are out there working.
Working, but they're better farmers.
Yeah. games smoking and the women are out there working working but they're better farmers yeah and the that the fact is then that's 200 million uh acres or hectares actually of forest that we don't have
to cut down to produce food for a growing population we have all the land we need in uh
in order to produce enough food for the 10.7 or 9.8 billion whoever billion people can be here in
2050 but not using the agricultural practices that we use.
Well, that's the propaganda talking point.
How are we going to feed the world?
There's not going to be enough food for everybody.
We have a growing population.
Yes, we have problems with agriculture,
but it's inevitable.
We have to do it.
I know.
In fact, that is not necessarily true.
And there's been some interesting analyses of these.
One was-
Dramatically not true.
Prince Charles gave a talk at Georgetown years ago
and it turned into a little book called The Future of Food. And he talks about how do we
actually look at the truth of this? And is this an actual fact that we need these big agricultural
practices to save the world? And he says we don't. In fact, if we include the costs, the externalities
that are not embedded in the price of the food, in the price of the food, or he calls it accounting
for sustainability, it would be far more expensive to have industrial agriculture if you count
the cost on health, the cost on the soil, the cost on our water, depletion, the cost
on climate, the cost on the environment.
Those are costs which are not in a can of soda, right?
And maybe it should be $100 to have a can of soda or a grass-fed, I mean, beef compared
to a feedlot beef.
The feedlot beef should maybe be $1,000 a pound.
Yeah, industrial food is unaffordable.
Yeah, and we are subsidizing it in the taxpayer.
In fact, we subsidize it three times.
I've said this before.
We subsidize the food to be grown, wheat, corn, and soy commodities.
Then those get turned into processed food,
which then we subsidize for the poor to almost a trillion dollars every 10 years, about 85 billion a year for food stamps. And then we pay for Medicare and Medicaid
for their illnesses. So we're triple taxing the taxpayer for the way in which we grow,
produce, and eat food. And that's why it shouldn't be a surprise. People have said to us,
the title of the book is the most Comprehensive Plan Ever Proposed to Reverse Global Warming.
But actually, we said that because no one ever proposed a plan.
So we could say whatever we wanted.
It sounds rash, but actually it was to make a point.
And the second thing is, it's not our plan.
It wasn't like our little NGO in Sausalito had a plan, listened to our plan.
What we're saying is the world, in its in Sausalito had a plan listen to our plan what we're saying
is the world in its collective wisdom does have a plan yeah these are solutions that people are
actually doing yeah everywhere all over the world globally yeah and and so that's when you said it's
hopeful the most hopeful thing about it is that we think humanity is on the case when you read
the headlines you get a very different sense we don't have news we have
bad news the good news doesn't get covered right i mean are i mean it's kind of like the the the
fossil fuel team got spotted 72 points and it's a football game okay yeah but i mean you know
they're way ahead because it's a 200 year head start but having a 200 year head start doesn't
mean that the movement to reverse global warming isn't going faster and growing faster
than the movement to destroy the earth which is really what's happening yeah i mean you know
there's a bit of fatalism out there i i think you know fear and fatalism and denial and you know
just blah blah blah don't i want to hear about it because it's hard to believe that we can actually
do this people people so often think well the most important thing is the answer to the questions and
we actually i started this saying no what i want to do is question the answers yeah because i
thought the answers weren't working yeah because the answers were disempowering people disenfranchising
them and turning them off yeah and i said a minute, these aren't the right answers
to the questions everybody has, which is how do I take care of myself,
my family, my community, and in a way that is supportive of them
and everything else, which is all living life.
And that's really what all people want to do.
I really feel that's true with some exceptions who are very rich,
but most people on the ground want to do that.
They don't know how to do that, and they've been taught how not to do it and that's habitual right now
and so that's why drawdown really was about possibility was just saying we got the problem
got it exquisite two and a half billion data points the fifth assessment the sixth one's coming
out next i mean we could have a better problem saving you know but now can we just talk
about solutions because that doesn't repeating the problem does not solve the problem yeah you know
so let's talk about the solutions that you know the number three solution in the first food one
in the list was food waste oh yeah which people don't really think about but you know 30 to 40
percent of all the food we eat is thrown out ends up in landfills, which is stunning to me. And we
go, we don't have enough food to feed the world. Yeah, we do. It's in the garbage. And we don't
like to eat ugly food. You never see a crooked carrot. You never see a misshapen potato. You
never see broccoli with a little brown on it. I mean, it's amazing. We only want to eat perfect food. And
I went to this farmer's market around here in New York a few days ago, and there was this
beautiful display of apples. And they were all beautiful and clean and looked great and pristine.
And then I said, well, do you have any organic apples? And they said, oh, yeah, they're a little
bit over here. And they're these kind of ugly little apples with brown and specks and little
things on them and little warts. And I'm like, I bought those, and they're these kind of ugly little apples with brown and specks and little things on them and little warts and i'm like i bought those and they actually were really good
so you know we have this big food waste problem tell us um why food waste is such a problem one
of the wasted resources that happen when we throw out food or food gets wasted in our society well
again i mean when we spoke earlier about the
process of making food you have to go back even further which is you have a land and a tractor
and diesel so forth growing seeds actually growing seeds those seeds then are cleaned and shipped to
a farmer the farmer does the same thing which is he tills the soil she tills the till the soil then
you know they what they irrigate it that's cost with pumping water um they use herbicides
they use pesticides they use you know you know nitrogen fertilizers that are made from petroleum
so forth and then uh they'll harvest it you know with a you know harvester and then that harvest
they'll take that and they'll go to the grain elevator. It'll be cleaned.
It'll be shipped.
It'll be processed.
It'll be sent to a food manufacturer.
It'll be manufactured.
It'll be put in plastic or cardboard or something, usually plastic now.
And it'll be shipped to a distributor. It goes to a retailer, the retailer.
You now are driving up to the thing and you get this food and then you take it home so this tremendous amount of
human energy and effort and possible energy has gone into this food whatever it is so for you go
home and believe me 40 of you take home is wasted in america you think about it if if florida or
toyota made cars and 40 ended up in landfills out of the factory right 40 of your income 40
of anything oh my my God, yeah.
And for several reasons.
One is habitual, which is like,
and it happens in restaurants,
it happens everywhere,
which is I'm full, I pushed it away.
I did it today.
Somebody complimentarily gave us a bowl of harissa
and I don't eat harissa
and they just put it there and walked away
and it was a compliment.
It was from the chef and I'm going, I can't eat that. And. And they just put it there and walked away. And it was a compliment. It was from the chef.
And they're going, I can't eat that.
And so I felt really bad about it.
I mean, you know, just like, oh, you know,
and I didn't give them any time.
And so they wanted to say, oh, no,
we don't want your compliment.
But I mean.
Essentially, there's a bunch of climate activists
I know who like dumpster diving.
Oh, yeah.
Because they go in the back.
Yeah.
It's amazing.
These big food companies will actually
in grocery stores will actually police their garbage so that people don't steal their garbage
why don't you let them take the expired this and expired that because it's you know but then i mean
besides that there's restaurants where we push the plate away that's the polite thing to do right
you know i'm full thank you that's enough i didn't order that i ordered too much sorry i didn't think
it was and we give people too much you know yeah we give too much and then the other thing is we
put food in the refrigerator where it goes to die i mean that's really what refrigerators do mostly
that's my favorite thing is to go in the fridge i do this with my wife it shocks her all the time
i go and i hunt for all these different things what looks like there's nothing in the fridge
and i make these delicious meals out of all the almost bad food i call it bottom in the refrigerator soup yeah yeah i called yeah yeah it's like w-i-f whatever is in the fridge it was ever in there
yeah but but i mean so uh it's extraordinary you know then in processing on the farm itself
i mean when we get uh some romaine lettuce all the real green leaves are left there
they just cut the inner core yes which is not so green that's why it's true
when you go in your garden you wow this is what it looks like yeah big plant
yeah you just take in the little court yeah even broccoli like when I grow
broccoli my backyard I don't just did head I eat the Lee all the leaves you
can cook them there all things edible yeah edible. Yeah, it's all edible. It's amazing. I know, so we raise it.
But 40% of the United States,
which is 133 billion tons of food,
I mean, it's just ridiculous.
But in the rest of the world, in poor countries,
poor people don't waste food.
But, I mean, they can't afford to.
But on their farms, they can't get food to market.
It spoils.
They don't have cold chains.
They don't have the support to actually preserve and protect the food.
And so they lose a lot to insects.
They lose it to mice.
They lose it to vermin.
They lose it in transport.
And those are only the front-end inputs you're talking about.
But on the back-end inputs, when it goes into landfills, itments and it breaks down and it releases methane which is
far more powerful in terms of affecting climate carbon dioxide waste was the number three solution
but we didn't measure the methanogenesis from landfill food because we don't have the data
we know it's 28 to 34 times more powerful wow than co2 in terms of CO2 equivalents.
So you don't even include that in the calculation.
So maybe it's number one.
Oh, it's number one if you do that.
No question about it.
Unbelievable.
No question about that one.
So how do we fix that?
Well, again, we map, measure, and model.
If we don't have good data, we couldn't include it.
It doesn't mean the data aren't there or that the fact isn't there.
It is. It's certainly well known. But if we couldn't provide ample evidence
of it being measured by a third party
that was credible and recognized,
we couldn't include it in our models.
And this is an interesting point
because it's not just food waste.
The numbers you see and draw down
are all very conservative by intention.
So the learning rate and everything,
which is how fast did the price go down on, say, an EV or solar price
per kilowatt hour or whatever, we almost flatlined that.
I mean, very, very little projection of costs going down any further
on wind, solar, EVs.
That's not true.
We know that's not true.
We were very, very conservative on the science.
So, for example, if there was on a solar panel, it's not.
You know the outcome in terms of electrons from a solar panel.
It's measured, done.
But in land use, and particularly food, there's scientific studies all over the map, actually,
regen agriculture.
And so we always did a sort of a median sensitivity analysis and took the low median.
Yeah.
Always.
We never took the high.
And our purpose from the outset was to-
Over-promise and under-deliver.
Was to be conservative.
Over-deliver and under-promise.
Yeah.
Was to be conservative.
And the reason for that is that if we were going to get criticism the criticism we wanted is that it's better than that and that's
exactly so far what's happened the only criticism we've gotten on our numbers is people saying you
underestimated you undercounted it was it's better than that and every time that happens we go yeah
which is impressive and staggering how good the numbers are. Yeah. I mean, because if we had made one mistake on any of the numbers and somebody busted
us and said, oh, wow, you misplaced a decimal here or whatever, that would bring the whole
study, the whole model into disrepute.
Yeah.
And so we erred on the side of conservatives.
So everything you see there is actually better than that
in terms of the possibilities.
Yeah, and there are companies out there
that are innovating.
Imperfect Produce is a guy
who literally goes to the farm,
buys all the ugly food,
and sells it direct to consumer.
Watermelon Water is a beautiful,
hydrating, low-sugar electrolyte drink
that is made from misshapen
or blanched or ugly watermelons.
800 million pounds of these watermelons were getting thrown out,
and now they're made into this delicious drink.
So there's people who are innovating around the margins on this.
Yeah, there's a lot of startups in this space now.
Even in Silicon Valley, I don't mean Impossible Foods and the meat substitutes.
I mean in terms of very, very select niches in the food where there's waste
and actually transferring that waste. And it's amazing what we throw out, in the food where there's waste and actually transferring that
waste. And it's amazing what we throw out, you know, all the scraps and peels and everything.
I went to this amazing dinner in Blue Hill where it was during a food conference for the New York
Times and Dan Barber created this meal of scraps. It was all like all the garbage that you throw in
the garbage, like your potato peels and your carrot peels and all the ends of everything.
I mean, he made the most unbelievable gourmet meal.
And it's like, wait a minute, maybe we should be making soup stock.
Maybe we should be not throwing stuff away.
So on an individual level, there's a lot of things we actually can do.
Yeah, absolutely.
And then that sort of leads into the composting, which is another solution.
I think Denmark, for 25 years, has not allowed any food waste to be going into the garbage.
And you just can't do it.
And they have huge amounts of composting.
San Francisco recently did the same thing.
So if you have the right political will and the leader, you can actually start to make these changes.
Absolutely.
And I, by the way, I'm very proud.
In 1979, I lived in a house, and I think I had a bunch of friends when I went to Cornell.
And we won the composting prize.
And I've been composting ever since.
And it makes me feel good.
Great stuff to put in my garden. We got three
gallons of Cornell ice cream as our
prize, which we ate. That was before my dairy
free phase, but it was good.
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, you don't want to throw food away if
possible, but if it goes away, and that
can be the peelings or the scraps
that you actually don't eat absolutely they should never be go to
landfill they should be diverted and composted and if you don't put it back
to the land the land doesn't you know thrive and so but the number four
solution actually relates to number three too which is plant-rich diet which
is very very important there was change what you eat not just what you do with what you eat yeah or by
and plant-rich diet is the number four solution you know which is really and that's different than
a plant-based diet that's a plant-rich diet meaning it's what i always say with a pegan diet
is you want 60 to 70 percent of your plate as vegetables yeah it's well we're what we were
saying we weren't trying to say you
should be or your diet should be we weren't saying that what we are saying is that we should all be
eating the the um healthful amount of protein which is 50 55 grams per day and in those countries
where we're growing 90 100 grams per day we, we cut that back. And in those countries
where there's insufficient protein intake,
we increased it.
So that we have a world
where everybody's getting adequate protein content.
Then next, we're saying we should shift
a significant amount of that protein intake
to plants, from plants,
as opposed to CAFOs,
meat coming from confined area feeding operations.
And so those two together produce the number four solution.
So both for your health, it's great to eat more plants.
That's always a plant-rich diet.
But that sort of segues into the idea of regenerative ag.
And there's a bunch of solutions that are all sort of related.
It's um conservation agriculture
there's um managed grazing and there's regenerative agriculture and they're all kind of related
yeah solutions that have to do with rethinking how we raise animals rethinking how we
grow crops rethinking how how we actually um you know uh protect the land so how how can we then
sort of move from from idea of, you know,
reducing food waste that you need to do to everybody should be composting.
And you can, I mean, you can do that in the city.
There's now compost bins you can put in your kitchen.
And in fact, I live in New York City and have an apartment.
And in Union Square, you can bring your garbage and compost
and they will take it in Union Square.
Now, we should have a citywide composting program, but we don't.
And I feel horrible when I throw stuff in the garbage in New York, but that's the kind of stuff
we can innovate around. But what about this movement around regenerative agriculture? Because
people are saying, well, if you scale this up and you do this kind of grazing where you manage the
cows and livestock, you can actually begin to sequester carbon by restoring soils like the
buffalo did, that it could bring us down to pre-industrial levels. We don't know if that's true or not.
How did you sort of come up with these solutions and what are they? Can you kind of go through
them? What's regenerative ag? What's managed grazing? What's conservation agriculture? And
how do we combine those to really change the way we farm and grow and have animals? Because
animals are a part of this solution, right? Yeah, absolutely.
Regenerative agriculture basically can include animals,
and I think it does in most cases,
but is really about, first of all, never breaking the soil, no till.
That's the first thing, which is as soon as you break the soil,
you're releasing carbon.
And not only that, the soil microorganisms are dying in the face of
sunshine and heat the soil is alive and you're literally killing it when you run a till through
it yeah it's the most complex living organism there is by the way yeah and we still don't know
what's going on down there yeah and so that's number one number two is cover crops which is
complex cover crops you know not just clover or vetch, but I mean 10, 20, 25 seeds in the drill box.
So you're planting a real complex ecosystem that is interactive with itself,
that affixes different minerals, that affixes nitrogen, of course,
in terms of laguminous crops, cover crops.
And so you're bringing down nitrogen, you put it in the soil,
but also you're creating tilth, you're creating the roots
or breaking up the soil, and you're creating greater water retention
because there's more carbon in the soil, and carbon is life,
and so you're producing that.
And then using perennial crops or deep-rooted crops,
that is to say crops whose roots go down instead of
laterally there's called labial carbon which is the first six inches of the soil but actually when
you have deep-rooted crops um they um the carbon goes down about you know 40 percent of it goes
down into the roots and that carbon is in the form of sugar it's not like a carbon molecule
and that sugar feeds the microorganisms the rhizomes and
yeah and and um it's food and uh so the plant gives the food away those things in turn break
down the minerals that is to say the rocks and the salt sand or whatever in there breaks it down
and makes those minerals bioavailable to the plant, which makes the plant healthier and grow.
And both together then create soil that retains, you know,
from 3 to 10 to 20 times more water.
And so it gives the...
Let's not say only floods and droughts because...
Right, you can't absorb the water.
You can't absorb it and can't keep it.
But on the other hand, if a farmer has that kind of soil,
you do have a drought,
you actually have a crop that's still going to make it as opposed to being perishing right away yeah because you have no water in the
soil so you create a water bank which prevents flooding at the same time you create a water bank
which protects crop yeah and the water is a huge issue i mean i remember being in a talk uh by
jim kim who was the head of the World Bank,
and he said, the wars of the future
will be fought over water, not oil.
And when you think about it,
5% of the Earth's surface is fresh water.
1% is in Russia under Putin,
so who knows what's going to happen to that in Lake Baikal.
Now it's 4% for the rest of us,
and we're depleting it at rapid rates
that are unsustainable.
And I mean, imagine if we run out of water.
But look at the good side, though,
which is that global warming produces more water in the air.
Uh-huh.
And that's from the ocean.
You get a hurricane.
No.
So if you have an agricultural system that is much more retentive of water.
I mean, I remember a farmer we talked to,
and he pointed to some ground over there.
He said, you know, we would get half an inch of rain, and it would pool. of water i mean i remember a farmer we talked to and he pointed to some ground over there he said
you know we would get half an inch of rain it would pool you would pool right on that uh that
land he said we had 13 inches you know yeah and we didn't pull at all and so so we can actually
do something which is very interesting not talked about so much which is create an agricultural system that brings the water back yeah okay and
when you rehydrate the soil you cool the earth yeah just like we perspire right and we cool the
body well this earth is the same so when it's dry which is it's getting very dry right then it gets hotter if it's full of water you know as
then it respires yeah and it cools it off well the other part of this whole soil story is that
the soil if it's not holding the carbon then it's releasing in the environment and i think of the
soil as sort of the rainforest of the prairies it goes in the environment and it goes into the oceans
and then you get the death of a phytoplankton which produced 50 percent of our oxygen so not
only we're going to overheat and die from the heat we're going to actually suffocate because
there's not enough oxygen for us to breathe yeah and i and i'm you're kind of going to
where everybody else is going which is all the things are going to go wrong yeah and like the fix but
the fix is fixing the soil that's the whole thing the fix is but also it's fixing our relationship
to the oceans which is the oceans can be farmed in such a way that transforms uh right now the
co2 is going as carbonic acid and acid and acidifying the oceans and then killing off phytoplankton and other things.
And so we can start to look at the oceans as places that can be farmed.
Kelp is the number one sequestration organism in the planet is kelp.
Amazing.
Not bamboo, it's kelp.
I just had a kelp salad the other night.
It's great.
Yeah, well, when Drake went up the coast of California
to Oregon, Washington.
The Explorer.
British Columbia, Sir Francis Drake.
I mean, they described the kelp beds off Cascadia,
which is what I call that whole area,
but Cascadia as the eighth wonder of the world.
It went out 40, 50 miles.
It was just sea otters everywhere.
You could almost pick the fish out with your hands.
Talk about a rainforest.
It was an oceanic rainforest.
And what happens, that's gone today.
So bringing back help and bringing back oceanic life, actually,
is actually not so difficult.
It takes intention.
It takes design.
But there are now companies working on marine permaculture,
which is like, in a sense, regenerative ocean farming,
where you not only bring back phytoplankton, zooplankton, algae, kelp,
but you bring back feeder fish forest fish you bring
back you know whale sharks i mean you the whole trophy cascade is brought back and you can bring
it back within weeks uh if you bring up the thermocline if you bring up the cold waters
that are now being suppressed by these heat blankets caused by global warming amazing and
if you produce like these marine permaculture has self-actuating
pumps you know they're just actuated by the rise and fall of the water tubes down to the thermocline
you bring up the cold water you have frames there recycle pt whatever so forth and the ocean
regenerates itself and sequesters more carbon per acre per hectare than any other single source in
the world regenerative farming in the oceans. Exactly right. Exactly right. And we can do that.
So I want to get into a little bit of a sticky issue, controversial, which is the whole idea
of meat.
Because on one hand, I think we all agree that CAFO farming, because of how the food
is grown, that depletes the soil and water, is industrial farming.
And the CAFOs themselves, where the cows release methane and contribute
in all the runoff. That's just a big mess. No one thinks that's good. But when you start to
think about using animals to restore soils, to restore water and to dry down carbon,
should we be eating more meat or should we be eating the right kinds of meat that are grown
in that way? And what are the arguments for of meat that are grown in that way and what are the
arguments for and against that because some people say oh yeah if we do regenerative agriculture at
scale we can have lots of meat it's not going to be as much as we have with CAFOs but it still
will be able to supply the world with meat but it'll actually reverse climate change well regenerative
agriculture does and doesn't have animals I mean I think the healthiest regen farms I've seen do
use pulse grazing that is to say they use ruminants and and
pulse grazing is just what the buffalo did you talked about earlier which is basically
they graze and move graze and move graze and move graze and move and they don't stay in the same
place and destroy manage grazing and furthermore they have perennial grasses perennial grasses or
deep-rooted grasses and when they're bitten off so to speak speak, by a cow, goat, or sheep or whatever,
it stimulates root production.
And so it comes back stronger.
And it stimulates carbon going deeper into the soil.
So it is very much regenerative when you have that.
If you just crop it, crop it, crop it, crop it, crop it,
then that plant just gives up and dies.
And you go to annuals and you plant annuals.
And annuals don't do a darn
thing for the soil frankly so um but so this idea of me not me what we know is that all grasslands
in the world co-evolved with animals they didn't just happen by having grass there and blowing in
the wind and plant replanting its seeds they co-evolved the great soils and prairies
and the serengeti and all those grasslands were even even the sub-arctic circle yeah you know
which is uh was heavily populated by ruminants and wolves and buffaloes and yakushin horses and
the woolly mammoth and you know elk and and and things that could survive minus 100 degrees fahrenheit in the winter
and they could survive and they ate grasses you know and and they embrace and produced a very
healthy ecosystem they were exterminated 12 000 years ago so all the lands that we have co-evolved
with animals you take the animals off the land there goes the land goodbye see ya so lots that happen how we went from 60 million
bison in the 1800s to almost none and then the dust bowl in the 30s yeah absolutely i mean the
buffalo common was extraordinary in its fertility and productivity but so the idea of eat me 90
that's a personal decision what we do know is that in order to regenerate grasslands,
which hold more carbon than the forests of the world.
Yeah.
Wait, wait, say that again.
Which hold more carbon than forests. So the grasslands are more powerful than the rainforests in holding carbon.
Something we never talk about.
No, we don't talk about that.
And so those grasslands cannot persist or be healthy or actually increase their
sequestration rate of carbon unless they have animals and not just animals sitting on them but
animals graze manage grazing and so forth pulse grazing there's lots of words for it the one thing
i would say is that you know somebody has gone on a TED Talk, said we can reverse global warming if we do that.
That's just scientific puppy cock.
Yeah.
Sorry.
The Savory Institute.
Yeah, exactly.
And Alan's a fantastic guy and brilliant man
and has done amazing things
and really popularizing the idea
of this land-animal relationship.
But we have to be careful that there is no silver bullet
because there really isn't.
It's a system that caused it.
Yeah.
It's a system that cures it.
And so we don't want to burden a system by saying, oh, if we do that, then this is going to happen.
We're going to save our, you know, it's not true.
But what I hear you saying is that animals, as part of the cycle, are a critical component.
I agree with Alan Seabury.
No question about it.
And that the quality of the meat's better, and it promotes better health, and it has less, obviously...
Oh, it's very different meat.
Very different. The quality has higher omega-3 fats,
more minerals, more antioxidants. Absolutely.
But it doesn't mean that being vegan is right
or wrong. It doesn't mean eating meat is right or wrong.
That's a moral choice. It may not be. It's moral,
and for some people, you know, I mean,
we talked about this once before, you know,
people in the tropics have very long intestines.
People in the north and south, you know, who who live in cold inclement climates have been meat eaters for
generations have very short intestines people with short intestines grow vegan and actually
kind of starve people with long intestines who grow up to all meat or you know like a keto diet
don't do well at all and so this idea that one diet fits all just isn't true you know yeah yeah i mean the best
indicator is you i would say the smartest doctor in the room is your own body yes and if you listen
whether you're eating meat or not i mean people know yeah and i think that's key but i think the
argument that you know we should never eat meat because it's bad for the climate isn't the true
story it may produce in industrially is bad for the climate. Yes. And that meat should be assiduously avoided.
No question about it.
And the other type might actually help.
Yep.
Yeah.
So there's a lot of other interesting solutions part of this,
which I thought were kind of fascinating.
Things we don't really think about like how we grow rice around the world.
Rice, other than wheat, is one of the biggest staples.
And yet the way we grow rice around the world contributes to methane in the environment
and these big rice patties, which look so beautiful.
You take your pictures when you're on vacation,
but then you're like, whoa, maybe actually it's not so good.
So tell us about the rice cultivation story.
I will, and then I'll tell you about
how we are a learning organization, Drawdown.
The research is not done.
It's never done.
It's ongoing.
There's two methods to grow rice that differ from
conventional rice growing, whether it's organic or non-organic, which is you take the water
off the patty and you return it to an aerobic environment, because once you have water on
it, it's anaerobic. In an anaerobic environment, same as a food landfill, then you get methane production. And so rice
cultivation is a major source of methane in the world as a food crop. And so there are two methods
in order to reduce that by about 50%, which have a major impact on methane emissions. And those
methods both increase yield and decrease the cost for the farmer.
So it's kind of a win-win-win.
Okay, having said that, last month a paper came out that said,
hold on, hold on, that's all true,
but when you take the water off the paddy,
you get increased emissions of nitrous oxide. Oh, that's not so good.
Right, so now we're looking at that and maybe it
wasn't the best solution well it is a solution it's in there but i just want to say we're all
learning we're all learning yeah and and that science didn't exist when we published and when
we did our research and we'll look at the science it doesn't mean it's true or not true it may be
that science was done on california patties that are heavily uh
fertilized with nitrogen fertilizers and therefore it's bioavailable and submitting or does that mean
the farms in bali the traditional methods where you have fish in the patties and you know i don't
know what it means i'm just saying is that uh we're still learning. Well, that's what we intend to be, yes.
So one of the things that I find very fascinating
is the whole area of how to restore farms
that have been sort of depleted.
Farmland restoration.
And we think, oh, it's the industrial agriculturists
that have done this.
But often, we humans are often pretty destructive.
And even if you're a smallholder farm, you might be using practices that just are not so great uh and i i read this book called
sapiens which made me a little disillusioned with the human race because i think i had this idyllic
view that we're these great people and we had this indigenous cultures that lived in harmony
with the land but the truth is we were raping and pillaging and destroying and we'd go through and
ruin someplace then we'd go find some other place now we're running a place that's the problem
and and i found fascinating in your book the the story of how we can take some of these farms that
have been depleted that are now wastelands and actually restore them using more innovative
practices and it's going to be regenerative agri but this can be done with small farmers all around
the world who do produce most of the world's food i mean that was a shocking stat that you know if 27 of the food is produced by big ag that means
that you know 63 percent is 73 i'm not so good with math i'm a doctor you know 73 percent is uh
is produced by everybody else which are the smallholder farms right and and that goes to
education because i think smallholders would
be the first to want to farm in such a way that was less costly more productive and that is what
regen does and furthermore there's a billion acres of land that's been abandoned and abandoned
because it's not productive it doesn't work it's dried out it's been destroyed you know and so
what we need though is a way for people financially to make that transition.
Because that first two years is a money loser.
And so that's why that land has been abandoned, because you can't make any money on it.
So why farm it?
It doesn't matter what the crop is, whether it's sheep or goats or whether it's corn or maize or soya.
It just doesn't matter.
It just doesn't work financially as far so um we need a way to support people to make that transition
once they make that transition they could even pay back those loans or some of those but so you
gotta have that bridge we hadn't in the bridge and we have to recognize it and that's true for
american farmers there's american farmers who are hitting the wall and they can't afford to make the
transition to regenerative agriculture so there are some ngos and they can't afford to make the transition to regenerative agriculture
so there are some ngos and people starting funds that will actually work with farmers to make that
transition but it needs to be financed you know the same way that many people need help on health
care costs right they need help they can't do it themselves if they get good health care provider
then maybe they'll start being preventive in terms of,
as opposed to palliative. But nevertheless, that's where we are on farmlands around the world.
Now, you have been doing this for a long time, and you published the book in early 2017.
And it's not just a book, it's a movement. And you've been then called around the world to talk
to leaders about how to start to implement this.
What have you seen since you published the book and are speaking about this all around the world that's given you hope?
What are the kinds of solutions and things that are beginning to happen that have been catalyzed by this?
Well, there's several things that I set out in the beginning as sort of principles or ethos, you know, ethics,
I mean, how we go about things.
One was we wanted to create the conditions for self-organization around drawdown
as opposed to be as...
Top-down, you want to be decentralized.
Well, yeah, because top-down is too slow
and doesn't work anyway.
And because you say you're right, you know,
that means someone else doesn't know
and they're not right. I mean, that is not a good way to communicate yeah in the world so number one
we don't say we're right we don't say that we say we think it's approximately right
and here's the data and here's our sources and help us so number two we're deeply collaborative
there was a small we of 220 some odd people, scientific advisors, and then research fellows who are
scholars, scientists, PhDs, postdocs, et cetera, working together really to create the data points.
And then a small group, me and Catherine Sorber actually wrote the final copy, but that came from
a copy that was written by over 60 people around the world. So we're deeply collaborative, and so we are a small we talking to the bigger we,
reflecting back to the bigger we.
This is what we know.
We know this, not we, our little NGO in South Salina, but we, the big we.
So it's important for people to understand that this is about our collective understanding of wisdom
as opposed to a small group knows this and you didn't.
So that's number three uh is language is that we use language that is not divisive that isn't uh
sports and war metaphors so we don't take combat and fight and fight you know and win and and you
know it's like or i was just walking up Central Park West last night
and said curb your dog
and people say
curb climate change
and I'm going
that's what they do
in New York with dogs
you know
it's like
you can't curb it
you just go sit on the curb
yeah
and the thing is
like the idea
that climate change
is something
we can curb
fight
combat
you know
crusade
I mean
all those metaphors
are so stupid
because climate change
is a miracle.
And it's the last thing in the world you'd want to fight.
The problem is warming.
That's the problem.
And warming is caused by us.
And warming changes the circulation models.
All climate models are about how,
you can't model climate.
All you model is the circulation of these rivers of air
in the north and southern hemispheres and those
rivers of air you know bring weather bring rain or they move and they bring drought and so we know
from the predictions that were made that as it gets warmer the jet stream gets more wonky and so
you get more rain or you get hydrological weirdness which is no rain so you get drought and flood
instead of the more conventional rains that were there every year so we are very careful not to
other than the right language well not to make it other because making it other is the problem
that is not the solution to think of climate as a problem to teach our children the climate is a
disaster when they should be learning how to fall in love with it and it's a miracle yeah is you not the solution to think of climate as a problem to teach our children the climate is a disaster
when they should be learning how to fall in love with it and it's a miracle yeah is you know and
so one of the things that's come out of drawdown is that it's taught from fourth grade all the way
to graduate school it's amazing the same curriculum that actually empower people yeah i'm going to
make institute this weekend to talk to teachers from fourth grade to graduate school
and historically
black colleges
indigenous people
you know
and because
they're using it
as a template
to understand
what they can do
in their communities
in their social
political boundaries
in their states
and cities
in their schools
and to teach children
so teachers are
paying attention
but also governments
are paying attention
governments are paying attention
oh yeah we have
and so we have
drawdown cities we have drawdown so we have drawdown cities.
We have drawdown countries.
We have drawdown Australia, drawdown Switzerland, drawdown Nova Scotia,
drawdown Toronto, drawdown...
And we didn't create any of these.
We didn't create them.
We were in touch with them, and we talked to them, and we loved them,
and we see what we can do to help them.
But what you're seeing is drawdown organizations, startups spontaneously around the world
because they have the toolkit.
They have a toolkit.
And what you're also seeing is the model
being coded from our little kludgy way
into Python, into the cloud,
and then be downloaded all over the world.
So people can model India or Victoria,
if it's in Australia, or Victoria if it's in Australia or Toronto if it's in Canada or Botswana if it's a country. So they can look and benchmark and see which of those
solutions are applicable, what do they cost there, where is the source, where do you get it, how do
you do it, here are the resources, here you want more, this is education, this is activation. So
people around the world, they want those tools.
So we're definitely in the process of doing that,
working with Penn State and MIT and Georgia Tech and University of Washington,
Imperial College, ANU in Canberra, Terry in Hyderabad,
23 universities around the world.
And we cut it off because we'll work with them
and then it will be available to any university or any institution in the world.
So the model then becomes applicable to that place.
You know,
whether it's a physical boundary or social political boundary,
whatever it is,
those people decide.
And that means anybody then can go into the model and then change it,
work with it,
play with it.
So great.
I mean,
you've now taken us from being in a hopeless
place to a hopeful place.
I think we can do it. From a disempowered
place to an empowered place,
both on a local level
and a community level, on a social
political level, and even
a global level with governments.
For those people listening, they're probably wondering,
okay, this is all great, but in this
set of solutions,
what are those things,
what are those actions that I can take that are going to make the biggest difference?
So interesting.
Is it composting?
Oh, so interesting, that question.
Who is it?
What is it?
Oh, because it talks, you know,
that's the question I get, you know.
Yeah.
Okay, now there's a question to answer.
Maybe tonight there'll be one.
Is this a change in your light bulb,
like Al Gore said, or what is it?
No, no, what can I do?
And I'll say, we just met, you know I do? And I'll say, we just met.
Like you're raising your hand, we just met.
I have no idea what you can do or should do.
Only you know that.
And I guess what I'm saying,
if I tell you what you should do, you should run.
Okay, because that's bullshit.
And the thing you should do is what lights you up.
The thing you should do is where you get turned on.
The thing you should do is the thing...
Plant a garden or whatever.
Whatever it is.
And you can be sure if you're not doing something else,
somebody else is.
I can assure you because we know that factually.
But the thing about...
But it's nice to know the multiple choice of,
oh, these are the top 10 or 20 things.
They are, right?
They're ranked by... It's nice to know the multiple choice of, oh, these are the top 10 or 20 things. They are rated.
They're ranked by.
Well, I mean, I'm not going to be planting a multi-level forest in my backyard, but I might compost my food or I might eat more plants or I might put a solar panel. So what should I say to you?
See, I wouldn't say what you should do.
You know, you see the ranking.
You have the book.
You know, like, wow, wow, wow, wow.
And so right away, you can waste you know number three that's for easy right i mean because some of these solutions are things
that require you know a different level of action that someone as an individual can do but a lot of
these are actually things you can do and make a huge difference and i always say the most important
thing every day is three times a day is decide what you put on your fork because it affects you
i agree it affects your health number one planet the climate it affects the political environment your social
environment i mean this is what my next book is going to be and we talked about this i call it
the food fix as opposed to the food fight which some people want me to call it because it's not
about what the fight is about what you can do yeah i couldn't agree more and that is the number one
solution because you do it three times a day at least and or hopefully not too many times but
i mean but you buy or consume food and and so that is the number one solution because it's a
cascading solution it's not just not wasting food yeah it's what did you eat where did it come from
who made it i mean it goes way way out and so forth so food is definitely number one it's eight
of the top 20 but what we avoid doing uh is is uh call to action telling
people what to do and the interesting thing about it is that people say i was very hopeful but i'll
can tell you steps to reverse climate change in three weeks exactly my next book the the thing is
that when we started it i had no and therefore we had no idea whether drawdown was even possible so we didn't go into it to prove
it was possible we didn't go in to demonstrate that it's possible we went in and did the math
yeah and people say it was a very hopeful book i said no it's not it's a reality project yeah
we are about reality numbers it's very sober it's very interesting and so forth and so people say
well it makes me very hopeful i said great, great. But that means reality makes you hopeful. Yeah.
There's no rhetoric. No. It's amazing. There's no rhetoric in there. There's no politics. But
there's stories. The first solar panel went up in New York City in 1884. Yeah. Who knew? And it was
just two years after Edison put up the first coal fire. I mean, it's happening. I mean, you know,
I was in the Middle East recently and I met with one of the top royals and guys who had the first coal-fired wind. I mean, it's happening. I mean, you know, I was in the Middle East recently and I met with one of the top royals
and guys who runs the country.
And he's like, yeah, we decided to invest in solar.
And it was, you know, whatever it was,
20 cents a kilowatt or whatever.
It was like not really very cost-effective.
He says, now it's one cent.
And now we desalinate all our water.
I said, why don't you use oil?
He says, this is cheaper.
I'm like, wow wow that's unbelievable yeah
yeah what's happening yeah and again it's like i think also it absolutely every individual should
understand what their relationship is to the earth to food to systems to you know energy everything
at the same time there's been this over emphasis on what you can do you you you you
and it's really the only way we're going to solve this is be a we yeah and to come together and
collaborate and that's what we tried to model is to be a collaborative it's about listening it's
about sharing it's about not being right it's about permeability it's about you know um i would say rigor you know in terms of let's make sure this is right this
works but it's not about you know if you don't do this then something bad is going to happen
because that actually again puts people into a kind of a guilt thing well you're also making a
series on this is a netflix or something is going, it looks like Nat Geo now has supplanted Netflix
and they're doing a two-hour special
on Drawdown and
probably
sponsored by AT&T. It's interesting
because AT&T said if
they sponsor it, every ad will not
be about getting a new phone, but actually
what they are doing with respect to
energy. In other words, everything
will be about their
initiatives internal to the company yeah to reduce their carbon footprint it's incredible i mean it's
it's all happening in the catalytic catalytic aspect of your book in the environment i think
can't be understated i encourage everybody to go get a copy of drawdown go to drawdown.org
check out what's on there i mean you almost don't need to buy the book. There's so much information on the website.
I was like, whoa.
He's giving away the store, but it's good.
Absolutely, yeah.
We gave it away.
It's pretty amazing, and it's beautifully presented.
I think it became a bestseller, though,
because the book is something people give to others.
They give it as a message,
and it's in 12 languages as of the end of this year.
From Finnish to Arabic to Vietnamese to French, Dutch, and Italian, German, all those sort of things.
And it's just spreading around the world.
And we didn't have anybody out trying to sell the book.
People want that book for the same reason, which is they want a roadmap and the tools with which they, as communities, as schools, schools as individuals as agency type
individuals but some individuals are city managers some people are CEOs some
people are and so it depends where you are what you can what you can do so one
last question and maybe we've already answered this which is if you were king
for a day and you could change anything and maybe you've already done the work
to do what you're doing what would it be that
would have the most impact the most impact would be to get uh to change the get corporations out
of the media out of the media yeah and not politics well that is politics okay you mean
citizens united or do you mean no not commercial that's marketing numbers that the
media is actually true media now right now you have sinclair buying every small station there
is in the country and you have you know that we don't get a free press is what you're asking for
a free a free true press nobody will know about this but there was something called the fairness
doctrine oh yeah which was repealed under Reagan, which,
because the government owns the airwaves, they license the airwaves, and they changed the
regulations to remove the Fairness Doctrine, which stated that all the reporting and all the
information had to be fairly presented according to the facts. And that led to the rise of all
these polarizing media on there where you know you don't
even know what you're reading you watch fox news and you watch cnn you feel like you're in two
different planets exactly and that's corporations yeah both corporations both making money but
they're making money basically off the um they're neuroscientists there and they know how to actually
make people addicted to that form of
news doesn't matter what's left or right yeah and uh and the thing is we're not you cannot have a
democracy unless you're fully informed yeah it doesn't matter who you vote for unless the polity
is informed in a fair and objective way then they cannot make decisions i have a lot of faith in
human beings making good decisions if they have good information.
But without good information.
And so I feel like the thing that's holding us back
is that, however, at the same time,
the thing that's going to push us away
is that climate change is not a linear system.
I mean, the rate at which CO2 is going up is very linear.
It's almost a straight line.
But climate change is a complex adaptive system
that changes in a nonlinear way.
And you have regime changes
where like this year, the jet stream broke.
It not only went down deep, deep south
and baked everybody,
but it actually broke.
It's never broken like that before.
How can a jet stream break?
It's like a river stopping.
And is that a regime change? Is that permanent? Or are we going to go back to can a jet stream break it's like a river stopping and uh is that a regime change is that permanent or we're gonna go back to the old gesture even next year i mean so i think you're
gonna have like you know mexico beach you know and you had the the gulf hurricane michael i mean i
think you're gonna have extreme events you know where uh regions by region by region by region
too often the poor unfortunately but, but basically get it.
And they didn't get the science, they didn't get the news, they didn't get the information,
they may not have the literacy that required to make a decision or even economic wherewithal to
do so. But they're going to have the understanding that everybody who was a denier everybody who was basically fobbing them
off and so forth was dead to rights wrong yeah and and that the true climate movement is about
caring it's about yeah it's about heart it's about going back to community it starts here and goes
out and that really the people who really want to care for all of life,
not just humanity, but all living creatures,
and bacteria, and microbes, and mycelium, and so forth,
are the ones who are at the forefront of this movement.
And that's really what it's about.
It's an extraordinary thing.
It's a beautiful sentiment that we're all in this together.
We really are.
We're all in this one organism, and we're all connected,
whether we like it or not. Well, that's why we avoid all in this together. We really are. And so that's one organism and we're all connected. Yeah. Whether we like it or not.
Well, that's why we try to,
we avoid all polarizing language.
We avoid all things.
I mean, the Me Too movement
is about making,
about we made women other.
Right.
Okay.
Fighting climate change
is the same mind
that made women others
making the climate other.
You know?
It's us.
It's all connected
and it's us. and what would you do to
yourself oh thank you paul thank you paul what an amazing conversation i hope you all enjoyed it
you've been listening to the doctor's pharmacy with dr mark hyman and paul hawkin and if you
like this podcast please leave us a review and a comment share with your friends and family on
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Pharmacy. Thanks so much, Mark.