• 3 days ago
“Images of dystopia start creeping into my dreams.”

Here’s what Barack Obama had to say about the climate crisis during his speech at the COP26 summit ...

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00:00There are times where I feel discouraged.
00:05There are times where the future seems somewhat bleak.
00:08There are times where I am doubtful that humanity can get its act together before it's too late.
00:15And then images of dystopia start creeping into my dreams.
00:21We are nowhere near where we need to be yet.
00:32For starters, despite the progress that Paris represented,
00:36most countries have failed to meet the action plans that they set six years ago.
00:41And the consequences of not moving fast enough are becoming more apparent all the time.
00:46Most nations have failed to be as ambitious as they need to be.
00:52The escalation, the ratcheting up of ambition that we anticipated in Paris six years ago
00:57has not been uniformly realized.
01:02I have to confess, it was particularly discouraging to see the leaders of two of the world's largest emitters,
01:08China and Russia, decline to even attend the proceedings.
01:13Our international plans so far reflect what appears to be a dangerous lack of urgency,
01:19a willingness to maintain the status quo on the part of those governments.
01:24And that's a shame.
01:25We need advanced economies like the U.S. and Europe leading on this issue.
01:32But you know the facts.
01:33We also need China and India leading on this issue.
01:37We need Russia leading on this issue,
01:39we need Indonesia and South Africa and Brazil leading on this issue.
01:43We can't afford anybody on the sidelines.
01:57Back in the United States, of course, some of our progress stalled
02:01when my successor decided to unilaterally pull out of the Paris agreement in his first year in office.
02:08I wasn't real happy about that.
02:14And yet, the determination of our state and local governments,
02:20along with the regulations and investment that my administration had already put in place,
02:26allowed our country to keep moving forward, despite hostility from the White House.
02:31In the U.S. alone, more than three million people now work in clean energy-related jobs.
02:36That is more than the number of people currently employed by the entire fossil fuel industry.
02:41So despite four years of active hostility toward climate science,
02:46coming from the very top of our federal government,
02:50the American people managed to still meet our original commitment under the Paris agreement.
03:01And not only that, but the rest of the world stayed in the deal.
03:06And now, with President Biden and his administration rejoining the agreement,
03:12the U.S. government is once again engaged and prepared to take a leadership role.
03:17As I'm sure is true for all of you out there,
03:21those of you who are steeped in this work, who are far more expert than me,
03:27there are times where I feel discouraged.
03:31There are times where the future seems somewhat bleak.
03:38There are times where I am doubtful that humanity can get its act together before it's too late.
03:45And then images of dystopia start creeping into my dreams.
03:51And yet, whenever I feel such despondency,
03:56I remind myself that cynicism is the recourse of cowards.
04:02We can't afford hopelessness.
04:07Instead, we are going to have to muster the will and the passion and the activism of citizens
04:13pushing governments, companies and everyone else to meet this challenge.

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