David Titley: How the military fights climate change
David Titley: Wie das Militär den Klimawandel bekämpft
Scientist and retired Navy officer Dr. David Titley asks a big question: Could the US military play a role in combating climate change? Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
about climate and change,
über den Klimawandel erzählen,
Menschen und nicht über Eisbären.
and not polar bears.
that we lived in in the mid-2000s.
for the Navy's weather and ocean service.
des Wetter- und Ozeandienstes der Marine.
called Stennis Space Center
namens Waveland, Mississippi.
called Waveland, Mississippi,
wie man sieht, gerüstet gegen Sturmfluten.
it's up against a storm surge.
storm surge does
was als Nächstes passiert.
this is, like, right after Katrina --
unser Haus -- direkt nach Katrina --,
up there in the railway tracks,
entweder in den Eisenbahnschienen
in the Gulf of Mexico,
wir unser Haus wirklich.
we really, we lost our house.
the luckiest people on the Gulf Coast.
glücklichsten Menschen der Golfküste.
is probably pretty important there.
ist hier ziemlich wichtig.
you know, what happened here?
because as you've heard,
da ja bekannt ist,
to do something like this.
in der Lage, so etwas zu tun.
and kind of look at this.
zurücktreten und das Gesamte betrachten.
climate's really complicated,
it's all about the water.
Wesentlichen um das Wasser.
there down on the lower part?
Punkte in der unteren Bildhälfte?
that's all the water in the world.
das gesamte Wasser der Erde.
those are the fresh water.
sind das Frischwasser.
that as the climate changes,
is changing very fundamentally.
auf fundamentale Weise.
wrong place, wrong time.
am falschen Ort zur falschen Zeit.
it's liquid where it should be frozen;
und flüssig, wo es gefroren sein sollte,
of the ocean itself is changing.
die Chemie der Ozeane an sich.
from a security or a military part
oder Militärperspektive verursacht,
environment that we're working in,
unserer Tätigkeiten,
which sounds kind of fancy
was sich verrückt anhört
by that in a second.
a couple examples here.
etwas allgemein Bekanntem,
and humanitarian catastrophe
und humanitäre Krise,
was one of the causes
erwiesenermaßen eine der Gründe
in things like wheat and barley.
Bereichen wie Getreide und Gerste sein.
in Assad's office that said,
Assads Büro, der sagte:
we're in the eastern Mediterranean,
östlichen Mittelmeerraum,
maybe not the best idea."
vielleicht nicht die beste Idee.“
nach gesagt wurde:
and handsome man. We'll get right on it."
schöner Mann. Wir setzen uns daran.“
glauben Sie es oder nicht,
self-sufficient in food,
ihren Grundwasserspeichern
of their surface water.
klimaunabhängige Gründe,
many nonclimate issues
by that lower blue line there,
come into the cities.
in die Städte.
heat wave and drought --
Hitzewelle und Dürre --
dem Klimawandel zusammenhängt --
to the changing climate --
of a million farmers
They had nothing.
Sie hatten nichts.
he's taking care of his people,
nicht um seine Leute.
we have just this huge issue here
wir Sicherheitsexperten
a risk to instability.
it makes bad places worse.
Es macht schlimme Ort schlimmer.
or about 1,200 miles, north of Oslo,
weiter nördlich von Oslo,
strategischsten Inseln,
you've never heard of.
to get out and go into warmer waters.
um in wärmere Gewässer zu kommen.
every single polar orbiting satellite
einzelnen Satelliten im Polarorbit.
Position für das Weltall.
the sea ice around here,
gewaltig zusammengeschmolzen,
Aktivität enorm steigert.
Parliamentary Assembly
Versammlung der NATO
on Svalbard next month.
Monat dort treffen wird.
very unhappy about that.
a flashpoint in the Arctic,
in der Arktis suchen,
if not centuries,
a typhoon or strategic changes,
oder strategische Veränderungen,
unser Verteidigungsminster,
he understands that as well,
is that climate is a risk.
das Klima als Bedrohung.
responses to Congress,
Antwort an den Kongress:
Risiken zu begegnen.“
that understands this.
in other navies and other militaries
in anderen Marinen und Militärs
about the climate risk.
auf die Klimarisiken.
to speak for a half-a-day seminar
2014 auf einem Halbtagsseminar
diese Sache vorzustellen.
is alleged to have said,
but he's alleged to have said
be counted upon to do the right thing
immer das das Richtige tun,
ausgeschöpft haben.
wir sind noch im Begriff,
we're still in the process
Meinung nach durchsetzen.
your recycling out on Wednesday,
Mittwoch die gelbe Tonne rauszustellen,
with every business leader,
every government leader,
jedem Regierungsoberhaupt
to stabilize the climate?"
Klima zu stabilisieren?“
Menschen genügend kümmern,
won't lead on this issue --
solchen Dingen häufig drücken --
the ice doesn't care.
darum schert sich das Eis nicht.
wer im Weißen Haus sitzt.
who's in the White House.
Ihren Kongress kontrolliert.
controls your congress.
Ihr Parlament kontrolliert.
controls your parliament.
ABOUT THE SPEAKER
David Titley - MeteorologistScientist and retired Navy officer Dr. David Titley asks a big question: Could the US military play a role in combating climate change?
Why you should listen
David Titley is a Professor of Practice in Meteorology and a Professor of International Affairs at the Pennsylvania State University. He is the founding director of Penn State’s Center for Solutions to Weather and Climate Risk. He served as a naval officer for 32 years and rose to the rank of Rear Admiral. Titley’s career included duties as commander of the Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command; oceanographer and navigator of the Navy; and deputy assistant chief of naval operations for information dominance. He also served as senior military assistant for the director, Office of Net Assessment in the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
While serving in the Pentagon, Titley initiated and led the U.S. Navy’s Task Force on Climate Change. After retiring from the Navy, Titley served as the Deputy Undersecretary of Commerce for Operations, the chief operating officer position at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Titley serves on numerous advisory boards and National Academies of Science committees, including the CNA Military Advisory Board, the Center for Climate and Security and the Science and Security Board of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists. Titley is a fellow of the American Meteorological Society. He was awarded an honorary doctorate from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks.
David Titley | Speaker | TED.com