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The Gray Area with Sean Illing

Elizabeth Kolbert: We have locked in centuries of climate change

The Gray Area with Sean Illing

Vox Media Podcast Network

Politics, News, News Commentary, Philosophy, Society & Culture

4.5 • 11.1K Ratings

🗓️ 10 January 2017

⏱️ 82 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Elizabeth Kolbert covers climate change for the New Yorker. She's the Pulitzer prize-winning author of The Sixth Extinction. And she recently wrote a paragraph I can't stop thinking about. "The problem with global warming—and the reason it continues to resist illustration, even as the streets flood and the forests die and the mussels rot on the shores—is that experience is an inadequate guide to what’s going on. The climate operates on a time delay. When carbon dioxide is added to the atmosphere, it takes decades—in a technical sense, millennia—for the earth to equilibrate. This summer’s fish kill was a product of warming that had become inevitable twenty or thirty years ago, and the warming that’s being locked in today won’t be fully felt until today’s toddlers reach middle age. In effect, we are living in the climate of the past, but already we’ve determined the climate’s future."Kolbert lives, to an unusual degree, in the planet's future. She travels to the places around the world where the climate of tomorrow is visible today. She has watched glaciers melting, and seen species dying. And she is able to convey both the science and the cost with a rare lucidity. Talking with Kolbert left me with an unnerving thought. We look back on past eras in human history and judge them morally failed. We think of the Spanish Inquisition or the Mongol hordes and believe ourselves civilized, rational, moral in a way our ancestors weren't. But if the science is right, and we do unto our descendants what the data says we are doing to them, we will be judged monsters. And it will be all the worse because we knew what we were doing and we knew how to stop, but we decided it was easier to disbelieve the science or ignore the consequences. Kolbert and I talk about the consequences, but also about what would be necessary to stabilize the climate and back off the mass extinction event that is currently underway. We discuss geoengineering, political will, the environmental cost of meat, and what individuals can and can't do. We talk about Trump's cabinet, about whether technological innovation will save us, and if pricing carbon is enough. We talk about whether hope remains a realistic emotion when it comes to our environmental future.Books:-Edward Abbe’s “Desert Solitaire”-Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring”-David G. Haskell’s “The Forest Unseen”-Bill McKibben’s “The End of Nature” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Support for the show comes from Into the Mix, a Ben and Jerry's podcast about joy and

0:06.1

justice produced with Vox Creative.

0:09.6

Thousands of Afghans fled their homes when the Taliban took control of Afghanistan in 2021.

0:15.2

The UK government pledged to take in 20,000 of them as refugees, but in the first year

0:20.2

only 22 Afghans had been approved for asylum in the UK.

0:24.6

So what happened?

0:26.4

And what does this mean for the tens of thousands of people left behind?

0:30.4

Hear that story on the latest episode of Into the Mix.

0:35.9

On July 21st, the cinematic experience of the summer arrives.

0:40.6

Written indirected by Christopher Nolan, Oppenheimer is an epic thriller about the man

0:44.6

who risked destroying the world for the one chance to save it.

0:48.4

Featuring an incredible cast including Robert Downey Jr. Emily Bluntz, Oscar winner's

0:52.4

Matt Damon and Kenneth Brandock, Oscar nominee Florence Pugh, and Killing Murphy at

0:57.2

J. Robert Oppenheimer.

0:59.4

In theaters to live 21st, rated R.

1:04.6

The following podcast contains explicit language.

1:10.6

Hello, welcome to The Ezra Client Show.

1:20.9

I am Ezra Client and my guest this week is Elizabeth Colbert.

1:25.0

This is probably one of the most important interviews I have done for this show.

1:30.2

I've been wanting to do an episode about climate change and environmental change for a long

1:35.0

time.

1:36.0

These are issues that I feel passionately about, but I'm often scared off from due to

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