[SustainableTompkins] Inspiring Nobel Prize speech by Al Gore

Maiken Winter mw267 at cornell.edu
Mon Dec 10 10:32:52 PST 2007


Dear all,
I found his speech very deeply moving and worth everybody's time to read
and reflect upon.  "We have a purpose." It is good to be reminded of the
urgency of this purpose, and the need of each one of us to keep going in
spite of whatever personal difficulties we might face by doing so. All our
work is absolutely urgently needed and the best investment of our time,
even if it might sometimes not look like it.
Maiken

SPEECH BY AL GORE ON THE ACCEPTANCE  OF THE NOBEL PEACE PRIZE
DECEMBER 10, 2007
OSLO, NORWAY

Your Majesties, Your Royal Highnesses, Honorable members of the Norwegian
Nobel Committee, Excellencies, Ladies and gentlemen.

I have a purpose here today.  It is a purpose I have tried to serve for
many years.  I have prayed that God would show me a way to accomplish it.

Sometimes, without warning, the future knocks on our door with a precious
and painful vision of what might be.  One hundred and nineteen years ago,
a wealthy inventor read his own obituary, mistakenly published years
before his death.  Wrongly believing the inventor had just died, a
newspaper printed a harsh judgment of his life's work, unfairly labeling
him "The Merchant of Death" because of his invention - dynamite.  Shaken
by this condemnation, the inventor made a fateful choice to serve the
cause of peace.

Seven years later, Alfred Nobel created this prize and the others that
bear his name.

	Seven years ago tomorrow, I read my own political obituary in a judgment
that seemed to me harsh and mistaken – if not premature.  But that
unwelcome verdict also brought a precious if painful gift:  an
opportunity to search for fresh new ways to serve my purpose.

Unexpectedly, that quest has brought me here.  Even though I fear my words
cannot match this moment, I pray what I am feeling in my heart will be
communicated clearly enough that those who hear me will say, "We must
act."

The distinguished scientists with whom it is the greatest honor of my life
to share this award have laid before us a choice between two different
futures - a choice that to my ears echoes the words of an ancient prophet:
 "Life or death, blessings or curses.  Therefore, choose life, that both
thou and thy seed may live."

We, the human species, are confronting a planetary emergency - a threat to
the survival of our civilization that is gathering ominous and destructive
potential even as we gather here.  But there is hopeful news as well:  we
have the ability to solve this crisis and avoid the worst - though not all
- of its consequences,  if we act boldly, decisively and quickly.

However, despite a growing number of honorable exceptions, too many of the
world's leaders are still best described in the words Winston Churchill
applied to those who ignored Adolf Hitler's threat:  "They go on in
strange paradox, decided only to be undecided, resolved to be irresolute,
adamant for drift, solid for fluidity, all powerful to be impotent."

So today, we dumped another 70 million tons of global-warming pollution
into the thin shell of atmosphere surrounding our planet, as if it were an
open sewer.  And tomorrow, we will dump a slightly larger amount, with the
cumulative concentrations now trapping more and more heat from the sun.

As a result, the earth has a fever.  And the fever is rising.  The experts
have told us it is not a passing affliction that will heal by itself.  We
asked for a second opinion.  And a third.  And a fourth.  And the
consistent conclusion, restated with increasing alarm, is that something
basic is wrong.

We are what is wrong, and we must make it right.

Last September 21, as the Northern Hemisphere tilted away from the sun,
scientists reported with unprecedented distress that the North Polar ice
cap is “falling off a cliff.”  One study estimated that it could be
completely gone during summer in less than 22 years.  Another new study,
to be presented by U.S. Navy researchers later this week, warns it could
happen in as little as 7 years.

Seven years from now.

In the last few months, it has been harder and harder to misinterpret the
signs that our world is spinning out of kilter. Major cities in North and
South America, Asia and Australia are nearly out of water due to massive
droughts and melting glaciers.  Desperate farmers are losing their
livelihoods.  Peoples in the frozen Arctic and on low-lying Pacific
islands are planning evacuations of places they have long called home. 
Unprecedented wildfires have forced a half million people from their homes
in one country and caused a national emergency that almost brought down
the government in another.  Climate refugees have migrated into areas
already inhabited by people with different cultures, religions, and
traditions, increasing the potential for conflict.  Stronger storms in the
Pacific and Atlantic have threatened whole cities.   Millions have been
displaced by massive flooding in South Asia, Mexico, and 18 countries in
Africa.  As temperature extremes have increased, tens of
 thousands have lost their lives.  We are recklessly burning and clearing
our forests and driving more and more species into extinction. The very
web of life on which we depend is being ripped and frayed.

We never intended to cause all this destruction, just as Alfred Nobel
never intended that dynamite be used for waging war. He had hoped his
invention would promote human progress.  We shared that same worthy goal
when we began burning massive quantities of coal, then oil and methane.

Even in Nobel's time, there were a few warnings of the likely
consequences.  One of the very first winners of the Prize in chemistry
worried that, "We are evaporating our coal mines into the air."  After
performing 10,000 equations by hand, Svante Arrhenius calculated that the
earth’s average temperature would increase by many degrees if we doubled
the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.

Seventy years later, my teacher, Roger Revelle,  and his colleague,  Dave
Keeling, began to precisely document the increasing CO2 levels day by day.

But unlike most other forms of pollution, CO2 is invisible, tasteless, and
odorless -- which has helped keep the truth about what it is doing to our
climate out of sight and out of mind.  Moreover, the catastrophe now
threatening us is unprecedented – and we often confuse the unprecedented
with the improbable.

We also find it hard to imagine making the massive changes that are now
necessary to solve the crisis.  And when large truths are genuinely
inconvenient, whole societies can, at least for a time, ignore them.  Yet
as George Orwell reminds us:  "Sooner or later a false belief bumps up
against solid reality, usually on a battlefield."

In the years since this prize was first awarded, the entire relationship
between humankind and the earth has been radically transformed. And still,
we have remained largely oblivious to the impact of our cumulative
actions.

Indeed, without realizing it, we have begun to wage war on the earth
itself.  Now, we and the earth's climate are locked in a relationship
familiar to war planners:  "Mutually assured destruction."

More than two decades ago, scientists calculated that nuclear war could
throw so much debris and smoke into the air that it would block
life-giving sunlight from our atmosphere, causing a "nuclear winter."
Their eloquent warnings here in Oslo helped galvanize the world's resolve
to halt the nuclear arms race.

Now science is warning us that if we do not quickly reduce the global
warming pollution that is trapping so much of the heat our planet normally
radiates back out of the atmosphere, we are in danger of creating a
permanent "carbon summer."

As the American poet Robert Frost wrote,  "Some say the world will end in
fire; some say in ice."  Either, he notes, "would suffice."

But neither need be our fate.  It is time to make peace with the planet.

We must quickly mobilize our civilization with the urgency and resolve
that has previously been seen only when nations mobilized for war.  These
prior struggles for survival were won when leaders found words at the 11th
hour that released a mighty surge of courage, hope and readiness to
sacrifice for a protracted and mortal challenge.

These were not comforting and misleading assurances that the threat was
not real or imminent; that it would affect others but not ourselves; that
ordinary life might be lived even in the presence of extraordinary threat;
that Providence could be trusted to do for us what we would not do for
ourselves.

No, these were calls to come to the defense of the common future.  They
were calls upon the courage, generosity and strength of entire peoples,
citizens of every class and condition who were ready to stand against the
threat once asked to do so.  Our enemies in those times calculated that
free people would not rise to the challenge; they were, of course,
catastrophically wrong.

Now comes the threat of climate crisis - a threat that is real, rising,
imminent, and universal.  Once again, it is the 11th hour.  The penalties
for ignoring this challenge are immense and growing, and at some near
point would be unsustainable and unrecoverable.  For now we still have the
power to choose our fate, and the remaining question is only this:  Have
we the will to act vigorously and in time, or will we remain imprisoned by
a dangerous illusion?

Mahatma Gandhi awakened the largest democracy on earth and forged a shared
resolve with what he called "Satyagraha" - or "truth force."

In every land, the truth - once known - has the power to set us free.

Truth also has the power to unite us and bridge the distance between "me"
and "we," creating the basis for common effort and shared responsibility.

There is an African proverb that says, "If you want to go quickly, go
alone.  If you want to go far, go together."  We need to go far, quickly.

We must abandon the conceit that individual, isolated, private actions are
the answer. They can and do help. But they will not take us far enough
without collective action. At the same time, we must ensure that in
mobilizing globally, we do not invite the establishment of ideological
conformity and a new lock-step "ism."

That means adopting principles, values, laws, and treaties that release
creativity and initiative at every level of society in multifold responses
originating concurrently and spontaneously.

This new consciousness requires expanding the possibilities inherent in
all humanity.  The innovators who will devise a new way to harness the
sun's energy for pennies or invent an engine that's carbon negative may
live in Lagos or Mumbai or Montevideo.   We must ensure that entrepreneurs
and inventors everywhere on the globe have the chance to change the world.

When we unite for a moral purpose that is manifestly good and true, the
spiritual energy unleashed can transform us.  The generation that defeated
fascism throughout the world in the 1940s found, in rising to meet their
awesome challenge, that they had gained the moral authority and long-term
vision to launch the Marshall Plan, the United Nations, and a new level of
global cooperation and foresight that unified Europe and facilitated the
emergence of democracy and prosperity in Germany, Japan, Italy and much of
the world.   One of their visionary leaders said, "It is time we steered
by the stars and not by the lights of every passing ship."

In the last year of that war, you gave the Peace Prize to a man from my
hometown of 2000 people, Carthage, Tennessee.  Cordell Hull was described
by Franklin Roosevelt as the "Father of the United Nations."  He was an
inspiration and hero to my own father, who followed Hull in the Congress
and the U.S. Senate and in his commitment to world peace and global
cooperation.

My parents spoke often of Hull, always in tones of reverence and
admiration.  Eight weeks ago, when you announced this prize, the deepest
emotion I felt was when I saw the headline in my hometown paper that
simply noted I had won the same prize that Cordell Hull had won.  In that
moment, I knew what my father and mother would have felt were they alive.

Just as Hull's generation found moral authority in rising to solve the
world crisis caused by fascism, so too can we find our greatest
opportunity in rising to solve the climate crisis.  In the Kanji
characters used in both Chinese and Japanese, "crisis" is written with two
symbols, the first meaning "danger," the second "opportunity."  By facing
and removing the danger of the climate crisis, we have the opportunity to
gain the moral authority and vision to vastly increase our own capacity to
solve other crises that have been too long ignored.

We must understand the connections between the climate crisis and the
afflictions of poverty, hunger, HIV-Aids and other pandemics.  As these
problems are linked, so too must be their solutions.  We must begin by
making the common rescue of the global environment the central organizing
principle of the world community.

Fifteen years ago, I made that case at the "Earth Summit" in Rio de
Janeiro. Ten years ago, I presented it in Kyoto.  This week, I will urge
the delegates in Bali to adopt a bold mandate for a treaty that
establishes a universal global cap on emissions and uses the market in
emissions trading to efficiently allocate resources to the most effective
opportunities for speedy reductions.

This treaty should be ratified and brought into effect everywhere in the
world by the beginning of 2010 - two years sooner than presently
contemplated.  The pace of our response must be accelerated to match the
accelerating pace of the crisis itself.

Heads of state should meet early next year to review what was accomplished
in Bali and take personal responsibility for addressing this crisis.  It
is not unreasonable to ask, given the gravity of our circumstances, that
these heads of state meet every three months until the treaty is
completed.

We also need a moratorium on the construction of any new generating
facility that burns coal without the capacity to safely trap and store
carbon dioxide.

And most important of all, we need to put a price on carbon -- with a CO2
tax that is then rebated back to the people, progressively, according to
the laws of each nation, in ways that shift the burden of taxation from
employment to pollution.  This is by far the most effective and simplest
way to accelerate solutions to this crisis.

The world needs an alliance  - especially of those nations that weigh
heaviest in the scales where earth is in the balance.  I salute Europe and
Japan for the steps they've taken in recent years to meet the challenge,
and the new government in Australia, which has made solving the climate
crisis its first priority.

But the outcome will be decisively influenced by two nations that are now
failing to do enough: the United States and China. While India is also
growing fast in importance, it should be absolutely clear that it is the
two largest CO2 emitters - most of all, my own country -- that will need
to make the boldest moves, or stand accountable before history for their
failure to act.

Both countries should stop using the other's behavior as an excuse for
stalemate and instead develop an agenda for mutual survival in a shared
global environment.

These are the last few years of decision, but they can be the first years
of a bright and hopeful future if we do what we must.  No one should
believe a solution will be found without effort, without cost, without
change.  Let us acknowledge that if we wish to redeem squandered time and
speak again with moral authority, then these are the hard truths:

The way ahead is difficult.  The outer boundary of what we currently
believe is feasible is still far short of what we actually must do. 
Moreover, between here and there, across the unknown, falls the shadow.

That is just another way of saying that we have to expand the boundaries
of what is possible.  In the words of the Spanish poet, Antonio Machado, 
"Pathwalker, there is no path. You must make the path as you walk."

We are standing at the most fateful fork in that path.  So I want to end
as I began, with a vision of two futures - each a palpable possibility -
and with a prayer that we will see with vivid clarity the necessity of
choosing between those two futures, and the urgency of making the right
choice now.

The great Norwegian playwright, Henrik Ibsen, wrote,  "One of these days,
the younger generation will come knocking at my door."

The future is knocking at our door right now. Make no mistake, the next
generation will ask us one of two questions.  Either they will ask: "What
were you thinking; why didn't you act?"

Or they will ask instead:  "How did you find the moral courage to rise and
successfully resolve a crisis that so many said was impossible to solve?"

We have everything we need to get started, save perhaps political will,
but political will is a renewable resource.

So let us renew it, and say together: "We have a purpose. We are many. 
For this purpose we will rise, and we will act."

Al Gore


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