Instructional Video12:52
TED Talks

TED: A provocative way to finance the fight against climate change | Michael Metcalfe

12th - Higher Ed
Will we do whatever it takes to fight climate change? Back in 2008, following the global financial crisis, governments across the world adopted a "whatever it takes" commitment to monetary recovery, issuing $250 billion worth of...
Instructional Video18:30
TED Talks

Greening the ghetto - Majora Carter

12th - Higher Ed
* Viewer discretion advised. This video includes discussion of mature topics and may be inappropriate for some audiences. In an emotionally charged talk, MacArthur-winning activist Majora Carter details her fight for environmental...
Instructional Video17:02
TED Talks

TED: 100 solutions to reverse global warming | Chad Frischmann

12th - Higher Ed
What if we took out more greenhouse gases than we put into the atmosphere? This hypothetical scenario, known as "drawdown," is our only hope of averting climate disaster, says strategist Chad Frischmann. In a forward-thinking talk, he...
Instructional Video14:14
TED Talks

TED: An economic case for protecting the planet | Naoko Ishii

12th - Higher Ed
We all share one planet -- we breathe the same air, drink the same water and depend on the same oceans, forests and biodiversity. economist Naoko Ishii is on a mission to protect these shared resources, known as the global commons, that...
Instructional Video13:29
TED Talks

Sonaar Luthra: We need to track the world's water like we track the weather

12th - Higher Ed
We need a global weather service for water, says entrepreneur and TED Fellow Sonaar Luthra. In a talk about environmental accountability, Luthra shows how we could forecast water shortages and risks with a global data collection effort...
Instructional Video20:34
TED Talks

TED: How megacities are changing the map of the world | Parag Khanna

12th - Higher Ed
I want you to reimagine how life is organized on earth, says global strategist Parag Khanna. As our expanding cities grow ever more connected through transportation, energy and communications networks, we evolve from geography to what he...
Instructional Video12:38
TED Talks

TED: What you need to know about carbon removal | Gabrielle Walker

12th - Higher Ed
What do woolly pigs have to do with climate change? They're part of a vital, ingenious and evolving strategy to take carbon out of the sky and store it safely -- in trees, soils, the ocean, buildings, rocks and deep underground. Every...
Instructional Video11:05
TED Talks

How carbon capture networks could help curb climate change | Bas Sudmeijer

12th - Higher Ed
What if we could build a global waste disposal service for carbon? In this forward-thinking talk, carbon capture advisor Bas Sudmeijer proposes building CO2 networks: partnerships between cities around the world that would share the cost...
Instructional Video5:35
TED Talks

Romain Lacombe: A personal air-quality tracker that lets you know what you're breathing

12th - Higher Ed
How often do you think about the air you're breathing? Probably not enough, says entrepreneur and TED Fellow Romain Lacombe. He introduces Flow: a personal air-quality tracker that fits in your hand and monitors pollution levels in real...
Instructional Video12:38
TED Talks

The people who caused the climate crisis aren't the ones who will fix it | Angela Mahecha Adrar

12th - Higher Ed
Corporations and big business have wrecked the environment, but disadvantaged communities living in "sacrifice zones" -- urban areas heavily polluted and poisoned by industry -- are paying the price, says climate justice leader Angela...
Instructional Video14:00
TED Talks

Tim Flannery: Can seaweed help curb global warming?

12th - Higher Ed
It's time for planetary-scale interventions to combat climate change -- and environmentalist Tim Flannery thinks seaweed can help. In a bold talk, he shares the epic carbon-capturing potential of seaweed, explaining how oceangoing...
Instructional Video15:54
TED Talks

Marla Spivak: Why bees are disappearing

12th - Higher Ed
Honeybees have thrived for 50 million years, each colony 40 to 50,000 individuals coordinated in amazing harmony. So why, seven years ago, did colonies start dying en masse? Marla Spivak reveals four reasons which are interacting with...
Instructional Video2:36
MinuteEarth

An Unexpected Consequence of COVID

12th - Higher Ed
The global pandemic led to a drop in outdoor air pollution, but it also led to an increase in indoor air pollution - and our exposure to it.
Instructional Video3:45
SciShow

Ecstasy in Rivers and The World's First Geological Map

12th - Higher Ed
SciShow News shares new research into how music festivals can lead to high levels of drugs in your drinking water, and celebrates the man who created the world’s first geological map.
Instructional Video15:52
TED Talks

TED: A small country with big ideas to get rid of fossil fuels | Monica Araya

12th - Higher Ed
How do we build a society without fossil fuels? using her native Costa Rica as an example of positive action on environmental protection and renewables, climate advocate Monica Araya outlines a bold vision for a world committed to clean...
Instructional Video18:54
TED Talks

TED: This country isn't just carbon neutral -- it's carbon negative | Tshering Tobgay

12th - Higher Ed
Deep in the Himalayas, on the border between China and India, lies the Kingdom of Bhutan, which has pledged to remain carbon neutral for all time. In this illuminating talk, Bhutan's Prime Minister Tshering Tobgay shares his country's...
Instructional Video4:21
SciShow

This is Weird but...COVID Decreased Lightning Strikes

12th - Higher Ed
The COVID-19 pandemic hasn’t just affected us. It’s also affected the weather. And this turns out to be a lucky natural experiment to help us understand how much we influence the world around us.
Instructional Video18:16
TED Talks

TED: How we wrecked the ocean | Jeremy Jackson

12th - Higher Ed
In this bracing talk, coral reef ecologist Jeremy Jackson lays out the shocking state of the ocean today: overfished, overheated, polluted, with indicators that things will get much worse. Astonishing photos and stats make the case.
Instructional Video6:02
TED Talks

TED: A young inventor's plan to recycle Styrofoam | Ashton Cofer

12th - Higher Ed
From packing peanuts to disposable coffee cups, each year the uS alone produces some two billion pounds of Styrofoam -- none of which can be recycled. Frustrated by this waste of resources and landfill space, Ashton Cofer and his science...
Instructional Video5:17
TED Talks

Federica Bianco: How we use astrophysics to study earthbound problems

12th - Higher Ed
To study a system as complex as the entire universe, astrophysicists need to be experts at extracting simple solutions from large data sets. What else could they do with this expertise? In an interdisciplinary talk, TED Fellow and...
Instructional Video17:45
TED Talks

Tyrone Hayes + Penelope Jagessar Chaffer: The toxic baby

12th - Higher Ed
Filmmaker Penelope Jagessar Chaffer was curious about the chemicals she was exposed to while pregnant: Could they affect her unborn child? So she asked scientist Tyrone Hayes to brief her on one he studied closely: atrazine, a herbicide...
Instructional Video11:40
TED Talks

TED: Why is China appointing judges to combat climate change? | James K. Thornton

12th - Higher Ed
Why is China appointing thousands of judges to environmental courts and training prosecutors to bring cases to them, even if it means suing the government? Eco-lawyer James Thornton takes us inside the country's growing effort to use the...
Instructional Video9:32
TED Talks

TED: Climate justice can't happen without racial justice | David Lammy

12th - Higher Ed
Why has there been so little mention of saving Black lives from the climate emergency? For too long, racial justice efforts have been distinguished from climate justice work, says David Lammy, Member of Parliament for Tottenham, England....
Instructional Video16:24
TED Talks

Michael Porter: The case for letting business solve social problems

12th - Higher Ed
Why do we turn to nonprofits, NGOs and governments to solve society's biggest problems? Michael Porter admits he's biased, as a business school professor, but he wants you to hear his case for letting business try to solve massive...