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Naomi Klein: Addicted To Risk

First Posted: 12/08/11 10:57 AM ET Updated: 12/08/11 11:21 AM ET

In this special year-end collaboration, TED and The Huffington Post are excited to count down 18 great ideas of 2011, featuring the full TEDTalk with original blog posts that we think will shape 2012. Watch, engage and share these groundbreaking ideas as they are unveiled one-by-one, including never-seen-before TEDTalk premieres. Standby, the countdown is underway!
Watch Naomi Klein's amazing TEDTalk on our addiction to risk and its consequences ... then read TED's Tom Rielly, below, as he writes about a project from a TED Fellow that shows us a new way to approach oil spills -- and take responsibility for risks.

On November 7, the Frade field oil platform, in Bacia de Campos, 350km north of Rio de Janeiro, began leaking crude oil.

[The platform is] operated by the American drilling company Chevron-Texaco. On Monday, 21 November, Chevron was fined the maximum amount allowed by IBAMA (Brazilian Institute of Environment and Renewable Natural Resources), $R50 million (approximately $28 million USD). The oil spill is now believed to be under control.


Looking at photos from the November spill, so eerily similar to the photos from BP's April 2010 spill in the Gulf of Mexico, it's clear we are still looking for energy in risky places, and largely unprepared to deal with the consequences of failure. One year after the BP spill (which workers soaked up, in large part, with straw bales), the X Prize Foundation announced winners of a million-dollar incentive to develop new tools to clean up oil spills:

And many others are looking at this problem too, including one of TED's Senior Fellows, Cesar Harada.

Harada is an inventor -- of a staggering number of kinds of things. One of them is the Open_Sailing project, a group of inventors and scientists building open-source hardware and software to explore and study the ocean.

He's been looking deeply at the principles of sailing -- where does the rudder actually need to be? How can we use wind more efficiently? -- with surprising results. Watch this video of a boat he designed with a rudder in the front:


And start at 1:29 in this video to watch a boat that is 100% rudder, with an articulated hull that moves like a snake.


Harada's current project brings together his passion for sailing, open-source design and ocean exploration with his passion for engagement.

Protei, Harada's open-source oil spill cleanup project, is a fleet of unmanned, semi-autonomous, inexpensive sailboats designed to tow a long tail of absorbent booms. It's an elegant idea: Each Protei saiboat can be remote-controlled to the edge of a spill -- then it uses its sail to tack against the current into the path of oil being blown downwind. The articulated hull sweeps efficiently across the spill, dragging 20 meters of boom behind it.

As Harada writes on his Kickstarter page (the project is fully funded):

Current oil spill skimming technology was able to collect only 3% of the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill. The health of remediation workers was compromised by exposure to cancerous toxic chemicals, skimming boats themselves contributed to pollution and were expensive to power, operations were constrained by daily weather conditions and were limited by proximity to the coast. In contrast, Protei aims to be: unmanned, unrestrained by human biological needs; green and affordable; self-righting and therefore operable even in hurricane conditions; semi-autonomous, so that far offshore, many Protei would be able to intelligently and continuously swarm.


The Protei team unveiled its most recent prototype, 5.1 (nicknamed "Alien") in Rotterdam in September. It combines an articulated hull and a lightweight inflatable body; it's hurricane-resistant, unsinkable, unbreakable. Watch this video to see the latest version:


And last Saturday, Harada's collaborator Kasia Molga presented the Protei project in Brazil. As she wrote to my team in an email:

After the presentation, someone came to me to ask whether it would be possible for us to come to Campos Basin and work with people over there -- help them to investigate spills and help them to set the infrastructure for Protei. Apparently (I am paraphrasing) the problem with biodiversity and how it affects local communities is very much unreported. Campos residents are struggling, as obviously the latest Chevron spill is not the only one. Indeed, while spending some time today looking on the internet for more information about Campos Basin villages and people, I haven't found much.


There is also another problem: According to news which were revealed in Brazil, confirming a lot of what other people said to me, Chevron was drilling deeper than it was allowed. One of the problems why they couldn't stop the spill is that they couldn't manage the pressure so deep in the water (when the spill escaped a plug). They even didn't have a right equipment (ROV) to go deep enough to check the spill, and the Brazilian Petrobras had to lent them some equipment in order to do that. Chevron have started cleaning 2 weeks after the beginning of the leak by skimming, which apparently hasn't been very effective either.

There have already been noticed changes in the amount of fish and impact on local fisherman businesses. That is obviously not only from the last spill. The problem has impacted local communities for a little longer -- but -- as I mentioned before -- it is not really reported and surely not broadcasted.

In contrast to the slow response and secrecy reported after this spill, Harada and his team are inspired by curiosity and openness. Their work is nimble and responsive, and powered by crowds. Harada is showing a new way all of us can take responsibility for risks.

The open-source Protei project is free to be reproduced and modified by anyone. To learn more, visit www.protei.org. Harada can be followed on Facebook here.

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05:48 PM on 08/16/2012
Protei is half an idea, that TED does not recognize this hurts Protei and the environment and humanity it might have helped.

Half thought out and over funded its failure is preordained.

TED needs a governing board and great care in calling an idea great. Maybe after cleaning up its act and showing us real greatness for a couple years we might believe, again.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Andrew Harvey
Don't F with the Jesus
01:15 AM on 05/28/2012
That's got to be the dumbest idea I've heard in a while. What happens when there's no wind? How many sailboats would it take to scoop up a million barrels of oil?
08:25 AM on 12/22/2011
Still, we live on a finite rock we lovingly call Earth. It started to be Earth long in our concept of time, but not the universe’s. It has naturally become hospitable to life. Conditions have even favored varieties of life with remarkable tendencies. Among others are we, conscious, capable of possessing the laws of nature. The law is and operates in its own time, the life of the universe. Possessing the law and using the law creates power that operates forward and laterally but not backwards. Without a memory of our beginning, the winners see only their infinite future. This system has been gamed. Despite the scale of possibilities drawing closer to the lines of inevitability, a defeated Earth, these winners intent to remain winners. We are already tipping. Consider what that might look like: Bosch: “Garden of Earthly Delights” on the way to Marsforming.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zephyra
06:24 PM on 12/13/2011
Thank you for your voice in this, Naomi. TED talks need to be required viewing in our public schools.
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FrankenPC
12:07 AM on 12/12/2011
The narrative she's describing sounds very close to Star Trek. Maybe we should all reexamine Roddenberry's universe more closely. Utopia is never achievable, but balance is.
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Capn Scott
the 'moderated' me
06:25 PM on 12/11/2011
Speaking as someone who lives on a sailboat....mad props to these guys.
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Clifton Middleton
Plant It Everywhere
09:56 AM on 12/11/2011
We can replace fossil fuel and the dangers of drilling with Free Market Hemp. Industrial hemp can be grown, processed and manufactured into hemp based fuel, fiber, medicine and more, creating millions of jobs all across the land. If all of the complainers of the oil problem would unite in support of one doable idea to achieve energy and economic independence, we would prevail. Plant It Everywhere and Prosper. This is the only plan on the table to create jobs.
07:42 AM on 12/11/2011
I liked investing in the stock market and going to Vegas, but then I developed a risky pattern of putting more in the 'machines' to get my lost money back. I can't stand to be outdone.

It is too risky to invest, if what Corzine did is legal. The Wall Street derivitive mess was legal, I suppose.

It irritates me when the market shoots up and the 'insiders' run the stocks up before the average person can buy.
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LMPE
I connect the most dissimilar things
06:34 PM on 12/10/2011
I deliberately avoid doing anything risky.
01:24 PM on 12/09/2011
There is no progress and advancement when our overall actions are detrimental to the environment and to mankind. Overall, the so called progress of mankind has been, for the most part, to benefit only mankind. Ironically this so called progress will kill everything on the planet. Putting ourselves above nature, thinking we are separate from nature is a human failing. Progress in medicine to prolong our lives, to increase population and to supposedly make our lives better is exactly what the planet does not need when every act of 'progress' creates hell for mother nature. Man is not the most important issue here. We are merely ants in the universe.
09:49 AM on 12/09/2011
It's nice to see people stand up and tell the truth. I only wish we had more people like this.
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CaptD
Freedom From Nuclear Fascism...
02:49 PM on 12/10/2011
Fanned and Fav'd!
I'm with you!
11:07 AM on 12/11/2011
Thank you Capt.
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intotheabyss
Imperialism is a form of insanity.
09:16 AM on 12/09/2011
I love Naomi. "The Shock Doctrine" was brilliant! I'm just finishing up "Vultures Picnic" In Pursuit of Petroleum Pigs, Power Pirates, and High-Finance Carnivores by Greg Palast. This book is another must read! The crimes in high places this guy exposes are truly shocking. It's do or die time on planet Earth. Occupy everything!
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Raymond Fernandez
Lover not a fighter.
07:29 AM on 12/09/2011
Brilliant ...just brilliant...the kind of spirit, mind and passion that we need to save this planet from the insanity of madmen. I hope we can do it, we need to start here with our narratives and see them for what they are; justifications for horrible choices and shift them to an honest and harsh light of reality. If we cannot handle this, then we do not deserve the heritage that this planet should be for all of humanity.
06:06 AM on 12/09/2011
Naomi Klein: Addicted To Risk

This Ted talk is outstanding, a Lecture indispensable for all from elementary school to the houses of power.

Our politicians in America are mostly in siesta. Yet, perhaps they come to life upon watching this Lecture.

Think about it. America and 8 powers in the world hold 20,500 nuclear bombs to raze the world several times. Yet, the war mongers sing the chant of crusade with Iran, not even being sure if CIA has any solid evidence to support the claim of a “nuclear Iran”. Iran granted the world 7,000 years of civilization. President Truman approved two nuclear bombs for Japan to murder nearly 200,000 innocent babies, children, senior citizens, and people like you and I!

Ignorance allows taking enormous risks in search for oil in Gulf of Mexico or in Persian Gulf! Drill deep in the ocean in the search for oil or fabricate a pretext to yet assault another country to take over oil fields.

President Obama: You arrived to bond us with the world, not to part us. Those who put you on a dais with a Noble Prize for Peace, through their hard work and sweet, expect you to act like a king, The Martin Luther King. Stand with the people before the citizens here and the nations overseas depart. We do not follow politicians. We trail men and women of principles.

Akbar Montaser
Professor of Chemistry
The George Washington University
Washington DC
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LazarusDurden
To Make A Long Story Short...
08:21 AM on 12/09/2011
Stick to Chemistry instead of making bombastic claims about President Truman. Unless you wanna bring up what the Japanese did in Occupation of Nanking? And the Iran of 7000 years ago isn't the Iran of today. I'm definitely not saying we need to invade them, but lauding other nations while overlooking their faults and then doing the reverse to the US doesn't help your case.
05:03 PM on 12/11/2011
Truman dropped nuclear bombs on 2 major cities. He did not make a bombastic claim.
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FrankenPC
12:13 AM on 12/12/2011
I second that! It's hard to leek at the millions of lives the Japanese invaders pillaged, raped, and forced into submission in southern China. But, the cold hard reality is they were incredibly dangerous and would not have relented if it were not for the bombs. The bombs are a powerful deterrent including the ability to hang them over the heads of the most dangerous regions around the world.

Oh, and Truman had to live the rest of his life with all those souls on his conscience. He WAS a man of conscience. Imagine how hard it was to pull the trigger on the largest gun the world has ever seen. That's taking personal responsibility to the max. We haven't had leaders of that caliber for so long, I think we are starting to assume they all are shallow and weak.
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Susan Cain
09:20 AM on 12/09/2011
Eloquent response, I sit here with tears in my eyes wondering what will be become of my grandchilrens future, this is my legacy to them. We the grandparents need to take action
05:05 PM on 12/11/2011
It all goes back to greed. Occupy.
lastpost
see biography
05:21 AM on 12/09/2011
“What would you attempt to do, if you knew you could not fail.”
Is it, bring children into the world without making any attempt to ensure the future of either?

Sarah's narrative:
Never mind reality. Live the rendition, while it lasts.