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B1 中級 英語 23:28 Educational

The End of Oil, Explained | FULL EPISODE | Vox + Netflix

Vox · 3,192,977 回視聴 · 追加日 3週間前

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B1

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字幕 (347 セグメント)

00:01

In 1856, a scientist, named Eunice Foote, conducted an experiment.

00:08

She filled one tube with regular air, and another with carbon dioxide,

00:13

put thermometers in them, and placed them in the sun.

00:16

And she noticed, the tube of carbon dioxide got a lot hotter, and stayed hot longer.

00:22

She published her results noting that "an atmosphere of that gas

00:26

would give to our earth a high temperature".

00:30

Three years later, Edwin Drake struck oil in Western Pennsylvania.

00:36

A hundred years after that first well, the American oil industry celebrated its centennial.

00:43

And they invited the physicist Edward Teller, one of the inventors of the atomic bomb,

00:47

to make a speech about the future of energy.

00:50

“We probably have to look for additional fuel supplies,” he told the crowd.

00:55

“Because the extra carbon emitted from burning fossil fuels causes a greenhouse effect.”

01:00

Which, he believed, would be sufficient to melt the ice cap and submerge New York.

01:07

By 1965, scientists were confident enough to formally warn U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson

01:15

A decade later, Exxon’s own scientists were making grim predictions.

01:20

By 1988, it was front page news.

01:24

And since then, we’ve kept pumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere

01:29

at an accelerating rate.

01:31

We have a world economy today that depends on fossil fuels for most of its energy.

01:36

A third of it from oil.

01:38

It's a tremendous irony that the very substances that helped us achieve this level of development

01:44

today are, now, the very substances that endanger the future of civilization as we know it.

01:50

Governments are starting to agree that we shouldn't let the world warm more than one-point-five

01:55

degrees centigrade, and we're on track to blow past that by twenty-thirty.

02:01

So, why is it so hard to turn off the tap?

02:04

And can we do it in time?

02:08

Industrial nations have developed a great dependency on oil.

02:12

It has added a new freedom to our lives.

02:15

The invaluable stocks of oil in these exotic islands.

02:17

Their wealth is cracking the old life of Arabia wide open.

02:21

Nigerian government love the oil more than our lives.

02:27

Increasing amounts of carbon dioxide surround us.

02:30

If man continues to abuse his environment, Earth too may become barren.

02:43

The story of oil is a story of geopolitical clash, technological advancement

02:49

and intense competition.

02:51

The story of oil is a story of inequality.

02:54

It’s a story of dominance.

02:57

The Nigeria in which I was born in was just a couple of years before the ending of

03:04

the British colonial rule.

03:06

At the time, it was an agricultural economy.

03:10

Cotton from the north, cacao from the west, and rubber from the mid-west.

03:15

And in the area where Nnimmo grew up, fishing.

03:18

The Niger Delta is an area that is crisscrossed by water bodies, creek streams, rivers, estuaries

03:26

which is the breeding ground for most fish in the Gulf of Guinea.

03:29

It was so fertile, fishermen could just leave their traps at high tide

03:34

and pick them up at low tide.

03:35

And in the evenings...

03:37

Children would sit around in the moonlight, and the elders would share stories.

03:41

They didn’t know they were sitting on one of the most oil-rich regions on Earth.

03:46

Until the British granted Shell and BP an exclusive permit to explore for oil.

03:53

They struck black gold in 1956.

03:57

Nigerians were extremely hopeful that the discovery of oil in their would bring about

04:02

positive changes in their economic wellbeing, in the health conditions of the people

04:07

in terms of employment and everything.

04:10

And just a few years later, Nigeria won independence.

04:14

The future looked bright.

04:18

After all, fossil fuels had transformed other countries.

04:21

The world’s wealthiest nations had once been much poorer.

04:25

The amount of work a person could do was the amount they could do with their hands

04:30

possibly helped by a horse or mule.

04:34

Coal was the first discovery that changed all that.

04:37

Ancient organisms in oceans and swamps had soaked up the power of the sun.

04:42

Their fossils compressed over millions of years into coal, and a mile or more down

04:48

into natural gas and crude oil.

04:51

Burning coal, this time-capsule of the sun’s energy, helped Britain become

04:57

the first industrialized nation

04:59

and the most powerful empire the word had ever seen.

05:02

And then, oil came along.

05:04

And that stared off this kind of boom.

05:08

It was discovered that gasoline, which had been kind of this waste product

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