Hi, my name is Andri Snær Magnason, talking from Iceland.
(Water rushing)
In 2019, we had lost our first glacier to climate change: the Okjökull, the Ok glacier, that is not OK anymore. And in the next 200 years, we expect all our glaciers to follow the same path. This glacier here is one of them: Sólheimajökull, in the south coast of Iceland.
(Water rushing)
I wrote a poem for a plaque that was placed on the mountain where Okjökull once stood. It was a letter to the future, and it says, "This monument is to acknowledge that we know what is happening and what needs to be done. Only you know if we did it."
My grandparents, they were glacier explorers at times, when the glaciers seemed eternal. They went on a glacial honeymoon in the year 1956. For three weeks, they were mapping and traveling Vatnajökull, Europe's biggest glacier, sleeping in tents in extreme temperatures. And I asked them once, "Weren't you cold?" And they said, "Cold? We were just married." My grandmother just turned 96, and now we know that many glaciers will be gone within the time someone born today becomes as old as my grandmother is now. We need to start connecting to the future in an intimate and urgent way. My grandmother, she was born in the year 1924. And if I have grandchildren, the people I will love the most in my life will still be alive in the year 2150. Because our time is the time of the people that we know and love, the time that created us, and our time is also the time of the people that we will know and love, the time that we create. We can easily span 230 years -- the handshake of generations.
When a scientist says 2100, we just shrug; we don't feel connected. But I asked my grandmother, "Are 100 years a long time or short time?" And she said, to my surprise, "It's a short time. I feel like I was traveling the glaciers yesterday."
(Water rushing)
So 2100 is not a distant future. It's basically tomorrow, because in the mind of those people, 2020 will be yesterday. And I'm quite sure that we want them to look at our time with pride and gratitude, because we knew what was happening and we know what needs to be done, and we actually, eventually, did the right thing.
Thank you.