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You're listening to TED Talks Daily, where we bring you new ideas to spark your curiosity every day. I'm your host, Elise Hu. Sometimes a major problem comes along that we actually have the ability to solve because we've done it before, just not everywhere. Lead poisoning is one of those problems.
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In 2023, the last year that we have estimates, lead took more lives than all active wars, all natural disasters, all road accidents and HIV and malaria combined.
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That's Drew McCarter, the head of Pure Earth, a 2025 TED Audacious Project grantee and nonprofit working to prevent exposure to toxic pollutants like lead globally. As he shares in his talk, barely anyone in the US Talks about lead as a problem. And that is, it turns out, is part of the problem. He reminds us that every day lead poisoning accounts for an estimated 2 million IQ points permanently lost in children. One of the most overlooked catastrophes of our time.
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Now, I suspect that we agree if you rob one child of their potential, that's a tragedy. But to do it to a billion kids, that changes the trajectory of of humanity. Okay, that's all the bad news. Now the good news. This thing is solvable.
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Drew breaks down Pure Earth's proven three step model to measure, identify and remove lead. And how. Because of this, they're scaling across more than 20 countries to protect half a billion children and stick around. After the talk, we caught up with Hasiba Huck of ted's Audacious Project, who shares why this hit closer to home than she expected and why Drew's work gives her hope at a moment when so many other problems feel impossible to solve. That's all coming up right after a short break. This episode is brought to you by Dell. Back to school starts now. Get long lasting battery life on the Dell XPS laptop powered by Series 3 Intel Core, so you can work from anywhere now starting at $699 with exclusive student pricing. So starting at 599. And it's lightweight, portable and packed with enough processing power to make multitasking a breeze. So say goodbye to distractions and hello to more free time. Because you finished your work faster, complete your setup with savings on select monitors and more. Must have electronics and accessories, limited time deals and free shipping on PCs and more await you@dell.com deals that's Dell.com SL deals. This message is brought to you by Apple Card. Apple Card puts the power of titanium in the palm of your hand. What does that mean? It means the power to earn unlimited daily cash back on your purchases every day. It means a materially different credit card accepted anywhere in the world. MasterCard is accepted. Ditch the plastic, upgrade to titanium Apply in the wallet app on iPhone Today subject to credit approval Apple card is issued by Goldman Sachs Bank USA Salt Lake City Branch terms and more@applecard.com this episode is brought to you by Walmart Business. The best leaders might tell you the work that moves an organization forward doesn't happen in spreadsheets or supply chain emails. It happens when you have the space to think big. That's the idea behind Walmart Business. It's built to take the friction out of running an organization so your team isn't losing hours to procurement logistics when they could just be focused on the problems that actually matter. With an ever expanding business assortment everyday low prices and fast reliable shipping, Walmart Business keeps your operations running smoothly. Shop online, in store or through the Walmart Business app, however, works best for you. Simpler operations, smarter spending. It's Walmart built for your business. Sign up for a free Walmart business account@business.walmart.com. And now our TED TALK of the Day.
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All right, I'm here to deliver good news about lead poisoning. But first, a little bit of bad news. And that is that this issue that we treat as a problem of the past is just taking an almost unimaginable toll on humanity today. In fact, what you're looking at behind me are IQ points that lead is robbing from the youngest kids on Earth, permanently and in real time.
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Hey, all, Elise here. What Drew's referring to right now is a tracker on the screen behind him. The screen is black with large white numbers starting below 100 and rapidly counting up underneath. It says real time IQ loss.
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And by the end of the day today, that number is estimated to exceed 2 million IQ points lost on the day. And then tomorrow It'll be another 2 million. And then again and again every day until we solve it. And lead isn't just causing brain damage. It kills a shocking number of people through cardiovascular disease, heart attacks and stroke. In fact, in 2023, the last year that we have estimates, lead took more lives than all active wars, all natural disasters, all road accidents and HIV and malaria combined just from lead. I run a nonprofit called Pure Earth, and we prevent lead poisoning. And a couple years ago, we were cleaning up lead pollution in a village in Bangladesh. That resulted when some men leased a plot of land to recycle the lead out of old car batteries. And they would take these lead plates out of the battery and melt them down in an open fire. Spreading toxic dust across the community. And that is where we met Saeem. Now you cannot spot a lead poisoned child. But Sain's mom knew and she told us that before the men arrived, Saim was doing well in school and he could remember things. And then gradually he began forgetting everything. I want to show you what Saeem told us.
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Drew is about to play a video of a young boy named Saeem sitting outside by a tree, speaking with his teacher who is behind the camera. They are speaking in Bengali and I will translate for you here. The teacher asks, what grade are you in? Saeem responds, Grade 2. Grade 2. Which school? Raja Bari. Who are your friends at school? There are many others. Is Mim your classmate? Yes, she is in my grade. Which grade? Grade three. Meme is in grade three. We are both in grade three. You are also in grade three? Yes. Didn't you just say that you were in grade two? I can't remember. You can't remember? The video ends with Saeem shaking his head.
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No, Saim doesn't know what grade he's in. I have a daughter Saim's age. And if you have kids, you know how important their grade level is to their identity. You don't get to call your third grader a second grader without catching a little feedback about that. So what can lead be doing in the brains of kids to allow a child to forget what grade they're in? Well, Syme's brain, like all kids brains, is like a new city under construction. And calcium actually plays a role, like a city planner, directing crews to build synaptic roads and bridges that allow for things like learning and memory and impulse control. All these tools we need. But when lead is in the body, it. It masquerades as calcium and the brain will use the lead instead. But lead is a terrible city planner and it directs those crews to build dead end streets and bridges to nowhere. And once lead's chaotic network is built, the damage is permanent. And syem isn't alone. Around the world, more than 1 billion kids and teenagers have a concentration of lead in their blood that exceeds the World Health Organization's threshold for intervening in a child's life. A billion. That's one in three. Now imagine you're looking at your kids and you have to choose which one. Almost all of these kids live in low income and middle income countries where the average child has an exposure level high enough that they will lose an estimated 4 to 5 IQ points due to lead. And that is enough to shift the entire intelligence curve downward such that we cut in half the number of kids who have an IQ above 130. These are gifted kids. And we increase by half the number of kids who have an IQ below 70 who face intellectual disability. Now, I suspect that we agree if you rob one child of their potential, that's a tragedy. But to do it to a billion kids, that changes the trajectory of, of humanity. Okay, that's all the bad news. Now the good news, this thing is solvable. This is. Yeah. This is not one of those global problems that we're going to struggle to make progress on because the politics aren't aligned or it's too expensive, or we need some magical new technology. This one is solvable. Today we, with the tools that we already have. And I know that because for 25 years, Pure Earth has been testing prevention strategies. And we've learned that when governments take three core steps, lead levels can drop dramatically. So here's the model. First, run a nationally representative survey of kids exposure levels. That usually means testing the blood of a couple thousand kids to establish a baseline to understand how many kids and where they are. But mostly this motivates governments with their own data because the news is usually bad. Second, we got to find out where the lead's coming from. In the West. We talk a lot about old paint and pipes, and those are issues in other countries. But the exposure sources vary wildly from place to place and can include things like food and spices, traditional cosmetics and medicines, things like ceramic glazes, cheap aluminum cookware, and industrial pollution like same faced. But the point is we need to identify the priority ones. And then thirdly, and most importantly, we have to regulate and remove lead from our economy and our environment. And this looks like tightening standards, improving enforcement capacities and cleaning up old contaminated sites. So that's the model. I don't want to pretend like it's easy. It's not easy. But it's also not rocket science. And it works. In 2018, the country of Georgia conducted a national survey with UNICEF and found that 41% of Georgian kids exceeded that WHO threshold. The government brought Pure Earth over and together we identified contaminated spices as the major driver. Lead based pigments in the spices to make them those bright oranges and reds. The government tightened their regulations, improved their enforcement capacity, and today lead levels in the hardest hit regions of Georgia are down by 75%. The government owns the agenda and the next generation is well protected. But Georgia isn't alone. We've helped the Philippines conduct their first large survey. We've helped Ghana identify their exposure sources. We've helped Mexico reduce the use of lead based glazes. And there are dozens of other examples of countries and organizations making progress. Now, we cannot give back to Saeem what lead stole from him, but there are millions of young brains under construction right now and we have to get to them before lead does. And that's the plan. With support from the Audacious Project donor community, we are rolling out the model that I just described in over 20 countries that are home to 500 million lead poison kids. And I'm confident that over the next eight years, this program will improve the intellectual capacity, health and longevity of not just that half a billion kids, but every generation coming up behind them. So you now know more about lead poisoning than almost anyone on earth. And that fact remains our central challenge. So tell people, tell them how big it is and tell them that we can solve it. Thank you.
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That was Drew McCarter at TED 2026. This ambitious idea is part of the Audacious Project, TED's initiative to inspire and fund global change. Learn more@audaciousproject.org and now here's Audacious Project's Hasiba Huq, who shares the question she can't stop thinking about after working with Drew. What else in the world could we be solving if we just took the same approach?
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Hey everyone, thanks for listening to Drew's talk. I'm Hasiba and I work at the Audacious Project at TED and and Drew is one of our Audacious grantees. I feel really lucky that I got to work with Drew on his talk that you just heard. And before you go, I want to jump in and share a bit more about Drew, his work and talk and why we're so excited to have FIT shared with you today. Drew's talk is really interesting right now because he's talking about a problem that feels really dated in the US And North America, but is actually huge in other parts of the world. I honestly, like most people, thought lead was an old problem. And living in a New York City apartment, you're kind of used to the idea of old lead paint. What I didn't realize was that so much of the lead in other parts of the world is in cosmetics and spices and daily things that people use. Drew tells a story of a boy from Bangladesh. And that's where my family's from. And I've heard murmurs and whisperings of this from family members about spices and things being contaminated and them being worried about buying certain things. So being able to see the other side and know that there's somebody who's doing work in this space and reminding us that other people's experiences are different just meant a lot to me. And I think why it's so critical for right now is that we're in a moment where relying on economies and countries in the Global south will become more and more important. And so I think just thinking about a future where we're not so concentrated in the US or in the Global north, but really thinking about who our future leaders are from the Global south and from other countries, I think is really crucial. And Drew's kind of the perfect person for this. He's worked at Pure Earth for the last 20 years, and if I'm remembering correctly, he started as an intern and has moved his way up to become the leader of the organization. And I think it speaks a lot to his ability in understanding the issue and also his ability to be leader and to really move through this space. I think every time I've worked with Drew, he's been really cognizant about reminding us and reminding me that Pure Earth and he are not the only people working in the lead space. It's a collective effort across so many organizations. And I think it just speaks to the fact that, like, he really believes this idea is important and also can't be done alone. Now that Jude's talk is out in the world and people know that lead is a big problem, I think what's cool is that he's got funding and energy behind him to be able to fix this problem. It's inspiring to know that you can get governments on board for a collective issue and a values based issue. And Drew and his team are proving that there is possibility in fixing things, especially at a time when it feels like every problem is insurmountable. He really helps us try to remember that so many of the things that we deal with today get caught in the red tape of bureaucracy and politics and personal interests, et cetera. And this is one of those issues that actually isn't plagued by that because people see the value in preserving a child's health. So it just makes me wonder what else in the world we could be solving if we took that lens.
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If you're curious about Ted's curation, visit ted.com curate and that's it for today. TED Talks Daily is a podcast from ted. This episode was fact checked by the TED research team and produced and edited by our team, Martha Estefanos, Oliver Friedman, Lucy Little, Emma Tobner and Tansika Sangmarnival. Additional support from Daniela Ballaraizo. Christopher Faizy Bogan, Valentina Bohanini, Banban Chang, Brian Greene and Lainey Lott. Learn more at Podcasts. I am Elise Hu. I'll be back tomorrow with a fresh idea for your feed. Thanks for listening. This episode is brought to you by Ground News. Every day millions of people read the news, but are they reading the same story? Take a recent headline making waves across the media. Depending on where you got your information, you may have seen wildly different takes on the same event. That's where Ground News comes in. It's an app and website that pulls together coverage from hundreds of outlets across the political spectrum, all in one place. On any given story, you can compare how different sources frame it, check each outlet's political bias and factuality rating, and even see who owns them. That kind of transparency is exactly what critical thinking demands. The Nobel Peace center called it an excellent way to stay informed. Avoid echo chambers and expand your worldview. Right now, TED listeners get 40% off the vantage subscription. Unlimited access, no limits. Go to groundnews.com talks that's groundnews.com talks. Use our link so they know we sent you groundnews.com talks this episode is brought to you by Capital One. Capital One's tech team isn't just talking about multi agentic AI. They already deployed one. It's called Chat Concierge and it's simplifying car shopping using self reflection and layered reasoning with live API checks. It doesn't just help buyers find a car they love, it helps schedule a test drive, get pre approved for financing and estimate trade in value. Advanced, intuitive and deployed. That's how they stack. That's technology at Capital One.
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Episode: The deadly threat affecting millions — and how to prevent it | Drew McCartor
Date: July 10, 2026
Host: Elise Hu
Guest/Speaker: Drew McCartor (Head of Pure Earth), Hasiba Huq (TED’s Audacious Project)
This episode focuses on the largely unrecognized but immense global threat of lead poisoning and how it is stealing intelligence, health, and lives from millions—especially children. While many in high-income countries think of lead as a problem solved, Drew McCartor reveals how this silent epidemic persists across the globe, disproportionately harming children in low- and middle-income countries. The conversation centers on why lead poisoning matters, the stories of those affected, and how proven, scalable solutions can drastically reduce its impact.
| Timestamp | Segment | Speaker | |-----------|-----------------------------------------------------|----------------------------------| | 00:21 | The massive toll of lead poisoning | Drew McCartor | | 05:05 | The realtime “tally” of IQ loss | Drew McCartor | | 06:46 | Saeem’s story: Forgetting his grade | Saeem (Bangladesh), Drew Comment| | 08:06 | One billion children above WHO blood-lead threshold | Drew McCartor | | 09:02 | The three-step model explained | Drew McCartor | | 10:39 | Success story: 75% reduction in Georgia | Drew McCartor | | 12:12 | Pure Earth’s global scale-up | Drew McCartor | | 13:43 | Central challenge: Awareness and hope | Drew McCartor | | 15:03 | Hasiba Huq reflects on global impact | Hasiba Huq |
For more details, visit audaciousproject.org or pureearth.org.
If you want more curated TED content, check out ted.com/curate.