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Atmosphere of Hope

Searching for Solutions to the Climate Crisis

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The author of the #1 bestseller, The Weather Makers, pens “a brilliant examination of where we are with climate change and where we might be able to go” (The National Observer, Vancouver).
 
Almost two decades ago, Tim Flannery’s #1 international bestseller, The Weather Makers, was one of the first books to break the topic of climate change out into the general conversation. Today, Earth’s climate system is fast approaching a crisis. Political leadership has not kept up, and public engagement with the issue of climate change has declined. Opinion is divided between technological optimists and pessimists who feel that catastrophe is inevitable.
 
Around the world people are now living with the consequences of an altered climate—with intensified and more frequent storms, wildfires, droughts, and floods. For some it’s already a question of survival. Drawing on the latest science, Flannery gives a snapshot of the trouble we are in and more crucially, proposes a new way forward, including rapidly progressing clean technologies and a “third way” of soft geo-engineering. Tim Flannery, with his inimitable style, makes this urgent issue compelling and accessible. This is a must-read for anyone interested in our global future.
 
“What Flannery provides—a convincing defense for the position that a path to averting catastrophic climate change still exists—is invaluable.” —Los Angeles Review of Books
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    • Library Journal

      October 1, 2015

      Flannery, author of the best-selling Weather Makers, which addresses what global warming may bring, revisits in this book the most important of these issues, and in addition, deals with ways that their deleterious effects can be ameliorated or even improved upon. He reviews the coal, gas, oil, wind, electric vehicle, and solar energy industries, ruminates on their futures, and offers a wealth of specific facts. Thus, he is an articulate generalist yet also provides particulars. Much of his description of methods to combat the buildup of CO2 and other chemicals is technical. Terms such as gigawat, albedo, cell grazing, biochar, anthropocene, the third way, and many others are explained when they first appear, but there are enough so that a glossary seems necessary. Also, some of the solutions Flannery proposes, such as seeding the entire stratosphere using an array of approaches, are so vast, complex, uncertain, and expensive that the reader may see them as fantasies, though granted, there may be no easy answers to the problems the author investigates. VERDICT Highly recommended for all concerned with environmental problems, climate change, geology, pollution, business and corporations, weather, chemistry, and related fields.--Henry T. Armistead, formerly with Free Lib. of Philadelphia

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2015
      When it comes to climate change, the writing on the wall is increasingly difficult to ignore. With extreme summers in Europe, the drought and wildfires in the American West, and seesawing weather patterns around the globe, sneak peeks at worst-case scenarios are already making headlines. Scientist and prolific writer Flannery (An Explorer's Notebook, 2014), who was head of the Australian Climate Change Commission until he was fired by the conservative government, then reinstated as the country's chief climate spokesperson by a crowd-funded, social-media-fueled coalition, suggests a third way set of solutions that capitalizes on the earth's own carbon-capture possibilities as a path out of the crisis. Seaweed farming as a carbon-sequestration technique is just one of many examples. Although the distinction between this third way approach and geoengineering is fuzzy at times, this is an informative tour of promising multipronged approaches to one of humanity's biggest challenges. Flannery's solution-focused quest is especially timely with the UN Paris summit being held later this year, in which the political will to do the right thing will be severely tested.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2015, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2015

      Ten years ago, Flannery helped jump-start the conversation on climate change with The Weather Makers, a No. 1 international best seller that was named an ALA Notable Book and has over 150,000 copies in print. Now we've moved from change to crisis, but Flannery refuses to despair, offering proposals that include geoengineering and committing to the emerging clean technologies. With an eight-city tour; note that Flannery's book is expected to figure largely in debates at the Climate Change Conference, being held in Paris in December 2015.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2015
      Flannery (An Explorer's Notebook: Essays on Life, History, and Climate, 2014, etc.) argues for renewed optimism in human capabilities to reverse the destabilizing effects of climate change.For years, the author has been in the forefront of spreading the warning of climate change's dire consequences to a broad audience. "This book describes in plain terms our climate predicament," he writes, "but it also brings news of exciting tools in the making that could help us avoid climate disaster." Flannery sees a decided change in governmental responsibility since the Copenhagen Accord of 2009, which suggested the possibility of international political cooperation, and the marginalization of the deniers, whom he finds "perverse. Even grotesque." The author makes it abundantly clear where we stand-that we are far from achieving the 2 percent solution to global warming-but that there is also diverse, effective, and innovative activity toward cutting carbon dioxide emissions. This is occurring on the individual front-through digital interconnectedness and direct action such as disinvestment campaigns-and through the adoption of a long-view, "third way" of implementing projects that stimulate natural systems to draw the gas out of the air and oceans at a faster rate than we produce it. Flannery crisply outlines what is now known and conjectured about the human influence on climate change, exploring the long ragweed season, the nutritional degradation of crops, and the acidification of the oceans. There are roadblocks to alternative energy sources-as Ralph Nader noted, "the use of solar energy has not been opened up because the oil industry does not own the sun"-but Flannery also finds that money will drive the wind and solar power sources as they rapidly become more efficient. He also puts fracking under great scrutiny, and he makes an intriguing case for the capture and storage of the byproducts of the damage already done. A sharp summary of energy potentialities, where the good and the bad reside in human hands, hearts, and minds.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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