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Every person on our home planet is affected by a worldwide deluge
of man-made chemicals and pollutants - most of which have never
been tested for safety. Our chemical emissions are six times larger
than our total greenhouse gas emissions. They are in our food, our
water, the air we breathe, our homes and workplaces, the things we
use each day. This universal poisoning affects our minds, our
bodies, our genes, our grandkids, and all life on Earth. Julian
Cribb describes the full scale of the chemical catastrophe we have
unleashed. He proposes a new Human Right - not to be poisoned. He
maps an empowering and hopeful way forward: to rid our planet of
these toxins and return Earth to the clean, healthy condition which
our forebears enjoyed, and our grandchildren should too.
Do you want to help save human civilisation? If so, this book is
for you. How to Fix a Broken Planet describes the ten catastrophic
risks that menace human civilisation and our planet, and what we
can all do to overcome or mitigate them. It explains what must be
done globally to avert each megathreat, and what each of us can do
in our own lives to help preserve a habitable world. It offers the
first truly integrated world plan-of-action for a more sustainable
human society - and fresh hope. A must-read for anyone seeking
sound practical advice on what citizens, governments, companies,
and community groups can do to safeguard our future.
In "The Coming Famine", Julian Cribb lays out a vivid picture of
impending planetary crisis - a global food shortage that threatens
to hit by mid-century - that would dwarf any in our previous
experience. Cribb's comprehensive assessment describes a dangerous
confluence of shortages - of water, land, energy, technology, and
knowledge - combined with the increased demand created by
population and economic growth. Writing in brisk, accessible prose,
Cribb explains how the food system interacts with the environment
and with armed conflict, poverty, and other societal factors. He
shows how high food prices and regional shortages are already
sending shockwaves into the international community. But, far from
outlining a doomsday scenario, "The Coming Famine" offers a strong
and positive call to action, exploring the greatest issue of our
age and providing practical suggestions for addressing each of the
major challenges it raises.
Ours is the Age of Food. Food is a central obsession in all
cultures, nations, the media, and society. Our future supply of
food is filled with risk, and history tells us that lack of food
leads to war. But it also presents us with spectacular
opportunities for fresh human creativity and technological prowess.
Julian Cribb describes a new food system capable of meeting our
global needs on this hot and overcrowded planet. This book is for
anyone concerned about the health, safety, affordability,
diversity, and sustainability of their food - and the peace of our
planet. It is not just timely - its message is of the greatest
urgency. Audiences include consumers, 'foodies', policymakers,
researchers, cooks, chefs and farmers. Indeed, anyone who cares
about their food, where it comes from and what it means for them,
their children and grandchildren.
In "The Coming Famine", Julian Cribb lays out a vivid picture of
impending planetary crisis - a global food shortage that threatens
to hit by mid-century - that would dwarf any in our previous
experience. Cribb's comprehensive assessment describes a dangerous
confluence of shortages - of water, land, energy, technology, and
knowledge - combined with the increased demand created by
population and economic growth. Writing in brisk, accessible prose,
Cribb explains how the food system interacts with the environment
and with armed conflict, poverty, and other societal factors. He
shows how high food prices and regional shortages are already
sending shockwaves into the international community. But, far from
outlining a doomsday scenario, "The Coming Famine" offers a strong
and positive call to action, exploring the greatest issue of our
age and providing practical suggestions for addressing each of the
major challenges it raises.
The book explores the central question facing humanity today: how
can we best survive the ten great existential challenges that are
now coming together to confront us? Besides describing these
challenges from the latest scientific perspectives, it also
outlines and integrates the solutions, both at global and
individual level and concludes optimistically. This book brings
together in one easy-to-read work the principal issues facing
humanity. It is written for the two next generations who will have
to deal with the compounding risks they inherit, and which flow
from overpopulation, resource pressures and human nature. The
author examines ten intersecting areas of activity (mass
extinction, resource depletion, WMD, climate change, universal
toxicity, food crises, population and urban expansion, pandemic
disease, dangerous new technologies and self-delusion) which pose
manifest risks to civilization and, potentially, to our species'
long-term future. This isn't a book just about problems. It is also
about solutions. Every chapter concludes with clear conclusions and
consensus advice on what needs to be done at global level -but it
also empowers individuals with what they can do for themselves to
make a difference. Unlike other books, it offers integrated
solutions across the areas of greatest risk. It explains why Homo
sapiens is no longer an appropriate name for our species, and what
should be done about it.
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