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This book must not be ignored. It really is our final warning. Mark
Lynas delivers a vital account of the future of our earth, and our
civilisation, if current rates of global warming persist. And
it’s only looking worse. We are living in a climate emergency.
But how much worse could it get? Will civilisation collapse? Are we
already past the point of no return? What kind of future can our
children expect? Rigorously cataloguing the very latest climate
science, Mark Lynas explores the course we have set for Earth over
the next century and beyond. Degree by terrifying degree, he charts
the likely consequences of global heating and the ensuing climate
catastrophe.  At one degree – the world we are already
living in – vast wildfires scorch California and Australia, while
monster hurricanes devastate coastal cities. At two degrees the
Arctic ice cap melts away, and coral reefs disappear from the
tropics. At three, the world begins to run out of food, threatening
millions with starvation. At four, large areas of the globe are too
hot for human habitation, erasing entire nations and turning
billions into climate refugees. At five, the planet is warmer than
for 55 million years, while at six degrees a mass extinction of
unparalleled proportions sweeps the planet, even raising the threat
of the end of all life on Earth. These escalating
consequences can still be avoided, but time is running out. We must
largely stop burning fossil fuels within a decade if we are to save
the coral reefs and the Arctic. If we fail, then we risk crossing
tipping points that could push global climate chaos out of
humanity’s control. This book must not be ignored. It
really is our final warning.
How to calculate your carbon footprint and practical tips on how to
reduce it. Written by Mark Lynas, one of Britain's most respected
commentators on environmental issues, The Carbon Calculator shows
you how to reduce your carbon footprint and help protect the
environment. Measuring your carbon footprint, from food shopping,
to work, holidays, and clothes. The handy carbon calculator takes
you through each aspect of everyday living, helping you to assess
the impact you are having on the environment. How do you measure
up? Allows you to measure your carbon footprint against averages
around the world and guage what sort of targets should you be
setting yourself. How can you improve your carbon footprint? Lots
of suggestions on how to adapt your lifestyle to make it more
environmentally-friendly. Who can help? Hints, tips, and advice on
who to ask, where to go, and what to do. The Carbon Calculator is
printed in Great Britain on FSC approved paper.
The green movement has got it very wrong. Nature no longer controls
our planet - it is humanity, 'the god species', that must save the
environment we have inflicted unprecedented damage upon. And the
tools we must use are the very technologies that environmentalist
have told us for years will spell disaster: nuclear power, GM food
and geo-engineering. In this blistering and urgent manifesto, Mark
Lynas identifies a new future for the green movement and an
entirely fresh agenda for how we will save the Earth, and
ourselves.
The No Logo of climate change – a book that shows how global
warming is not a theory we should still debate, but something that
has already happened on a global scale. Climate change is not a
concern for the future. It's happening right now. In this book
– based on the latest scientific evidence – the
author takes us around the world to show the impact of global
warming already being felt in people's lives. From sand-buried
houses in China to thawing Alaskan plains, the author witnesses
some of the worst effects of climate change at first hand. Some,
like the floods in the UK, are near home. Others – like the
drowning Pacific island of Tuvalu – are a world away from
the exhaust pipes and factory chimneys that are actually causing
global warming. But this isn't simply an inventory of disaster,
it's a wry look at how people around the globe are coping as their
world changes at unprecedented speed. In the process, the author
eats whale blubber in Alaska, swims in shark-infested waters off
the Great Barrier Reef and struggles to the top of Andean peaks in
Peru. An adventure with a conscience and an argument with an urgent
purpose, High Tide is an extremely important book.
We humans are the God species, both the creators and destroyers of
life on this planet. As we enter a new geological era - the
Anthropocene - our collective power now overwhelms and dominates
the major forces of nature.
But from the water cycle to the circulation of nitrogen and carbon
through the entire Earth system, we are coming dangerously close to
destroying the planetary life-support systems that sustain us. In
this controversial new book, Royal Society Science Books Prize
winner Mark Lynas shows us how we must use our new mastery over
nature to save the planet from ourselves.
Taking forward the work of a brilliant new group of Earth-system
scientists who have mapped out our real 'planetary boundaries',
Lynas draws up a radical manifesto calling for the increased use of
environmentally-friendly technologies like genetic engi- neering
and nuclear power as part of a global effort to use humanity's best
tools to protect and nurture the biosphere.
Ecological limits are real, but economic limits are not, Lynas
contends. We can and must feed a richer population of nine billion
people in decades to come, whilst also respecting the nine
planetary boundaries - from biodiversity to ocean acidification -
now identified and quantified by scientists.
Ripping up years of environmental orthodoxy, he reveals how the
prescriptions of the current green movement are likely to hin- der
as much as help our vitally-needed effort to use science and
technology to play God and save the planet.
"President Bush and his Administration have risen to the global
warming challenge with responses ranging from obfuscation to
pretense to outright denial...I'd like to issue each and every one
of them a challenge. Come with me--see what I have seen--and try to
understand what global warming really means for us and for our
children. Leave Washington and travel to the places I have
visited..."--From the Preface
A glacier disappears high in the Peruvian Andes. Floodwaters surge
across the English countryside. Ten thousand Pacific Islanders
begin to evacuate their homeland. A dust storm turns day into night
across the Inner Mongolian plains. These events may seem unrelated,
but they are not. Even as scientists and other experts debate the
specifics, climate crisis is already affecting the lives of
millions.
In this ground-breaking book, Mark Lynas reveals the first
evidence--collected during an epic three-year journey across five
continents--about how global warming is hitting people's lives all
around the world. From American hurricane chasers to Mongolian
herders, from Alaskan Eskimos to South Sea islanders, Lynas's
encounters and discoveries give us a stark warning about the even
worse dangers that lie ahead if nothing is done.
High Tide's message is urgent and its revelations are at once
shocking and inspiring--shocking as so few of us yet realize the
magnitude of what's happening, and inspiring as there is still time
to avert much greater catastrophe. No one who reads this book will
be able to look their children in the eyes and say "I didn't know."
As global temperatures soar to record levels, Lynas bears witness
to:
- CRIPPLING DROUGHT: China's Yellow River no longer reaches the sea
for half the year, and villages across the north of the country are
disappearing under advancing sand dunes
- BAKED ALASKA: Permafrost is melting, leaving houses, roads and
whole forests sucked into the thawing ground. Winter is in retreat,
leaving animals confused and Native Alaskan people without a
livelihood
- DISAPPEARING GLACIERS: Every glaciated mountain range on Earth is
experiencing massive ice losses. Montana's Glacier National Park
has lost 100 glaciers in the last century; only 50 remain. Water
supplies to hundreds of millions of people--from Peru to
Pakistan--are threatened
- HIGH TIDES: Islanders on the tiny South Pacific nation of Tuvalu
are already leaving their homeland as rising sea levels engulf
their atolls. Today 70 percent of the world's sandy shorelines are
retreating; up to 90 percent of the beaches on the Eastern U.S.
seaboard are eroding fast
- CATASTROPHIC FLOODS: English villagers now talk about a "wet
season" rather than a winter. Heavier rainfall is now falling
across the global mid-latitudes, from the continental U.S. to
Russia, sparking devastating floods on an ever more frequent basis.
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