Review
A master at joined-up progressive thinking. (New Scientist )
'An ebullient driving force,' listed as one of the UK's top environmentalists by the Independent on Sunday (Independent on Sunday )
(A) leading industry observer (Financial Times )
Creative and compelling (Larry Elliott, Economics Editor, Guardian )
Essential reading (R K Pachauri, Ph.D, Director-General, TERI, Chairman of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change )
A new phrase has entered the language (Dame Anita Roddick, founder of The Body Shop )
This book describes the world as it really is. ... Read it, find out who really owes what to whom. (Tony Juniper, Executive Director, Friends of the Earth )
Product Description
--New edition of this highly acclaimed guide--
'Creative and compelling.' Guardian
'Essential reading.' Head of the IPCC
'A new phrase has entered the language.' Anita Roddick
This is the second edition of Andrew Simms's highly regarded guide to ecological debt.
Simms shows how millions of us in the West are running up huge ecological debts: from the amount of oil and coal that we burn to heat our houses and run our cars, to what we consume and the waste that we create, the impact of our lifestyles is felt worldwide. Whilst these debts go unpaid, millions more living in poverty in the majority world suffer the burden of paying dubious foreign financial debts.
The book explores a great paradox of our age: how the global wealth gap was built on ecological debts, which the world's poorest are now having to pay for. Highlighting how and why this has happened, he also shows what can be done differently in the future. Now updated throughout, this is a clear and passionate account of the steps we can take to stop pushing the planet to the point of environmental bankruptcy.