Review
'Creative and compelling.' Guardian 'Essential reading.' --Head of the IPCC 'A new phrase has entered the language.' --Anita Roddick
Larry Elliott, Guardian
'Creative and compelling.'
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Tony Juniper, Friends of the Earth
'A compelling argument ... Read it, find out who really owes what to whom.'
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Head of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
'This book should be essential reading.'
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Product Description
Have you ever wondered what you can do to help stop global warming? To live in a way that is more beneficial to our planet? This book shows you how, in small but significant ways, you can make changes to the way you live that will help to preserve the balance of the environment and protect it for future generations. The author, Andrew Simms, is an expert in environmental policy, based at one of the world's leading think-tanks. In this short, accessible book, he illustrates the deeply harmful consequences of the West's totally unsustainable consumption patterns. He reviews the ecological consequences of climate change and the effect of global warming on developing countries. And he argues that the West has a huge ecological debt towards developing countries, much bigger than the financial debt of developing countries towards industrialised nations.He shows how, in order both to adapt to changing climate conditions and to pay back our debt to developing countries, we can rethink our lifestyles and how we think about 'progress' in a way that will sustain our environment and create a more balanced global society.
About the Author
Andrew Simms is Policy Director of the New Economics Foundation (a leading think-and-do tank in the UK working to create environmentally sound and socially just economies). Andrew is a regular contributor to the World Disasters Report and his articles are published regularly in British national newspapers such as the Guardian and the Financial Times. He is a regular commentator on BBC, commercial radio and television.