This damning account of the forces that have hijacked progress on climate change shares a bold vision of what it will take, politically and economically, to face the existential threat of global warming head-on.
In the past few years, it has become impossible (for most) to deny the effects of climate change and that the planet is warming, and to acknowledge that we must act. But a new kind of denialism is taking root in the halls of power, shaped by a quarter-century of neoliberal policies, that threatens to doom us before we've grasped the full extent of the crisis.
As Kate Aronoff argues, since the 1980s and 1990s, economists, pro-business Democrats and Republicans in the US, and global organizations like the UN and the World Economic Forum have all made concessions to the oil and gas industry that they have no intention of reversing. What's more, they believe that climate change can be solved through the market, capitalism can be a force for good, and all of us, corporations included, are fighting the good fight together.
These assumptions, Aronoff makes abundantly clear, will not save the planet. Drawing on years of reporting and rigorous economic analysis, Aronoff lays out a robust vision for what will, detailing how to constrain the fossil fuel industry; transform the economy into a sustainable, democratic one; mobilize political support; create effective public-private partnerships; enact climate reparations; and adapt to inevitable warming in a way that is just and equitable.
Our future, Overheated makes clear, will require a radical reimagining of our politics and our economies, but if done right, it will save the world.
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Release date
April 20, 2021 -
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Kindle Book
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- ISBN: 9781568589961
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- ISBN: 9781568589961
- File size: 1466 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Kirkus
February 15, 2021
Our environmental future depends on radical economic change. Drawing on government documents, interviews, environmental studies, and reports from a wide range of media sources, journalist and New Republic staff writer Aronoff mounts a compelling indictment of capitalism for making climate change reform impossible. The fossil fuel industry, representing "the most powerful and politically entrenched companies on earth," has hijacked such reforms, she asserts, funding climate change deniers, influencing governmental policy, and blocking any measures that would affect the industry's financial growth. "The line between what constitutes an official US governmental priority versus that of its biggest companies is a thin one," writes the author. To undermine politicians who seek reform, for example, the industry has engaged in "fearmongering" about how measures such as cap and trade, designed to limit carbon emissions, "would kill jobs and raise fuel costs." Portraying fossil fuel executives as opportunists, Aronoff reveals that from 2000 to 2018, despite "selling themselves as climate champions," energy companies invested less than 4% of their capital expenditures in low-carbon technologies. To counter the pernicious effects of capitalism, the author proposes "low-carbon populism" that sets out goals "other than the boundless accumulation of private wealth." As in her previous book, A Planet To Win, Aronoff champions the Green New Deal as a flexible, responsive framework "for reimagining the fractured social contract upon which this country was built" and for acknowledging the connection between racism and environmental vulnerabilities. Reprising the achievements of Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal, Aronoff suggests nationalizing the fossil fuel industry, turning to unions to train workers for clean energy jobs, and spurring technological innovation. "The New Deal's throughline wasn't socialism or even big government," she asserts, "but a thoroughly democratic political economy." The business model of the fossil fuel industry, she concludes in this well-documented and necessarily provocative book, is "incompatible with a livable future." An informative, urgent, and sure to be controversial argument.COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Formats
- Kindle Book
- OverDrive Read
- EPUB ebook
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Languages
- English
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