Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet
Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet book cover

Six Degrees: Our Future on a Hotter Planet

Kindle Edition

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$12.99
Publisher
Fourth Estate
Publication Date

Description

`Scientists predict that global temperatures will rise by between one and six degrees over the course of this century and Mark Lynas paints a chilling, degree-by-degree picture of the devastation likely to ensue unless we act now..."Six Degrees" is a rousing and vivid plea to choose a different future.' Daily Mail `The saga of how, in the world as imagined by thousands of computer-modelling studies, global warming kicks in degree by degree. "Six Degrees", I tell you now, is terrifying.' Sunday Times `Brilliant and higly readable.' Sunday Times --This text refers to an alternate kindle_edition edition. From School Library Journal Adult/High School—Lynas has gathered global-warming information from an array of authoritative scientists: geologists, glaciologists, oceanographers, climate scientists, and paleoclimatologists, as well as "major scientific projections" from computer modelers. He divides his findings into six main chapters representing the consequences of a one- to six-degree shift in temperature rise. More factual than hysterical and using accessible language, the author portrays a sobering, but broad and fascinating, view of the problem. He discusses not only the environmental consequences of melting icecaps, ocean warming, coral reef bleaching, CO2 emissions, deforestation, and severe weather, but also cultural and economic reverberations-the result of population shifts, animal migrations, and societal collapse. Through computer-modeling simulations he looks back into the past (the Pliocene, the Mayan civilization) and projects into the future for CO2 comparisons. His premise: the problem is now at global scale and will not just impact the disappearance of one group alone as it did the Maya. Claiming that solutions must be political, and that it is too late for quick fixes using renewable energy sources or technology, he concludes with some cautionary possible solutions: relocalization of goods and services, less consumption, global-scale carbon rationing, and a "2 degree increase target." Anyone studying climate change will find this a helpful reference as much current research has been precompiled and interpreted within one resource.— Jodi Mitchell, Berkeley Public Library, CA Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. Mark Lynas, a journalist, campaigner, and broadcast commentator on environmental issues, is the author of High Tide: News from a Warming World. He is a contributor to periodicals including New Statesman, Ecologist, Granta, and Geographical, and to the Guardian and Observer newspapers in the United Kingdom. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • An eye-opening and vital account of the future of our earth and our civilisation if current rates of global warming persist, by the highly acclaimed author of ‘High Tide’.
  • Picture yourself a few decades from now, in a world in which average temperatures are three degrees higher than they are now. On the edge of Greenland, rivers ten times the size of the Amazon are gushing off the ice sheet into the north Atlantic. Displaced victims of North Africa's drought establish a new colony on Greenland's southern tip, one of the few inhabitable areas not already crowded with environmental refugees. Vast pumping systems keep the water out of most of Holland, but the residents of Bangladesh and the Nile Delta enjoy no such protection. Meanwhile, in New York, a Category 5-plus superstorm pushes through the narrows between Staten Island and Brooklyn, devastating waterside areas from Long Island to Manhattan. Pakistan, crippled by drought brought on by disappearing Himalayan glaciers, sees 27 million farmers flee to refugee camps in neighbouring India. Its desperate government prepares a last-ditch attempt to increase the flow of the Indus river by bombing half-constructed Indian dams in Kashmir. The Pakistani president authorises the use of nuclear weapons in the case of an Indian military counter-strike. But the biggest story of all comes from South America, where a conflagration of truly epic proportions has begun to consume the Amazon…
  • Alien as it all sounds, Mark Lynas's incredible new book is not science-fiction; nor is it sensationalist. The six degrees of the title refer to the terrifying possibility that average temperatures will rise by up to six degrees within the next hundred years. This is the first time we have had a reliable picture of how the collapse of our civilisation will unfold unless urgent action is taken.
  • Most vitally, Lynas's book serves to highlight the fact that the world of 2100 doesn't have to be one of horror and chaos. With a little foresight, some intelligent strategic planning, and a reasonable dose of good luck, we can at least halt the catastrophic trend into which we have fallen. But the time to act is now.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

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Most Helpful Reviews

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Scary but important to any one with a pulse.

This is a critical read for anybody planning to survive the 21st century. Mr. Lynas has exhaustively collected the research data and scientific reports on global climate change and pre historical events we know have actually happened, and fashioned this examination of the most probable results to our climate as we sustain each of six degrees celsius global temperature rise. While our planetary policies seem to accept the inevitable 2 degree celsius rise by 2050 because of the environmental damage we have already caused, he demonstrates this seemingly small change is only the best possible scenario and it includes some very worrisome changes. Because very little action has been taken to limit temperature and CO2 rise so far, it is clear that this goal will almost certainly be overshot in the coming century, leading to some rather catastrophic climate changes for humans to try and survive. While many good people continue to work on this knotty problem, It would seem that until our policy makers abruptly change their focus from research and rhetoric to more forceful global action against further environmental destruction, our future looks bleak indeed.
6 people found this helpful
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Grim Diagnosis

We've progressed beyond the debate of whether global warming is real. It's time to debate what's going to happen because of global warming. This book represents one version of possible consequences. I hope he's wrong. If he's not, billions of people will die. There's no way we are going to cut emissions enough to stop this train wreck. All we can do now is prepare our children and grandchildren to survive in the world they will inherit. Hopefully, they won't hate us for it.
2 people found this helpful
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Shortsightedness

This is one of the few books which impressed me most and scared me at the same time. I do not understand why humans can be as stupid as appearently they are and do not act in time to avoid the drama which perhaps our generation will no face but a very next one.
2 people found this helpful
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Need more proof of climate change? Me neither, but this is good

Books on climate change and global warming can be a little dry. Not this book. It's easy to read...more of a conversational style. You'll turn off your lights and monitor, unplug your chargers, and drive less from now on after reading this book.
2 people found this helpful
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A great overview

A quick, straightforward read about what different levels of warming mean for the planet. Lynas writes clearly, boils the science down into a clear narrative, and illustrates just what our current use of CO2 could mean for our children. Can't recommend enough.
2 people found this helpful
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Climate

Why doesn't anyone look at the obvious!!
In the next 25 years the world population is expected to increase 60%. That's 10 billion people! every person places a demand on the earth. With that increase is an increase in food, industrial output, autos, gasoline, the forest. Garbage and human waste and clean water! Religion will never allow population control.
1 people found this helpful
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Old but still good

This book has some obsolete points. For example, hydrogen fuel cells have lost their raison d'etre because battery electrical vehicles now have ranges comparable to a fuel cell car of similar size. But it is still worth reading.
1 people found this helpful
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This book offers a frightening and realistic scenario of what ...

This book offers a frightening and realistic scenario of what is going to happen in a future that is barreling toward us.
1 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

Read it!!
1 people found this helpful
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grim outlook

this book was a real eye opener. It gives a very good picture of what the world could be like if we do reduce our carbon dioxide out put.
1 people found this helpful