Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Fred Pearce - The Last Generation, How Nature will take her revenge for Climate Change


There are a plethora of books coming out at the moment about Climate Change, a colleague of mine half jokingly described it as “the new religion”, and in part he was right - since the latest IPCC report, the existence of Climate Change cannot be denied and now, the rush to make money from the issue has begun.

But amongst all the “Rough Guides to Climate Change”, and the “No Nonsense” guides, there are some gems. Monbiot’s book “Heat” is a fantastic example, and Tim Flannery’s look at the impact on the world’s eco-systems is well worth a read too.

Journalist Fred Pearce (who writes for the New Scientist) has also produced a readable book and it doesn’t simply regurgitate other books. In other ways (though not necessarily ones that are politically or scientifically problematic) it is very annoying.

To explain what the book is about, I need to explain about the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change reports. These are regular reports (the most recent was in Feb 2007, the previous was in 2001) on Climate Change, and they are effectively a summary of scientific understanding on the subject. However, they are a consensus of scientific belief, ignoring the more extreme ideas, or those that are still hotly debated. Pearce’s book doesn’t ignore these ideas. In fact what he does is to concentrate on the aspects of climate science that the IPCC reports might skirt around.

In particular he looks at tipping points, or positive feedbacks. These are aspects of the climate/environment that can, in some models, lead to massive changes to the climate from small changes. For instance (and I pick a standard example) the melting tundra of the northern wastes of Siberia, will release methane gases that have been trapped under the icy soil. These gases will, once released, contribute to further climate change, but are frozen in disproportionate amounts. As the planet warms from historical emissions, more gases are released from the tundra, and the world heats exponentially.

There are many such examples, and Pearce documents them all. Some of these issues are the subject of intense scientific debate. If this was all that Peace did, it would be a boring (and depressing) book. What Peace also does is to look at historical climate change.

Climate Change has always been part of the world’s history, as he points out there have been only two prolonged periods of stability in the earth’s climate. But in documenting how the earth’s climate history has been punctuated by moments of rapid and extreme climate change, the author is showing just how dramatic an effect the consequences of human society are. Currently we are responsible for adding “4 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide a year to the atmosphere”. This is a colossal amount, and it is enough to nudge to fragile climate systems in dangerous directions.

Ultimately, this book cannot help but be a manifesto for change, as most of the other books (good and bad) are. There is nothing special about Pearce’s calls for renewable energies or reduced car use. I was struck by his argument (which I haven’t seen before) that to buy some breathing(!) space, we should concentrate on removing gases like Methane from the atmosphere first. Methane molecules “measured over the first decade after their release… causes a hundred times more warming than a molecule of carbon dioxide”.

As an initial step, blocking emissions from land fills etc could have a major impact on short term global warming, buying the human race much needed time to reduce carbon emissions.

Unfortunately, the book’s clichés (“His name was Bond, Gerrad Bond”) are predictable and in places very annoying. Also annoying is the jacket quote from John Gummer MP, (who famously made his daughter eat beef during the BSE crisis) which is printed above the slogan “Read this book. Your children’s future depends on it”, with no trace of irony.

Finally, I think the title was chosen to sell books, rather than reflect the material within. Nature will not have "revenge", rather the environmental systems will react to environmental changes according to physical laws, unfortunately with appalling consequences for life on earth.

Nevertheless, the book serves a purpose – it highlights something often unmentioned by popular and political accounts of climate change, we don’t face a problem which is gradually going to get worse, we face a situation where existing climate problems will create greater problems that snowball out of our control. Unless of course we all act, collectively, to solve the problem now.

Related Reviews

Monbiot - Heat, How To Stop The Planet Burning
Flannery - The Weathermakers

4 comments:

carolwilliams said...

Thanks for this interesting review.You mention his call for reduced car use and methane emissions. But I'm really interested in just how much big buisness - rather than the individual not doing enough recylcing or using thier cars too much - are contributing to climate change problems. For example, everyone knows they build in obsolecence to cars, fridges etc. When will we see a book that details this information? Or is there one?

Resolute Reader said...

Well the call to reduce car use is inherent in any serious strategy to reduce CO2 emissions. Actually, most of Pearce's ideas are serious suggestions to reduce emissions massively - which of course requires government/state action. Hence my interest in his argument to reduce methane emissions from landfills - these are not individual solutions. And lets be fair to Pearce, his isn't a book about solving the problem, though he does go into some detail on this, this is really about highlighting little known aspects of the climate problem - feedback mechanisms in particular, as I hoped I'd made clear in the review.

Of course, the world is, as you suggest of those who do propose individual solutions, from greens to government ministers. But the serious commentators have long since moved on from this - the scale of the problem is just to large to imagine we can solve the problem by changing individual behaviour. Unfortunately it is still the dominate ideology of the media and the mainstream politicians.

So, when will we see a book that details this? Well I think there are a good few that do already, but as I have pointed out on many occasions, the starting point is Monbiot's book Heat. Even if he doesn't draw revolutionary conclusions, his conclusions ARE revolutionary, if you see what I mean. And he explicityly makes the point, what's the point cycling to work if the emissions you save in a lifetime of cycling are wiped out by a single overseas flight by someone else.

We need serious strategies around energy efficiency, energy generation, public transport and insulation, as a start. Monbiot has done sterling work on this, there are others, but start with Heat.

Anonymous said...

It's Bush's fault! Obama will kiss it and make it all better. Stop crying now!

Resolute Reader said...

Ahhhh "Anonymous" comments. The internet's equivalent of the random shouty man in the street.

If you believe that Obama is going to simply "kiss" this problem away, then frankly either you are a proverbial ostrich with it's head in the sand, or more likely, extremely naive about the vested, commercial interests behind Obama. I'd love to imagine a world where the next US administration will simply solve the problem of climate change, sadly I know the reality is that they'll have to be forced to do something, every inch of the way.