Kindle
$19.49
Available instantly
Prime Member Exclusive Offer
3 months free
$0.00
  • For a limited time, get Audible Premium Plus free for 3 months.
  • You'll receive 1 credit a month to pick ANY title from our entire premium selection to keep forever (you'll use your first credit now).
  • You'll also get UNLIMITED listening to select audiobooks, Audible Originals, and podcasts.
  • After 3 months, $14.95/mo. Cancel online anytime.
Sold and delivered by Audible, an Amazon company
List Price: $25.19
By completing your purchase, you agree to Audible’s Conditions Of Use and Amazon's Privacy Notice.
Sold and delivered by Audible, an Amazon company
Added to

Sorry, there was a problem.

There was an error retrieving your Wish Lists. Please try again.

Sorry, there was a problem.

List unavailable.

Apocalypse Never: Why Environmental Alarmism Hurts Us All Audible Audiobook – Unabridged

4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars 5,492 ratings

Climate change is real, but it’s not the end of the world. It is not even our most serious environmental problem.

Michael Shellenberger has been fighting for a greener planet for decades. He helped save the world’s last unprotected redwoods. He co-created the predecessor to today’s Green New Deal. And he led a successful effort by climate scientists and activists to keep nuclear plants operating, preventing a spike of emissions.

But in 2019, as some claimed "billions of people are going to die", contributing to rising anxiety, including among adolescents, Shellenberger decided that, as a lifelong environmental activist, leading energy expert, and father of a teenage daughter, he needed to speak out to separate science from fiction.

Despite decades of news media attention, many remain ignorant of basic facts. Carbon emissions peaked and have been declining in most developed nations for over a decade. Deaths from extreme weather, even in poor nations, declined 80 percent over the last four decades. And the risk of Earth warming to very high temperatures is increasingly unlikely thanks to slowing population growth and abundant natural gas.

Curiously, the people who are the most alarmist about the problems also tend to oppose the obvious solutions.

What’s really behind the rise of apocalyptic environmentalism? There are powerful financial interests. There are desires for status and power. But most of all, there is a desire among supposedly secular people for transcendence. This spiritual impulse can be natural and healthy. But in preaching fear without love, and guilt without redemption, the new religion is failing to satisfy our deepest psychological and existential needs.

Read & Listen

Switch between reading the Kindle book & listening to the Audible audiobook with Whispersync for Voice.
Get the Audible audiobook for the reduced price of $16.79 after you buy the Kindle book.

Product details

Listening Length 12 hours and 18 minutes
Author Michael Shellenberger
Narrator Stephen Graybill
Whispersync for Voice Ready
Audible.com Release Date June 30, 2020
Publisher HarperAudio
Program Type Audiobook
Version Unabridged
Language English
ASIN B07YCSVVGR
Best Sellers Rank #10,774 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals)
#1 in Environmental Public Policy
#4 in Environmental Policy
#5 in Climate Change (Audible Books & Originals)

Customer reviews

4.7 out of 5 stars
4.7 out of 5
We don’t use a simple average to calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star. Our system gives more weight to certain factors—including how recent the review is and if the reviewer bought it on Amazon. Learn more
5,492 global ratings
Empower yourself for any discussion with the most extreme environmental activists
5 Stars
Empower yourself for any discussion with the most extreme environmental activists
Michael has tapped into a frustration many of us have experienced regarding discussions of the environment. As Americans, we love our beautiful earth and resources it has to offer. Unfortunately, as many of us have learned over the years, it’s almost impossible to engage in any discussion on the environment that is contrary to the popular media narrative. Who knew that even highly credentialed and knowledgeable professional environmentalists like Michael were feeling the same frustration. In this book, Michael tackles everything from plastics, to renewable energy, to economic development in third world countries. This book is well written: substantiated facts, personable, and humorous. Watch my video review on Rumble (link in my Amazon bio).
Thank you for your feedback
Sorry, there was an error
Sorry we couldn't load the review

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on July 14, 2020
APOCALYPSE NEVER—Amazon review

Apocalypse Never is an extremely important—and highly readable—book about Earth’s environment and contemporary human society. The author is a lifelong environmentalist. This book carries forward Michael Shellenberger’s personal mission—to protect the natural environment and to achieve the goal of universal prosperity for all people.

Shellenberger explains, “I wrote Apocalypse Never because the conversation about climate change and the environment has spiraled out of control.” In England, for example, leaders of an organization called Extinction Rebellion have made claims on national television, that because of climate change “Billions of people are going to die. Life on Earth is dying. Governments aren’t addressing it.”

A 16-year old Swedish girl became an international celebrity in 2019 for crying out that same message. In September 2019, a survey of thirty thousand people around the world found that 48 percent believed climate change would make humanity extinct.

Many young people are suffering psychic trauma because they have heard some of their elders predicting over and over again that “our kids will be dead in ten to fifteen years,” while declaring that awful fate has been proven scientifically.

Shellenberger interviewed Sarah Lunnon, a representative of Extinction Rebellion, about the basis for her statements on television that billions would die because of global warming. She said that scientists like Johan Rockström from the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research in Germany are saying it.

Shellenberger interviewed Rockström by telephone. Rockström told Shellenberger, “We don’t have evidence that we can provide freshwater or feed or shelter today’s world population of eight billion in a four degree [Celsius] world. My expert judgment, furthermore, is that it may even be doubtful if we can host half of that, meaning four billion.”

Shellenberger asked Rockström whether anyone has done a study of food production at four degrees. Rockström replied, “I must admit I have not seen such a study. It seems like such an interesting and important question.”

Shellenberger comments, “In fact, scientists have done that study, and two of them were Rockström’s colleagues at the Potsdam Institute. It found that food production could increase even at four to five degrees Celsius warming above preindustrial levels and that . . . fertilizer, irrigation, and mechanization mattered more than climate change.”

We learn from the book that in 1989, thirty years previously, Associated Press reported that a senior U.N. environmental official claimed that if global warming wasn’t reversed by the year 2000 rising sea levels would wipe entire nations off the face of the Earth, ice caps will melt away, the rainforests will burn, and the world will warm to unbearable temperatures. Governments have a ten-year window of opportunity to solve the greenhouse effects before it goes beyond human control.

Shellenberger explains, “I also care about getting the facts and science right . . . Much of what people are being told about the environment, including climate change is wrong, and we desperately need to get it right. I decided to write Apocalypse Never after getting fed up with the exaggeration, alarmism, and extremism that are the enemy of a positive, humanistic, and rational environmentalism.”

In Apocalypse Never Shellenberger says “Climate change is happening. It’s just not the end of the world. It’s not even our most serious environmental problem.”

The book takes readers along with Shellenberger in his investigatory travels to Africa, England, India, Indonesia, and South Korea. Shellenberger reports interviews in person and by telephone with interesting people including environmental scientists and activists.

In 291 pages of text and 19 color photos the book presents many surprising facts about the Earth’s environment and climate. For example carbon dioxide emissions are declining in most rich nations and have been declining in Britain, Germany, and France since the mid-1970s; the Amazon River basin is not “the lungs of the world;” climate change is not making natural disasters worse; and projected future global food supply exceeds consumption demand by 20% to 30%.

Statements of fact are supported by references in 104 pages of notes citing scientific sources including studies from the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO), the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) and other leading scientific bodies.

Michael Shellenberger and his wife Helen traveled to the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2014 to study the impact of widespread wood fuel use on people and wildlife, particularly the fabled mountain gorillas in Virunga National Park.

Congo was at the center of the Great African War (1988-2003). The war involved nine African countries and caused the deaths of three to five million people, mostly due to disease and starvation, but many by violence and atrocities. Another two million were displaced from their homes or fled seeking asylum.

The U.S. Department of State warned against travel to Congo because it was not safe due to widespread crime and lack of effective policing. For security, Michael Shellenberger hired a guide and translator, Caleb Kabanda, who has a reputation for keeping his clients safe.

Michael and Helen saw extreme poverty in Congo. They met Bernadette Semutaga (Bernadette), age 25, near Virunga National Park, home of the mountain gorillas. Bernadette told them, “I got married when I was fifteen years old. When I met my husband he was an orphan. He had nothing.”

Bernadette and her family lack basic medical care. Her seven children often go hungry and get sick. Bernadette was in fear of the heavily armed militias that roam the countryside robbing, raping, kidnapping, and murdering.

Bernadette is among the one billion people, one in seven worldwide in the early 21st century, who lack access to clean water, sanitation facilities, and electricity. Bernadette farms to survive. She must spend several hours each day walking to fetch water and firewood, hauling and chopping wood, building and fanning smoky fires, and cooking over them. Wild animals eat her crops.

Congo is rich in natural resources, but energy poor. Bernadette lives near Goma, the provincial capital city. Shellenberger told his Congolese guide, Caleb Kabanda, that he was in Congo in part to study the relationship between energy scarcity and conservation. Caleb said of Goma, “can you imagine a city of nearly two million people relying on wood for energy? Its’ crazy!”

The Congolese people hope for the completion of a planned hydroelectric dam that would bring them electricity. The book informs us that such dams in poor countries have been opposed by a non-governmental organization known as International Rivers. Their opposition is based on the loss of white water rafting if such dams are completed.

The book takes us to visit Indonesia, where Shellenberger traveled to investigate the working conditions for factory workers. Indonesia is rich both in natural resources and in energy. In Indonesia, Shellenberger met Suparti, a 25-year old woman from the island of Java. She was raised in a strict Islamic community where she couldn’t go to social gatherings if men were there.

Suparti’s family home had no electricity or TV. She worked alongside her parents and siblings in the fields. After she turned seventeen years old, Suparti left home for a city in Sumatra where she had an aunt and a sister. She found work in a factory that supplied products to Mattel, the American maker of toys and dolls.

At age eighteen Suparti changed jobs, taking work at a chocolate factory. Over the next seven years she moved to progressively more responsible positions. Her wages more than tripled since her first job. Eventually her work involved the factory’s computer systems. By age twenty-five Suparti was able to purchase a flat-screen TV, a motor scooter, and even a home.

Suparti told Shellenberger that she missed home, but had no desire to go back; that her parents encouraged the Muslim way of marriage where religious teachers would introduce her to someone they think is a good match. However, Suparti preferred to get to know the man before marriage. She wanted four children, two boys and two girls. At age twenty-one she met her future husband via Facebook. They married and have a child.

This review is just a brief sampling of the book. A few of the chapter titles, listed below, provide a foretaste of the richness of detail and thoughtful analysis in Apocalypse Never:

• It’s Not the End of the World
• Earth’s Lungs Aren’t Burning
• The Sixth Extinction Is Cancelled
• Greed Saved the Whales, Not Greenpeace
• Destroying the Environment to Save It
• False Gods for Lost Souls

This book may make Michael Shellenberger famous—or infamous in the opinion of people who were already trying to impede its circulation not seven days after it was issued.
62 people found this helpful
Report
Reviewed in the United States on November 17, 2020
I bought the hard cover edition of the book. The book consists of an Introduction, 12 chapters, a Notes section and an Index. The chapters are relatively short and easy to read. The prose is well written and seems to be well thought out. I did not find any grammatical mistakes. Prospective readers should note that this is not a technical book. There are no graphs or figures, nor any mathematical formulas, nor any discussion of atmospheric or ocean chemistry or physics. Michael Shellenberger has written about the history of the environmental movement, the deliberate instilling of anxiety and fear by environmental activists, politicians and the media, and the negative consequences of environmental actions around the world.

I am impressed by the breadth and depth of Mr. Shellenberger’s knowledge of the environmental movement and his investigative experience (i.e. the number of individuals he has interviewed). I have read many books on climate change and the environment and Mr. Shellenberger has, by far, exceeded the efforts of any other environmental journalist that I am aware of. His motivation for writing the book is the alarmism and warnings of an impending global apocalypse that pervade the movement. This is very well explained in the book. He also discusses the misinformation, deliberate deception by activists, scientists and politicians and outright lies presented as facts which poison the entire realm of environmentalism.

The war on nuclear fueled electricity generating plants was unknown to me. However, Mr. Shellenberger explains the course of events which have taken place across the country – especially in California – to close all such plants. The main actors are former governor Jerry Brown, the National Resource Defense Council, the Environmental Defense Fund and the Sierra Club. And strangely enough, the one thing that all of these actors have in common is that they were working to have fossil fuel burning electricity plants take the place of nuclear plants!!! Jerry Brown was protecting his family’s oil resources and the environmental advocates were pushing natural gas. You have to read the whole story in the book to believe this craziness!!! On top of this, Mr. Shellenberger explains in the book how past and present California administrations are connected to each other (it’s a very small world) and how they passed or ignored environmental regulations in order to benefit themselves and their supporters. The corruption and environmental hypocrisy have no limits. It’s almost enough to make you sick!!

This is not to leave out the deliberate actions of billionaires, such as Tom Steyer and Michael Bloomberg, who funded organizations such as the NRDC, the EDF, 350.org and the Sierra Club with money from fossil fuel stock investments. The whole scene gets even worse with a mob of rich politically connected benefactors who have contributed to political campaigns in order to get favors from politicians so that they can make huge profits with existing and new capital ventures.

Mr. Shellenberger also explains how low energy density systems like solar panels and wind turbines are simply too inefficient to take the place of fossil fuel burning power plants. How it would take 1,000 times more land to establish a wind farm that would generate the same number of megawatts as an equivalent nuclear power plant. Additionally, information is included regarding how the World Bank and rich developed nations refuse to fund the construction of dams and energy dense fossil fuel plants which could provide cheap electricity to residents in poor countries so that they can establish businesses and industries. Instead, rich nation politicians, the World Bank and environmental activists push third world countries to “leap frog” to wind and solar energy systems!
Some environmental organizations even push for low agricultural productivity – which maintains poverty – in a misguided attempt to “save the environment.” However, in reality, farmers are forced to clear more land in order to grow more crops. Had the World Bank and others funded the purchase of modern farming equipment, then the farmers could have used the land more intensively and saved land in the Amazon rain forest and across the globe. It is also mentioned that the discovery of plentiful oil and gas in the United States curtailed the practice of mountain top coal removal. Who would have known? Mr. Shellenberger also includes examples of the hubris of environmentalists and politicians who push their favorite environmental plans on poor communities without regard to the needs of those communities. Many more examples are listed in the book of actions taken which, on first glance, don’t seem to have an environmental benefit, but, when examined more fully, are shown to be the wisest and most clear-headed choices for the world.

I enjoyed the book very much. The information Mr. Shellenberger presented was, at times, stunning in its significance and shocking! One of my regrets is that he still believes that CO2 is the cause of global warming, but, then, he is not a scientist. I wouldn’t expect him to understand that water vapor is the important greenhouse gas. He also doesn’t address the issue of climate science skepticism. Skepticism is the basis for scientific research. Not discussing this was a missed opportunity. Lastly, he believes that EXXONMOBIL knew that CO2 was causing global warming back in 1979(?). However, this is not what their research indicated. So, I’ll give him a pass, give the book five stars and recommend it to everyone.

Raphael Ketani
Sunnyside, NY
20 people found this helpful
Report

Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
Blaise Allen
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read to understand climate reality vs. apocalypse fear mongering
Reviewed in Brazil on September 6, 2022
One of the most important books written about the environmental scare tactics being used to drive dangerous public policies.
Customer image
Blaise Allen
5.0 out of 5 stars A must read to understand climate reality vs. apocalypse fear mongering
Reviewed in Brazil on September 6, 2022
One of the most important books written about the environmental scare tactics being used to drive dangerous public policies.
Images in this review
Customer image Customer image Customer image
Customer imageCustomer imageCustomer image
One person found this helpful
Report
Dario
5.0 out of 5 stars Perfetto !
Reviewed in Italy on January 7, 2024
Perfetto !
Jacky P.
5.0 out of 5 stars Vision humaniste du monde
Reviewed in France on December 13, 2023
Le discours environnemental dominant est, de nos jours, décidément malthusien, misanthrope et dogmatique. Ce livre est, au contraire, humaniste. Il place l'humain au centre, et préfère la raison au dogme. Ce fut rafraichissant.
Jawad Shuaib
5.0 out of 5 stars Apocalyptic scaremongering causes paralysis
Reviewed in Canada on January 22, 2021
For reasons I am not yet sure, our species is uniquely obsessed with its own imminent demise. This prime belief is shared amongst all religions of the world. So it is no wonder that the rise of secularism in the West has instead been replaced by a new religion of “Climatism” with its prophets and adherents raising alarm of an impending doom.
 
Environmental alarmism has polarized policy makers and paralyzed the rest of us. Climate change is of course real. But many of the policies that could dampen its ramifications are worsened by environmental groups.
 
This book delves into the politics of climate change. Instead of alarmism, this book provides pragmatic solutions. One such solution is to embrace Nuclear Energy. It is the safest, cleanest and most reliable source of energy. If we can solve the energy problem, we can solve nearly all challenges faced by the world - including climate change. Unfortunately, as a result of many activist groups, nuclear energy has been unfairly berated in favor of “renewable energy”. So today, many nations are obsessively destroying large swaths of land for solar and wind farms; ironically, this has resulted in an overall increase in emissions since their unreliability must be supplanted with burning more coal and fossil fuels.
 
Many environmentalists see the world through a Malthusian perspective - one that sees development in the third world as harmful to the ecosystem and hence denies them energy dense solutions to stutter their progress. But how can the poor be expected to take care of the environment if they are forced to rely upon it for sustenance? People kept at the bottom of Maslow’s pyramid cannot possibly be persuaded to give up hunting and deforestation. What we need is for more people to move to cities so better waste management and energy solutions can be provided. In other words, it is only through human development that farmlands can be reclaimed by forests.
 
There is hope. But this hope is stunted when the solutions offered are short-sighted and laced with apocalyptic scaremongering.
Customer image
Jawad Shuaib
5.0 out of 5 stars Apocalyptic scaremongering causes paralysis
Reviewed in Canada on January 22, 2021
For reasons I am not yet sure, our species is uniquely obsessed with its own imminent demise. This prime belief is shared amongst all religions of the world. So it is no wonder that the rise of secularism in the West has instead been replaced by a new religion of “Climatism” with its prophets and adherents raising alarm of an impending doom.
 
Environmental alarmism has polarized policy makers and paralyzed the rest of us. Climate change is of course real. But many of the policies that could dampen its ramifications are worsened by environmental groups.
 
This book delves into the politics of climate change. Instead of alarmism, this book provides pragmatic solutions. One such solution is to embrace Nuclear Energy. It is the safest, cleanest and most reliable source of energy. If we can solve the energy problem, we can solve nearly all challenges faced by the world - including climate change. Unfortunately, as a result of many activist groups, nuclear energy has been unfairly berated in favor of “renewable energy”. So today, many nations are obsessively destroying large swaths of land for solar and wind farms; ironically, this has resulted in an overall increase in emissions since their unreliability must be supplanted with burning more coal and fossil fuels.
 
Many environmentalists see the world through a Malthusian perspective - one that sees development in the third world as harmful to the ecosystem and hence denies them energy dense solutions to stutter their progress. But how can the poor be expected to take care of the environment if they are forced to rely upon it for sustenance? People kept at the bottom of Maslow’s pyramid cannot possibly be persuaded to give up hunting and deforestation. What we need is for more people to move to cities so better waste management and energy solutions can be provided. In other words, it is only through human development that farmlands can be reclaimed by forests.
 
There is hope. But this hope is stunted when the solutions offered are short-sighted and laced with apocalyptic scaremongering.
Images in this review
Customer image
Customer image
5 people found this helpful
Report
Rodrigo Barreda Maza
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Reviewed in Germany on May 11, 2024
Excellent