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The Skeptical Environmentalist: Measuring the Real State of the World Reprint Edition
Purchase options and add-ons
- ISBN-109780521010689
- ISBN-13978-0521010689
- EditionReprint
- PublisherCambridge University Press
- Publication dateSeptember 10, 2001
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions6.69 x 1.22 x 9.61 inches
- Print length540 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
The Economist
"… a superbly documented and readable book."
The Wall Street Journal
"… it is a surprise to meet someone who calls himself an environmentalist but who asserts that things are getting better … Strange to say, the author of this happy thesis is not a steely-eyed economist at a conservative Washington think tank but a vegetarian, backpack-toting academic who was a member of Greenpeace for four years … The primary target of the books, a substantial work of analysis with almost 3000 footnotes, are statements made by environemtal organizations like the Worldwatch Institute, the World Wildlife Fund and Greenpeace. He refers to the persistently gloomy fate from these groups as the Litany, a collection of statements that he argues are exaggerations or outright myths."
The New York Times
"The Skeptical Environmentalist should be read by every environmentalist, so that the appalling errors of fact the environmental movement has made in the past are not repeated. A brilliant and powerful book."
Matt Ridley, author of Genome
"Lomborg pulls off the remarkable feat of welding the techno-optimism of the Internet age with a lefty's concern for the fate of the planet."
Rolling Stone
"Bjørn Lomborg is an outstanding representative of the 'new breed' of political scientists - mathematically-skilled and computer-adept. In this book he shows himself also to be a hardheaded, empirically oriented analyst. Surveying a vast amount of data and taking account of a wide range of more and less informed opinion about environmental threats facing the planet, he comes to a balanced assessment of which ones are real and which are over-hyped. In vigorous and what needs not to be done about those turning out to be pseudo-problems."
Jack Hirshleifer, University of California, Los Angeles
"Bjørn Lomborg raises the important question whether the costs of remedying the damage caused by environmental pollution are higher than the costs of the pollution itself. The answer is by no means straightforward. He has written a pioneering book."
Richard Rosecrance, University of California, Los Angeles
"When Lomborg concludes that 'the loss of the world's rainforests, of fertile agricultural land, the ozone layer and of the climate balance are terrible' I agree. But we also need debate, and this book provides us with that in generous amounts, incl 2428 footnotes. If you, like I do, belong to the people who dare to think the world is making some progress, but always with mistakes to be corrected, this book makes important reading."
Lars Kristoferson, Secretary General, WWF Sweden
"… probably the most important book on the environment ever written."
booksonline
"Lomborg is right on his points, that his critique of much green activism and its reporting in the media is just, and, above all, that where there is room for disagreement, Mr Lomborg invites and facilitates discussion, rather than seeking to silence it."
The Economist
Book Description
About the Author
Product details
- ASIN : 0521010683
- Publisher : Cambridge University Press; Reprint edition (September 10, 2001)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 540 pages
- ISBN-10 : 9780521010689
- ISBN-13 : 978-0521010689
- Item Weight : 2.38 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.69 x 1.22 x 9.61 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #136,275 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #98 in Environmental Economics (Books)
- #181 in Ecology (Books)
- #241 in Environmental Science (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Dr. Bjorn Lomborg is an academic and the author of the best-selling "The Skeptical Environmentalist" and "Cool It". He challenges mainstream concerns about development and the environment and points out that we need to focus our limited resources and attention on the smartest solutions first. He is a visiting professor at Copenhagen Business School, and president of the Copenhagen Consensus Center which brings together top economists, including seven Nobel Laureates, to set data-driven priorities for the world.
Follow him on twitter: bjornlomborg
Lomborg is a frequent commentator in print and broadcast media, for outlets including the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, The Guardian, CNN, FOX, and the BBC. His monthly column is published in 19 languages, in 30+ newspapers with more than 30 million readers globally.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the content well-researched, well-documented and accessible. They also describe the reading experience as highly recommended and helps them think about priorities. Opinions are mixed on the writing style, with some finding it thoughtful and thoroughly presented, while others say it's misleading and full of irrelevant personal attacks.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book well-written, meticulously researched, and documented. They say it provides trend data on many important issues, using clear statistics and excellent references. Readers also say the book is very rational and reasonable, and stirs up discussion. They appreciate the tables that allow further analysis.
"...Lomborg describes all of this very transparantly, uses clear statistics, uses excellent references and argues very logically, intelligently and..." Read more
"...The book contains 173 figures, mostly graphs, nearly 3000 references, and thousands of interesting facts...." Read more
"This book is a well needed reality check to the scare tactics used by politicians, profit seekers and incompetent extremists in order to exert..." Read more
"...(if a bit repetitive on occasion), with a refreshingly straightforward examination of facts and rhetoric surrounding much of the environmental debate..." Read more
Customers find the book compelling, well-written, and highly recommended. They also appreciate the very good index and the breaking up of topics into subtopics.
"...I think this is a brave and terrific book...." Read more
"Worth a read, particularly if you are looking for balance...." Read more
"...The book is highly recommended. It's a thorough investigation into the all of humanities greatest concerns, and a highly usable reference...." Read more
"...This is probably the most rigorous book I have ever read by a political scientist and it enhanced my appreciation for what Lomborg's profession can..." Read more
Customers find the book useful, apolitical, and a precious antidote to propaganda, hysteria, and hyperbole. They also say it does a great job cutting through the hype and getting to the facts.
"...Let's start at the beginning. This is by far the most useful reference on environmental issues and facts ever published...." Read more
"The Skeptical Environmentalist is an important book...." Read more
"...its academic underpinnings the style is friendly, open, and most importantly apolitical. You can astound your friends with what you will learn...." Read more
"...This book does a great job of cutting through the hype and getting to the facts to that we can make good choices about the environment...." Read more
Customers are mixed about the writing style. Some mention that the book presents the data thoughtfully and thoroughly, using easy-to-understand graphs and long time periods. They also say it's fairly well organized and accessible for those with a basic understanding of science. However, others say that the writing is awkward, misleading, and full of irrelevant personal attacks.
"...The book is well documented, containing 153 pages of notes and bibliographical information that allows the reader to look deeper into the issues he..." Read more
"...Lomborg's presentation is engaging and the book is visually attractive...." Read more
"...The criticisms are full of irrelevant personal attacks, misquotations and unsubstantiated attacks. Lomborg's replies are factual and to the point...." Read more
"...In terms of readability, this book is very accessible for those with a basic familiarity with data analysis; probably nothing more than an..." Read more
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Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
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1. The world population is not growing at a record rate; the growth rate has been steadily declining since 1964. The world's population is expected to stabilize just short of 11 billion.
2. There is more and more food per head of the world's population. This is largely caused by the success of the so-called 'Green Revolution' (high-yield crops, irrigation and controlled water supply, fertilisers and pesticides, and farmers' management skills). The number of people starving is decreasing (although the numbers are still frighteningly high!)
3. Our lives and health have improved dramatically over the past couple of hundred years due to better standards of living, better hygiene and water supplies and better medical therapy. And over the past 50 years poverty has fallen more than in the previous 500. Also in the developing world a fantastic progress has been made (although there is still a long way to go!). Furthermore, over the past three decades, inequality between countries has not been increasing but decreasing. This trend is expected to continue throughout much of the century.
4. We are not headed for a major energy crisis, nor are we likely to experience any significant scarcity of raw materials. The earth is not running out of energy or natural recourses.
5. We need to manage and price water more carefully but we are not facing insurmountable water shortages.
6. Overall, the pollution burden has diminished dramatically in the developed world. Air pollution has dramatically decreased over the past decades in the Western world while at the same time there has been a dramatic economic growth. It would be a mistake to believe that economic growth is in the process of destroying the earth. Economy and ecology complement each other.
7. Global warming is almost certainly taking place, but 1) probably less devastating than often claimed, 2) radical fuel cutbacks are worse than the original affliction
8. Biodiversity-reduction and deforestation do exist but to a much lesser extent than often thought and claimed.
Lomborg describes all of this very transparantly, uses clear statistics, uses excellent references and argues very logically, intelligently and subtly. He constantly keeps on explaining and reminding throughout the book that the fact that things are getting better does not mean everything is OK. He clearly points at the necessity to keep on focusing on solving all of the real problems we still face. Also he acknowledges that the fact that things are getting better overall does not mean that there are no places or times were things get worse. The author says for instance: "A lot still needs to be done to improve conditions in Africa, not only in the context of AIDS prevention but also for food availability and economic production.
I think this is a brave and terrific book. I was surprised by how ferociously it was attached by some authoritative scientists, for instance in Scientific American. These scientists treat the book literally as if it were an attack on science. I read many of the criticisms and Lomborg's response to them. And according to me, Lomborg wins by knock out. The criticisms are full of irrelevant personal attacks, misquotations and unsubstantiated attacks. Lomborg's replies are factual and to the point. I am not an expert at all in this field and I can't know how right Lomborg is. But if he's right, it wouldn't be the first time that established scientists deny a truthful new message and try to isolate the messenger.
Regarding his chapter on Global Warming. Contrary to what some reviewers and critics claim, Bjorn Lomborg does not deny the existence of Global Warming. Neither does he state that it is not partially human induced. However, he puts the effects of Global Warming in perspective and corrects many alarmist myths regarding this subject. He also statistically analyzes the effects of the Kyoto protocol and finds that it is a flawed protocol that does much more harm than good.
Why the book is so important is because the public has been made to believe so much outrageous nonsense with regards to the economy, health, resources, environment, and the state of the world. It is primarily the media and environmental activists that are responsible for this misinformation. However, environmental scientists have not been very eager to correct misconceptions that result in more grants for them. This book is a "just the facts mam" book, and many (I believe the vast majority) of the facts that will surprise you are also agreed on by the very experts that are critical of this book. This is very important to remember. The book contains 173 figures, mostly graphs, nearly 3000 references, and thousands of interesting facts. Some of the claims in the book are under dispute, but for the average reader this is not of great concern. You have been bamboozled and Bjorn Lomborg will set you almost entirely straight.
One great service the book does to the average reader is that it makes you aware of how statistics can be used to manipulate you (this was not a surprise to me). For example, a claim that more people are dying of cancer does not mean that there is a cancer epidemic. Cancer is an old age disease, and we are living longer but the overall mortality rate is still 100%(duh), so that a higher percent is dying from cancer is not strange. You have to adjust the cancer rate and mortality rates for age to see if it has become worse (and it hasn't). Watch out for statistics in the media. Lomborgs analysis of GM food scares/hoaxes was exceptionally interesting.
And finally, here are a few interesting facts selected by me.
>> In 1970 35% of all people in the developing world were starving. In 1996 the figure was 18% and the UN expects that the figure will have fallen to 12% by 2010.
>> The life expectancy in the whole world in 1900 was still around 30. In 1998 it was 65 in the developing world.
>> Water scarcity is a local and logistic problem, not a global resource problem.
>> So2 pollution in London in the mid 1800 was around 40 times higher than it is now. Also economic development leads naturally to less pollution (not the the other way around), except for the very beginning.
>> The price of the vast majority of the important minerals and metals keep going down, and the reserves up (we find more, or extract more efficiently).
>> The worlds known conventional oil reserves has gone up (not down) because we keep finding more. At the year 2000 it stood at 40 more years of consumption.
>> It is estimated that globally there is about 242 times more shale oil than the conventional petroleum resource (we could tap into this when the price goes up more)
>> Do you remember the acid rain scare, it was just that. Acid rain only damages trees under very rare conditions.
Top reviews from other countries
He points out things which the reader should already know to be true. I know that the environment of the UK has visibly improved during my lifetime - I grew up in the 1970s - and Lomborg points out that this is true elsewhere. He points out that environmental legislation can only follow prosperity and that the greatest scandal in the world is not deforestation but lack of drinking water and adequate sanitation so that many people in the developing world are poisoned by their own filth.
So far so obvious. However, he gets much more subversive. Lomborg's strength is not that he can conduct primary research - he's not an oceanographer or meteorologist - but that he can analyse other people's data and see the patterns lying underneath. From his analysis, he shows that we are not living through a mass extinction unparalleled since the end of the cretaceous, that we are not running out of natural resources and neither are we likely to, that the world is not overpopulated, that the welfare of almost all people (and not just those in the developed countries) has improved greatly during the last century and will continue to do so, that deforestation is largely illusory, etc. Most importantly, he debunks a lot of myths about global warming and argues - persuasively I believe - that the Kyoto agreement is no more than an expensive and pointless act of public penance for our imagined sins.
His central message is not that controversial and it is this: the world is not perfect and many things can be improved but it is not as bad as many people would have you believe. This needs to be borne in mind by our legislators when they consider implementing policies which will have a negative impact not just on our prosperity but on the prosperity of developing nations as well.







