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An Inconvenient Truth: The Planetary Emergency of Global Warming and What We Can Do About It Paperback – May 26, 2006
Purchase options and add-ons
- Print length320 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherRodale Books
- Publication dateMay 26, 2006
- Dimensions7.75 x 1.25 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101594865671
- ISBN-13978-1594865671
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About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Some experiences are so intense while Some experiences are so intense while they are happening that time seems to stop altogether. When it begins again and our lives resume their normal course, those intense experiences remain vivid, refusing to stay in the past, remaining always and forever with us.
Seventeen years ago my youngest child was badly--almost fatally--injured. This is a story I have told before, but its meaning for me continues to change and to deepen.
That is also true of the story I have tried to tell for many years about the global environment. It was during that interlude 17 years ago when I started writing my first book, Earth in the Balance. It was because of my son's accident and the way it abruptly interrupted the flow of my days and hours that I began to rethink everything, especially what my priorities had been. Thankfully, my son has long since recovered completely. But it was during that traumatic period that I made at least two enduring changes: I vowed always to put my family first, and I also vowed to make the climate crisis the top priority of my professional life.
Unfortunately, in the intervening years, time has not stood still for the global environment. The pace of destruction has worsened and the urgent need for a response has grown more acute.
The fundamental outline of the climate crisis story is much the same now as it was then. The relationship between human civilization and the Earth has been utterly transformed by a combination of factors, including the population explosion, the technological revolution, and a willingness to ignore the future consequences of our present actions. The underlying reality is that we are colliding with the planet's ecological system, and its most vulnerable components are crumbling as a result.
I have learned much more about this issue over the years. I have read and listened to the world's leading scientists, who have offered increasingly dire warnings. I have watched with growing concern as the crisis gathers strength even more rapidly than anyone expected.
In every corner of the globe--on land and in water, in melting ice and disappearing snow, during heat waves and droughts, in the eyes of hurricanes and in the tears of refugees--the world is witnessing mounting and undeniable evidence that nature's cycles are profoundly changing.
I have learned that, beyond death and taxes, there is at least one absolutely indisputable fact: Not only does human-caused global warming exist, but it is also growing more and more dangerous, and at a pace that has now made it a planetary emergency.
Part of what I have learned over the last 14 years has resulted from changes in my personal circumstances as well. Since 1992, our children have all grown up, and our two oldest daughters have married. Tipper and I now have two grandchildren. Both of my parents have died, as has Tipper's mother.
And less than a year after Earth in the Balance was published, I was elected vice president--ultimately serving for eight years. I had the opportunity, as a member of the Clinton-Gore administration, to pursue an ambitious agenda of new policies addressing the climate crisis.
At that time I discovered, firsthand, how fiercely Congress would resist the changes we were urging them to make, and I watched with growing dismay as the opposition got much, much worse after the takeover of Congress in 1994 by the Republican party and its newly aggressive conservative leaders.
I organized and held countless events to spread public awareness about the climate crisis, and to build more public support for congressional action. I also learned numerous lessons about the significant changes in recent decades in the nature and quality of America's "conversation of democracy." Specifically, that entertainment values have transformed what we used to call news, and individuals with independent voices are routinely shut out of the public discourse.
In 1997 I helped achieve a breakthrough at the negotiations in Kyoto, Japan, where the world drafted a groundbreaking treaty whose goal is to control global warming pollution. But then I came home and faced an uphill battle to gain support for the treaty in the U.S. Senate.
In 2000 I ran for president. It was a hard-fought campaign that was ended by a 5-4 decision in the Supreme Court to halt the counting of votes in the key state of Florida. This was a hard blow.
I then watched George W. Bush get sworn in as president. In his very first week in office, President Bush reversed a campaign pledge to regulate C02 emissions--a pledge that had helped persuade many voters that he was genuinely concerned about matters relating to the environment.
Soon after the election, it became clear that the Bush-Cheney administration was determined to block any policies designed to help limit global-warming pollution. They launched an all-out effort to roll back, weaken, and--wherever possible--completely eliminate existing laws and regulations. Indeed, they even abandoned Bush's pre-election rhetoric about global warming, announcing that, in the president's opinion, global warming wasn't a problem at all.
As the new administration was getting underway, I had to begin making decisions about what I would do in my own life. After all, I was now out of a job. This certainly wasn't an easy time, but it did offer me the chance to make a fresh start--to step back and think about where I should direct my energies.
I began teaching courses at two colleges in Tennessee, and, along with Tipper, published two books about the American family. We moved to Nashville and bought a house less than an hour's drive from our farm in Carthage. I entered the business world and eventually started two new companies. I became an adviser to two already established major high-tech businesses.
I am tremendously excited about these ventures, and feel fortunate to have found ways to make a living while simultaneously moving the world--at least a little--in the right direction.
With my partner Joel Hyatt I started Current TV, a news and information cable and satellite network for young people in their twenties, based on an idea that is, in our present-day society, revolutionary: that viewers themselves can make the programs and in the process participate in the public forum of American democracy. With my partner David Blood I also started Generation Investment Management, a firm devoted to proving that the environment and other sustainability factors can be fully integrated into the mainstream investment process in a way that enhances profitability for our clients, while encouraging businesses to operate more sustainably.
At first, I thought I might run for president again, but over the last several years I have discovered that there are other ways to serve, and that I enjoy them. I have also continued to make speeches on public policy, and--as I have at almost every crossroads moment in my life--to make the global environment my central focus.
Since my childhood summers on our family's farm in Tennessee, when I first learned from my father about taking care of the land, I have been deeply interested in learning more about threats to the environment. I grew up half in the city and half in the country, and the half I loved most was on our farm. Since my mother read to my sister and me from Rachel Carson's classic book, Silent Spring, and especially since I was first introduced to the idea of global warming by my college professor Roger Revelle, I have always tried to deepen my own understanding of the human impact on nature, and in my public service I have tried to implement policies to ameliorate-- and eventually eliminate--that harmful impact.
During the Clinton-Gore years we accomplished a lot in terms of environmental issues, even though, with the hostile Republican Congress, we fell short of all that was needed. Since the change in administrations, I have watched with growing concern as our forward progress has been almost completely reversed.
After the 2000 election, one of the things I decided to do was to start giving my slide show on global warming again. I had first put it together at the same time I began writing Earth in the Balance, and over the years I have added to it and steadily improved it to the point where
I think it makes a compelling case that humans are the cause of most of the global warming that is taking place, and that unless we take quick action the consequences for our planetary home could become irreversible.
For the last six years, I have been traveling around the world, sharing the information I have compiled with anyone who would listen in colleges, small towns, and big cities. More and more, I have begun to feel that I am changing minds, but it is a slow process.
In the spring of 2005, I gave my slide show to a large gathering in Los Angeles organized and hosted by environmental activist (and film producer) Laurie David, without whom the movie never would have been made. Afterward, she and Lawrence Bender, a veteran film producer who was essential to the project's success, first suggested that I ought to consider making a movie out of my presentation. I was skeptical because I couldn't see how my slide show would translate to film. But they kept coming to other slide shows and brought Jeff Skoll, founder and CEO of Participant Productions, who expressed interest in backing the project. And then, Scott Burns brought his unique and crucially important skills to the production team. Lesley Chilcott became the coproducer and legendary "trail boss." Lawrence and Laurie also introduced me to the highly talented director, Davis Guggenheim.
This extraordinary group convinced me that the translation of the slide show into a film wouldn't need to sacrifice the central role of science for entertainment's sake. Davis Guggenheim's creative vision was extraordinary. Moreover, his skills as a documentarian included an ability to ask probing questions during our many lengthy recorded dialogues--questions that forced me to find new ways to articulate ideas and feelings that, in some cases, I had never put into words before. It was in response to one of his questions that I first used the phrase "An Inconvenient Truth," a phrase that Davis later suggested be the title of the movie.
I then chose that same title for this book, but the idea for a book on the climate crisis actually came first. It was Tipper who first suggested that I put together a new kind of book with pictures and graphics to make the whole message easier to follow, combining many elements from my slide show with all of the new original material I have compiled over the last few years.
Tipper and I are, by the way, giving 100% of whatever profits come to us from the book--and from the movie--to a non-profit, bipartisan effort to move public opinion in the United States to support bold action to confront global warming.
After more than thirty years as a student of the climate crisis, I have a lot to share. I have tried to tell this story in a way that will interest all kinds of readers. My hope is that those who read the book and see the film will begin to feel, as I have for a long time, that global warming is not just about science and that it is not just a political issue. It is really a moral issue.
Although it is true that politics at times must play a crucial role in solving this problem, this is the kind of challenge that ought to completely transcend partisanship. So whether you are a Democrat or a Republican, whether you voted for me or not, I very much hope that you will sense that my goal is to share with you both my passion for the Earth and my deep sense of concern for its fate. It is impossible to feel one without the other when you know all the facts.
I also want to convey my strong feeling that what we are facing is not just a cause for alarm, it is paradoxically also a cause for hope. As many know, the Chinese expression for "crisis" consists of two characters side by side . The first is the symbol for "danger," the second the symbol for "opportunity."
The climate crisis is, indeed, extremely dangerous. In fact it is a true planetary emergency. Two thousand scientists, in a hundred countries, working for more than 20 years in the most elaborate and well-organized scientific collaboration in the history of humankind, have forged an exceptionally strong consensus that all the nations on Earth must work together to solve the crisis of global warming.
The voluminous evidence now strongly suggests that unless we act boldly and quickly to deal with the underlying causes of global warming, our world will undergo a string of terrible catastrophes, including more and stronger storms like Hurricane Katrina, in both the Atlantic and the Pacific.
We are melting the North Polar ice cap and virtually all of the mountain glaciers in the world. We are destabilizing the massive mound of ice on Greenland and the equally enormous mass of ice propped up on top of islands in West Antarctica, threatening a worldwide increase in sea levels of as much as 20 feet.
The list of what is now endangered due to global warming also includes the continued stable configuration of ocean and wind currents that has been in place since before the first cities were built almost 10,000 years ago.
We are dumping so much carbon dioxide into the Earth's environment that we have literally changed the relationship between the Earth and the Sun. So much of that CO2 is being absorbed into the oceans that if we continue at the current rate we will increase the saturation of calcium carbonate to levels that will prevent formation of corals and interfere with the making of shells by any sea creature.
Global warming, along with the cutting and burning of forests and other critical habitats, is causing the loss of living species at a level comparable to the extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. That event was believed to have been caused by a giant asteroid. This time it is not an asteroid colliding with the Earth and wreaking havoc; it is us.
Last year, the national academies of science in the 11 most influential nations came together to jointly call on every nation to "acknowledge that the threat of climate change is clear and increasing" and declare that the "scientific understanding of climate changes is now sufficiently clear to justify nations taking prompt action."
So the message is unmistakably clear. This crisis means "danger!"
Why do our leaders seem not to hear such a clear warning? Is it simply that it is inconvenient for them to hear the truth?
If the truth is unwelcome, it may seem easier just to ignore it.
But we know from bitter experience that the consequences of doing so can be dire.
Product details
- Publisher : Rodale Books; First Edition (May 26, 2006)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 320 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1594865671
- ISBN-13 : 978-1594865671
- Item Weight : 2.05 pounds
- Dimensions : 7.75 x 1.25 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #667,438 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,084 in Ecology (Books)
- #1,290 in Environmental Science (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Former Vice President Al Gore is co-founder and chairman of Generation Investment Management. He is also a senior partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, and a member of Apple, Inc.'s board of directors.
Gore spends the majority of his time as chairman of The Climate Reality Project, a non-profit devoted to solving the Climate Crisis.
Gore was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1976, 1978, 1980 and 1982 and the U.S. Senate in 1984 and 1990. He was inaugurated as the forty-fifth Vice President of the United States on January 20, 1993, and served eight years. During the Administration, Gore was a central member of President Clinton's economic team. He served as President of the Senate, a Cabinet member, a member of the National Security Council and as the leader of a wide range of Administration initiatives.
He is the author of the bestsellers Earth in the Balance, An Inconvenient Truth, The Assault on Reason, and Our Choice: A Plan to Solve the Climate Crisis. He is the subject of an Oscar-winning documentary and is the co-recipient, with the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize for "informing the world of the dangers posed by climate change."
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Customers find the presentation excellent, with excellent illustrations and photographs. They describe the information as informative, dense with facts and figures explaining scientific data. Readers say the book is great, enjoyable, and worth the price.
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Customers find the presentation of the book well-presented, understandable, and well-organized. They appreciate the excellent illustrations and photographs. Readers also mention the charts, graphs, and photos are very useful.
"...In an ironically amusing and disarmingly simple cartoon, Gore demonstrates what dissenters of global warming are doing; they are weighing gold bars..." Read more
"...the risks of the human race's reliance on fossil fuel, he also offers stunning photos showing concrete examples of the effects of global warming...." Read more
"...The presentation is sound, though it often relies on anecdotal information. He avoids drastic, unsupportable statements...." Read more
"...of all the darn things, a slide presentation, converted and presented marvelously in this book, that purports to represent science, you win awards...." Read more
Customers find the book very informative, dense with facts and figures explaining scientific data. They say it's interesting and a good first book on the topic. Readers also mention the science is reasonably sound.
"...Gore does a great job of explaining in the most simple terms what is happening, and what the current as well as past scenario looks like, and the..." Read more
"...One misconception with this book is that it is dense with facts and figures explaining scientific data...." Read more
"...author's book has a clear political message I can find no fault in his basic reasoning...." Read more
"...It is a smart, sensible, inexpensive book that anyone can understand that addresses the tedious, but absolutely essential relationship between..." Read more
Customers find the book great, enjoyable, and worthy of its best-seller status. They say it's a good primer on issues surrounding climate change and a great companion to the movie. Readers also mention the cartoon is ironically amusing.
"...In an ironically amusing and disarmingly simple cartoon, Gore demonstrates what dissenters of global warming are doing; they are weighing gold bars..." Read more
"...Indeed, An Inconvenient Truth makes an excellent coffee table book that is truly educational...." Read more
"...This is a great book for children and adults a like. The pictures alone make it worthwhile.If this review was helpful, please vote." Read more
"...Whatever one's political leanings might be, this book is worthy of its best-seller status and a must-read...." Read more
Customers find the book worth the price and valuable to anyone willing to learn. They say it provides consumers with more spending power and improves energy efficiency, which ultimately costs less.
"...PURE ECONOMICS - HIGH ROIImproved energy efficiency ultimately costs less (e.g. compact fluorescent light bulbs, diesel automobiles)..." Read more
"...It is a smart, sensible, inexpensive book that anyone can understand that addresses the tedious, but absolutely essential relationship between..." Read more
"...Despite these frustrations, the book is not without value. Many of the facts presented are worthy of deep consideration...." Read more
"...Or, turning your thormostat up 1 degree. Saves you money, and saves the environment...." Read more
Customers say the book makes a solid contribution to the environmental debate. They say it reinforces the message of conservation and that changing lightbulbs to CFL's can significantly reduce the amount of pollution.
"...found his niche in life after politics, making a solid contribution to the environmental debate...." Read more
"...Simple things like changing lightbulbs to CFL's can significantly reduce the amount of pollution. Or, turning your thormostat up 1 degree...." Read more
"...Every page has a strong point which reinforces the message of conservation...." Read more
"...Overall, a great reference for the environmentalists library or for anyone who is interested in learning about the current state of the environment..." Read more
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Now, let us get rid of that assumption which we made above, because it is plain wrong. There is no doubt in the minds of the majority of scientists that global warming is real, that greenhouse gases are causing is, and that it is generally responsible for violent and unpredictable weather events. There is no doubt in the mind of scientists that for the first time in the history of our planet, a single species has engaged in activities whose magnitude has finally become enough to modify earth's mighty and tempestuous terrains, oceans, and atmosphere. Actually most scientists are quite sure about even definite changes, such as ice cap melting, but let us for a moment give the skeptics the benefit of doubt by agreeing that the exact details are debated. Even then, the issue does not lose its ominous urgency. No.
I don't want to go into all the details about global warming myself, because they are easily available and are enumerated in detail in the film. There are myriad changes of ever kind on our planet, including everything from hurricanes and desertification, to a rise in noxious plants and insidious animal, insect, and most importantly, disease causing microorganisms. It does not matter that we cannot pinpoint particular events to just global warming. This is like knowing that a tiger is on his way to kill us, and asking for the length of his fangs and the exact strength in his muscles, before deciding whether to run or not. Does it matter?
Gore does a great job of explaining in the most simple terms what is happening, and what the current as well as past scenario looks like, and the book is worth reading just for those factual details. The facts are lavishly illustrated and accessible to anyone if he cares to take interest.
The graphs and charts can be understood by any high school student. As one review said, there's no scene in any horror movie which can elicit as much horror as the face-slapping truth of some of those charts. The images of dying glaciers, rainforests, and rapidly declining species of every kind are striking, but not because of their grandeur. They are striking because of their sheer number, which demonstrate that climate change is not just real, but it's happening fast. We are losing day by day, and painful bit by bit, what Edward Wilson describes as our primeval emotional connection to nature.
Another key feature of the film is that Gore is distinctly non-partisan, and yet he manages to convey that the current administration will go down in ignominy because of its blatant disregard, abuse and manipulation of sound and objective scientific advice. If we deem Union Carbide to be a criminal, then why not politicians like those in the current administration, who are doing the exact same thing by ignoring data that has a fair chance of causing the death of millions and destruction of untold amounts of property? What kind of monsters will go on playing for profits after knowing that there is a thirty percent chance that ten million people may die because of man made climate change that they are partially or largely responsible for?
And in the end, does it matter if the whole issue is about profits? In an ironically amusing and disarmingly simple cartoon, Gore demonstrates what dissenters of global warming are doing; they are weighing gold bars and prosperity on one side of the scale. What's on the other side of the scale? Planet Earth. Q.E.D. and there should be no need to say more.
The real issue in my mind, far away, is actually quite different but a crucial one that I believe strikes at the heart of our existence and history on earth. We have phenomena here that are generally agreed upon. There is also general scientific consensus on their causes, which are man made. And there is also general consensus about their effects. My point is, irrespective of the details, isn't it our moral, political, social, and even economic duty, to do something about events that, even potentially, can hold the planet's fate in their balance? Do we need to be one hundred percent sure of such a catastrophe in order to do something about it? If so, then I think we will have failed all our future and past accomplishments, and our unique perspective of insight and foresight which has helped us survive and conquer this planet much more than we should have.
The issue surely is a moral one. But I think that the greater issue simply asks the question of what the stuff is, that we as humans are made of. We have outlived our lifespan and colonized every acre of the planet by averting exactly those risks which we were reasonably sure of, without waiting for certainty about their prospects. We never always asked for one hundred percent guarantee when it came to issues of survival. Do we ask for one hundred percent certainty that an emergent disease could possibly wipe out even ten percent of the world's population? Do we ask for one hundred percent certainty that a natural catastrophe will happen in some location? Do we we ask for one hundred percent certainty about financial events that could bring about economic depression? The answer clearly is no. We have always acted on the basis of the best possible knowledge that we have, even though we never were one hundred percent sure. We have kept the midnight oil burning in our laboratories and institutions, and poured in resources of every kind, to prevent minor catastrophes that even had a fifty percent chance of occuring.
If this is the case, then it is beyond me to understand why we are so stuborn in acting to prevent something that is firstly reasonably well-established, and secondly, something that is a million times more damaging than these other events, even to the point of being a certified global killer. Have the trappings of our unique minds injected so much hubris and clouded our psyche so much, that like a Greek tragedy, when it is most necessary, we fail to summon all our qualities that have furthered our existence and prosperity until now?
And yet, even in the dark recesses of our greatest errors, hope goes about its daily business as usual.
This is a problem we can solve. At the end of the book, simple ways to reduce our dependence on oil and cut down on emissions, including electing responsible politcians, intersperse the titles. A large enough number of people just have to do it. A large enough number of people have to lobby in whatever way they can, to change policy. At the very least, they have to educate themselves about issues at the very basic level. If there is any time for all of us to climb out of our cocoon of complacance, this is it, and perhaps this is the last great opportunity we have. The greater responsibility is obviously of the developed nations, but we all have to do our share. The science is reasonably sound, and we are only deceiving ourselves if we ignore it or deem it to be "uncertain", as most politcians do. Central to their behavior is perhaps the notion that environmental protection and corporate interests cannot coexist. Wrong again. However, it is also true that every day that corporations and governments ignore warmings about human initiated climate change, so will changes for the better keep on becoming harder to implement. If we cross the tipping point, some things may permanently change. It's a law of nature.
Sometimes, I get the feeling that human existence is the greatest of Greek tragedies, inevitably caught so much in its own inertia, that the sheer scale and intensity of that inertia means that we are hurtling inexorably towards our doom. We did not die because of plagues because we invented medicines. We did not die of natural disasters because we protected ourselves through technology. We have not even died yet of war, for inexplicable reasons in which I nonetheless see hope and aspirations. But what about those reasons which we manufacture almost gleefully. It may be that fate would have finally found the perfect way to bring an end to humanity, by literally its own will.
And yet like I said, the fact that even the darkest scenarios hold hope also seems to be a curiously human attribute. Gore talks about the great wars we have fought, the disasters (including CFC damage) that we have averted, and the differences that we have overcome in presciently achieving the impossible. When no amount of logic and reasoning can pacify our hearts and minds, it is only the thin but remarkably assuring thread of history that can guide us in the dark. And yet, like the thread of Ariadne, it leads us both ways, to liberation, or to the Minotaur which we have subconsiously created out of our common greed and woes. Where we go depends on us, all of us. We have to integrate and educate, empathize and act. This issue is not about Republicans and Democrats, about conservatives and liberals, about developed and developing countries. We are beyond rhetoric. We have entered the age where action should provide its own rhetoric.
Global warming is a fact with unpredictable consequences. We are largely responsible. The consequences will be violent. Unless everyone does his or her own part to prevent it, the olympian sun, both literally and figuratively, will undoubtedly melt the wings of us proud Icaruses.
And in the limitless reaches of space, with not an inkling of life anywhere in the Universe, there wouldn't even be any one to watch this pale blue dot, alone in its glory and pride, gradually dim and fade away into non existence.
Don't miss 'An Inconvenient Truth', both the book and the movie.
One misconception with this book is that it is dense with facts and figures explaining scientific data. While there is substantive information contained in text, a large collection of beautiful photos allows any reader to quickly absorb the message. In these photos, various ice formations from 50-70 years ago are juxtaposed with their current state. In total, they make for a compelling story alone.
What is missing from the book is a thorough explanation of the economics behind conservation and energy independence that any Republican would love. Energy independence and conservation offer a host of pure economic motives including improving overall industrial efficiency and promoting domestic agricultural resources. Likewise, investment in alternative technology will keep America in the forefront of the alternative energy market where it has been losing ground to Germany and Japan. This virtuous circle is not outlined in this book, unfortunately.
An Inconvenient Truth serves its mission in explaining to the lay community the causes and consequences of Global Warming. Al Gore accomplishes this in telling interesting story with supporting photographic evidence. Whether you are an environmentalist or merely looking for a unique gift, spread the message by including this book under the Christmas tree or giving it as a birthday gift.
NOTES:
The Economic Story that is missing:
*PURE ECONOMICS - HIGH ROI
Improved energy efficiency ultimately costs less (e.g. compact fluorescent light bulbs, diesel automobiles)
Provides higher performance (e.g. greater home insulation, improved windows)
*REDUCTION OF FOREIGN LEVERAGE ON UNITED STATES
Lessens vulnerability to foreign powers
Reduces US military presence in other countries
*MACROECONOMICS
Provides consumers with more spending power (e.g. less spent on electricity allows more spending at Wal-Mart)
Reduces peripheral waste (e.g. reduction of container packaging requires less waste hauling)
*DOMESTIC RESOURCE ULTILIZATION
Promotes domestic sources of energy (e.g. corn and soybeans)
Domestic production of wind power and solar systems
*INFRASTRUCTURE STABILITY
Distributed power fights disruption (e.g. solar panels provide local power - down power lines don't impact end user)
A broader range of energy sources combats reliance on a single source that can be disrupted
Fights spikes that cause blackouts (e.g. photovoltaic cells produce power during highest demand times)
Reduces strain on current infrastructure (e.g. reduces creation of more power lines, transformers)
Better use of land area (e.g. solar panels on roof require no additional land area)
*BETTER UTILIZATION OF HUMAN POWER
Walking, bicycling, using the stairs improves health and fights obesity
Pedal power and public transportation reduces congestions
Although the author's book has a clear political message I can find no fault in his basic reasoning. The presentation is sound, though it often relies on anecdotal information. He avoids drastic, unsupportable statements. When describing the danger of diluting the Atlantic and diminishing the Gulf Stream circulation he avoids the conclusion of the movie, "The Day After Tomorrow." Such gloom and doom movies do not supply the grist for serious debate. What Al Gore has done is present basic facts, at a middle school level, for the public to consider. If you can look at a picture of a glacier in the Andres and argue that it's a natural cycle of nature -- good luck.
So, what is lacking? Perhaps it's the scientist in me that wants more statistical analysis. The charts, graphs and photos are very useful but looking at the hard data is often better for number-crunchers.
This is a great book for children and adults a like. The pictures alone make it worthwhile.
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I saw the movie years ago and reading the book recently was a good reminder about the dire need there is for ALL of us to care, to take action...in any way we can; to preserve and protect our planet. I think Al Gore did an outstanding job with this work and he is going to leave a positive and important legacy that will live on for years to come.
It is sad to observe so many people who still seem to have no interest or concern about the effects of global warming, particularly those who are parents of young children. What are they thinking? Being wasteful, not recycling, buying gas-guzzling trucks,buying all kinds of junk products filled with chemicals, smoking one cigarette after another...the list goes on and on. I see this first hand particularly at our local recycling center, in the Kootenays of BC, supposedly an area filled with "enlightened people". Far from it!!!
Actions always speak louder than words. We can all make a difference, every step in the right direction does count. But first, you have to make people care. And if they don't they should at least be made accountable for NOT caring or doing their share.
I'm off my soapbox!!! ;-) A topic that is near and dear to my heart. I guess that's obvious, reading this review.
1.写真やイラストで何が問題かがぱらぱらとページをめくるだけでわかります。
入手困難なレアな写真と分かりやすいイラストと正しい情報に基づいていて書かれています。
2.ネットや類似本のイラストはこの本のイラストや写真がソースになっているようです。
今やネット上には大量の環境関連の情報やイラストがアップされていますが、それらはゴアさんの本を基本にしているようです。
3.美しい英語で書かれています。
環境問題ですから、化学やテクノロジーなどの専門英語で書かれているのではないかと思われますが、実際には誰にでもわかる日常英語で書かれています。そして表現が美しい。感動する表現がいたるところに散らばっています。
4.この本で環境問題が一気に世界中の人たちのものとなったのではないでしょうか。
まさに、ノーベル平和賞授与にふさわしい一冊だと思います。




