Archive For The “climate change” Category
Coalition Of The Willing from coalitionfilm on Vimeo.Global discourse on the climate change issue reached a peak at the end of last year with the meeting of world leaders in Copenhagen. It was rather adventurously sold in much of the media (British at …
I wrote the following column for Sublime Magazine. Unfortunately, Jeremy Leggett wrote one that was remarkably similar. Mine’s better, though, of course! So I’m publishing it here. – – – – – For years we’ve been told that we can live with fewer and fewer limitations on our freedom and our consumption. Climate change and [...]![]()
I recently read The End of Nature by Bill McKibben. The book was originally published in 1990, just two years after James Hansen testified before the senate that human-caused climate change was a genuine phenomenon. I was amazed to realise how much we already knew about the impact of our activities on the planet’s ecology [...]![]()
The more I explore the subject of climate change, the more I notice two distinct (and dangerous) ways of perceiving it. On the one hand, there is the ‘end of the world is nigh’ position, which I am occasionally guilty of lapsing into. At the furthest extreme of this position lies a conviction that human [...]![]()
I’ve been particularly busy this week, and haven’t got around to producing any new material for this blog. On the other hand, I have written a piece for Sublime Magazine on the aftermath of Copenhagen – inspired by this extraordinary piece of journalism from Mark Lynas. I’ve also realised that I haven’t yet posted the [...]![]()
I’ve been thinking a lot recently about the likeliest outcomes of the next century or so, and reflecting on how the possibilities they hold out seem to run the gamut from large improvements in the way we live now to total societal collapse. Duncan Campbell, host of the Living Dialogues podcasts, is a keen proponent [...]![]()
I listened recently to a fascinating dialogue between Duncan Campbell and George Lakoff (it consists of three episodes, available here, here and here). In it, Lakoff mentioned that a key reason for the success of the Republican party in the US in recent years has been their ability to capture the imagination of the American [...]![]()
In general, I think of myself as a fairly peaceable person. I’m fairly thoughtful, and I rarely act before engaging my brain. Over the past few days, however, I’ve noticed the red mist descending more than once. The trigger? Discussions about climate change over the internet. I’ve resorted to telling one person to ‘fuck off’ [...]![]()
When I was a child, and into my teenage years and early twenties, I absolutely devoured fiction. Some time around the age of 22 or 23, though, I veered away from it and begun a search for ‘The Truth’. In terms of my reading habits, this manifested as an almost exclusive concentration on non-fiction. Yoga [...]![]()
Ian Plimer, for those who are unaware, is a man who continually seeks to muddy the consensus on climate change. If polls are to be believed, he and a few others are doing a spectacularly good job. According to George Marshall, scarcely ten per cent of people in the UK regard climate change as a [...]

