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Bending the Curve Climate Change Solutions Veerabhadran Ramanathan

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Open textbook libraryDistributor: Minneapolis, MN Open Textbook LibraryPublisher: Oakland, California eScholarship [2019]Copyright date: ©2019Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • QD31.3
Online resources:
Contents:
Part I Concepts and Solutions -- 1 Climate Change -- 2 Humans, Nature, and the Quest for Climate Justice -- 3 Climate Change and Human Health -- 4 Overview of the Ten Solutions for Bending the Curve -- Part II Ten Solutions -- 5 Your Leadership: Social Movements and Social Solutions to Climate Change -- 6 Social Transformation: Changing Attitudes, Norms, and Behaviors -- 7 Religion, Ethics, and Climate Change -- 8 Communicating Climate Change Science -- 9 Lessons from California -- 10 The Paris Agreement and Its Implementation -- 11 Economics: Emissions, Impacts, and Policy -- 12 Cost-Effective Climate Policies -- 13 Two Evolving Energy Technology Pathways -- 14 Environmentally Sustainable Transportation -- 15 Technologies for Super Pollutants Mitigation -- 16 Enhancing Carbon Sinks in Natural and Working Lands -- Part III Current Topics -- 17 Sea Level Rise from Melting Ice -- 18 Atmospheric Carbon Extraction: Scope, Available Technologies, and Challenges -- 19 Local Solutions
Subject: Climate change is an urgent problem. Because it is causing new weather extremes and fatal catastrophes, climate change is better termed climate disruption. Bending the curve to flatten the upward trajectory of pollution emissions responsible for climate disruption is essential in order to protect billions of people from this global threat. Education is a key part of the solution. This textbook book lays out ten solutions that together can bend the curve of climate warming below dangerous levels. These solutions fall into six categories: science, societal transformation, governance, economics, technology, and ecosystem management. Four themes emerge from the book: * There is still time to bend the curve. The time to act was yesterday, but if proper actions are taken now, there is still time to avoid disastrous changes. We have to pull on three levers: The carbon lever to achieve zero net emissions of carbon dioxide before 2050; the short-lived climate pollutants lever to drastically reduce concentrations of other major climate pollutants; and the atmospheric carbon extraction lever to remove massive amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. * Bending the curve will require interdisciplinary solutions. Climate change requires integrating approaches from the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities, so this textbook—unlike most on climate change solutions—does just that, with chapters written by experts in climate science, social justice, economics, environmental policy, political science, energy technologies, ecology, and religion. Bending the curve also requires preservation and restoration of ecological systems. * Bending the curve requires a radical shift in attitude. This shift requires change in behavior, change in our attitudes towards each other, and change in our attitude towards nature. Climate justice has to be an integral part of the solution. * Technology, market mechanism and policy need to be a part of the solution. New market mechanisms and other policies are required to spur technological innovations and to scale clean technologies globally. There are ancillary materials available for this book. List of Authors: Ramanathan, VeerabhadranAines, RogerAuffhammer, MaxBarth, MattCole, JonathanForman, FonnaHan, HahrieJacobsen, MarkPellow, DavidPezzoli, KeithPress, DanielRignot, EricSamuelsen, ScottSilver, WhendeeSolomon, GinaSomerville, RichardTucker, Mary EvelynVictor, DavidZaelke, DurwoodScott Friese
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Part I Concepts and Solutions -- 1 Climate Change -- 2 Humans, Nature, and the Quest for Climate Justice -- 3 Climate Change and Human Health -- 4 Overview of the Ten Solutions for Bending the Curve -- Part II Ten Solutions -- 5 Your Leadership: Social Movements and Social Solutions to Climate Change -- 6 Social Transformation: Changing Attitudes, Norms, and Behaviors -- 7 Religion, Ethics, and Climate Change -- 8 Communicating Climate Change Science -- 9 Lessons from California -- 10 The Paris Agreement and Its Implementation -- 11 Economics: Emissions, Impacts, and Policy -- 12 Cost-Effective Climate Policies -- 13 Two Evolving Energy Technology Pathways -- 14 Environmentally Sustainable Transportation -- 15 Technologies for Super Pollutants Mitigation -- 16 Enhancing Carbon Sinks in Natural and Working Lands -- Part III Current Topics -- 17 Sea Level Rise from Melting Ice -- 18 Atmospheric Carbon Extraction: Scope, Available Technologies, and Challenges -- 19 Local Solutions

Climate change is an urgent problem. Because it is causing new weather extremes and fatal catastrophes, climate change is better termed climate disruption. Bending the curve to flatten the upward trajectory of pollution emissions responsible for climate disruption is essential in order to protect billions of people from this global threat. Education is a key part of the solution. This textbook book lays out ten solutions that together can bend the curve of climate warming below dangerous levels. These solutions fall into six categories: science, societal transformation, governance, economics, technology, and ecosystem management. Four themes emerge from the book: * There is still time to bend the curve. The time to act was yesterday, but if proper actions are taken now, there is still time to avoid disastrous changes. We have to pull on three levers: The carbon lever to achieve zero net emissions of carbon dioxide before 2050; the short-lived climate pollutants lever to drastically reduce concentrations of other major climate pollutants; and the atmospheric carbon extraction lever to remove massive amounts of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. * Bending the curve will require interdisciplinary solutions. Climate change requires integrating approaches from the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities, so this textbook—unlike most on climate change solutions—does just that, with chapters written by experts in climate science, social justice, economics, environmental policy, political science, energy technologies, ecology, and religion. Bending the curve also requires preservation and restoration of ecological systems. * Bending the curve requires a radical shift in attitude. This shift requires change in behavior, change in our attitudes towards each other, and change in our attitude towards nature. Climate justice has to be an integral part of the solution. * Technology, market mechanism and policy need to be a part of the solution. New market mechanisms and other policies are required to spur technological innovations and to scale clean technologies globally. There are ancillary materials available for this book. List of Authors: Ramanathan, VeerabhadranAines, RogerAuffhammer, MaxBarth, MattCole, JonathanForman, FonnaHan, HahrieJacobsen, MarkPellow, DavidPezzoli, KeithPress, DanielRignot, EricSamuelsen, ScottSilver, WhendeeSolomon, GinaSomerville, RichardTucker, Mary EvelynVictor, DavidZaelke, DurwoodScott Friese

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