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Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Thunberg aims to educate with ‘The Climate Book’ 

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772 days ago
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FILE - Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg speaks on the stage of a demonstration in Glasgow, Scotland, Friday, Nov. 5, 2021 which is the host city of the COP26 U.N. Climate Summit. Thunberg has compiled a handbook for tackling the world’s interconnected environmental crises, with contributions from leading scientists and writers. Publisher Penguin Random House on Thursday, March 31, 2022 says “The Climate Book” contains contributions from more than 100 academics, thinkers and campaigners. (AP Photo/Jon Super, file)

FILE - Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg speaks on the stage of a demonstration in Glasgow, Scotland, Friday, Nov. 5, 2021 which is the host city of the COP26 U.N. Climate Summit. Thunberg has compiled a handbook for tackling the world’s interconnected environmental crises, with contributions from leading scientists and writers. Publisher Penguin Random House on Thursday, March 31, 2022 says “The Climate Book” contains contributions from more than 100 academics, thinkers and campaigners. (AP Photo/Jon Super, file)

Skip­ping school to sit out­side the Swedish Par­lia­ment in 2018 with a sign read­ing “School Strike for Cli­mate” at the age of 15, Gre­ta Thun­berg promised she would nev­er stop call­ing out lead­ers and gov­ern­ments for re­fus­ing to take strong enough ac­tions to mit­i­gate cli­mate change.

Fast for­ward five years and while Thun­berg is no longer a teenag­er, she is as blunt as ever.

“Leav­ing cap­i­tal­ist con­sumerism and mar­ket eco­nom­ics as the dom­i­nant stew­ards of the on­ly known civ­i­liza­tion in the uni­verse will most like­ly seem, in ret­ro­spect, to have been a ter­ri­ble idea,” she writes in ‘The Cli­mate Book’.

Di­vid­ed in­to five parts — How Cli­mate Works, How Our Plan­et is Chang­ing, How It Af­fects Us, What We’ve Done About It and What We Must Do Now — the book fea­tures 105 guest es­says cov­er­ing every­thing from “ice shelves to eco­nom­ics, from fast fash­ion to the loss of species… from wa­ter short­ages to In­dige­nous sov­er­eign­ty, from fu­ture food pro­duc­tion to car­bon bud­gets.”

Thun­berg’s goal is to raise pub­lic aware­ness by shar­ing the best avail­able sci­ence to shine a spot­light on what we’ve done to the Earth and what we must do to keep it hab­it­able by hu­man­i­ty.

Stuffed with charts and graphs and pho­tos spread across two pages (all in black and white, a cu­ri­ous de­sign choice), the book is sure to ed­u­cate any­one who gives it an hon­est read­ing. Yet it’s dif­fi­cult to shake a feel­ing of doom as you turn the pages.

The cur­rent way of life in the “Glob­al North”, as Thun­berg calls the lead­ing West­ern democ­ra­cies re­spon­si­ble for most of the world’s car­bon emis­sions, is not sus­tain­able:

“If we con­tin­ue to in­sist on fly­ing around the world, eat­ing au­then­tic Japan­ese sushi in New York, dri­ving our SU­Vs, and on and on, we will even­tu­al­ly change plan­e­tary sys­tems to such a de­gree that life as we know it won’t be pos­si­ble.”

This cover image released by Penguin shows "The Climate Book" by Greta Thunberg. (Penguin via AP)

This cover image released by Penguin shows "The Climate Book" by Greta Thunberg. (Penguin via AP)

Some of the book’s con­trib­u­tors man­age to bal­ance the gloom with glim­mers of hope. Writ­ing about the re­mark­able events of the last few years, Cana­di­an pub­lic pol­i­cy re­searcher Seth Klein finds com­fort in the glob­al re­sponse to COVID-19:

“We wit­nessed gov­ern­ments… cre­at­ing au­da­cious new eco­nom­ic sup­port pro­grams with a speed that few would have pre­dict­ed.” If gov­ern­ments would take a sim­i­lar ap­proach to elec­tri­fy­ing every­thing with green pow­er, he ar­gues, Ho­mo sapi­ens might sur­vive.

As oth­er es­say­ists point out, how­ev­er, it’s im­pos­si­ble un­til the largest gov­ern­ments in the world start treat­ing the cli­mate cri­sis like a true cri­sis.

And so hope­ful­ly bil­lions of peo­ple read ‘The Cli­mate Book’ and enough of them rise up to de­mand change. 3.5%. That’s the mag­ic num­ber men­tioned by Har­vard po­lit­i­cal sci­ence pro­fes­sor Er­i­ca Chenoweth in her es­say, “Peo­ple Pow­er”:

“Among non-vi­o­lent move­ments at­tempt­ing to over­throw their own gov­ern­ments, none has failed af­ter mo­bi­liz­ing 3.5% of their pop­u­la­tion to en­gage in mass demon­stra­tions.”

And in the end, that’s Thun­berg’s ul­ti­mate pre­scrip­tion, too:

“I would strong­ly sug­gest that those of us who have not yet been green­washed out of our sens­es stand our ground.”

_______

Sto­ry by ROB MER­RILL | As­so­ci­at­ed Press

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