Buchzusammenfassung
Bill McKibben is a professor of Environmental Studies at Middlebury College in Vermont, a founder of the environmental organization 350.org and the author of 17 books. Those books include three bestsellers: The End of Nature, Deep Economy and Eaarth: Making a Life on a Tough New Planet. He’s also received the Gandhi Prize, the Thomas Merton Prize, and the Right Livelihood Prize for his political activism and advocacy on climate change.
Over the past decade, the escalating threats of climate change, environmental degradation, and their cascading effects on humanity have become undeniable. From record-breaking heatwaves and devastating wildfires to rising sea levels and mass migrations, the planet is already grappling with the consequences of global warming. These challenges are compounded by the destabilization of ecosystems, such as the loss of half the global population of land-dwelling animals since 1970, and the strain on resources like arable land and water. Even optimistic scenarios, like achieving the Paris Agreement’s targets, predict severe droughts, declining crop yields, and uninhabitable regions. Meanwhile, the melting permafrost reveals dormant pathogens, while the redistribution of ice mass triggers natural disasters. Though some dream of space colonization as an escape, the logistical and biological realities make this an implausible solution. Beyond climate change, humanity faces additional existential threats, including the unchecked rise of artificial intelligence and the ethical dilemmas of genetic engineering. While solutions exist—such as transitioning to renewable energy, regulating AI, and enforcing global genetic engineering standards—they require unprecedented global cooperation and urgency. The next chapter delves deeper into the practical steps humanity must take to confront these mounting challenges.
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