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Oväder: nyheter från en allt varmare värld

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Medan vi diskuterar om växthuseffekten verkligen är ett hot eller inte, så finns det andra som lever mitt i dess verklighet. Invånarna i den lilla ögruppen Tuvalu i Stilla havet kan med egna ögon se hur deras land försvinner. Snart kommer alla områdets öar att ligga under vatten. Befolkningen på Tuvalu evakueras redan nu till Nya Zeeland. Floden Rimac som förser Perus huvudstad Lima med vatten, kommer i en nära framtid att vara torrlagd sex månader om året eftersom de glaciärer som förser Rimac med vatten snart inte finns längre. Temperaturen i Alaska stiger tio gånger snabbare än i resten av världen. Och effekterna är så dramatiska att hela ekosystem håller på att kollapsa. Växthuseffekten är ett faktum och konsekvenserna håller sakta men säkert på att bli ödesdigra, i ordets krassaste betydelse. För att bara i någon mån bromsa den utveckling som sker skulle vi behöva ett nytt Kyotoavtal, men fem gånger så radikalt som det nuvarande. Mark Lynas har rest kors och tvärs över vårt allt varmare jordklot. Han har träffat och lyssnat på människor i de områden som redan drabbats. Han analyserar och drar slutsatser. Den bild som träder fram är chockerande. Oväder är en bok som rör oss alla, en ögon-öppnare av samma slag som en gång Rachel Carsons Tyst vår. Det är något konstigt med vädret, säger allt fler. De har alldeles rätt.

290 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 2004

5 people are currently reading
176 people want to read

About the author

Mark Lynas

20 books77 followers
Mark Lynas is a British author, journalist and environmental activist who focuses on climate change.

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Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Andy Gibb.
Author 1 book2 followers
June 3, 2014
Written ten years ago, this book challenges the reader to ponder if the climate crises depicted were one-offs or indeed part of global warming. The very first example comes down heavily on the latter side. Lynas chronicles the once-in-centuries UK floods of 2000 (which I missed by being in California). Well, we've had the same again in 2007, 2012 and 2014. That sounds like an acceleration.

Likewise for the chapter about hurricanes in the USA: Katrina, Sandy and a few other notables have demonstrated the author's prognosis that they will get more violent if not more frequent. Mind you, the point is also made that they do more damage simply because there's more shit to destroy. We keep building and breeding in these areas.

Moving on to glaciers, a thought occurred to me that if they are melting, cities that rely on them must actually be getting a bonanza. Then Lynas makes just this point, especially about Lima, which should be running out about now.

The book then also runs, downhill, with a boring ending on what the politicians are (not) doing about this. And the "personal action" section. I'm getting pretty fucking tired of these.

Let's face it: 30 years of "saving the planet" has only witnessed an increase in its destruction. Here's a thought game for you: what's the ultimate action you could take to reduce your environmental footprint? How about killing yourself? And would that make the slightest difference?

Nah, it'll just leave more energy – and that's the bottom line drawn under fuel, plastic bags, recycling, water, electricity, the lot – for the exploiters to continue their rape. Surely the subversive thing to do is waste all this energy so they can't use it. Leave taps running, lights on; throw away as much rubbish as possible; buy a gas guzzler. Let's bring this show to a close as soon as we can.

That'll help the climate crisis.
Profile Image for Kelly Mai.
57 reviews1 follower
September 28, 2025
tuvalu and palau and their taro farms getting oversalinated via sea water bc of sea levels rising ...aka basically all of Oceania is suffering ....should be a wake up call!!!!! save our oceans and our ambrosias and their taro farms and yellowfin tuna
20 reviews6 followers
June 18, 2020
It starts very slowly, but towards the end it gets a lot better.
Profile Image for Kevin Fernandes-Prabhu.
20 reviews4 followers
June 14, 2016
brings out the scary realities of climate change and geo-politics in colourful descriptions and the personal narration of a well meaning White Man. the constant bombarding with statistics is needed to validate and make the argument water-tight, but can get tiresome after a while. woke up the dormant environmental activist in me.
7 reviews
March 29, 2007
Good book so far. I'm about 50 pages in. Nothing terribly new, but it puts a face on whats happening with global warming.
Profile Image for S.P..
Author 2 books7 followers
January 21, 2009
Nothing here you don't already know (unless you've been living in a cave), however four years ago when it was originally written I imagine it could be quite shocking.
Profile Image for Federico Palacios.
1 review21 followers
January 14, 2016
A highly simplistic take on current issues. If you have studied this previously, consider reading something a little more complex.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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