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Paul hawken drawdown
Paul hawken drawdown












“Together We Rise: The Power of Female Leadership to Help Solve the Climate Crisis”with Mary Robinson was inspired by the book “All We Can Save” by Dr. This year’s Drawdown Event kicked off Climate Week on Sept 20, 2021. 100 solutions to the climate crisis already exist and can succeed if scaled up. Now if we can only start implementing them on large scales.Much of our work is based on Project Drawdown, one of the most comprehensive plans ever proposed to reverse the disastrous heating of our planet. It’s nice to know that we have solutions for climate change. I don’t recommend this for everyone, but if the topic interests you, it’s definitely worth a read.

paul hawken drawdown

I really liked these sections and added some of the books to my TBR. For example, there were excerpts from The Hidden Life of Trees by Peter Wohlleben and The Invention of Nature by Andrea Wulf. Interspersed between the solution essays were excerpts from books that relate to the science of climate change and caring for the planet.

paul hawken drawdown

It might not ever lead to concrete solutions, but I liked taking a peek sort of behind the scenes. There was a section at the end describing “Coming Attractions”–tech that is in the research and development stage. The editor devoted one section to cultural changes, specifically related to more feminist topics–women smallholders, family planning, and educating girls. There were a few things that I did really like. Then we went to microgrids, #78, then back to geothermal energy, ranked #18. The “Energy” section begins with “Wind Turbines” which he ranks in effectiveness at #2 for onshore turbines and #22 for offshore turbines. But from there, I don’t know he ordered the solutions in the order he chose. The editor chose to divide the solutions into topics like “Energy” or “Food.” I can follow that. The organization of the book was a bit odd for me. But there is an associated website,, that provides updates to the material. You can’t throw a rock without hitting a Tesla in bigger cities now. In the book, Tesla cars seem like an anomaly and their buyers still get a tax break (which I believe is no longer the case). It seems negligent not to mention destructive mining practices and battery disposal when talking about electric cars, for example.ĭrawdown was published in 2017, which doesn’t seem that long ago in some ways, but technology changes so quickly, parts already feel dated. I understand that we do need to do something to start addressing the challenges facing us and if we wait around waiting for perfect solutions, we’ll never change anything. Speaking of negatives, I feel that they were glossed over a bit. I would recommend buying a copy so that you can dip in and out as your interest and time allow rather than checking it out of the library and trying to finish it all before the due date. I probably had the attention span for about 50 of these solutions. The editor tried to keep each of the 100 solutions to just a few pages, giving a rough overview of the science, the benefits, and the negatives. The book got a bit too long and detailed for my level of interest. Even ideas that are more personal in scope, like electric cars or solar panels, would be implemented more quickly if we could have better tax breaks or if startup companies had better government subsidies. Most of them are only practical at the industrial or national scale.

Paul hawken drawdown how to#

We know what needs to be done, we have feasible ideas for how to do it, but, at least in the States, we don’t have the political will or impetus to implement many of these solutions. Drawdown fit the bill but I still got a little depressed. I didn’t want something that was going to depress me so I decided to read a book focused on solutions rather than problems. I needed to read a book about climate change for the Nonfiction Reading Challenge hosted by Shelleyrae at Book’d Out.

paul hawken drawdown

These measures promise cascading benefits to human health, security, prosperity, and well-being-giving us every reason to see this planetary crisis as an opportunity to create a just and livable world. If deployed collectively on a global scale over the next thirty years, they represent a credible path forward, not just to slow the earth’s warming but to reach drawdown, that point in time when greenhouse gases in the atmosphere peak and begin to decline. The solutions exist, are economically viable, and communities throughout the world are currently enacting them with skill and determination. They range from clean energy to educating girls in lower-income countries to land use practices that pull carbon out of the air. One hundred techniques and practices are described here-some are well known some you may have never heard of. In the face of widespread fear and apathy, an international coalition of researchers, professionals, and scientists have come together to offer a set of realistic and bold solutions to climate change.












Paul hawken drawdown