Thursday, March 6, 2025

Review of Not the End of the World: How We Can Be the First Generation to Build a Sustainable Planet by Hannah Ritchie

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = Science
Book Club Event = Book List (04/26/2025)


Watch Short Review

Excerpts

“A lot of the controversy about these definitions is because we assume there is an unavoidable trade-off between the first and second half.  It’s human well-being or environmental protection.  That means one must be prioritized over the other, and for ‘sustainability’ it’s the environment that wins.  This trade-off existed in the past.  But the central argument throughout this book is that this conflict does not have to exist in our future.  There are ways to achieve both at the same time, which means there should increasingly be less conflict between the definitions.  So, if you still want to adopt an environment-only definition, then think of human flourishing as a nice add-on.” – Hannah Ritchie, Chapter 1: Sustainability: A tale of two halves, Page 25

 

“Environmental action is often framed as at odds with the economy.  It’s either climate action or economic growth.  Pollution versus the market.  This is just wrong.  Countries have slashed air pollution while growing their economies at the same time.  Lower pollution, better health and a stronger economy?  That sounds like the perfect sales pitch to me.” – Hannah Ritchie, Chapter 2: Air Pollution: Breathing clean air, Page 51

 

“The other big change is that moving to a low-carbon, sustainable economy is not seen as the sacrifice it used to be.  Fossil fuels were far cheaper than renewables.  Electric vehicles cost a fortune.  But now low-carbon technologies are becoming cost-competitive.  It now makes financial sense to take the climate-friendly path.” – Hannah Ritchie, Chapter 3: Climate Change: Turning down the thermostat, Page 66


Review

Is This An Overview?

The problem with doomsday environmental narratives is that they can paralyze decision making efforts to solve the crises, and reduce public trust when the claims turn out to be wrong.  Doomsday claims contain a lot of misinformation, which enable policies that appear to be environmentally sustainable but are harming the environment.

 

Through human efforts in obtaining environmentally sustainable knowledge, people have changed practices of production and developed technology that can enable humanity to achieve sustainability in the 21st century.  Achieving sustainability for the first time in human history, as the world has never before been sustainable.  Throughout history, people either could not satisfy their present needs, or they compromised future needs.  There used to be a sustainability trade-off, a conflict between human well-being and environmental protection as each came at the expense of the other.  But, technology and methods have enabled the ability to achieve both human well-being and environmental protection at the same time.

 

There used to be a trade-off between cheap energy sources or environmentally sustainable energy sources.  But technology has enabled environmentally sustainable energy sources to become cost-competitive with unsustainable technologies.  Removing the trade-off as the cheap energy sources are the sustainable sources.  Economic policies no longer need to be in conflict with environmental sustainably, as economies can grow while reducing pollution.  Although energy use has increased relative to how much was used before, there is far less pollution than before.  There are many different ways that human society is much better than in the past such as life expectancy, food availability, education, and income opportunities.  But there is still much for humanity to resolve. 

 

Caveats?

To overcome environmental sustainability misinformation, various metrics are used to show the evidence of certain claims.  The evidence is presented in a way that does not require a statistics background.  As the author references, the focus of the metrics is on environmental sustainability, while societies have various needs for which different metrics would be more appropriate.  


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•How do doomsday environmental stories effect the science? 
•How did Russia’s invasion of Ukraine effect energy supplies and greenhouse emissions? 
•Has the world ever been sustainable?
•Can the world become sustainable?
•What is sustainability? 
•What is the sustainability trade-off?
•What are the advantages of societies in the 21st century than any previous society?
•What ideas won’t fix sustainability problems? 
•What happened to air pollution?
•What happened to Beijing’s air quality? 
•What happened to Delhi’s air quality?
•How does air pollution effect a society? 
•What happened to the ozone layer?
•What is the environmental Kuznets Curve? 
•What happed to the costs of sustainable technologies? 
•What information makes it into the news? 
•What happened to pollution from energy sources? 
•Which vehicle is more efficient, an electric or petrol vehicle?
•What is the energy usage of urban and rural societies?
•What is the effect of a carbon tax?
•How much oxygen does the Amazon contribute? 
•What happened to French forests? 
•What effect does deforestation have? 
•What is the effect of palm oil? 
•How much land does agriculture take?  
•How many harvests are left? 
•How many people can be fed by the planet?
•What happened to the food supply? 
•What is the effect of eating locally? 
•Is the planet going through an extinction event? 
•What happens to plastics after being use? 
•What effect do plastics have on wildlife? 
•What happened to fish stock? 

Book Details
Edition:                   First ebook edition
Publisher:               Little, Brown Spark [Hachette Book Group]
Edition ISBN:         9780316536950
Pages to read:          246
Publication:             2024
1st Edition:              2024
Format:                    eBook 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    5
Content          5
Overall          5