Environmental Innovation by Jack Buffington (.ePUB)

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Environmental Innovation: An Action Plan for Saving the Economy and the Planet by 2050 by Jack Buffington
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Overview: Defines the challenges facing climate goals and offers achievable solutions to meet these goals by 2050—without sacrificing economic growth.

Climate change and other environmental dangers are considered an existential threat, yet mankind is falling further behind in addressing these challenges. Policies aimed at fixing these issues have consistently missed the mark by focusing on the symptoms, such as CO2 emissions, rather than the root cause problems, such as the limitations of human systems and global poverty.

In Environmental Innovation, Jack Buffington provides a unique perspective on environmental sustainability and how it can be addressed: rather than assuming humans can solve environmental challenges as a global community and indirectly blaming poverty and overpopulation on the poor, Buffington points to clear evidence that reducing poverty levels can also improve the environment. If we correct the failures of environmental policy that has existed for five decades, there are great possibilities for solving the planet’s existential crisis. Buffington also points to key areas where policy has been lacking, such as the imbalance between the natural and built ecosystems, toxins and chemicals including single use plastics, the depletion of natural resources, and others.

Ultimately, Environmental Innovation provides a comprehensive perspective of how the world needs to define the problem of environmental sustainability, with specific focus on the great divide between the rich Global North and the poor and developing Global South. Readers will come away with a clear, detailed roadmap for how environmental sustainability can be achieved by 2050 and what technologies are required to achieve this balance between the natural and built environments. For humanity to succeed, Buffington argues we must replace the grandiose notions of the so-called global community and instead create new models for action that are consistent with human progress over thousands of years.
Genre: Non-Fiction > Educational > Climatology

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