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The Price is Wrong: Why Capitalism Won't Save the Planet

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Price is Wrong: Why Capitalism Won't Save the Planet

Contributors:

By (Author) Brett Christophers

ISBN:

9781804292303

Publisher:

Verso Books

Imprint:

Verso Books

Publication Date:

4th June 2024

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Finance and the finance industry
Social impact of environmental issues
Environmental economics
Climate change
Capitalism

Dewey:

338.927

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

432

Dimensions:

Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 32mm

Weight:

604g

Description

What if our understanding of capitalism and climate is back to front What if the problem is not capitalist profiteering from the energy transition, but that saving the planet is not profitable enough This is Brett Christophers claim. The global economy is greening slower than required because the return on green investment is too low. Todays consensus is that the key to curbing climate change is to green electricity and electrify everything possible. The consensus is also that the main economic barrier to clean electricity has been removed. With the price of solar and wind-power having tumbled, we are poised, say boosterists, for a golden renewables era. But the boosterists are wrong. What drives investment is profit, not price, and operating solar and wind farms remains a marginal business, dependent everywhere on the states financial support. Our predicament We are expecting markets and the private sector to solve the climate crisis, yet the profits that are their lifeblood are elusive. The answer is not to continue to cobble together green profit through subsidy. It is to take energy out of the private sectors hands. An essential intervention, The Price is Wrong is as politically far-reaching as it is factually illuminating.

Reviews

All aboard this ride through the hidden abode of electricity production - it is not to be missed! With his signature knowledge of the financial and economic systems that dominate our lives, Brett Christophers here takes on a central paradox of the moment. How is it that investment in fossil fuels continues relentlessly, even though renewables have become cheaper Standard theories of the causes of climate breakdown will not survive this book. Readers will be all the wiser. -- Andreas Malm
Have we been looking at the energy transition all wrong In this vital new perspective on the biggest challenge facing humanity, Brett Christophers turns the conventional wisdom on green energy on its head, with profound consequences for policymakers and the public. -- Ed Conway, Economics Editor of Sky News
This impressive book is a must read for anyone who wants to understand possible drivers of a green transition. Christophers articulates a theoretically and empirically grounded critique of the dominant paradigm in climate economics that relies on the mantra of "getting the prices right." This standard view misses the driving force of capitalism: profits. Firms and financial market actors invest not because of relative prices but because of the anticipated profitability. Green investments are no different in that regard. Recentering from prices to profitability calls for a fundamental reconsideration of climate policy. Should public money be mobilized to create private profitability for green investments Or should we instead rely on public investments to defy the profitability requirement -- Isabella Weber, author of How China Escaped Shock Therapy
Brett Christophers' argument in The Price is Wrong that capitalism cannot deliver a decarbonised electricity sector based on solar and wind is as incisively made as it is crucially important. This book is indispensable for anyone who wants to understand the economic issues around electrification. -- Helen Thompson, University of Cambridge, author of China and the Mortgaging of America (2010)
One of the most insightful and clarifying books yet written on the relationship between climate change and capitalism. It's one of the simplest but most urgent questions in climate policy: If renewables are now the cheapest form of electricity production, why aren't we building more of them Why are we still off track for our climate goals The answer, Brett Christophers argues, is that the price has never mattered that much in the first place. Profit, not price, is what reshapes the world. Too many climate books rest on easy slogans or simplistic answers. Not this one. This is a sophisticated, entertaining study of a huge problem - one that everyone who cares about stopping climate change should understand. If you're an angry activist, a confused politician, an expert wonk, or a skeptical engineer, you should read this book. You will think about power, clean energy, and the climate challenge in a new way. -- Robinson Meyer, Executive Editor, Heatmap
This is a masterful work of political economy that zeroes in on a major obstacle to addressing the climate crisis in the context of capitalism. As Brett Christophers compellingly and painstakingly demonstrates, in renewable energy sectors, expected profits are low. The corollary is the crucial role of the state in de-risking investments to ensure investor returns-and thus the timely buildout of wind and solar. But the public guarantee of private profits raises the question: why shouldn't the public own and control clean energy sectors in the first place The Price is Wrong is absolutely essential reading for climate experts, public policymakers, and grassroots activists alike. -- Thea Riofrancos, author of Resource Radicals (Duke University Press, 2020), co-author of A Planet to Win (Verso Books, 2019) and currently writing Extraction: The Frontiers of Green Capitalism (W.W. Norton)
This book is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand why capitalism poses an such an extraordinary obstacle to real progress against climate breakdown. Don't miss it. -- Jason Hickel, author of Less is More: How Degrowth Will Save the World

Author Bio

Brett Christophers is a political economist and economic geographer, and the author of Our Lives in Their Portfolios, Rentier Capitalism and of The New Enclosure, which won the Isaac and Tamara Deutscher Memorial Prize.

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