Available Formats
The High Seas: Ambition, Power, and Greed on the Unclaimed Ocean
By (Author) Olive Heffernan
Greystone Books,Canada
Greystone Books,Canada
28th August 2024
Canada
General
Non Fiction
Oceanography (seas and oceans)
Geopolitics
Pollution and threats to the environment
551.46
Hardback
360
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
In this essential guide to the half of our blue planet we call the high seas (Will McCallum, author of How to Give Up Plastic), one of the worlds leading voices on the issue tracks the race to exploit and protect our last frontier.
Two thirds of the worlds oceans lie beyond national borders. Owned by all nations and no nation simultaneously, the high seas are home to some of the richest and most biodiverse environments on the planet. But they are also home to exploitation on a scale that few of us have imagined.
Here, out of sight and out of mind, industry and economic progress rule and lax enforcement and apathy are the status quo, underscored by a battle to control, profit from, protect, or obliterate the worlds largest, wildest commons. In this book, Heffernan uncovers the truth behind deeply exploitative fishing practices, investigates the potentially devastating impact of deep-sea mining, and holds to task the Silicon Valley interventionists whose solutions to climate change are often wildly optimistic, radically irresponsible, or both. This is a powerful and deeply researched manifesto calling for the protection and preservation of this final frontier.
"This book is the essential guide to the half of our blue planet we call the high seas, written by someone who has done more than almost anyone on Earth in the last few years to understand the problems we face, and the solutions that might be available.
--Will McCallum, author and director of Greenpeace UK and author of How to Give Up Plastic: A Guide to Changing the World, One Plastic Bottle at a Time
"A vital, fascinating, deeply researched exploration of Earth's last wilderness, owned by us all and by no one. This is powerful and urgent reportage that rips the veil of romanticism to reveal a vast world of criminal and dangerous enterprise accelerating beyond our shores, threatening us all. Shocking and starkly illuminating--a must-read."
--Gaia Vince, author of Transcendence and Nomad Century
"With energy equal to her profound subject, Heffernan boards many ships and journeys from the Arctic to the Antarctic to bring(s) us an illuminating portrait of a world we rarely see and barely understand--and of the hidden forces that threaten to wreck it."
--Robert Kunzig, author of Mapping the Deep: the Extraordinary Story of Ocean Science
Olive Heffernan is a science journalist with 20 years' experience as a reporter and an editor. Her writing on ocean science and climate change has been published in Nature, WIRED, Scientific American, National Geographic, New Scientist and BBC Wildlife, among many others. A marine biologist by training, she spent the early part of her career researching Atlantic fish stocks before leaving academia to pursue a career in journalism. She was founding chief editor of Nature Climate Change and chief editor of The Marine Scientist magazine and has also been an online news and opinion editor on climate change at Nature. In 2019, she joined the faculty of Johns Hopkins University as an adjunct lecturer, and in 2020 received a Giles St Aubyn Award for non-fiction from the Royal Society of Literature. She lives by the sea in Ireland with her husband and children.