Available Formats
Leave It in the Ground: The Politics of Coal and Climate
By (Author) John C. Berg
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
3rd September 2019
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Climate change
Green politics / ecopolitics / environmentalism
333.822
Hardback
208
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
567g
Employing scientific explanations and hard data, this book shows why coal is such a problem, how the pro-coal forces got to be so powerful, and how those forces might be defeated through political activism. Coal provided the energy to build modern civilization. This energy source raised standards of living, multiplied the earth's population, and enabled people in developed countries to enjoy leisure time. Today, we know that if we burn all the coal available, climate change will continue to increase. But the use of coal isn't purely an environmental issue; there are also political and economic forces at play. This book examines the politics and environmental impact of coal production and distribution, presenting a clear point of viewthat we must shift away from coal usebacked by hard data and supplying specific prescriptions for opposing and regulating the coal industry. Author John C. Berg explains how ending the burning of coal (and of oil and natural gas) is a political problem rather than a technical one; explodes the "clean coal" myth, providing scientific documentation of how burning coal emits more greenhouse gases per unit of energy than any other fuel; and describes how controlling coal use in the United States will also serve to restore the possibility of a meaningful international climate agreement. Additionally, readers will understand the critical importance of activismfrom local to internationalin spurring government regulation to control the coal industry, which can only be defeated politically.
Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty and professionals. General readers. * Choice *
Berg's book provides an excellent demonstration of realist analysis, and he clearly elucidates the relations between economic interests and policy outcomes. * New Political Science *
John C. Berg is professor of government and director of environmental studies at Suffolk University.