Highway to Hell
Joëlle Gergis
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Sachbuch / Natur und Gesellschaft: Allgemeines, Nachschlagewerke
Description
What will the climate crisis mean for Australia? What is the price of our inertia?
Australia is in peril. Do we truly grasp the impact of a warming planet – in particular, what it will mean for our sunburnt country? As temperatures rise, the climates of our capital cities will change. The sea will rise, and we will see increased fire and drought.
In this powerful essay, Joëlle Gergis, a leading climate scientist, depicts the likely future in vivid and credible detail. Working from the science, she discusses the world's and Australia's efforts to combat climate change. She outlines how far Australia is from keeping its promises to cut emissions. She takes aim at false solutions and the folly of "adaptation" rather than curbing fossil fuel use. This is an essay about government paralysis and what is at stake for all of us. It's about getting real, in the face of an unprecedented threat.
"How many disasters does it take to wake people up to the fact that Australia's climate is becoming more extreme, with today's destruction set to be dwarfed by things to come? Do people realise that adapting to climate change won't be possible in some parts of the country?" Joëlle Gergis, Highway to Hell
This essay contains correspondence relating to Quarterly Essay 93 Bad Cop from Niki Savva, Thomas Mayo, Lachlan Harris, Mark Kenny, Robert Wood, Paul Strangio, and Lech Blaine
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Australian economics, greenhouse gas emissions, global warming, COP28, climate emergency, books on climate change, The Australia Institute, IPCC's Sixth Assessment Report, climate breakdown, climate crisis, climate policy, climate scientist, Queensland Literary Awards, Not Too Late: Changing the climate story from despair to possibility, The Monthly, Australian politics, Sunburnt Country: The history and future of climate change in Australia, climate change, Australian Book Industry Awards, The Climate Change Book, renewable energy, Humanity's Moment: A Climate Scientist's Case for Hope