Shopping Cart

We want to direct you to the right website. Please tell us where you live.

(This is a one-time message unless you reset your location.)

Available in Print and Digital (eBook) formats.
Choose the format you need.

Paperback
$22.99 USD
PDF
$22.99 $14.95 USD
EPUB
$22.99 $14.95 USD
Publisher: New Society Publishers
Pub. Date: 2024-04-30
ISBN: 9780865719897
Format: Paperback - 256 pages
Size: 6" x 9" (w x h)
BISAC: SCIENCE / Global Warming & Climate Change

Runaway Climate

What the Geological Past Can Tell Us about the Coming Climate Change Catastrophe

With rising emissions, we are on track to cause rapid global warming with devastating consequences. But how bad could climate change get and what might it do to planet Earth and humanity?

Runaway Climate explores the causes of the Paleocene Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) rapid climate-heating, its dramatic impact on life on Earth, and lessons for our climate future.

Fifty-six million years ago our planet experienced a period of intense warming known as the PETM, resulting in a rapid global temperature increase of about 7°C. Triggered by natural geological processes over millennia and magnified by strong climate feedback loops, the PETM lasted for about 200,000 years and drastically altered life on Earth. Yet in only a few short decades we’ve pumped similar amounts of greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere, making the PETM an unsettlingly apt analogy for our current predicament. This deeply cautionary tale explores:

  • The runaway feedbacks that pushed the PETM’s climate past the tipping point
  • Subsequent cascades of environmental devastation—from plant and animal migrations to ocean acidification, extreme weather, and mass extinctions
  • A sobering vision of life on hothouse Earth—a hostile world of desertification, sea-level rise, climate refugees, and agricultural collapse
  • The urgent need for decisive individual and collective actions to slash carbon emissions, stabilize the climate, and undertake a rapid transition to a cleaner and healthier future.

Scientifically rigorous yet accessible to a wide audience, Runaway Climate is essential reading for everyone committed to understanding and taking action on the climate emergency.

About the Author

Steven Earle, PhD, has developed and taught university earth science courses for over four decades. He is the author of A Brief History of Climate Change and the widely used textbook Physical Geology. A dedicated community activist, he champions climate change solutions in areas such as low-carbon transportation, home heating, and land stewardship.




The Memory We Could Be

Overcoming Fear to Create Our Ecological Future

by Daniel Macmillen Voskoboynik


The Story of Upfront Carbon

How a Life of Just Enough Offers a Way Out of the Climate Crisis

by Lloyd Alter


Earth for All

A Survival Guide for Humanity

by Sandrine Dixson-Decleve, Owen Gaffney, Jayati Ghosh and Jorgen Randers


How to Talk to Your Kids About Climate Change

Turning Angst into Action

by Harriet Shugarman


Sacred Acts

How churches are working to protect Earth's climate

by Mallory McDuff and Bill McKibben