Compare prices and save on cheap textbooks at CheapestTextbooks.co.uk
Compare prices and save on cheap textbooks at CheapestTextbooks.co.uk HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
Go to CheapestTextbooks USA!Go to CheapestTextbooks UK!
Multi-Shop Textbook Search
  
(What's this?)
Selected Product:

An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming
An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming

Hardcover
Author: Nigel Lawson
Publisher: Gerald Duckworth & Co Ltd
Release Date: April 2008
ISBN-10: 071563786X
ISBN-13: 9780715637869
List Price: £9.99
Average Customer Rating:
Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5
Similar Products

Scared to Death: From BSE to Global Warming: Why Scares are Costing Us the Earth
ISBN-10: 0826486142


Squandered
ISBN-10: 1845298322


Cool It: The Skeptical Environmentalist's Guide to Global Warming
ISBN-10: 0462099121


The Great Global Warming Swindle
ISBN-10: B000OOOKZS


Unstoppable Global Warming: Every 1500 Years
ISBN-10: 0742551245


Our Review: To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming by Nigel Lawson (ISBN-10: 071563786X, ISBN-13: 9780715637869).

At this time we have not yet written a review for An Appeal to Reason: A Cool Look at Global Warming by Nigel Lawson (ISBN-10: 071563786X, ISBN-13: 9780715637869). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews.

Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Rating: Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5 Score = 3.5

Just what it says on the tin
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
This is a wonderful book. As the title suggests, it is cool, reasonable, and patient, looking carefully at all the evidence and coming to conclusions which it is hard to disagree with.

Like other reviewers, I find it hard to take excerpts from the book because I would have to quote the whole thing! However, perhaps I may try to help anyone who is wondering whether to read it. One way to look at the global warming/climate change debate is to ask oneself three questions.

First, is the world getting warmer?
Second, is human activity, and specifically CO2, a major cause?
And third, does it matter? Will there be harmful consequences? And if so, what should we do about them?

Much of the angry debate between believers and sceptics rages round the first two points. Lawson surveys the evidence on both, and comes to a conclusion. But what makes this book so powerful is its focus on the third question: whether a warmer world is one that will harm people, animals, plants, and our descendants. The Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) argues that it will. Lawson disagrees. He takes us through the IPCC scenarios, and their range of predictions relating to five potential impacts of a warmer world: on water, ecosystems, food, coasts, and health. In each case he demonstrates, with evidence, that a warmer world will either be neutral or even beneficial. What makes this evidence particularly persuasive is that much of it is drawn from the IPCC's own 4th report (2007)!.

It would be wrong to think of this book as complacent, a kind of 'I'm all right, Jack, pull up the ladder'. As Lawson points out, the single major cause of ill-health and death in the world is poverty, and if we take the standpoint of human welfare, the surest way to benefit humans is to lift them out of poverty. Lawson sees many serious problems facing the world, and many things that urgently need putting right. The view of this compelling and convincing book is that global warming isn't one of them.

A call for solid science to replace the hype and hysteria
Customer Rating:  Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5 Score = 5
A well written and thought provoking book that attempts to speak above the hysterical din that dominates the subject.

The author calls for a considered approach and appeals to organisations to address the issues we face in a sensible and practical way.


Thought-provoking contribution
Customer Rating:  Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4 Score = 4
In this thought-provoking book, Nigel Lawson asks key questions about global warming. Is the world warming and if so, why? How much warmer will it get? What will be the consequences? What can and should we do about it? What is the most cost-effective way to tackle it?

He looks at the temperature record. Surprisingly, temperatures have not risen since 2001, even though global CO2 emissions have been rising faster than ever. There was a 0.7oC rise over the last century while the CO2 in the atmosphere rose by 30%, largely caused by industrialisation driven by the rapid worldwide growth of carbon-based energy consumption (burning coal, oil and gas). Some, possibly most, of the warming is due to this growth of CO2 emissions and so of CO2 concentrations in the atmosphere.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's 2007 report predicted a sea-level rise of between 18 and 59 centimetres by 2100. (Its 1990 report predicted a 3.67 metre rise.) The IPCC predicted a 1.8o-4oC temperature rise by 2100, a mean of less than 3oC. (At 3oC, it says, "Globally, the potential for food production is projected to increase.") 3oC is 0.03oC a year, compared to 1975-2000's 0.02oC a year.

The IPCC says the one `virtually certain' impact of global warming is `reduced human mortality from decreased cold exposure'. A 2003 Department of Health study confirmed this, predicting a decrease in cold-related mortality of 20,000 and an increase in heat-related mortality of 2,000 by the 2050s.

On the IPCC's worst case scenario, of 1% growth a year in the developed countries and 2.3% in the developing countries, global warming could cost us 5% of world GDP by 2100. This would make developed countries' GDP 2.6 times today's rather than 2.7 and developing countries' GDP 8.5 times today's rather than 9.5.

Lawson argues that we should drop the precautionary principle because it is wrong to take decisions on the basis of worst-case possibilities: probabilities, not possibilities, should be our guide.

He looks at the prospects of some specific disasters. He notes that Antarctic ice-sheets are growing, that the IPCC's 2007 report said that an `abrupt transition' of the Gulf Stream is `very unlikely' and that the World Meteorological Organization said of climate change's effects on hurricanes, "no firm conclusion can be made on this point."

The EU's Emissions Trading Scheme has increased profits for selected emitters and not cut emissions. Kyoto's Clean Development Mechanism has done no better. The EU promotes growing biofuels, yet the Chinese government has suspended the production of the biofuel ethanol because it has raised food prices.

The Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform said that meeting the EU's agreed target of 20% of energy from renewables by 2020 would raise our electricity costs by £18-22 billion a year.

In June 2007 Merkel and Blair tried to get the G8 to agree to cut emissions by 50% by 2050. The rest rejected the idea. Six months later, Britain and Germany lost again when they proposed a mandatory global emissions cut of 25-40% by 2020.

We could control the world's temperature by severely limiting carbon dioxide emissions through raising prices of carbon-based energy, to make non-carbon-based energy more competitive. But this would force our energy-intensive industries out to China and other countries. (Although China's, and India's, emissions per head are still far less than the West's.) 1990s Russia showed that the only way to meet the Kyoto targets is to destroy your industries.

Lawson argues for an across-the-board carbon tax, even if it forces our remaining energy-intensive industries abroad, and for ending subsidies to all carbon-based energy. Instead, we need to keep our industries, se we need new carbon-based power stations and new gas storage facilities, which the market has not provided and will not provide.



Deluded amateur challenges the science
Customer Rating:  Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1
Lawson flies in the face of scientific consensus with no solid basis for his position. An unhelpful book.

Bad science sells well to those who want to hear his message
Customer Rating:  Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1 Score = 1
It's a shame this book was actually released without the facts being checked. Claims made bear no resemblance to verifiable facts. Global warming isn't strictly speaking the correct term - it should be global climate change. The latest climate models predict a slightly warmer and much wetter future for the UK.
I suspect there is a target market for Lawsons fantasies and that he is preaching to those who will clutch at any straw telling them what they want to hear. Controversy sells and doesn't Nigel know it...

























Suggestions | Textbook Shop Reviews | Site Map | Contact Us
© 2008 . All rights reserved. Privacy Statement and Disclaimer
web site design and support by Crystal Solutions