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Ten Billion

by Stephen Emmott

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1479187,039 (3.56)2
"A VINTAGE PAPERBACK ORIGINAL Deforestation. Desertification. Species extinction. Global warming. Growing threats to food and water. These driving issues of our times are the result of one huge problem: Us. Just over two hundred years ago, there were one billion humans on Earth. By 1960, there were three billion. There are now over seven billion of us. By 2050, there will be at least nine billion people on this planet. And, sometime near the end of this century, the world population will reach ten billion. As we continue to grow, these problems continue to grow. And this means that every which way we look at it, a planet of 10 billion people is set to look increasingly like a nightmare. Stephen Emmott, a scientist whose lab is at the forefront of research into climate, ecosystems, food-webs, and plant biology sounds the alarm. TEN BILLION is a snapshot of a planet, and our species, approaching a crisis: how we got here, what's happening now, and where this leaves us for the rest of this century. TEN BILLION is anything but a "green" book. And it's not another book about the climate. TEN BILLION is a book about us"--"A VINTAGE PAPERBACK ORIGINAL Just 10,000 years ago, there were only one million humans on Earth. By 1800, just over two hundred years ago, there were one billion of us. By 1960, there were three billion. There are now over seven billion of us. By 2050, there will be at least nine billion other people--and, sometime near the end of this century, there will be at least ten billion of us. There is simply no known way to provide this many people with clothes, food, and fresh water. And any action we take to address these issues will turn up the thermostat on global warming. Stephen Emmott has dedicated his career to researching the effects of humans on the Earth's natural systems. This is his call to arms, an urgent plea to re-imagine the interconnected web of our global problems in a new light"--… (more)
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Showing 1-5 of 9 (next | show all)
In 216 short pages -- most of which is, as pointed out by another reviewer, wasted on lot of 12-point font, negative space, photograph spreads, and over-simplified charts --the author attempts to deliver the sense of urgency by bulletpointing alarming examples of how humans misunderstand Earth's bounty and waste her natural resources.

While I don't disagree that we have a very serious problem at hand, I do have a number of problems with this book. The overall tone is very patronizing (the issues aren't very new or surprising, yet I can almost hear him leading into each statement with "Did you know???). There are lots numbers and facts, but without proper citations. The pages jump from topic to topic without good transition or synergy. There doesn't seem to be a lot of good substance; maybe it would have been better to publish this as a children's or coffee table book with large glossy full-color pages. And finally, while the author is very good at pointing out that the sky is falling, he does so without giving us any workable solutions or even an umbrella to stand under (consume less! he says).

Towards the end Emmott chides those who try to help out by turning off their mobile chargers, purchasing electric cars, or foregoing children, suggesting that they are merely assuaging their guilt. Perhaps this book is just his way of doing the same. ( )
  mimo | Dec 18, 2023 |
OK 10,000,000,000 is a lot of people. The number is scary. No doubt about it. Can the earth support this many people ? Probably not. But I found this book overly pessimistic and I also didn't care for the layout of the book at all. Many of the pages consisted of just one paragraph, some only contained one sentence. It was almost insulting. Overpopulation is an important topic, and I get it that the author wants to reach a large audience. But if you want to reach the masses and write a book for a wide audience don't insult your audience by writing a book that is written for people with a grade 6 reading level. If you want to read a better book on this topic go with something like Al Gore's An Inconvenient Truth. ( )
  kevinkevbo | Jul 14, 2023 |
Ten Billion by Stephen Emmott is based on the author's lecture run at the Royal Court Theatre in London. Emmott leads the Microsoft Computational Science Laboratory in Cambridge and is a professor of Computational Science at Oxford University.

There is a children's book entitled “There Was An Old Woman” about a woman who swallowed fly and from there swallowed a spider to catch the fly and goes on to a bird to catch the spider to cat, dog, goat, cow, and a horse (she's dead- of course!). We, humanity, are forcing the earth to swallow thing after thing to try and fix the problem's we are causing.

Human's emerged as a species 200,000 years ago. 10,000 years ago there were a million people on earth. In 1800, population reached 1 billion. By 1960, human population reached 3 billion. 5 billion in 1980 and today there are 7 billion people. By 2050, the the population will reach 9 billion. And 10 Billion by the end of the century, that is with restraint. If we grow at the current rate, by the end of this century there will be 22 billion people on the planet. Population, people, not flies or spiders will be the death of the planet as we know it.

We have recognizable damaged on the planet now and with the rise of the BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China) and there demands for a Western lifestyle of meat, cars, technology will put a huge burden on the planet. Emmott is not worried that we will run out of oil to fuel this growth; he is worried that we will continue to use it at an accelerated pace and the damage that will do.

In 1960, there were 100 million cars in the world. By 1980, there were 300 million cars on the road. This year we will produce the 1 billionth car and over the next 40 years we will produce another 2.5 billion cars. The price of cars extends beyond the price tag; there are roads, pollution and pollution related diseases, environmental damage from oil production, transportation costs of parts, raising of animals for leather, and the list goes on.

Food and water will see increased demand. The Green Revolution, the author says, is a myth. There was nothing green about it. Petroleum based fertilizers and irrigation allowed increased production. As petroleum becomes scarce and water becomes scarce, food will become scarce. To increase food production new crop lands will be needed. This will come at the expense remaining forests and protected lands. Climate change will move crop lands. Climate change is not weather: because it snows one day in March in Dallas, Texas does mean global warming is wrong.

Emmott paints a picture of earth reminiscent of Isaac Asminov's story 2430 AD. It is is a scary picture and it will be here in our children's life time, if not ours. We are not trying to change the path we are on, most are happy to speed down the road to oblivion. Even those who try aren't really doing much. I don't drive a car. I bicycle everywhere I can; I take the train if I need to go farther. I am a vegetarian who shops local. My technology consists of a laptop, a phone and a Nook (no TV, stereo, X-box...). But even all that won't be enough in the future. Emmott is much more blunt about it, let's just say, the old woman is starting to swallow the horse. ( )
  evil_cyclist | Mar 16, 2020 |
“Every which way you look at it, a planet of ten billion looks like a nightmare.” Emmott's short and spine-chilling read drives home the real costs of what humankind has done to the earth, and as the plague of humanity expands, will reap in the future. One of his final sentences is, “I think we’re fucked”. Read it, don't get defensive, it's short and to the point and might be just what the doubters need. ( )
  DebbieMcCauley | Apr 28, 2019 |
Interesting read about the state of the earth by a scientist with a sense of urgency and a sense of humor. Lots of information points rather than heavy analysis. A good book to peek one's curiosity for more in-depth writings. ( )
  econmatrix007 | Sep 9, 2018 |
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"A VINTAGE PAPERBACK ORIGINAL Deforestation. Desertification. Species extinction. Global warming. Growing threats to food and water. These driving issues of our times are the result of one huge problem: Us. Just over two hundred years ago, there were one billion humans on Earth. By 1960, there were three billion. There are now over seven billion of us. By 2050, there will be at least nine billion people on this planet. And, sometime near the end of this century, the world population will reach ten billion. As we continue to grow, these problems continue to grow. And this means that every which way we look at it, a planet of 10 billion people is set to look increasingly like a nightmare. Stephen Emmott, a scientist whose lab is at the forefront of research into climate, ecosystems, food-webs, and plant biology sounds the alarm. TEN BILLION is a snapshot of a planet, and our species, approaching a crisis: how we got here, what's happening now, and where this leaves us for the rest of this century. TEN BILLION is anything but a "green" book. And it's not another book about the climate. TEN BILLION is a book about us"--"A VINTAGE PAPERBACK ORIGINAL Just 10,000 years ago, there were only one million humans on Earth. By 1800, just over two hundred years ago, there were one billion of us. By 1960, there were three billion. There are now over seven billion of us. By 2050, there will be at least nine billion other people--and, sometime near the end of this century, there will be at least ten billion of us. There is simply no known way to provide this many people with clothes, food, and fresh water. And any action we take to address these issues will turn up the thermostat on global warming. Stephen Emmott has dedicated his career to researching the effects of humans on the Earth's natural systems. This is his call to arms, an urgent plea to re-imagine the interconnected web of our global problems in a new light"--

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