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Peak Everything: Waking Up to the Century of Declines (New Society Publishers)
Peak Everything: Waking Up to the Century of Declines (New Society Publishers)

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Author: Richard Heinberg
Publisher: New Society Publishers
Category: Book

List Price: $24.95
Buy New: $14.47
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New (26) Used (9) from $14.46

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 16 reviews
Sales Rank: 12834

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 224
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1
Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 6.1 x 0.9

ISBN: 086571598X
Dewey Decimal Number: 304.2
EAN: 9780865715981
ASIN: 086571598X

Publication Date: October 16, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: Brand new!

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

The twentieth century saw unprecedented growth in population, energy consumption, and food production. As the population shifted from rural to urban, the impact of humans on the environment increased dramatically.

The twenty-first century ushered in an era of declines, in a number of crucial parameters:

  • Global oil, natural gas, and coal extraction
  • Yearly grain harvests
  • Climate stability
  • Population
  • Economic growth
  • Fresh water
  • Minerals and ores, such as copper and platinum

To adapt to this profoundly different world, we must begin now to make radical changes to our attitudes, behaviors, and expectations.

Peak Everything addresses many of the cultural, psychological, and practical changes we will have to make as nature rapidly dictates our new limits. This latest book from Richard Heinberg, author of three of the most important books on Peak Oil, touches on the most important aspects of the human condition at this unique moment in time.

A combination of wry commentary and sober forecasting on subjects as diverse as farming and industrial design, this book tells how we might make the transition from the Age of Excess to the Era of Modesty with grace and satisfaction, while preserving the best of our collective achievements. A must-read for individuals, business leaders, and policymakers who are serious about effecting real change.

Richard Heinberg is a journalist, lecturer, and the author of seven books, including The Party's Over, Powerdown, and The Oil Depletion Protocol. He is one of the world's foremost Peak Oil educators.




Customer Reviews:   Read 11 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars If you are interested in reality, read this book....   December 5, 2007
 31 out of 34 found this review helpful

There is no more critical issue to the human family that the nearly simultaneous peaking of the resources that are necessary to the functioning of modern society. The production of conventional petroleum--the stuff we get our gasoline from--is at or near its peak right now. Henceforth, prices will go up and availability will go down.

At the same time we are getting repeated warnings that the atmosphere is `peaking' in the amount of greenhouse gases it can absorb without inducing climate change. The best information available indicates that other conventional sources of energy--natural gas, coal, and uranium--will all peak within the next 30 years. If this were a movie it would be real thriller; unfortunately we're talking about reality.

Richard Heinberg, author of `Peak Everything,' is one of the world's leading thinkers and writers on this rather earth-shaking issue of the peaking of the resources critical to our society as it is current configured. Heinberg has two other recent books that go into detail on the probable timing of these peaks (see `The Party's Over: Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Society') and what our choices are in response to this emerging reality (see `Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-carbon World').

This book, `Peak Everything,' is a wide-ranging exploration of how we managed, physically and psychologically, to end up in this blind alley (the majority of the world's 6.5 billion people are now fed by our petroleum-based agricultural system), and what some of the most promising models are for viable human communities in the future. There is no more compelling subject than this and Heinberg offers some of the best thinking and best insights to be found in print.



3 out of 5 stars Not much new here   October 24, 2007
 30 out of 43 found this review helpful

With such a great title I expected more than a few disparate essays rehashing topics already thoroughly covered in previous books. I had hoped for some actual ideas about "making the transition with grace". I didn't find anything of practical use.

I would recommend Overshoot by William Catton for thorough explanation of the ideas that Heinberg glosses over.



5 out of 5 stars The best book yet on this century of decline   January 12, 2008
 22 out of 23 found this review helpful

When I sat down to read this book I thought I knew quite a bit about "Peak Oil" and "Peak Energy" and about several other areas where we are now bumping up against the limits to growth. And since I had not only read The Party's Over and Powerdown but a number of Richard Heinberg's essays that I'd come across at the Energy Bulletin site, I thought I was pretty familiar with his insights regarding both the nature of the mess we now find ourselves in and the options available to us. So it was a pleasant surprise to find new and interesting insights in every chapter of this book.

One of the strengths of the book in my view is that it comes at the subject from so many different angles. I was impressed again and again by the scope of Heinberg's knowledge and the way he put the pieces together to make sense of the great challenges that we are facing.

As he himself says, "None of this is easy to contemplate. . . . [T]he suggestion that we are at or near the peak of population and consumption levels for the entirety of human history and that it's all downhill from here is not likely to win votes, lead to a better job, or even make for pleasant dinner banter."

But the better you understand the true nature of a problem, the better able you are to deal with it, and this book is the best yet in my opinion to help one awaken to the full implications of this "century of decline".



5 out of 5 stars Red-Blue Divide   April 16, 2008
 11 out of 13 found this review helpful

I bought and read Heinberg's "The Party's Over" and "Powerdown" as soon as they were available, but I held off buying and reading "Peak Everything" on account of the lukewarm and critical reviews. I needn't have waited.

I was expecting a catalogue of resource declines, but Peak Everything turned out to be more of a philosophical analysis of where we are and where we are headed, and I was not disappointed.

The book is worth its price for the final chapter in which Heinberg discusses the connection between language and religion. That helped me to understand how people have gone so blindly into overshoot, and I needed to understand that.

Reviews of the book are almost evenly divided, and in retrospect I think the division mirrors the political and cultural divide in the United States today. The Reds scoff at the book; the Blues applaud. In this case, I feel that the Blues are the ones who have their thinking caps on.

I would recommend this book to anyone who really wants to know where we are, how we came to be here, and where we likely are going.



2 out of 5 stars hodgepodge   February 13, 2008
 8 out of 23 found this review helpful

I think Mr. Heinberg threw together anything he's written lately to create a hodgepodge of a book. I liked that film also, but what do the parrots of Telegraph Hill have to do with peak everything? His aesthetic judgments are dubious. I love "Arts and Crafts" style objects also, but there is no reason to think that the products of a return to handcrafts would resemble them. They were the products of an elite late 19th, early 20th Century culture. The first creations of a return to handcrafts would likely be strictly utilitarian. As people develop more skill and have more leisure, their creations are as likely to be colorful and ornate as spare and elegant. Think Guatemalan busses, think New York City graffiti, we're talking popular art here. The results will quite likely not be to Mr. Heinberg's refined taste. I do not share his professed disdain for the products of modern industrial design and I enjoy indigenous and "outsider Art" as well. I think the whole discussion is irrelevant to "peak everything", and it inspires little confidence in any of the rest of his theories.

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