Cancun – How to be an optimist in a pessimist's world

  • Alan AtKisson outlines the seriousness of our global environmental problems - and makes the case for optimism
  • Free public lecture by Alan AtKisson at London School of Economics 23rd Nov 2010 - details here.

London - Earthscan~ "It looks unlikely that leaders at the climate negotiations at Cancún will get it together to face reality and prevent catastrophe," says Alan AtKisson, sustainability consultant to governments and business, and author of the bestselling book Believing Cassandra: How to be an Optimist in a Pessimist’s World, a new edition of which is published this month by Earthscan.

Yet despite this bleak prognosis, AtKisson makes the case for optimism:

"Cancún is not the whole story. The recent breakthrough on biodiversity (in Nagoya, Japan) proves that we can come together, as a world, to solve our problems."

AtKisson is well placed to comment on our reasons for optimism. For nearly twenty years, he has worked around the globe with projects that are creating, as he calls them, "the Proof of the Possible." "I have a fun job," he says. "I get to watch as whole countries and companies plan and implementsignificant transformations in the way that they run themselves and/or do business. And I am still truly astonished at how fast things can change, once they start changing."

AtKisson cites recent examples such as South Korea's massive investment in a 'Green Economy', China's astonishing rise as a major producer of renewable energy, and the accelerated "green turnarounds" in a variety of well-known global companies. His own recent work has included helping the United Nations develop a strategy for accelerating the spread of renewable energy, and working with a high-level council in Egypt that is planning for a "Green Transformation" in that country.

He also works with global companies. "Companies are ahead of governments when it comes to leading change for sustainability," says AtKisson. "And the NGOs are leading them. Bill McKibben's 350.org movement, for example, has defied the odds and made inspiring, global-scale impacts, with small amounts of money and huge amounts of people power."

AtKisson directs The AtKisson Group, a world-leading sustainability consultancy to businesses, international bodies, NGOs and governments, and is the author of a bestselling book on sustainability. In its first edition, Believing Cassandra quickly rose to #1 on Amazon’s environmental list for 1999. The book, now fully revised and updated with the latest scientific assessments and world events, covers:

  • The origins of the global environmental crisis, and the story of the scientific "Cassandras" who tried to warn us decades ago - and why those warnings were ignored
  • A guided tour through the "Gallery of Global Trends," with a compelling explanation of why humanity is still rocketing in the wrong direction
  • How to be a "sustainability change agent" and redirect the momentum of human economic, technological, and social development toward solutions
"If we are powerful enough to destroy the planet’s ecosystems," argues Alan AtKisson, "then surely we are powerful enough to save them."

Praise for the book:

'Exceptionally readable and erudite ... As rigorous as this book is with respect to science and facts, I see it as a blessing, not a warning, a benediction rather than an omen, because the information we need to make the transition from a culture of unimpeded growth to one of humane development is the same information that describes our demise, if it is ignored.' - Paul Hawken, author of Natural Capitalism and The Ecology of Commerce

"Woven throughout the story are the essential tools for understanding the current state of the challenges facing civilisation “candid, humorous, and full of memorable anecdotes.” - Worldlink, the magazine of the World Economic Forum

"The fact that BELIEVING CASSANDRA brings a message of hope didn’t hurt in our eventually choosing it as THE book, among all the other books we were reading, to pass out in a wider circle [of participants in the US Army's Installation Sustainability Program]."
- Manette Messenger, US Army

Source: www.earthscan.co.uk

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