Climate Hope

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Climate Hope: On the Front Lines of the Fight Against Coal, is an account of the grassroots movement to stop the construction of over 150 proposed new coal-fired power plants and synthetic fuels plants in the United States and phase out the use of coal entirely.[1] The book covers the period 2007 to 2009, during over 100 new coal plants were canceled, abandoned, or placed on hold. The book explains the research of climate scientists identifying coal as the primary driver of global warming, and focuses especially on the public advocacy of Dr. James Hansen, director of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Sciences. Major topics include the "China question" (whether controlling coal in the U.S. is pointless if China is simultaneously expanding its coal fleet), the potential for conservation and efficiency, the decentralized character of the anti-coal movement and the movement's use of networking tools, the use of nonviolent direct action by anti-coal activists, the abandonment of coal plants by Warren Buffett, the "clean coal" controversy, the TVA Kingston Fossil Plant coal ash spill and the Sierra Club's national coal campaign. The book also chronicles state and regional fights in over coal mining and power plants in Florida, Kansas, Appalachia, the Four Corners region, the Northern Plains, and Washington, D.C.

Because Climate Hope is being published under the terms of the GNU FDL Free Documentation License, its factual contents may be edited and expanded by anyone who logs on to SourceWatch. Readers may also post comments on the book by clicking on the "discussion" tab.

Contents

ClimateHopeCover1.jpg

Sources

  1. Ted Nace, Climate Hope: On the Front Lines of the Fight Against Coal (CoalSwarm, 2009)