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![]() by Gregory McNamee The Heat Is On: The High Stakes Battle Over Earth's Threatened Climate, by Ross Gelbspan (Addison-Wesley). Cloth, $23. FOREST AND GRASS fires rage through Mongolia and Texas. Killer heat waves fell hundreds in Calcutta and Chicago. Floods consume Nepal and Oman and North Dakota. Deserts form in Greece and Spain. Yellow fever-bearing mosquitoes move into the highlands of central Africa and Costa Rica--and the Sonoran Desert.
These and countless other alarming recent incidents form the
backdrop for veteran Washington Post reporter Ross Gelbspan's
book on the politics of global warming, a subject that excites
considerable controversy. Gelbspan opens with a dire scenario
about the melting of the Antarctic ice cap, ranges over a discussion
of the so-called greenhouse effect, and looks at the apparent
alteration of the globe's normal weather cycles in recent years.
Gelbspan's own command of the relevant science seems a little fuzzy at times, if far better than industry apologist Rush Limbaugh's, and the reader is left to judge just how evil the energy companies' acting out of clear self-interest really is. Still, it all adds up to an interesting polemic. And Gelbspan gives a good account of alternative-energy programs, which he urges be given greater funding priority. With the proper tax incentives, he holds, "climate-friendly energy technologies could instantly become competitive with fossil fuels"--a useful bit of news for those of us who live in the Sonoran Desert, where solar energy ought to reign.
Is the sky falling? After reading this book, you might be inclined
to think so. Whether you buy Gelbspan's thesis or not, it makes
good fodder for argument.
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