The Carbon Bubble.

By Jeff Rubin

ISBN: 9780345814708

Printed: 2015

Publisher: Random House. Canada

Edition: First edition

Dimensions 17 × 25 × 3 cm
Language

Language: English

Size (cminches): 17 x 25 x 3

£17.00
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Item information

Description

In the original dustsheet. Blue board binding with silver title on the spine.

F.B.A. provides an in-depth photographic presentation of this item to stimulate your feel and touch. More traditional book descriptions are immediately available.

An excellent Natural Capital Book

For the first time at book length, bestselling author and economist Jeff Rubin addresses Canada’s national economic future–and the financial security of all Canadians.
Since 2006 and the election of the 1st Harper government, the vision of Canada’s future as an energy superpower has driven the political agenda, as well as the fast-paced development of Alberta’s oil sands and the push for more pipelines across the country to bring that bitumen to market. Anyone who objects is labelled a dreamer, or worse–an environmentalist: someone who puts the health of the planet ahead of the economic survival of their neighbours.
In The Carbon Bubble, Jeff Rubin compellingly shows how Harper’s economic vision for the country is dead wrong. Changes in energy markets in the US–where domestic production is booming while demand for oil is shrinking–are quickly turning Harper’s dream into an economic nightmare. The same trade and investment ties to oil that pushed the Canadian dollar to record highs are now pulling it down, and the Toronto Stock Exchange, one of the most carbon-intensive stock indexes in the world–with over 25 percent market capitalization in oil and gas alone–will be increasingly exposed to the rest of the world’s efforts to reduce carbon emissions.
Rubin argues that there is a lifeline to a better future. The very climate change that will leave much of the country’s carbon un-burnable could at the same time make some of Canada’s other resource assets more valuable: our water and our land. In tomorrow’s economy, he argues, Canada won’t be an energy superpower, but it has the makings of one of the world’s great breadbaskets. And in the global climate that the world’s carbon emissions are inexorably creating, food will soon be a lot more valuable than oil.

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