By Brendan Hart 1 min read

As The World Burns

It is difficult for most people to connect the Industrial Revolution to current GDP and productivity growth to future climate-caused events.
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As The World Burns

The World is Literally Burning

“In 2006–16, as Asia’s emerging economies forged ahead, their energy consumption rose by 40% … Western countries grew wealthy on a carbon-heavy diet of industrial development.”

Climate change is dangerous because people, with acute needs and rigid ideologies, are short-term thinkers.

It is difficult for most people to connect the Industrial Revolution to current GDP and productivity growth to future climate-caused events.

No matter.

There is a moderate to likely chance that, during the lifetimes of those reading this essay, the earth will suffer irreparable damage from climate change.

When that happens — as it now seems to be — we cannot say that we were not warned.

Climate change is so complex because everyone contributes to it. It is cross-sector and cross-border. Its solutions have elements of science, technology, public policy, business concerns, and human behavior.

With ~80% of global emissions and two-thirds of people, cities are especially responsible for and at-risk of climate change.

As I’ve mentioned before, cities are making directional progress in this fight.

The question is whether our social media-addicted brains can focus on a global, complex, multi-generational problem.

I doubt it.

Brendan Hart

About the Author

Brendan Hart

Brendan Hart is the founder of The Power Curve, an independent platform for research and analysis on strategic competition, political economy, and applied AI.

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