From the National Business Book Award-winning author of Stupid to the
Last Drop, a captivating polemic on the global failure to deal with
climate change.
Kyoto, 1997. Montreal, 2005. Copenhagen, 2009. Cancun, 2010. In Fools
Rule, Marsden illustrates how inefficient and short-sighted political
negotiations have become despite mounting scientific evidence that
immediate action is essential to curb the effects of climate change.
International climate change summits are now widely monitored events,
attended by state leaders and crowded with journalists; yet somehow they
have never been less productive. Treaties and action plans are smothered
by economic self-interest, diplomatic errors and every nation's hungry
scramble for its share of the remaining atmospheric space.
Marsden takes us from inside the bungled negotiations at Copenhagen to
the melting glaciers and untapped oil reserves of the Arctic; he shows
us the paralyzing effect oil and gas companies have on green legal
initiatives in the United States, and therefore on any international
climate change treaty; and, with wit and penetrating insight, he asks
the toughest question--will we be able to change before it's too late?