Everyone knows that the planet is in trouble, but is there a solution? This timely book identifies the most effective ways individuals can be more green in four key areas: home, travel, food, and consumerism. It also describes how citizens can ensure that governments take the actions necessary to make sustainable lifestyles the norm instead of the exception. Environmental lawyer
David Boyd and celebrated ecologist
David Suzuki provide vital tips for choosing a home, creating a healthy indoor environment, and decreasing energy and water use — and utility bills. They discuss what readers can do to drive and fly less, profile the most environmentally friendly transportation choices, and explain how to purchase carbon credits, among other suggestions. In addition, they offer simple changes individuals can make in their diet to eat fresher, tastier, healthier food. Included too is invaluable advice about how to buy fewer things and avoid toxic consumer products.
Mục lục
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1: Help Wanted
Chapter 2: Home Smart Home
Chapter 3: Food for Thought
Chapter 4: Traveling Light
Chapter 5: Less Stuff
Chapter 6: Citizen Green
Chapter 7: Smaller Footprint, Bigger Smile
Appendix: A Snapshot of the Global Environmental Crisis
Resources
Index
Giới thiệu về tác giả
David Suzuki is the acclaimed geneticist and environmentalist, the host of The Nature of Things, the founder and chair of the David Suzuki Foundation, and the author of more than forty books. He is the recipient of the UNESCO Kalinga Prize for Science, the United Nations Environmental Medal, and the UNEP’s Global 500 award, and he has been named a Companion of the Order of Canada. He was selected as the 35th most important green campaigner of all time by the British newspaper, The Guardian. In addition, he holds eighteen honorary degrees and has been adopted into three First Nations clans. Suzuki lives in Vancouver, British Columbia.
David R. Boyd is one of Canada’s leading environmental lawyers and the author of influential works including
Sustainability Within a Generation: A New Vision for Canada,
Unnatural Law: Rethinking Canadian Environmental Law and Policy, and
Canada vs. The OECD: An Environmental Comparison. He lives, lightly, on Pender Island in British Columbia with Margot Venton and their daughter, Meredith.