Bill Gates is a technologist, business leader, and philanthropist. In 1975, he cofounded Microsoft with his childhood friend Paul Allen. Today, he is cochair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, where he has spent more than twenty years working on global health and development issues, including pandemic prevention, disease eradication, and problems concerning water, sanitation, and hygiene. He has three children.
Gates' book is compulsively readable. His ambition was to 'cut
through the noise' and give consumers better tools for
understanding what works, an ambition he meets admirably. It more
than that, however. Gates can get an audience with anyone, can
marshal almost limitless resources, and is dogged in the detail.
The result - particularly in the wake of the Trump presidency - is
thrilling
*The Guardian*
Of the many books I have come across recently making the case that
climate change will be a catastrophe, but we can do something about
it, this is the best ... The relentless practicality of the book
combined with Gates's firm faith in innovation do not promote
despair. He exudes optimism; things will get better, not least
because, as John Lennon once sang, they can't get no worse
*Sunday Times*
It is mostly concerned with solutions rather than problems. This
already marks it out as something of an outlier within
environmental literature... if you're after an approachable book
about what needs to happen next, this is a great place to start
*The Times*
Bold but well argued ... a compelling explanation of how the world
can stop global warming by reducing greenhouse gas emissions
effectively to zero... [Gates] is a serious and genuine force for
good on climate change
*Observer*
How to Avoid a Climate Disaster is clear, concise on a colossal
subject, and intelligently holistic in its approach to the
problem.
*New Scientist*
It all makes for a meaty manifesto which Gates hopes can offer
sufficient variety to appeal across political divides and "shift
the conversation" away from the polarisation and misinformation
that has clouded discussion about climate change up until now.
*Evening Standard*
Books about the environment can induce a paralysing despair. The
billionaire Bill Gates is a can-do, problem-solving chap, and his
book is full of detailed, practical plans
*The Times*
Gates's carefully packaged nuggets of information are not only easy
to understand, but they aim to provide the reader with practical
tools to engage with the density of climate change information ...
What Gates has achieved with his book is something rare in the
swelling arena of popular climate literature. The Microsoft
co-founder turned philanthropist has compiled a solutions-based
strategy that is as informed on the commercial realities of scaling
new technologies as it is on the environmental consequences of not
doing so.
*The Business Post*
The most refreshing aspect of this book is its bracing mix of
cold-eyed realism and number-crunched optimism ... Ultimately
[Gates's] book is a primer on how to reorganise the global economy
so that innovation focuses on the world's gravest problems. It is a
powerful reminder that if mankind is to get serious about tackling
them, it must do more to harness the one natural resource available
in infinite quantity-human ingenuity.
*Economist*
Gates plots out, in patient, simple prose, a pathway that would
allow us to reduce carbon emissions from the current 51 billion
tonnes a year to zero by 2050.
*London Review of Books*
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