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Mike Berners-Lee

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Mike Berners-Lee


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Average rating: 3.98 · 5,355 ratings · 651 reviews · 13 distinct worksSimilar authors
How Bad Are Bananas?: The C...

3.91 avg rating — 2,958 ratings — published 2010 — 20 editions
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There Is No Planet B: A Han...

4.04 avg rating — 1,848 ratings — published 2019 — 20 editions
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The Carbon Footprint of Eve...

4.12 avg rating — 232 ratings — published 2022
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The Burning Question: We ca...

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4.22 avg rating — 226 ratings — published 2013 — 5 editions
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A Climate of Truth: Why We ...

4.16 avg rating — 70 ratings3 editions
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Peut-on encore manger des b...

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How Bad are Bananas? The Ca...

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The Burning Question: We Ca...

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“What has been Extinction Rebellion’s magic? It boils down to values, processes, role modelling, positivity and fast learning. Most importantly for me, XR has been a loud advocate of the three core values I call for in this book. In the London protests of April 2019, you could hear the tannoys reminding supporters to respect everyone: the authorities; the government; the public; each other; the oil companies; EVERYONE. In surreal scenes on Waterloo Bridge, the police were caught visibly off balance by the tide chanting: ‘To the police, we love you. We’re doing this for your children’, as the police carried people away to their vans. Of course, as XR’s name suggests, they stand overtly for the preservation of all species. And they made a very strong call for truth. At its best, XR gave us a taste of a better world. They”
Mike Berners-Lee, There Is No Planet B: A Handbook for the Make or Break Years – Updated Edition

“At Booths, over one-quarter of the transport footprint comes from the very small amount of air freight in their supply chains—typically used for expensive items that perish quickly. Conversely, most of their food miles are by ship (partly because the U.K. is an island), but because ships can carry food around the world around 100 times more efficiently than planes, they account for less than 1 percent of Booths’ total footprint. The message here is that it is OK to eat apples, oranges, bananas, or whatever you like from anywhere in the world, as long as it has not been on a plane or thousands of miles by road. Road miles are roughly as carbon intensive as air miles, but in the U.K. the distances involved tend not to be too bad, whereas in North America they can be thousands of miles. Booths is a regional supermarket with just one warehouse, so their own distribution is not a big carbon deal, and they have been working hard on further improvements.”
Mike Berners-Lee, How Bad Are Bananas?: The Carbon Footprint of Everything

“Do we need protest? After decades of asking politely and getting nowhere, we have a full-scale emergency on our hands. We have to have change. And it must be now. If the right kind of protest is what it takes, then that’s what we must have. I do not write this as someone who feels instinctive joy at the thought of taking to the streets, but these are serious times. There is compelling evidence that the right kind of protest clearly works. When, in 2019, the UK tightened its carbon targets to ‘net zero by 2050’, it wasn’t far enough, but it was a big step in the right direction. And it looks pretty clear that the political space to make that possible was opened up in no small part by protesters; by Greta Thunberg, by armies of school kids, and by Extinction Rebellion (XR). My work with tech giants, investment bankers, energy companies, an airline and many other corporations tells me that these straight-talking, non-violent direct actions made possible conversations in boardrooms that seemed unthinkable just 18 months before.”
Mike Berners-Lee, There Is No Planet B: A Handbook for the Make or Break Years – Updated Edition

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