City Libraries, City of Gold Coast

Carbon justice, the scandal of Australia's biggest contribution to climate change, Jeremy Moss

Label
Carbon justice, the scandal of Australia's biggest contribution to climate change, Jeremy Moss
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Carbon justice
Responsibility statement
Jeremy Moss
Sub title
the scandal of Australia's biggest contribution to climate change
Summary
It's a shocking fact: the emissions produced annually from the fossil fuels extracted by Australia's major gas, coal and oil producers -- the likes of Glencore, BHP, Yancoal, Peabody, Chevron and Anglo-American -- and sold here and overseas are larger than the emissions of all 25 million Australians. If Australia's exported and domestic emissions are combined, Australia ranks as the sixth largest emitter in the world, behind China, the US, India, Russia and Japan. Far from being an insignificant contributor to climate change because of its small population, Australia is a key driver through its fossil fuel exports. How have these companies' exports escaped scrutiny when climate change is such an urgent problem? Understanding the moral responsibility of Australia's major carbon emitters is a crucial first step in determining how to fairly share the burdens of a climate transition. In this book, political philosopher Jeremy Moss sets out an ethical framework to establish the cost of the harms of these major exporters and what they should do about it. What they do next will shape Australia's response to climate change
Table Of Contents
Climate justice -- It wasn't us -- Time to adopt the contribution model -- A just response -- Sharing the benefits, not the risks
Classification