The carbon footprint of everything

Mike Berners-Lee

Book - 2022

"An award-winning, practical (and funny) guide to reducing your carbon footprint. Calculate your carbon footprint: with an item-by-item breakdown. Meet your company's carbon goals: using the latest research. Covid-19 and the carbon battle: understand the new global supply chain. The Carbon Footprint of Everything breaks items down by the amount of carbon they produce, creating a calorie guide for the carbon-conscious. With engaging writing, leading carbon expert Mike Berners-Lee shares new carbon calculations based on recent research. He considers the impact of the pandemic on the carbon battle--especially the embattled global supply chain--and adds items we didn't consider a decade ago, like bitcoin and other cryptocurrencie...s. Supported by solid research, cross-referenced with other expert sources, illustrated with easy-to-follow charts and graphs, and written with Berners-Lee's trademark sense of humor, The Carbon Footprint of Everything should be on everyone's bookshelf. The Carbon Footprint of Everything is an extensively revised and updated edition of How Bad Are Bananas."--

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Subjects
Published
Vancouver ; Berkeley ; London : Greystone Books 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Mike Berners-Lee (author)
Edition
Updated North American edition
Item Description
Previously published under title: How bad are bananas? Vancouver : Greystone Books, 2011.
Physical Description
303 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781771645768
  • Introduction
  • A brief guide to carbon footprints
  • Less than 10 grams
  • A pint(16 oz) of tap water
  • An email
  • A Google search
  • A text message
  • A plastic grocery bag
  • Drying your hands
  • 10 to 100 grams
  • A paper bag
  • Ironing a shirt
  • A Zoom call
  • A 100 g (3 oz) serving of carrots
  • An apple
  • A mile by electric bike
  • Walking through a door
  • Boiling a liter (a quart) of water
  • Traveling a mile by bus
  • Cycling a mile
  • 100 to 500 grams (3.5 to 17.5 oz)
  • A 200 g (7 oz) serving of boiled potatoes
  • A banana
  • A diaper
  • An orange
  • A supermarket delivery
  • Traveling a mile by train
  • An hour watching TV
  • A shower
  • A unit of heat
  • A letter (and other mail)
  • A unit of electricity
  • A newspaper
  • A liter (32 oz) bottle of water
  • A bowl of oatmeal
  • A roll of toilet paper
  • Washing dishes
  • A 250 g (8 oz) clamshell of strawberries
  • 500 grams to 1 kilo (1.1 to 2.2 pounds)
  • An ice cream or popsicle
  • Driving a mile
  • A latte (or a tea or coffee)
  • 1 kg (2.2 lbs) of trash to landfill
  • A loaf of bread
  • A pint (16 oz) of beer
  • A 10-inch pizza
  • A 200 g (7 oz) serving of fish
  • Spending $1
  • A paperback book
  • Taking a bath
  • 1 to 10 kilos (2.2 to 22 pounds)
  • A pint (16 oz) of milk
  • A 250 g (8 oz) bunch of asparagus
  • A bottle of wine
  • A bunch of flowers
  • A carton of eggs
  • A day's protein (50 g/2 oz)
  • A load of laundry
  • Desalinating 1,000 liters (264 gallons) of water
  • 250 g (8 oz) of cheese
  • A 125 g (4 oz) burger
  • 1 kg (2.2 lbs) of rice
  • A takeout taco
  • 1 kg (2.2 lbs) of plastic
  • 1 kg (2.2 lbs) of tomatoes
  • A 250 g (8 oz) steak
  • 10 to 100 kilos (22 to 220 pounds)
  • A pair of shoes
  • A pair of pants
  • A rush-hour car commute
  • A bag of cement (25 kg/55 lbs)
  • Leaving the lights on
  • A night in a hotel
  • A leg of lamb (2 kg/4.4 lbs)
  • A week's food shopping
  • New York City to Niagara Falls and back
  • Using a smartphone
  • 100 to 1,000 kilos (220 pounds to 1 ton)
  • A 50-liter (13-gallon) tank of gas
  • A necklace
  • Christmas excess
  • A new carpet
  • Insulating an attic
  • A funeral
  • A computer (and using it)
  • A pet
  • A mortgage
  • 1 to 10 tons
  • An operation
  • A ton of steel
  • A ton of nitrogen fertilizer
  • Flying from Los Angeles to Barcelona return
  • Solar panels
  • 10 to 1,000 tons
  • A new car
  • A person (annual footprint)
  • Space tourism and travel
  • A wind turbine
  • A new-build house
  • A car crash
  • Having a child
  • Millions of tons
  • A volcano
  • The World Cup (soccer)
  • A new coal mine
  • Cryptocurrencies
  • The Cloud and the world's data centers
  • The USA (and other countries)
  • Billions of tons
  • Wildfires
  • The world's IT
  • A war
  • Deforestation
  • Black carbon
  • The world's annual emissions
  • Burning the world's fossil-fuel reserves
  • Negative emissions
  • Planting trees
  • Marine planting
  • Soil carbon sequestration
  • Biochar
  • BECCS (bioenergy with carbon capture and storage)
  • Enhanced rock weathering
  • DACCS (direct air capture and carbon storage)
  • What can we do?
  • Where the numbers come from
  • Appendix: Calculating footprints
  • Notes and references
  • Thanks
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

This new edition of How Bad Are Bananas? (2010) comes with a new title and updated numbers. The numbers are, as Berners-Lee states, "the best estimate we can get of the full climate change impact of something." His ideal for everyone on this planet is to adopt a five-ton lifestyle, referring to a person's carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) footprint per year; in the U.S., the average person's CO2e footprint is about 21 tons per year, so this is no small hurdle. In order to clarify what we do and use that generates this large of a footprint, chapters are divided by the amount of CO2e emitted, starting from less than 10 grams (like a cup of water or an email) to billions of tons (like wildfires and war) to those things that have negative emissions (like planting trees). Within each chapter are footnotes and references as to how Berners-Lee arrived at the numbers. He also includes chapters on what options exist to remove atmospheric CO2 and what each of us can do to lower our individual CO2e impact. This book, a user-friendly reminder of our environmental impact, will find an audience among patrons concerned about climate change.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An up-to-date life guide for carbon-conscious readers. In this "extensively revised and updated" edition of his 2010 book, How Bad Are Bananas, Berners-Lee offers an easy, often amusing read. Unfortunately, despite the traditional what-we-can-do-to-fix-it final chapter, the end result is not more than mildly encouraging. Since the author wrote Bananas, the global climate crisis has gotten much worse. Temperatures are rising faster than predicted; weather has deteriorated; trees are flowering sooner than they should; polar ice is melting, and sea levels are rising. The author adds that humans produced 56 billion tons of greenhouse gas emissions in 2018, and emissions continue to rise, "as if humans had never noticed climate change." The average American has an annual carbon footprint of 21 tons, while the global average is just over seven. Berners-Lee proposes five tons as a sensible goal. This may sound impossible, but he reminds readers that America is a very unequal society, and the extremely wealthy drive the average up by their "carbon-profligate lifestyles." However, since a single commercial flight from New York City to Seoul burns around 4.7 tons, many readers will remain doubtful. With the unpleasantness out of the way, readers can enjoy the fun (at least at the beginning) as Berners-Lee reveals the carbon footprints of hundreds of elements in our lives, starting small--tap water, email, a paper bag, a diaper; then moving up to a roll of toilet paper, washing dishes, driving a mile, taking a bath, using a smartphone--and ending with the big stuff: making a ton of steel, a plane flight, space travel, wildfires, wars, deforestation. Ending on the traditional positive note, the author shows more good sense than usual. Individual efforts (recycling, bicycling) are trivial, but we should do them to create a new norm. If enough of us live within our carbon budget, wasting it (the norm today) will become uncool. More bad news about climate change but entertaining and often practical. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.