The Cure for Catastrophe
How We Can Stop Manufacturing Natural Disasters
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- £5.99
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- £5.99
Publisher Description
Hurricanes, tsunamis, earthquakes, typhoons – we watch in horror before springing into action with aid and support, shocked again and again by the destructive power of the earth. Except these disasters aren’t only the earth’s doing, they are ours too.
Why did no one consider that a tsunami could disable the nuclear power plants in Fukushima? Why did so many die when Katrina flooded New Orleans? Not so long ago we could only focus on rescuing and sheltering survivors – now we can anticipate many natural disasters and plan for them. In dozens of cities around the world, we’re able to identify the specific buildings that will be shaken apart, blown down or reduced to rubble. Yet every year, thanks to politics and inertia, we fail to act.
Traversing continents and history, Robert Muir-Wood blends gripping storytelling with scientific insights to detail our efforts to tame the most extreme forces of nature. At the frontlines, the predictive powers of new technologies mean we can foresee a future where there is an end to the pain and destruction wrought by these devastating cataclysms. As The Cure for Catastrophe makes clear, we have an extraordinary opportunity before us – to make the decisions about what we build, where we live and how warnings are communicated that could save millions of lives.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Muir-Wood, chief research officer at Risk Management Solutions, exhaustively chronicles modern history's natural disasters and humankind's evolving if erratic responses to them. Catastrophes such as the 1755 Lisbon earthquake were once interpreted as "acts of fate," but centuries of meteorological, engineering, and economic research have ushered in "the modern social understanding of disasters and the practical scientific approach to disaster risk reduction." Recent decades have seen significant post-disaster advancements in the fields of architecture, insurance, forecasting, and probabilistic "catastrophe modeling." But Muir-Wood contends that there remain enormous impediments to managing natural disasters: namely, the rise in these events as a result of climate change, the increasingly devastating consequences in a world where "the number of people and buildings in harm's way keeps rising," and the prevalence of human denial and bureaucratic negligence. In his meticulous reportage on a number of environmental calamities over the past 300 years, the author offers a cautionary map of the route we took to arrive at this vital geologic moment. The path forward should entail "both disaster policy and disaster culture," Muir-Wood argues: a governing body and a motivated global community that will collaboratively and inventively undertake the management of inevitable catastrophes.