Earth:How Bad Are Bananas?

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Short description: 2010 non-fiction book by Mike Berners-Lee
How Bad Are Bananas?
Cover of How Bad Aare Bananas 1st ed.jpg
UK 1st ed., 2010
AuthorMike Berners-Lee
SubjectClimate change
GenreNon-fiction
PublisherProfile Books
Publication date
2010
ISBNISBN:9781846688911

How Bad Are Bananas? The Carbon Footprint of Everything is a 2010 non-fiction book by Mike Berners-Lee. The book details the carbon footprint of a wide range of activities and helps guide people towards less carbon-costly lifestyle options.

Publication

The book is written by British writer and academic Mike Berners-Lee, who acknowledges throughout the book his use of estimates and imperfect calculations.[1][2] It was first published in 2010; a second edition was published in the UK in 2020, and an "Updated North American edition", retitled The Carbon Footprint of Everything, in 2022.[2]

  • Berners-Lee, Mike (2010). How Bad Are Bananas? The Carbon Footprint of Everything:. London: Profile Books. ISBN 9781846688911. 
  • Second edition: Berners-Lee, Mike (2020). How bad are bananas? : the carbon footprint of everything (New ed.). London: Profile Books. ISBN 9781788163811. 
  • "Updated North American" edition: Berners-Lee, Mike (2022). The carbon footprint of everything. Vancouver: Greystone Books. ISBN 9781771645768. 

Synopsis

The book gives an approximate carbon footprint of just under 100 activities[3] starting small, with carbon used in sending a text message, ending with the massive example of a World Cup.[4][1] Commentary in the book helps the reader separate important decisions from trivial ones, for example highlighting that fresh food transported by air is more environmentally harmful than comparable produce transported by ship or truck.[1]

The book compares methods of transport, including walking and cycling and details the differences in carbon footprint for human-powered transport based on the diet of the walkers and cyclists.[5]

Critical reception

Aaron Couch writing for The Christian Science Monitor praises Berners-Lee for his use of humour and for informing rather than preaching.[1]

The Independent listed the book as one of its ten recommended "best books to help you live more sustainably."[6]

References