As featured in The Guardian and The New Statesman. One of the Financial Times'' ''best new books on climate and the environment''. One of WIRED''s Best Books of 2022. Longlisted for the 2023 Bread and Roses Award. ''Why do so many of the alleged solutions to climate crisis fail to deliver? In this tightly-argued, precise and deeply-researched book Adrienne Buller looks inside the heads of ''green'' capitalists, exposing how non-solutions proliferate. Read this brilliant expose if you want to understand not only how some of the world''s most powerful people think and act but also how their solutions differ from what is really needed to secure a safe and abundant future for everyone.'' Amelia Horgan, author of Lost in Work ''This is a witty, lucid and beautifully written critique of that contradiction-in-terms, ''green capitalism''. It explains why, despite the farcical diminuendo of climate denialism, so little has changed.
Its searching inquiry into the puritanical reduction of all living matter to economic value, which underpins most government responses to ecological catastrophe, incisively debunks one of the most dangerous illusions going. This is the book we have long needed.'' Richard Seymour, author of The Twittering Machine ''A wonderfully readable attack on the worldview that argues for adding a dollar value to nature in order to save it. An accessible account of a new phase of capitalism that we all need to understand.'' Professor Simon Lewis, author of The Human Planet ''At last! A wonderfully refreshing antidote to the notion that market forces can solve the climate and nature crises, and the deadly assumption that every idea must be evaluated in terms of markets, finance, property or profit. Elegant, incisive and fierce, Buller systematically takes apart the false solutions that dominate mainstream analysis, from carbon offsets to the commodification of nature, and gives us the tools to challenge their dominance and to broaden our understanding of what''s both possible and necessary.'' Caroline Lucas MP ''Buller offers essential context for understanding how economic dogmas and market-driven statecraft have warped our understanding of and responses to the climate crisis--or lack thereof. Crucially, she also presents a practical roadmap for course-correction.
The Value of a Whale is an accessible and expertly curated guide to the increasingly slick, green face of capitalism in the 21st century. This book should be required reading for everyone from climate activists to policymakers and concerned citizens looking to salvage our collective prospects for a liveable future.'' Kate Aronoff, author of Overheated ''This is a book for anyone troubled by our lack of progress on the climate crisis, from young activists to hard-headed CEOs and investors that face losing control of companies as the climate breaks down. In her persuasive analysis of net zero policies that narrowly prioritise efficiency, market pricing and offsetting - and with unusual clarity and scrupulous integrity - Buller comes to unsettling conclusions. Read this before it is too late.'' Ann Pettifor, author of The Case for the Green New Deal ''The Value of a Whale is an urgent and honest intervention, casting a magnifying glass over the institutions, insider groupthink, and non-solutions distracting and deflecting from the radical ideas and compassion we need to secure a safe planetary future. For too long, our response to ecological crisis has been steered by mainstream economic thinking that is not fit for purpose, to the exclusion of other vital perspectives. As Buller compellingly argues, we are long overdue a reset.
'' Farhana Yamin, Visiting Professor at UAK, Associate Fellow, Chatham House ''A sorely needed corrective in an era of climate politics dominated by dollars and models. Adrienne Buller''s The Value of a Whale is critical reading for the important task of prying the future out of the hands of corporations and technocrats.'' Olúfemi O. Táíwò, author of Elite Capture and Reconsidering Reparations ''As an argument, The Value of a Whale is utterly convincing, and thoroughly damning of the institutional and cultural forces it targets. Its factual analysis identifies and eviscerates the flawed assumptions and cynical illusions behind the recent turn to "sustainable finance." Buller highlights the inefficacy and injustice of carbon markets and other hand-waving schemes to offset biodiversity loss and ecological impacts.'' Chad A. Hines, Ancillary Review of Books ''The book provides a passionate and convincing critique of conventional environmental solutionism, and it ought to inspire greater scrutiny of what is being done in the name of saving the planet.
'' Chris Aylett, International Affairs, Volume 98, Issue 6 ''In this well-researched book, Buller forensically sets out the case against some common non-solutions - or certainly solutions that are leaned on too heavily.'' Jeremy Williams, The Earthbound Report ''The seriousness of climate change cannot be over-stated. Yet after decades of UK policy-makers paying lip service to pro-environment policies, sadly it does seem that the next Prime Minister will be, at best, indifferent to climate change, and at worst, openly hostile to the notion that we must transform our economy to address it. Adrienne Buller''s outstanding book, however, perhaps helps us to understand why that might be the case.'' Craig Berry, The Political Economy Blog ''By synthesizing complicated interactions between the world of finance and the world of climate policy, Buller makes an important contribution to the public discourse.'' Thomas Peterson, The Arts Fuse ''Buller''s work challenges us to rethink the viability of the current system and prioritise the planet''s health and the well-being of all its inhabitants. In that sense, we must act now to protect the planet''s key biomes such as the Amazon before we reach a tipping point. This requires both a radical transformation of our economic systems and a radical rethinking of our ways of life on this planet.
As a Brazilian rethinker committed to this cause both in research and advocacy, I find Buller''s message particularly resonant as a call to action to start building a world in which it is not only safe to live but also worth living in.'' João Pedro Braga, Rethinking Economics ''Maps and sharply criticizes the logics that characterize green capitalism and that block a real solution to the climate crisis.'' Politiken ''An outstanding commentary on the many shortfalls of ''green capitalism''.'' Reese Halter, Organic Gardener ''Dispelling the idea that economic value can be placed on nature in the name of protecting it, or indeed, using nature "sustainably", The Value of a Whale is an incredibly worthwhile read.'' @whatsophieisreading.