The New North: The World in 2050

The New North: The World in 2050

by Laurence Smith (Author)

Synopsis

Global warming has a silver lining for one part of the world: the countries around the arctic rim. Professor Laurence C Smith spent 15 months travelling through Canada, Scandinavia, Russia and the northern United States, and in The New North Professor Laurence Smith he shows how, by 2050, they may be flourishing. In the face of four key mega-trends: global warming, pressure on natural resources (especially oil and water), globalization and an exploding but aging population, some countries will benefit. While countries closer to the equator will suffer, Canada, Scandinavia, Russia and the northern United States will become formidable economic powers and migration magnets. Their cities will flourish: unlikely places such as Nuuk (Greenland); Hammerfest (Norway), Archangelsk (Russia)! But there's a catch. While wreaking havoc on the environment, global warming will liberate a treasure trove of oil, gas, water and other natural resources previously locked in the frozen north, enriching residents and attracting newcomers, according to Smith. And these resources will pour from northern rim countries - or NORCs, as Smith calls them - precisely at a time when natural resources elsewhere are becoming critically depleted, making them all the more valuable. Laurence Smith spent 15 months travelling the northern rim of the world originally simply to study the effects of climate change, especially among such indigenous peoples as Canada's Inuit and Scandinavia's Sami. He interviewed seal hunters, reindeer herders, fishermen, miners, farmers, oil company executives, biologists, climatologists, oceanographers, indigenous elders, restaurant operators, small-town mayors and big-time federal officials. But he uncovered a much bigger story. I kept badgering people for stories about climate change, Smith says. They'd sigh and oblige me, but then say, 'There's also this oil plant going up behind me' or 'All these Filipino immigrants are pouring in.' Within about two months, I realized there is a lot more going on up there besides climate change. Climate change is a critical threat to many people, but it isn't the sole development in their lives. He predicts how, for instance: *New shipping lanes will open during the summer in the Arctic, allowing Europe to realize its 500-year-old dream of direct trade between the Atlantic and the Far East, and resulting in new access to and economic development in the north *Oil resources in Canada will be second only to those in Saudi Arabia, and the country's population will swell by more than 30 percent, a growth rate rivaling India's and six times faster than China's. *NORCs will be among the few place on Earth where crop production will likely increase due to climate change. *NORCs collectively will constitute the fourth largest economy in the world, behind the BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China), the European Union and the United States. *NORCs will become the envy of the world for their reserves of fresh water, which may be sold and transported to other regions In a brilliant synthesis of hard data and human stories, The New North turns the world literally upside down.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Publisher: Profile Books
Published: 10 Mar 2011

ISBN 10: 1846688760
ISBN 13: 9781846688768
Book Overview: A book which literally turns the world upside down. The world in 2050 will be radically different from today; Northern countries - notably Canada, Russia and Scandinavia - will rise at the expense of southern ones. Patterns of human migration will change dramatically - and where we are born will more crucial than ever before. But humans are adaptable: there will be gains as a new world takes shape.

Media Reviews
A charismatic rising star vividly relates the big challenges facing the world -- Jared Diamond
Smith's planetary palm-reading would be impressive enough but he also manages to pull it off with literary gusto. He combines a wide-angle-lens analysis reminiscent of Jared Diamond with a knack for narrative, including tales of numerous visits to the Arctic. * New Scientist *
The best new geography book of the year -- Fred Pearce
a lively and impressive book * Wall Street Journal *
'One of the most head-turning books I've ever come across recently.' * World Politics Review *
It's refreshing to read a book that avoids the twin dangers of exaggeration and wishful thinking. The New North is such a book, and it's wonderful. [...] This is an outstanding book. -- Jonathan Wright * Geographical Review *
Smith spent many months exploring and talking to residents in remote Arctic towns and writing their personal stories, and the result is this fascinating book. * Press Association *
Let those who disagree come forward and make a different case. There is a lot for us to do in the meantime. -- Sir Crispin Tickell * Financial Times *
[Smith's] new book The New North: The World in 2050, demonstrates a remarkable knack for divining global megatrends from the stuff of daily life. It seems this is a man to whom the world whispers its secrets. -- Jake Wallis Simons * The Times *
[The New North] raise[s] urgent questions about the type of world we want to live in. -- PD Smith * Guardian *
A consistently challenging and mind-opening exercise in futurology -- John Gray * New Statesman *
As a geophysicist concerned with the responses of Arctic water, soil and ice to changing climates, Smith has extensive personal and academic knowledge of these regions. He seems to have travelled all over the Arctic world, and here he offers a vivid portrayal of the physical, economic and cultural upheavals the whole Norc region is undergoing. He is as good on the developments in First Peoples' politics as he is on the practicalities of ice roads and natural gas trans-shipment. He documents his accounts very informatively and his footnotes are a treat: comprehensive and thoroughly interdisciplinary. * THES *
For a geographer whose career is dedicated to finding out how massive population growth, and depletion of mineral and water resources will transform the planet, Lawrence Smith comes across as a remarkably chirpy guy. Partly it's his engaging prose. Partly it's his quirky anecdotes of everyday life as a popular scientist: getting chatted up by an oceanographer on a Canadian ice breaker or, while interviewing Sami reindeer herders, falling for the Finnish interpreter he later married. * Evening Standard *
Rather than contribute yet another volume to the already bloated genre of Eskimo-Woe, [Smith] set out to construct a more three-dimensional overview of what the future might hold for the countries of the north - which, by his definition, means everything above the line of 45 degrees North. The result is a thoughtful, plausible and entirely unmelodramatic read. * Scotland on Sunday *
This is an informed thought experiment rather than a proper prediction. But for anyone curious about the new north-let alone anyone thinking of investing in Arctic derivatives-it is an intrinsic exercise. * Economist *
The essential backgrounder for the coming era in which temperate civilisation moves north into the previous frozen tundra and boreal forest. Smith marshals his material brilliantly. * Independent Books of the Year *
Author Bio
Laurence C. Smith is professor and vice-chairman of geography and professor of earth and space sciences at the University of California. He has published more than fifty research papers, in journals such as Science and Nature and in 2006 he briefed Congress on the likely impacts of northern climate change. His work has been covered in the LA Times, National Geographic, Boston Globe, Washington Post, Time Magazine and NPR.