
Drawdown

“Drawdown’s” focus on reversing, rather than simply reducing, climate change is a compelling and urgent narrative that surely needs to be widely adopted? I also much appreciate its focus on regenerative and restorative development, as well as its references to the circular economy. These approaches are particularly close to my heart.
Paul Hawken • Drawdown
What we measure and model in Drawdown is how to begin the reduction of greenhouse gases in order to reverse global warming. —Paul Hawken
Paul Hawken • Drawdown
renewable energy, forest protection, better management of soil and marine conservation, to name but a few.
Paul Hawken • Drawdown
If you are traveling down the wrong road, you are still on the wrong road if you slow down. The only goal that makes sense for humanity is to reverse global warming, and if parents, scientists, young people, leaders, and we citizens do not name the goal, there is little chance it will be achieved.
Paul Hawken • Drawdown
It’s important to remember that climate change stems from many sources such as energy production, agriculture, forestry, cement, and chemical manufacturing; thus, the solutions must arise from those same many sources.
Paul Hawken • Drawdown
Climate changes because it always has and will, and variations of climate produce everything from seasons to evolution. The goal is to come into alignment with the impact we are having on climate by addressing the human causes of global warming and bringing carbon back home.
Paul Hawken • Drawdown
When we burn fossil fuels (coal, oil, and natural gas), manufacture cement, plow rich soils, and destroy forests, we release
Paul Hawken • Drawdown
We are, in writer Jeremy Leggett’s words, squarely in the middle of the greatest energy transition in history. The era of fossil fuels is over, and the only question now is when the new era will be fully upon us. Economics make its arrival inevitable: Clean energy is less expensive.
Paul Hawken • Drawdown
Turbines can harvest electricity while farmers harvest alfalfa and corn. What’s more, it takes one year or less to build a wind farm, quickly producing energy and a return on investment.