
It would be hard to find a more illuminating book for this purpose than Fossil Capital, a history of the rise of coal-fired steam power in Britain. If we are to rescue ourselves from the looming catastrophe that is climate change, one of our tasks must be to understand how we became enmeshed in an economy powered by fossil fuels. Like Naomi Klein’s This Changes Everything, Fossil Capital trenchantly demonstrated that capitalism and capitalists are responsible for climate change. The best book written about the origins of global warming. This is a denser, wonkier, and more historical survey of the long, ugly marriage between fossil fuels and capitalism - in fact, between fossil fuels and the entire history of economic growth. Malm does not take his audience for granted at any point there are no short cuts. This extremely well-written book is radical without being dogmatic. Malm does not reiterate commonplaces about climate change, but looks closely at its origins. Joar Tiberg,įossil Capital presents, with impressive detail and theoretical clarity, how the fossil fuel economy has come into being. The depth of his inquiry into how our economic system created the climate crisis is impressive … Very concrete, very beautiful, and perfectly reasonable. Has Andreas Malm written the crime story of the year with his book Fossil Capital? Or submitted the fossil world order to psychoanalysis? Both. This impressive book speaks to several emergent areas in ecocriticism: material ecocriticism, the ubiquitous Anthropocene, environmental history, ‘Victorian Ecology’ … Such a formidable body of historical evidence has the potential to ignite both ‘Victorian ecology’ and a more socially engaged ecocriticism. Dayton Martindale,Īnyone with an interest in ecology, and anyone opposed to capitalism, must read Malm’s crucial contribution to understand how and why capitalism makes war on planet Earth.

His thorough account of the switch to steam shows quite convincingly that coal did not make Britain great for everyone, and the transition was rooted not in technological superiority or environmental scarcity but in good old fashioned class conflict. Barbara Kiser,Ī major and important revision of Marxist theory … a singularly important work, pointing the way for future work in economics, politics, theories of time, space and energy. Around that, Malm builds a deep, insight-packed history of how society came to be in thrall to the twin engines of combustion and capital. The birth of the fossil economy, avers human ecologist Andreas Malm, arrived when steam eclipsed water power in mid-nineteenth-century Britain. Malm’s history is expansive and detailed, and often quite terrifying in its analysis.

Will climate change make us evaluate differently the achievements of George Stevenson and James Watt, Industrial Age pioneers? For it was in Britain, which accounted for 80 per cent of fossil fuel combustion in 1825, that “the fossil economy” began. Naomi Klein, author of This Changes Everything and The Shock DoctrineĪ unique reconceptualization of the relationship between nature, capitalism, and Marxism. Superb, essential reading from one of the most original thinkers on the subject. The definitive deep history on how our economic system created the climate crisis. John Bellamy Foster, University of Oregon, author of Marx’s Ecology

It is a book that I will return to again and again-and take notes. It looks unblinkingly at the catastrophe that could await human society if we fail to act on the words System Change or Climate Change. Mike Davis, author of Planet of Slums and Ecology of Fearįossil Capital is a theoretical masterpiece and a political-economic-ecological manifesto. Rather, as he shows in a subtle and surprising reinterpretation of the Industrial Revolution, it has been the logic of capital (especially the need to valorize immense sunk investments in fossil fuels), not technology or even industrialism per se, that has driven global warming. Malm forcefully unmasks the assumption that economic growth has inevitably brought us to the brink of a hothouse Earth.
