Resources

Hope in the Polycrisis

June 12, 2023
Thomas Homer-Dixon, Philip Steenkamp

Dr. Thomas Homer-Dixon sits down for a talk with Royal Roads University President Philip Steenkamp to explore the complex challenges facing humanity and innovative ideas about how we might solve them.

Earth’s Polycrisis Is No Mere Illusion

February 18, 2023
Thomas Homer-Dixon, Michael Lawrence, and Scott Janzwood

The backlash against the “polycrisis” neologism is well under way. But the polycrisis idea can motivate urgent scientific investigation into the architecture of global crisis interaction.

When Crises Collide image from New York Times

What Happens When a Cascade of Crises Collide?

November 13, 2022
Thomas Homer-Dixon and Johan Rockström

Humanity faces a complex knot of seemingly distinct but entangled crises that are causing damage greater than the sum of their individual harms.

A big bet on geothermal could help prevent a climate catastrophe

May 27, 2022

Directly under our feet, there’s enough heat emanating from the planet’s core to satisfy humanity’s future zero-carbon electricity needs thousands of times over.

Permafrost

Canada’s thawing permafrost should be raising alarm bells in the battle against climate change

June 11, 2021
Thomas Homer-Dixon and Duane Froese

Thomas Homer-Dixon and Duane Froese | Permafrost may seem tucked away in remote northern regions. But what happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay in the Arctic.

Interview with Tom Rand

Interview with Tom Rand

December 14, 2020

Watch my video interview with Tom Rand from MaRS Impact Week (32:34)

The great Canadian climate delusion

June 1, 2018
Thomas Homer-Dixon and Yonatan Strauch

with Yonatan Strauch | Is Canada going to be the first country to break apart over the issue of climate change? That may seem like a hyperbolic question. But the fissures in our federation over climate and energy policy are now extraordinarily deep, and there’s little sign that they’ll close soon.

No . . . I did not say wind energy is ‘Idiot Power’

May 22, 2018

A poster widely circulated on the web highlights text that was purportedly written by me saying that wind power inevitably suffers an energetic deficit. The poster is fraudulent.

Alberta’s economic future in peril without shift away from fossil fuel

November 8, 2017

by Gordon Kent | Alberta needs to start shifting quickly out of the oilsands to avoid serious economic trouble as the world moves away from fossil fuels, a University of Waterloo professor says.

B.C.’s green shift is a window to the world

August 12, 2017

In May’s provincial election, the Green Party won its first multiple-seat breakthrough in North America, and by a fluke of electoral arithmetic, it now holds the balance of power in the legislature. Today, B.C.’s citizens are exploring uncharted political territory of potentially huge significance to people outside the province.

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