Yeomans started compiling information and warning people in talks and lectures about global warming in the mid to late 1980s. His book
Priority One - Together We Can Beat Global Warming resulted from those actions. The book relies heavily on both his experience in soil fertility enhancement, and
meteorology. In 1990, he was the only non-American invited to attend, and to participate in, a three-day, twenty-two person "think tank" to define the future of agriculture in the United States. It was held at the
Esalen Institute in Big-Sur, California. It resulted in the Asilomar Declaration on Sustainable Agriculture. in which he proposed the then novel concept of absorbing atmospheric carbon into soil by the systematic enhancement of soil fertility levels. The concept is becoming internationally accepted and has become the basic tenets of the organization, Carbon Farmers of America. His concept of the sequestration of atmospheric carbon dioxide by the enhancement of soil fertility was, as of 2010, adopted as policy by the Australian Federal Opposition parties. Allan Yeomans also strongly supported the overall adoption of
nuclear energy for industrial power. He advocated for a switch to biofuels for all transport, and for these to be produced in what are currently tropical rain forests. He argued that we have no other safe practical alternatives. He criticized what he considered the predilection of the major world environmental movements to species survival, while effectively ignoring meaningful global warming prevention issues. ==Personal life and death==