The energy imperative : 100 per cent renewable now / Hermann Scheer.

By: Scheer, Hermann, 1944-2010Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: German Publisher: London ; New York : EarthScan, 2012Edition: 1st edDescription: xv, 184 pages ; 24 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781849714334; 1849714339Uniform titles: Energethische Imperativ. English Subject(s): Renewable energy sources | TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING -- Power Resources -- Alternative & Renewable | Renewable energy sources | Renewable energy sources | TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING / Power Resources / Alternative & RenewableDDC classification: 333.79/4 LOC classification: TJ808 | .S328713 2012Other classification: TEC031010 | TK01
Contents:
No alternative to renewable energy: the long suppressed physical imperative -- Methods and psychology of slowing down: paralysis, delays and (un)willing alliances -- Super-grids as pseudo-progressive brakes: DESER TEC and the North Sea Project, the new megalomania -- Speeding up: the free development of renewable energy instead of technocratic planning -- Productive fantasy: energy change as an economic imperative -- Agenda 21 reloaded: global federal initiatives for energy change -- A value decision: Social ethics instead of energy economism.
Summary: "For decades, Hermann Scheer was one of the world's leading proponents of renewable energy. In this, his last book before his death in 2010, he lays out his vision for a planet 100% powered by renewables and examines the fundamental ethical and economic imperatives for such a shift. And most importantly, he demonstrates why the time for this transition is now. In Scheer's view, talk of "bridging technologies" such as carbon capture and storage or nuclear energy - even (and perhaps especially) by environmentalists - is actively damaging the more the pressing agenda of the move to 100% renewable energy. Instead, he offers up examples of the technologies which are working (economically) today and details the policy and market conditions which would allow them to flourish. In 1993, Scheer's A Solar Manifesto laid the foundations for the road which has led to annual newly installed renewable capacity today rivalling that of conventional power sources. The Energy Imperative provides a practical, inspirational map for the next stage of the journey"-- Provided by publisher.
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"For decades, Hermann Scheer was one of the world's leading proponents of renewable energy. In this, his last book before his death in 2010, he lays out his vision for a planet 100% powered by renewables and examines the fundamental ethical and economic imperatives for such a shift. And most importantly, he demonstrates why the time for this transition is now. In Scheer's view, talk of "bridging technologies" such as carbon capture and storage or nuclear energy - even (and perhaps especially) by environmentalists - is actively damaging the more the pressing agenda of the move to 100% renewable energy. Instead, he offers up examples of the technologies which are working (economically) today and details the policy and market conditions which would allow them to flourish. In 1993, Scheer's A Solar Manifesto laid the foundations for the road which has led to annual newly installed renewable capacity today rivalling that of conventional power sources. The Energy Imperative provides a practical, inspirational map for the next stage of the journey"-- Provided by publisher.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 173-175) and index.

No alternative to renewable energy: the long suppressed physical imperative -- Methods and psychology of slowing down: paralysis, delays and (un)willing alliances -- Super-grids as pseudo-progressive brakes: DESER TEC and the North Sea Project, the new megalomania -- Speeding up: the free development of renewable energy instead of technocratic planning -- Productive fantasy: energy change as an economic imperative -- Agenda 21 reloaded: global federal initiatives for energy change -- A value decision: Social ethics instead of energy economism.

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