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Power Hungry

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Power Hungry

The Myths of "Green" Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future

Public Affairs,

15 mins. de lectura
10 ideas fundamentales
Audio y Texto

¿De qué se trata?

What is the real answer to the question: Where will our future electric power come from?

Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Controversial
  • Analytical
  • Background

Recommendation

Few subjects carry as much doomsday weight as the battle over the future of global energy. Climate-change Cassandras and deniers, offshore-oil advocates and their opponents, all jostle for position amid a general consensus that the nations of the world need to move sooner rather than later to renewable sources of energy. But energy expert Robert Bryce, in more than 400 heavily footnoted, graphics-packed pages, simply whips out his calculator and does the math, with devastating results for that basic assumption. The modern industrialized world is utterly reliant on abundant supplies of affordable energy, he writes, and hydrocarbons – oil, coal and natural gas – are far and away the best sources for the cheap juice people want for their Macbooks and Maseratis. Forget wind and solar energy; they are simply too diffuse under current technology to make much of a dent in the world’s thirst for power. So what’s a worrier about melting ice caps to do? Bryce makes a very good case that a two-step plan is the only way out for the U.S.: America has enormous reserves of natural gas, so the nation should start with that, and use it until it can build an adequate number of nuclear reactors. Bryce tries a little too hard to make his point, including cracking lame jokes, but you’ll never think about this issue with anything less than clarity again. getAbstract recommends this book to IT managers, heavy-industry executives, politicians and other big-picture planners seeking a real understanding of how to keep the lights on, long term.

Summary

Fossil Fuels Versus Green Energy

The United States has built its economy on fossil fuels, the only energy source that can supply the gigantic amounts of power the country needs at a price it can afford. Four unavoidable business factors – cost, scale, power density and energy density – dictate America’s energy choices. Proponents of green energy are generally unaware of how much power the nation consumes and of how impractical wind, solar and biomass energies are from a business perspective. Moving away from hydrocarbons will take almost the entire 21st century and will require staggering amounts of new investment, which needs to be in “N2N” energy sources, that is, natural gas over the short haul and nuclear power over the long term. Both sources can provide all the power needed without all the carbon-dioxide emissions of oil and coal.

Part I: The Quest for Power

Electric power makes modern society possible, but 90% of that power now comes from hydrocarbons because they are cheap, plentiful and effective. Ever since the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001, a growing consensus has emerged that the world needs to move away from fossil fuels and replace them...

About the Author

Robert Bryce, a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute’s Center for Energy Policy and the Environment, is former managing editor of the Energy Tribune. He wrote A Gusher of Lies: The Dangerous Delusions of “Energy Independence.”


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