Before the Lights Go Out: Conquering the Energy Crisis Before It Conquers Us
Autor Maggie Koerth–Bakeren Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 mar 2012
- Argues we′re not going to solve the energy problem by convincing everyone to live like it′s 1900 because that′s not a good thing. Instead of reverting to the past, we have to build a future where we get energy from new places, use it in new ways, and do more with less.
- Clean coal? Natural gas? Nuclear? Electric cars? We′ll need them all. When you look at the numbers, you′ll find that we′ll still be using fossil fuels, nuclear, and renewables for decades to come.
- Looks at new battery technology, smart grids, passive buildings, decentralized generation, clean coal, and carbon sequestration. These are buzzwords now, but they′ll be a part of your world soon. For many people, they already are.
- Written by the cutting edge Science Editor for Boing Boing, one of the ten most popular blogs in America
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780470876251
ISBN-10: 0470876255
Pagini: 290
Dimensiuni: 163 x 241 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Editura: Wiley (TP)
Colecția John Wiley &Sons
Locul publicării:Hoboken, United States
ISBN-10: 0470876255
Pagini: 290
Dimensiuni: 163 x 241 x 29 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Editura: Wiley (TP)
Colecția John Wiley &Sons
Locul publicării:Hoboken, United States
Public țintă
Environmental readers are moving beyond proof about peak oil or climate change. Instead they are turning toward books like Paul Gilding′s The Great Dispruption that explain, in concrete terms, what life will look like once the energy crunch really hits.Descriere
What you need to know now about America′s energy future
We all know America has an energy problem even if we can′t all agree on what, specifically, the problem is. Rising costs, changing climate, peak oil, foreign oil, public safety the issues are complicated, the solutions even more so. In Before the Lights Go Out, Maggie Koerth–Baker finally makes some sense out of the competing agendas and reveals the practical, multifaceted plan that will save America′s future.
"With spark and brilliance, Maggie Koerth–Baker reveals the thrumming, secretive inner workings of the U.S. energy grid. The wizard behind the curtain turns out to be a bunch of guys in light blue dress shirts, drinking RC Cola and sweating out a surplus that′s threatening to crash the western seaboard. Using the raw resources of carefully gathered facts and years of experience, Koerth–Baker builds a narrative that flows and illuminates like the river of electrons that I now understand to be electricity. In her capable and stylish telling, energy isn′t just policy and data; it′s people and history, happenstance and compromise. It′s a fine, cracking read."
Mary Roach, author of Stiff and Packing for Mars
"Maggie Koerth–Baker is one of the most innovative science writers at work today. Rather than settling for cheap flash, she burrows deep into many of the biggest mysteries in science and technology and comes out with wonderfully clear explanations. In Before the Lights Go Out, she digs into perhaps the most puzzling and urgent stories of our time: Where are we going to get our energy from in future decades? Her investigations take us from the early days of firewood and coal to the cutting edge of smart grids and carbon capture, and leave us well–equipped to take on this great challenge of our civilization."
Carl Zimmer, contributing editor, Discover; author of Science Ink
"None of this stuff is, in and of itself, sustainable. Not coal, not nukes, not solar, not wind. But some combination of various systems, various compromises and improvements and treaties between mutual belligerents, taken together, hold out the promise of a world where we and our descendants continue to enjoy comfort and prosperity. This isn′t a book about turning down the thermostat in the winter and putting on a sweater: it′s a book about making houses that are better, that warm the rooms where people are and keep the heat in, and, in the process, cost us all less, reduce the pressure to secure oil through military adventurism, and begin to curb our atmospheric CO2 addiction. This is an optimistic book. Not a book that says it′ll all come out all right, but rather a book that says that it might come out all right. It′s a book we need to read."
Cory Doctorow, author of Little Brother
We all know America has an energy problem even if we can′t all agree on what, specifically, the problem is. Rising costs, changing climate, peak oil, foreign oil, public safety the issues are complicated, the solutions even more so. In Before the Lights Go Out, Maggie Koerth–Baker finally makes some sense out of the competing agendas and reveals the practical, multifaceted plan that will save America′s future.
"With spark and brilliance, Maggie Koerth–Baker reveals the thrumming, secretive inner workings of the U.S. energy grid. The wizard behind the curtain turns out to be a bunch of guys in light blue dress shirts, drinking RC Cola and sweating out a surplus that′s threatening to crash the western seaboard. Using the raw resources of carefully gathered facts and years of experience, Koerth–Baker builds a narrative that flows and illuminates like the river of electrons that I now understand to be electricity. In her capable and stylish telling, energy isn′t just policy and data; it′s people and history, happenstance and compromise. It′s a fine, cracking read."
Mary Roach, author of Stiff and Packing for Mars
"Maggie Koerth–Baker is one of the most innovative science writers at work today. Rather than settling for cheap flash, she burrows deep into many of the biggest mysteries in science and technology and comes out with wonderfully clear explanations. In Before the Lights Go Out, she digs into perhaps the most puzzling and urgent stories of our time: Where are we going to get our energy from in future decades? Her investigations take us from the early days of firewood and coal to the cutting edge of smart grids and carbon capture, and leave us well–equipped to take on this great challenge of our civilization."
Carl Zimmer, contributing editor, Discover; author of Science Ink
"None of this stuff is, in and of itself, sustainable. Not coal, not nukes, not solar, not wind. But some combination of various systems, various compromises and improvements and treaties between mutual belligerents, taken together, hold out the promise of a world where we and our descendants continue to enjoy comfort and prosperity. This isn′t a book about turning down the thermostat in the winter and putting on a sweater: it′s a book about making houses that are better, that warm the rooms where people are and keep the heat in, and, in the process, cost us all less, reduce the pressure to secure oil through military adventurism, and begin to curb our atmospheric CO2 addiction. This is an optimistic book. Not a book that says it′ll all come out all right, but rather a book that says that it might come out all right. It′s a book we need to read."
Cory Doctorow, author of Little Brother
Textul de pe ultima copertă
What you need to know now about America′s energy future
We all know America has an energy problem even if we can′t all agree on what, specifically, the problem is. Rising costs, changing climate, peak oil, foreign oil, public safety the issues are complicated, the solutions even more so. In Before the Lights Go Out, Maggie Koerth–Baker finally makes some sense out of the competing agendas and reveals the practical, multifaceted plan that will save America′s future.
"With spark and brilliance, Maggie Koerth–Baker reveals the thrumming, secretive inner workings of the U.S. energy grid. The wizard behind the curtain turns out to be a bunch of guys in light blue dress shirts, drinking RC Cola and sweating out a surplus that′s threatening to crash the western seaboard. Using the raw resources of carefully gathered facts and years of experience, Koerth–Baker builds a narrative that flows and illuminates like the river of electrons that I now understand to be electricity. In her capable and stylish telling, energy isn′t just policy and data; it′s people and history, happenstance and compromise. It′s a fine, cracking read."
Mary Roach, author of Stiff and Packing for Mars
"Maggie Koerth–Baker is one of the most innovative science writers at work today. Rather than settling for cheap flash, she burrows deep into many of the biggest mysteries in science and technology and comes out with wonderfully clear explanations. In Before the Lights Go Out, she digs into perhaps the most puzzling and urgent stories of our time: Where are we going to get our energy from in future decades? Her investigations take us from the early days of firewood and coal to the cutting edge of smart grids and carbon capture, and leave us well–equipped to take on this great challenge of our civilization."
Carl Zimmer, contributing editor, Discover; author of Science Ink
"None of this stuff is, in and of itself, sustainable. Not coal, not nukes, not solar, not wind. But some combination of various systems, various compromises and improvements and treaties between mutual belligerents, taken together, hold out the promise of a world where we and our descendants continue to enjoy comfort and prosperity. This isn′t a book about turning down the thermostat in the winter and putting on a sweater: it′s a book about making houses that are better, that warm the rooms where people are and keep the heat in, and, in the process, cost us all less, reduce the pressure to secure oil through military adventurism, and begin to curb our atmospheric CO2 addiction. This is an optimistic book. Not a book that says it′ll all come out all right, but rather a book that says that it might come out all right. It′s a book we need to read."
Cory Doctorow, author of Little Brother
We all know America has an energy problem even if we can′t all agree on what, specifically, the problem is. Rising costs, changing climate, peak oil, foreign oil, public safety the issues are complicated, the solutions even more so. In Before the Lights Go Out, Maggie Koerth–Baker finally makes some sense out of the competing agendas and reveals the practical, multifaceted plan that will save America′s future.
"With spark and brilliance, Maggie Koerth–Baker reveals the thrumming, secretive inner workings of the U.S. energy grid. The wizard behind the curtain turns out to be a bunch of guys in light blue dress shirts, drinking RC Cola and sweating out a surplus that′s threatening to crash the western seaboard. Using the raw resources of carefully gathered facts and years of experience, Koerth–Baker builds a narrative that flows and illuminates like the river of electrons that I now understand to be electricity. In her capable and stylish telling, energy isn′t just policy and data; it′s people and history, happenstance and compromise. It′s a fine, cracking read."
Mary Roach, author of Stiff and Packing for Mars
"Maggie Koerth–Baker is one of the most innovative science writers at work today. Rather than settling for cheap flash, she burrows deep into many of the biggest mysteries in science and technology and comes out with wonderfully clear explanations. In Before the Lights Go Out, she digs into perhaps the most puzzling and urgent stories of our time: Where are we going to get our energy from in future decades? Her investigations take us from the early days of firewood and coal to the cutting edge of smart grids and carbon capture, and leave us well–equipped to take on this great challenge of our civilization."
Carl Zimmer, contributing editor, Discover; author of Science Ink
"None of this stuff is, in and of itself, sustainable. Not coal, not nukes, not solar, not wind. But some combination of various systems, various compromises and improvements and treaties between mutual belligerents, taken together, hold out the promise of a world where we and our descendants continue to enjoy comfort and prosperity. This isn′t a book about turning down the thermostat in the winter and putting on a sweater: it′s a book about making houses that are better, that warm the rooms where people are and keep the heat in, and, in the process, cost us all less, reduce the pressure to secure oil through military adventurism, and begin to curb our atmospheric CO2 addiction. This is an optimistic book. Not a book that says it′ll all come out all right, but rather a book that says that it might come out all right. It′s a book we need to read."
Cory Doctorow, author of Little Brother
Cuprins
Acknowledgments ix Introduction: Choice and Change 1
1 Making Apple Pie from Scratch 9
2 One in a Quadrillion 22
3 The Efficiency Paradox 36
4 The Emerald City 52
5 A Box Full of Lightning 67
6 Good and Good Enough 84
7 The View from Merriam s Peak 102
8 The Take–Charge Challenge 121
9 The Olive Green Revolution 135
10 The Default Option 150
11 Home Fires 173
12 Bigger Little 186
13 Good Citizens of the Grid 211
Notes 226
Index 279
1 Making Apple Pie from Scratch 9
2 One in a Quadrillion 22
3 The Efficiency Paradox 36
4 The Emerald City 52
5 A Box Full of Lightning 67
6 Good and Good Enough 84
7 The View from Merriam s Peak 102
8 The Take–Charge Challenge 121
9 The Olive Green Revolution 135
10 The Default Option 150
11 Home Fires 173
12 Bigger Little 186
13 Good Citizens of the Grid 211
Notes 226
Index 279
Notă biografică
Maggie Koerth–Baker is the science editor at BoingBoing.net, one of the ten most popular blogs and the number one science blog in the world. A former editor for Mental—Floss, she has contributed articles to Scientific American, Discover, and other magazines. She is the coauthor of the Mental—Floss book Be Amazing.