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Clean Tech Clean Profits – Using Effective Innovation and Sustainable Business Practices to Win in the New Low–carbon Economy

Autor Adam Jolly
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 2 iul 2014
Through a mixture of innovation and regulation, a future is being mapped out free of carbon and pollutants. The consequences of these changes could be as far-reaching as those triggered in the last 25 years by the web. Just as many winners and losers are likely to be created by the squeeze on carbon and the growth of clean technologies. Designed for a wide management audience, Clean Tech, Clean Profits provides a practical guide to how organizations can re-think their operations, develop an innovative response, commercialize clean technologies and improve their efficiency. Its emphasis is on the specific steps that can be taken now in reviewing options, drawing up plans, upgrading a process, writing a specification or making an investment.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780749470418
ISBN-10: 0749470410
Pagini: 264
Dimensiuni: 177 x 244 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Ediția:2. Auflage.
Editura: Kogan Page

Notă biografică

Adam Jolly

Cuprins

Section - ONE: The size of the challenge; Chapter - 1.1: Towards the circular economy - Ellen MacArthur; Chapter - 1.2: Energy innovation - Rob Saunders; Chapter - 1.3: Zero Carbon Britain - Paul Allen; Chapter - 1.4: Powering change - David Handley; Section - TWO: The potential for innovation; Chapter - 2.1: Low-carbon growth - Andy Eastlake; Chapter - 2.2: Smarter buildings - Richard Solomon; Chapter - 2.3: Efficiency gains - Andrew Mitchell; Chapter - 2.4: Changes in corporate behaviour - Matt Bonass; Chapter - 2.5: Clean options on major projects - Tom Woollard and Nick Cottam; Section - THREE: How the market works; Chapter - 3.1: Funding future energy - Jeremy Biggs; Chapter - 3.2: The value of measuring carbon - Melanie Eddis and Nick Cottam; Chapter - 3.3: Structuring techniques for demand-side management solutions - Michael Rudd; Chapter - 3.4: Responsibly sourced - Ian Nicholson; Chapter - 3.5: Energy system modelling - George Day; Chapter - 3.6: Intellectual property for clean tech - Nick Sutcliffe; Section - FOUR: Re-thinking energy; Chapter - 4.1: New demands on electricity - Mark Thompson and Martin Queen; Chapter - 4.2: Smart energy - Andrew Mitchell; Chapter - 4.3: The supergrid - Godfrey Spickernell; Chapter - 4.4: Prospects for self-generation - Jodie Huggett; Chapter - 4.5: Pumped storage hydropower - Catherine Anderson; Chapter - 4.6: Carbon capture and storage - Judith Shapiro; Section - FIVE: Renewable sources; Chapter - 5.1: De-risking ocean energy - Raymond Alcorn, Gordon Dalton, Mark Healy and Michael O'Connor; Chapter - 5.2: Solar technology - Lee Sutton; Chapter - 5.3: Offshore renewable energy - Nick Medic; Chapter - 5.4: Biomass - Professor Mike Bradley; Section - SIX: Environment; Chapter - 6.1: Water - Cees Buisman and Leon Korving, Wetsus; Chapter - 6.2: Current priorities for air pollution control - Professor Duncan Laxen; Chapter - 6.3: Resource efficiency - Katherine Adams; Section - SEVEN: Transport; Chapter - 7.1: Powering tomorrow's electric vehicles - Dr Mark Crittenden and Huw Hampson-Jones; Chapter - 7.2: Transport design - Paul Priestman; Chapter - 7.3: Low-carbon mobility - Liam Lidstone; Chapter - 7.4: LPG Autogas - Rob Shuttleworth