|
| Earth: The Sequel: The Race to Reinvent Energy and Stop Global Warming | 
enlarge | Authors: Fred Krupp, Miriam Horn Publisher: W. W. Norton Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy New: $12.47 You Save: $12.48 (50%)
New (51) Used (21) Collectible (8) from $12.43
Avg. Customer Rating: 53 reviews Sales Rank: 7793
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 256 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.2
ISBN: 0393066908 Dewey Decimal Number: 621.042 EAN: 9780393066906 ASIN: 0393066908
Publication Date: March 12, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Hardcover with Dust Jacket, never been read, minor shelf wear, In Stock and ready to ship
|
| Customer Reviews:
Grand praise from a non-environmentalist, 23 year old March 17, 2008 14 out of 15 found this review helpful
As a recent college graduate entering the private sector of the work force, I believe Krupp and Horn have created a window into the future. They abandon the uninspiring lectures of climate change's past, and immerse the reader in the inspiring and explosive world of renewable energies. For the first time our looming changing climate and energy obstacles are presented as what they truly are: opportunities.
Krupp and Horn illustrate how the combined efforts of entrepreneurs, legislators, and the free market economy will revolutionize a mutli- trillion dollar industry, rewarding handsomely those who take notice now, while leading us where we need to go. However, they emphasize this is not a leisurely exercise and we are rapidly losing time.
The authors have successfully reframed the climate and energy crisis from one of blame into one of unimaginable rewards for those who grasp this generation defining opportunity. It is truly inspiring and is without a doubt one of the most important books I have ever read. This is not a book for environmentalists (myself not being one), but a book for everyone. I especially suggest those of my young generation to pick it up for it is our future of which they speak, and it will soon either be our fault, or our glory. This book will surely help us reach the latter.
This Sequel Does Not Suck March 19, 2008 14 out of 15 found this review helpful
In Earth: The Sequel, Fred Krupp and Miriam Horn take a trip around the world to find the bold energy solutions that the world needs to combat Global Warming and boy, do they succeed! New breakthroughs in solar, wind, biofuels, geothermal, nuclear and wave energy are the stars of this book and the entrepreneurs that are working on these breakthroughs are nothing short of inspiring. The problem, however, is that none of these breakthroughs are likely to advance in our energy marketplace without the help of a Carbon Cap and Trade program, which will set a true price for emitting Carbon Dioxide and provide incentives for developing green energy.
Readers who find the idea of a emissions trading offensive may want to stay away from this book. On the other hand, they may want to read it and rethink their position because the breakthrough's highlighted by Krupp and Miriam are just too important for our future.
The only real criticism I have about Earth: The Sequel is that many may find it too confusing or dry. That's a shame because the message needs to be heard beyond the sphere of eco-geeks (like me) who eat this stuff up. On the Environmental Defense Fund site, there is a video promo for the book which, if expanded on, would make a good movie (ala An Inconvenient Truth) or television show. In other words, television and the big screen should be the sequel to Earth: The Sequel.
Double Spaced Very Useful Tour of the Energy Horizon May 3, 2008 13 out of 15 found this review helpful
I like this book and recommend it for students of any age from high school to the geriatric crowd that I represent. It has a super index but no mention of Lester Brown or Herman Daly, but that is offset by back cover recomendations from E. O. Wilson, Mark Lewis, and Michael Bloomberg.
Highlights from my fly leaf notes:
+ 1977 Clean Air was a command and control one size fits all that did not pass the market test
+ Lead author and others with the Environmental Defense Fund were instrumental in getting the 1990 Clear Air Act passed.
+ Making clean air a commodity makes the environment a profit center
+ Although there is no mention of Paul Hawkin's "true cost" meme, Hawkins does get listed in the index twice, see his Blessed Unrest: How the Largest Social Movement in History Is Restoring Grace, Justice, and Beauty to the World; the author mentions the urgency of accounting for the cost of pollution.
+ USA must cut its emissions by 80%
+ The author is fully aware that Acts of God are in fact Acts of Man. Another book, I cannot remember which, tells us that changes to the planet that used to take 10,000 years now take three. Not only do we need real time science, but we also need The Precautionary Principle: A Critical Appraisal
+ Clean energy is described by one sources as "the mother of all markets."
+ The author considers the energy markets to be completely "rigged" and notes that grain based ethanol, which I have called idiocy on more than one occasion, exists because of lobbying from Archer Daniels Midland among others.
+ In 2005 solar power grew by 45%.
+ Solar is distributed power, storage is a major obstacle.
+ The author clearly excited by Silicon Valley nano-tech, and also cautious about what we do not know when it is destabilized.
+ The solar energy industry is shooting for the Home Depot marketplace, stuff so simple I could install it. The author also tells us that banks are starting to get into power purchase agreements that will finance clean energy the way a home or car might be mortgaged. Home depot level will also mean graceful degradation and no "crash" or energy equivalent of Bill Gate's "blue screen of death".
+ Concentrating the sun is another promising approach. The author tells us that solar energy is six times more land efficient than wind energy.
+ Cuba is sitting on a sugar cane gold mine, biofuels with zero emissions are on the way from sugar modification.
+ Algae is covered, as well as bacteria.
+ Ocean power is also making headway, and is consistent, predictable, and has a high energy density.
+ Earth thermal includes hot water that comes with oil, previously considered a nusiance.
+ Coal is getting a make-over, and biomimicry is helping. It must get a make-over because it is an essential part of the mid-term power solution.
+ Sequestration is working and will work long enough to matter.
+ Regenerative reserves (e.g. the Amazon) are an essential part of the future. More more on this see the lovely and informative Climate Change and Biodiversity
+ Manure is turning into a major league energy source (when it's not contaminating our spinach, there is a whole land under surface water use deal here that we just do not understand.
+ Energy efficiency, hybrid cars, and smarter land use (compacting towns and cities to increase efficiency of public transportation) are part of the solution.
+ All parties will spend $10 trillion over the next thirty years to achieve clean energy.
See Other books I recommend: Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization, Third Edition Ecological Economics: Principles And Applications The Future of Life The Mighty Acts of God The Republican War on Science Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature Green Chemistry and the Ten Commandments of Sustainability, 2nd ed
This is a fine book. See also the WIRED Magazine Cover Story from 2000, it came out the same month Dick Cheney was meeting secretly with Enron and Exxon executives.
Informed, Upbeat, Inspirational March 28, 2008 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
Earth: The Sequel is a fascinating portrayal of state of the art advances in alternative energy production. The sun, the wind, the oceans, geothermal, biothermal - there are a host of ways that we can replace fossil fuels, and many highly creative people are working hard to make it happen. It becomes clear, through reading this extraordinary book, that we can do it, that the economy will thrive as we make this transition, and that the earth can be saved from global warming as we do this. This book portrays the nuts and bolts of the incredible effort that mankind must now make to save the earth from destruction.
Earth: The Sequel: The Race April 6, 2008 6 out of 7 found this review helpful
I don't know what it is about book sub-titles these days but they all have them, and this one generously has *two*, "The Sequel" and the common "The Race To.." (at least it's not "..That Changed the World"). I very often avoid books with these sub-titles because I know exactly what to expect: a long magazine article that would have been better in a magazine and not as a book. However in this case I took the chance because one of the co-authors is Fred Krupp, President of the influential Environmental Defense Fund, and the publisher is W.W. Norton. Even though it is indeed written like a magazine article (very skillfully I assume mostly by Miriam Horn) with lots of human interest stories and non-fiction narrative techniques, the content is well worth it.
Essentially it is a survey of the current technologies, companies and people involved with alternative energy in the United States. Even though I follow this stuff in the news and blogs there was tons of new stuff here I never knew about. Some of the people involved are really fascinating. Some of the companies are much further along than I realized. Others are probably not the solutions I thought they may be. My copy is marked up with people and companies to watch.
If the book has a message it is this: free markets work, but only if there is a cap and trade system to adjust the cost of fossil fuels upward, so that alternative technologies have a chance to develop and compete. If there is no cost to pollute, than obviously clean technologies are at a disadvantage. This has to change, and soon.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |