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Out of the Energy Labyrinth: Uniting Energy and the Environment to Avert Catastrophe
 
 

Out of the Energy Labyrinth: Uniting Energy and the Environment to Avert Catastrophe (Paperback)

by David Howell (Author), Carole Nakhle (Author) "Can the future be brought into the present? How the searches for energy security and for climate security must be allied and combined to have..." (more)
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
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'A terrific book, not least because of its topicality. I am fed up with reading about climate change with only pious references to what might be done about it. Here is a practical politician grappling with that question in some detail.' Simon Jenkins, journalist and author 'A serious and thoughtful attempt to grapple with the complexities of the energy challenge and foreign policy. The authors carefully distinguish between the immediacy of the energy security problem and the longer term issue of climate change. They are prepared to take clear stands on controversial issues, such as "peak oil" and the science of climate change, not to mention American foreign policy. They are also remarkably direct regarding Europe's energy vulnerabilities but appropriately dismissive of the pursuit of "energy independence".' - James R. Schlesinger, former US Secretary of Defense and Energy Secretary and now head of a White House Task force on energy policy'A week ago the government published a white paper entitled "Meeting the Energy Challenge". It was followed this week by a slimmer but much more readable volume, Out of the Energy Labyrinth...there is one way in which Out of The Energy Labyrinth scores over nearly every other study. The authors distinguish between the immediate need "for greater energy security worldwide" and the "search for a low-carbon future", with the former taking priority.' Samuel Brittan, Financial Times


Product Description

The planet is under threat. And that threat comes from energy. So goes the standard argument. But according to David Howell and Carole Nakhle, this reasoning is wrong. In their provocative and original book, the authors argue that energy can become a tool for environmental protection, that energy and environment are not by definition in conflict with each other and that by pooling energy production and environmental protection ideas energy can be part of a solution rather than the problem. This book is firmly grounded in reality (given the demands of China, India and other developing economies) and makes specific proposals: a radical rethinking on energy investment strategies; massive incentives to develop alternative fuel technologies; a ground-breaking public awareness strategy to redirect consumers and policy-makers to embrace fundamental (though essentially painless) change in consumption patterns. The solutions that Howell and Nakhle offer are unapologetically short term. This is because the energy challenges immediately ahead, if not handled right, could undermine all longer term attempts to limit climate change. Their important and novel approach makes this book essential reading for an understanding of today's bewildering environmental debates.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
Can the future be brought into the present? How the searches for energy security and for climate security must be allied and combined to have impact and provide the escape map from the energy labyrinth of winding contradictions, conflicts and confusions. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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2.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Steam water or ice - does the author know the difference?, 18 Mar 2008
By Dr. Neil A. Keron (Bedfordshire, Britain) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book makes constant references to LNG as compressed and/or frozen gas. How anyone with such a complete misunderstanding of phase change can claim to be expert enough to write a book on the subject just beggars belief.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Useful account of Britain's energy crisis, 4 Dec 2008
By William Podmore (London United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
David Howell, a Secretary of State for Energy under Thatcher, and Carole Nakhle, Energy Research Fellow at the University of Surrey, have produced a useful survey of Britain's energy crisis.

They sensibly write of recent US-British policy towards the Middle East, "What is crystal clear is that the Washingtonian belief in overwhelming force as the means of spreading democracy and `Western values', and thus stabilizing the world's dangerous regions - thereby ensuring reliable energy supplies - is a deeply flawed strategy. The outcome is the opposite." And, "The UK, by its compliance with US strategies, has placed its foreign policy in limbo and severely weakened its capacity to influence events - and to ensure energy security. It needs urgently to build ties with new friends - countries which are now setting the global agenda."

The authors show that we could reduce plane and car travel by investing in a better rail network. For example, by introducing the magnetic levitation system, as on the Tokyo-Osaka line, we could travel from London to Edinburgh at 280-300 mph.

They observe that we need new North Sea gas pipelines and new gas storage facilities, noting that the Thatcher government turned down British Gas's proposal to build a pipeline to bring gas from Norway's fields. We also need better oil refineries: the USA recovers 90% of the crude oil it gets, Britain only 75%. They call for `a modern domestic coal industry' - ironic, coming from a member of the government that did its damndest to destroy our coal industry, with its 1,000 years of reserves.

They point out that about 25 gigawatts (GW) of Britain's total power generation capacity of 75 GW will close by 2020. The government says that wind power will provide 35 GW (which would need 15,000 wind turbine generators). However, wind power is intermittent and variable and therefore unreliable. (When a 30 mph wind drops to 10 mph, the power output falls by 96%.) The government's policy of depending on wind is not designed to meet Britain's energy needs, but to obey the EU directive to cut carbon emissions by 80% by 2050.

To fill the energy gap, we need both nuclear power and clean coal technology with carbon capture and storage. Nuclear energy is a viable, low-carbon alternative that is not intermittent and is far cheaper than renewable energy. The authors admit that successive governments have allowed the rundown of our nuclear capacity. In 1980 the Thatcher government announced plans to build eleven nuclear power stations, but built only one, Sizewell B.

So we need to build a new generation of nuclear power-stations. This would create thousands of jobs for decades and reskill our workforce. However, as the authors acknowledge, the market cannot deliver this. The government would have to take the lead, and would have to ignore the EU and its rules against state aid to industry.
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