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The Truth About Energy

Our Fossil-Fuel Addiction and the Transition to Renewables

John K. White

$75.95

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English
Cambridge University Press
01 March 2024
The transition to renewable energy is vital and fast-paced, but how do we choose which technologies to drive this energy transition? This timely book provides everyone interested in the renewable energy transition with an introduction to and technical foundation for understanding modern energy technology. It traces everyday power generation through history, from the

Industrial Revolution to today. It examines the use of wood, coal, oil, natural gas, hydro, and nuclear to produce energy, before discussing renewable energy sources such as biomass, photovoltaics, concentrated solar power, wind, wave, and geothermal. The book examines to what extent and how each technology can contribute to a clean, green infrastructure. The Truth About Energy explains the science and engineering of energy to help everyone understand and compare current and future advances in renewable energy, providing the context to critically examine the different technologies that are competing in a fast-evolving engineering, political, and economic landscape.
By:  
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Weight:   1.152kg
ISBN:   9781009433198
ISBN 10:   1009433199
Pages:   722
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
PART I. Out with the Old; 1. Wood to Coal: A Short History of the Industrial Revolution; 2. Oil and Gas: Twentieth-Century Prosperity; 3. The Nuclear World: Atoms for Peace; PART II. In with the New; 4. Old to New: The Sun and all its Glory; 5. The Old becomes New Again: More Sustainable Energy; 6. Driving the Revolution: From Volta to Tesla and Back; PART III. Less is More; 7. Rethink, Rebuild, Rewire; Afterword; Appendix A: Unit abbreviations; Appendix B: Metric prefixes; Appendix C: Useful Acronyms; Chapter Notes; Bibliography; References; Index.

John K. White is a physicist, writer, and educator, who has worked in the engineering, science, and education fields in Canada, the Netherlands, Ireland, and Spain. He is the editor of the website E21NS (Energy in the 21st Century News Service) and author of Do The Math! On Growth, Greed, and Strategic Thinking (2013, Sage). He was a lecturer in the School of Physics, University College Dublin, and the Department of Education, University of Oviedo, where he taught courses in atomic physics, optics, and science education.

Reviews for The Truth About Energy: Our Fossil-Fuel Addiction and the Transition to Renewables

'White's writing convincingly glides between scientific and technological descriptions of energy and the social world in which those descriptions both form, and are formed by, that same science and technology. Part expose, part explanatory guide, the book provides an excellent and balanced foundation from which to understand the transitions we must undergo in our troubled relationship to energy. The analysis is thoroughly researched and not shy about naming names as it builds upon specifics. Now thrown into crisis mode, we face extremely consequential choices - digesting this book enables the reader to understand the social consequences of energy choices.' Kirk W. Junker, Vice Rector for Sustainability, University of Cologne 'Written by a physicist who has done his homework - on chemistry, biology, and even some social science - this is a well-informed and engaging book that conveys the excitement the author believes we should all feel about renewable energy. For those with the interest, there is ample technological and historical background to understand the complex technologies on offer, both renewable and non-renewable. But there are also personal asides and charming juxtapositions, such as when a fusion reactor and Vincent van Gogh share space within a single paragraph. The author's interests are wide-ranging, and despite my own background in the topics he covers, I learned a lot. I can readily see incorporating it as a supplementary text in a course in environmental studies, energy systems, or technology.' Eric Kemp-Benedict, Associate Professor of Ecological Economics, University of Leeds


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