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Power Hungry: The Myths of "Green" Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future »

Book cover image of Power Hungry: The Myths of "Green" Energy and the Real Fuels of the Future by Robert Bryce

Authors: Robert Bryce
ISBN-13: 9781586487898, ISBN-10: 1586487892
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: PublicAffairs
Date Published: April 2010
Edition: (Non-applicable)

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Author Biography: Robert Bryce

Robert Bryce has been producing industrial-strength journalism for two decades. His articles on energy and other subjects have appeared in dozens of publications ranging from the Wall Street Journal to Counterpunch and Atlantic Monthly to Oklahoma Stripper. He is the author most recently of Gusher of Lies: The Dangerous Delusions of “Energy Independence.” Bryce is also the managing editor of Energy Tribune. He lives in Austin.

Book Synopsis

Another smartly contrarian assessment of America’s energy situation—and the gulf between the goals of the green movement and our vast need for power—by the author of Gusher of Lies

Publishers Weekly

Journalist Bryce, author of Gusher of Lies and managing editor of online industry newsmagazine Energy Tribune, is nothing if not polemical. While his swings are sometimes familiar ("The essence of protecting the environment can be distilled to a single phrase: Small is beautiful") and sometimes bizarre ("The world isn't using too much oil. It's not using enough"), the points he raises merit serious consideration. In this informed, opinionated state-of-the-industry overview, Bryce contends that energy policy must be based upon four imperatives: "power density, energy density, cost and scale." Wind and solar power, he says, fail those standards due to storage problems and the vagaries of weather; Denmark, the poster child for renewable energy, nevertheless imports hydroelectric power from Norway and Sweden, relies heavily upon North Sea oil and coal, and increased its greenhouse gas emissions by 2.1 percent between 1990 and 2006. Pointing to the environmental cost of hydropower ("ruining habitats for aquatic life"), oil spills, and coal mining, Bryce makes a strong case for heavier reliance upon natural gas, a relatively clean and readily available carbon fuel, as a bridge technology: "The smartest, most forward-looking U.S. energy policy can be summed up in one acronym: 'N2N'," for "natural gas to nuclear power."
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