Cover image for Beyond the age of oil : the myths, realities, and future of fossil fuels and their alternatives
Title:
Beyond the age of oil : the myths, realities, and future of fossil fuels and their alternatives
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Santa Barbara, Calif. : Praeger, c2010
Physical Description:
xxxi, 259 p. : ill. ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780313381713

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30000010307012 TJ163.2 M38 2010 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

This book offers a revealing picture of the myths and realities of the energy world by one of our most renowned energy experts and managers.

At the end of the first decade of the 21st century, the human race finds itself caught in an "energy trap." Carbon-rich fossil fuels--coal, petroleum and natural gas--are firmly entrenched as the dominant sources of our energy and power. Their highly concentrated forms, versatility of use, ease of transport and storage, ready availability, and comparatively low costs combine to give fossil fuels an unassailable competitive advantage over all alternative sources of energy. This economic reality means that fossil fuels will inevitably continue to be the backbone of the global economy for the next quarter of a century, even while the adverse climate and environmental effects of our dependence on fossil fuels hurtle toward global crisis levels. To avert unacceptable environmental consequences, the world must deliberately and incrementally supplant fossil fuels with alternative energy sources, on a schedule that will have them overtake fossil fuels in the world's energy budget by 2035. To achieve this urgent goal without massive economic dislocation and reduction in standards of living, global investment in fossil fuel efficiency will be just as important as the development and massive deployment of alternative energy technologies and delivery systems.

In this eagerly awaited sequel to his prize-winning bestseller, The Age of Oil , Leonardo Maugeri, the strategy director of one of the world's biggest energy companies, puts forward a hard-headed, concrete plan in simple everyday language for how to shift the world economy's primary energy dependence from fossil fuels to renewable energies by 2035. Assuming no specialized knowledge, the author walks the reader chapter by chapter through each of the fossil fuels (oil, coal, and natural gas) and each of the alternative energy sources (nuclear, hydroelectric, biofuel, wind, solar, geothermal, and hydrogen). Drawing on the unparalleled data and analysis resources at his command, Maugeri assesses the problems and advantages of each energy source in turn in order to constrain the optimal mix of energy sources that the world should be aiming for in 2035. Critically, he lays out the arduous path for getting from here to there. Maugeri shows that the next 25 years will be a rocky marriage between the old and the new energy paradigms, during which we must dramatically improve the efficiency of our continuing use of fossil fuels, while driving ahead on all fronts to an energy future based on a suite of sustainable energy sources.


Author Notes

Leonardo Maugeri , PhD, is senior executive vice president of strategies and development at Eni SpA, one of the world's leading international oil and gas companies and Italy's largest industrial company.


Reviews 1

Choice Review

This authoritative, insightful assessment of the basic factors in the world's energy future is so timely, comprehensive, and well written that it belongs in most academic and public library collections. Maugeri, a strategies and development executive at Italy's Eni S.p.A., a major international oil and gas company, provides a lively analysis and interpretation of alternative energy sources (nuclear, water, biofuel, wind, solar, and hydrogen) in relation to those of the fossil fuels (oil, coal, and natural gas). This follow-up to the author's The Age of Oil (CH, Jan'07, 44-2726) is divided into 12 chapters, with 4 chapters focusing on the fossil fuels and 8 chapters on the alternatives. The conclusion is aptly titled "How Can We Escape Our Energy Trap?" The volume is very well footnoted and has a helpful glossary on units and measurements and a thorough index. Valuable for students of political science, economics, science, and technology. Summing Up: Highly recommended Academic and general libraries, all levels. W. C. Peters emeritus, University of Arizona


Table of Contents

Prefacep. ix
Acknowledgmentsp. xiii
Abbreviationsp. xv
Introduction: All the Energy in the Worldp. xvii
Part 1 The Fossil Sources
1 "King" Oilp. 3
2 The Splendor and Misery of Coalp. 37
3 All That Gasp. 57
4 The Quest to Eliminate Carbon Dioxidep. 85
Part 2 The Alternatives
5 Nuclear Power: Renaissance or Decline?p. 95
6 The Weight of Waterp. 113
7 Biofuels: Behind the Smoke and Mirrorsp. 125
8 Gone with the Wind?p. 141
9 The Sun Also Risesp. 155
10 Geothermal Power: The Primitive Energy of the Earthp. 169
11 The Hype about Hydrogen, the Hope about Electric Carsp. 179
12 Energy Efficiency: The Invisible Source of Energyp. 191
Conclusions: How Can We Escape Our Energy Trap?p. 205
Notesp. 221
Glossary of Units of Measurementp. 245
Indexp. 249