Search for books and compare prices on all major online booksellers with one click!

Home  About UsSuggest BookstoreRecommend Us 
    Title/Keywords ISBN  

Power to the People : How the Coming Energy Revolution Will Transform an Industry, Change Our Lives, and Maybe Even Save the Planet

AUTHOR: Vijay V. Vaitheeswaran
ISBN: 0374236755

SHORT DESCRIPTION: An energy and environment correspondent for "The Economist" sees great opportunity in the energy realm today, and this is his fiercely independent and irresistibly entertaining look at the economic, political, and technological forces that are...

Compare Price


HOME--->> Sports --->>Natural Resources --->>Natural Resources
 
Natural Resources
         Editorial Review

Power to the People : How the Coming Energy Revolution Will Transform an Industry, Change Our Lives, and Maybe Even Save the Planet
- Book Review,
by Vijay V. Vaitheeswaran


From Publishers Weekly
In the wake of this summer's failure of the aging power grid, Vaitheeswaran, the author of this timely book, highlights the trends he believes will transform the energy game: liberalization of the energy markets, the increasing influence of the environmental movement and recent innovations in hydrogen fuel-cell technology. In short essays, he covers many of today's energy problems, such as reliance on oil, global warming, air pollution and the dangers inherent in nuclear power. Micropower from fuel cells-big batteries that produce electricity by combining hydrogen fuel and available oxygen-will be our salvation, he asserts, because this technology makes possible small, clean power plants that can be located close to homes and factories, enabling power to flow not from on high but from the grassroots. Vaitheeswaran, an Economist correspondent, profiles some of the energy visionaries he reveres, such as Amory Lovins, a pioneer in the field of micropower, and Firoz Rasul of Ballard Power Systems, a Canadian fuel-cell firm. He also attempts to debunk some of the "truisms" currently spouted on both the left and the right, arguing, for example, that deregulation is not the problem, and that the Kyoto treaty is flawed and would not have solved global warming problems even if the U.S. had signed it. His lucid and entertaining book is informative and insightful, but his prediction that hydrogen fuel-cell technology will take off in a decade or so will strike some as overly optimistic.Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Scientific American
Energy is the lifeblood of industrial civilization and an absolutely necessary (albeit certainly not sufficient) condition for lifting the world's poor from their poverty. But current methods of mobilizing civilization's energy are more disruptive of local, regional and global environmental conditions and processes than anything else that humans do. This dichotomy defines the core of the energy challenge in the century before us: How can we supply enough affordable energy to permit the billions who are currently poor (and the billions more who will be added to their numbers in the decades ahead) to attain prosperity--and to sustain and expand the prosperity of those already rich--without suffering intolerable damage to the environmental dimensions of human well-being in industrial and developing countries alike? How difficult will meeting this challenge be? Is the "business as usual" approach--subsidizing fossil-fuel supply and nuclear energy and large hydro projects, maintaining low energy prices to consumers by keeping environmental and political costs "external," propping up oil supply by every available means--part of the solution or part of the problem? Can the privatization of energy sectors in the developing countries and the restructuring and deregulation of energy sectors in industrial countries be accomplished in ways that provide the economic benefits of competition while still preserving essential public benefits such as the reliability and resilience of the electricity system? In his book, Power to the People, Vijay Vaitheeswaran tackles these and the other hard questions at the core of society's energy dilemmas with style, balance and insight. The style is entertaining and accessible. The balance is impeccable--Vaitheeswaran generally lets the most forceful and effective exponents on different sides of the major issues state their case in their own words--but after ventilating the various positions he is not afraid to let the reader know where he comes out. And this is where the insight comes in. Vaitheeswaran brings to these questions the respect for markets and marketlike mechanisms of a writer for the Economist, the understanding of technology of an M.I.T.-trained engineer, and the sympathy for the plight of the world's poor of an individual born in India--all of which he happens to be. He also happens to have, in my judgment, a good sense of how to think about--and convey--the interplay of the economic, technological, environmental and sociopolitical dimensions of the energy issue as well as the reasons that the uncertainties afflicting our knowledge of all the dimensions do not add up to a good reason for inaction. Among the critically important points about all this that the book convincingly conveys: * Civilization is in no immediate danger of running out of energy or even just out of oil. But we are running out of environment--that is, out of the capacity of the environment to absorb energy's impacts without risk of intolerable disruption--and our heavy dependence on oil in particular entails not only environmental but also economic and political liabilities. * Choices that countries make about energy supply commit them to those choices for decades, because power plants and other energy facilities typically last for 40 years or more and are too costly to replace before they wear out. This is one of the reasons it is imprudent in the extreme to wait for even more evidence than we already have before letting climate-change risks start to influence which energy options we choose. * Energy technologies that exist or are under development could greatly increase energy efficiency in residences and businesses, reduce dependence on oil, accelerate the provision of energy services to the world's poor, increase the reliability and resilience of electricity grids, and shrink the impacts of energy supply on climate and other environmental values. The most promising of these options include renewable sources of a variety of types, advanced fossil-fuel technologies that can capture and sequester carbon, and hydrogen-powered fuel cells for vehicle propulsion and dispersed electricity generation. * These prosperity-building, stability-enhancing and environment-sparing options will not materialize in quantity matching the need unless and until three conditions are met: The massive subsidies favoring continuation of energy business as usual are ended. The massive risks of greenhouse gas-induced climate change are at least partly internalized with a carbon tax or its equivalent. And the industrial nations commit to helping the developing ones "leapfrog" past the inefficient and dirty-energy technologies that fueled the industrialization of the former but mortgaged the environment in the process. There are a few small technical slips in the elaboration of all this, but not many, and none that matter to the thrust of the argument. Written for the intelligent layperson, Vaitheeswaran's book is by far the most helpful, entertaining, up-to-date and accessible treatment of the energy-economy-environment problematique available. Its title, Power to the People, might strike some at first as too cute or too presumptuous. By the time I finished the book, though, I thought the title was apt, and in more ways than one. One must hope that knowledge translates to power in the political sense and that the knowledge to the people conveyed here will help lead to the political outcomes needed to bring the book's optimistic vision into being.

John P. Holdren is Teresa and John Heinz Professor and director of the Program on Science, Technology and Public Policy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.


From Booklist
Should the goals of environmentalism be advanced by governmental dictate or by market forces? Both should be used, concludes this survey of energy production and pricing by the Economist's beat reporter. Accepting the premise that injecting carbon into the atmosphere is too dangerous to countenance, Vaitheeswaran took to the field to interview executives of oil and utility companies, regulators, chiefs of environmental groups, and techno-proselytizers, such as the advocates of hydrogen fuel cells. He also breaks down topical events, such as California's fiasco of partial electricity deregulation or the global emissions-control treaty (the Kyoto Protocol of 1997), arenas where the regulation-versus-pricing approaches to energy and environmentalism played out. To these discussions, Vaitheeswaran brings both journalistic pizzazz and a commonsensical questioning of the claims of those vested in the oil-consuming status quo and of moral preeners among environmentalists. Polemically-minded readers will pass this work by, but solution-oriented ones will read it with optimism. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved


From Book News, Inc.
The energy debate typically consists of three camps who alternately argue that energy security is not necessary to worry about, that it is a threat but it can be addressed through developing non-OPEC sources of oil, or that it can only be addressed through conservation measures. The contending "relax, keep pumping, and ride your bicycle" camps all get it wrong, argues Vaitheeswaran (the energy and environmental correspondent for The Economist). The solution to energy security, he believes, lies in the promotion of fuel cells and other technologies that will be unleashed by liberalized market forces, leading to a world in which micropower will be the number one source of energy for households and industry.Copyright © 2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR


Review
"In a crucial area of public discourse that is too often dominated by flamethrowers from either side of the political spectrum, Vijay Vaitheeswaran's Power to the People provides a welcome relief: a balanced assessment of where we are, how we got here, and where our actions today may be taking us in the years ahead."
--Robert N. Stavins, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

"We are at an energy crossroads, and the path taken in the next few years will affect every person on the planet. Vijay Vaitheeswaran has produced a thoughtful and provocative book that maps the choices we face and the trade-offs we will encounter. Power to the People explodes myths, highlights our energy options, and shows the way to an energy future that is very different from the past. This volume is must reading for anyone who cares about the environment."
--Daniel Esty, Director, Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy

"Vijay Vaitheeswaran's analysis of where we stand right now on the energy front is well reasoned, insightful and tempered. At a time when the whole world is increasingly worried about our energy future, Mr. Vaitheeswaran takes us on an engaging, and ultimately hopeful, exploratory journey, investigating the many choices that lie ahead."
--Jeremy Rifkin, author of The Hydrogen Economy

"Many books on energy are filled with table after mind-numbing table, others with paeans to the all-powerful forces of free markets or the supposed magic of green energy technologies. Vaitheeswaran has written a book on energy that is factual, non-polemical and-can it really be?-fun to read! No one will agree with everything the author has to say about the world's energy future. Everyone will finish this book knowing much more about this important subject than they did before."
--Paul R. Portney, President, Resources for the Future

"Written in the easy, fluent style that makes Vijay Vaitheeswaran so readable in The Economist, Power to the People examines the energy future, including the prospects for fossil fuels, with a calm rationality that will surely command the respect of people across the political spectrum. More to the point, it does so in a spirit of optimism that doesn't prescribe a disruptive trade-off between preserving our environment and providing enough energy for continuing human progress."
--BP chief executive, Lord Browne of Madingley.

"The post-petroleum age is approaching rapidly, and who better to herald its arrival than a top journalist for The Economist. In Power to the People, Vijay Vaitheeswaran compellingly describes the vast innovations in technology and policy that are beginning to shake the energy industry to its core. It is a sign of the times that "alternative" energy is now attracting as much interest from business executives focused on the bottom line as it is from ecologists focused on climate change: as described in this book, the "coming energy revolution" is as logical, and perhaps as inevitable, as it is necessary."
--Christopher Flavin, President, Worldwatch Institute

"People need power. The challenge of meeting future energy needs has long moved beyond the realm of increased supply. Vaitheeswaran's analysis offers both a strategic ivory tower perspective as well as a breathtaking review of paradigm shifts and new technological frontiers. This is a book about the future - and the choices we face. Whether you are a pessimist, skeptic or optimist - Power to the People will challenge your assumptions without offering simplistic answers."
--Achim Steiner, Director General, IUCN - The World Conservation Union

"The post-fossil-fuel age is coming faster than you think, and Power to the People shows why. Discover the energy future in an important, lively and highly readable book ."
--Gregg Easterbrook, author of The Progress Paradox



Review
"In a crucial area of public discourse that is too often dominated by flamethrowers from either side of the political spectrum, Vijay Vaitheeswaran's Power to the People provides a welcome relief: a balanced assessment of where we are, how we got here, and where our actions today may be taking us in the years ahead."
--Robert N. Stavins, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

"We are at an energy crossroads, and the path taken in the next few years will affect every person on the planet. Vijay Vaitheeswaran has produced a thoughtful and provocative book that maps the choices we face and the trade-offs we will encounter. Power to the People explodes myths, highlights our energy options, and shows the way to an energy future that is very different from the past. This volume is must reading for anyone who cares about the environment."
--Daniel Esty, Director, Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy

"Vijay Vaitheeswaran's analysis of where we stand right now on the energy front is well reasoned, insightful and tempered. At a time when the whole world is increasingly worried about our energy future, Mr. Vaitheeswaran takes us on an engaging, and ultimately hopeful, exploratory journey, investigating the many choices that lie ahead."
--Jeremy Rifkin, author of The Hydrogen Economy

"Many books on energy are filled with table after mind-numbing table, others with paeans to the all-powerful forces of free markets or the supposed magic of green energy technologies. Vaitheeswaran has written a book on energy that is factual, non-polemical and-can it really be?-fun to read! No one will agree with everything the author has to say about the world's energy future. Everyone will finish this book knowing much more about this important subject than they did before."
--Paul R. Portney, President, Resources for the Future

"Written in the easy, fluent style that makes Vijay Vaitheeswaran so readable in The Economist, Power to the People examines the energy future, including the prospects for fossil fuels, with a calm rationality that will surely command the respect of people across the political spectrum. More to the point, it does so in a spirit of optimism that doesn't prescribe a disruptive trade-off between preserving our environment and providing enough energy for continuing human progress."
--BP chief executive, Lord Browne of Madingley.

"The post-petroleum age is approaching rapidly, and who better to herald its arrival than a top journalist for The Economist. In Power to the People, Vijay Vaitheeswaran compellingly describes the vast innovations in technology and policy that are beginning to shake the energy industry to its core. It is a sign of the times that "alternative" energy is now attracting as much interest from business executives focused on the bottom line as it is from ecologists focused on climate change: as described in this book, the "coming energy revolution" is as logical, and perhaps as inevitable, as it is necessary."
--Christopher Flavin, President, Worldwatch Institute

"People need power. The challenge of meeting future energy needs has long moved beyond the realm of increased supply. Vaitheeswaran's analysis offers both a strategic ivory tower perspective as well as a breathtaking review of paradigm shifts and new technological frontiers. This is a book about the future - and the choices we face. Whether you are a pessimist, skeptic or optimist - Power to the People will challenge your assumptions without offering simplistic answers."
--Achim Steiner, Director General, IUCN - The World Conservation Union

"The post-fossil-fuel age is coming faster than you think, and Power to the People shows why. Discover the energy future in an important, lively and highly readable book ."
--Gregg Easterbrook, author of The Progress Paradox



Christopher Flavin, President, Worldwatch Institute
"Vaitheeswaran describes the vast innovations in technology and policy that are beginning to shake the energy industry to its core."


Daniel Esty, Director, Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy
"This volume is must reading for anyone who cares about the environment."


Jeremy Rifkin, author of The Hydrogen Economy
"Vaitheeswaran takes us on an engaging, and ultimately hopeful, exploratory journey, investigating the many choices that lie ahead."


Peter D. Blair, American Scientist
"Treatments of energy policy are usually easily identified as from the left or the right…Vaitheeswaran strikes a more careful balance."


Kimberly Song, Far Eastern Economic Review
"…Well-researched and easy-to-read analysis of the complex and opaque $2 trillion-a-year business of global energy."


Review
"In a crucial area of public discourse that is too often dominated by flamethrowers from either side of the political spectrum, Vijay Vaitheeswaran's Power to the People provides a welcome relief: a balanced assessment of where we are, how we got here, and where our actions today may be taking us in the years ahead."
--Robert N. Stavins, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

"We are at an energy crossroads, and the path taken in the next few years will affect every person on the planet. Vijay Vaitheeswaran has produced a thoughtful and provocative book that maps the choices we face and the trade-offs we will encounter. Power to the People explodes myths, highlights our energy options, and shows the way to an energy future that is very different from the past. This volume is must reading for anyone who cares about the environment."
--Daniel Esty, Director, Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy

"Vijay Vaitheeswaran's analysis of where we stand right now on the energy front is well reasoned, insightful and tempered. At a time when the whole world is increasingly worried about our energy future, Mr. Vaitheeswaran takes us on an engaging, and ultimately hopeful, exploratory journey, investigating the many choices that lie ahead."
--Jeremy Rifkin, author of The Hydrogen Economy

"Many books on energy are filled with table after mind-numbing table, others with paeans to the all-powerful forces of free markets or the supposed magic of green energy technologies. Vaitheeswaran has written a book on energy that is factual, non-polemical and-can it really be?-fun to read! No one will agree with everything the author has to say about the world's energy future. Everyone will finish this book knowing much more about this important subject than they did before."
--Paul R. Portney, President, Resources for the Future

"Written in the easy, fluent style that makes Vijay Vaitheeswaran so readable in The Economist, Power to the People examines the energy future, including the prospects for fossil fuels, with a calm rationality that will surely command the respect of people across the political spectrum. More to the point, it does so in a spirit of optimism that doesn't prescribe a disruptive trade-off between preserving our environment and providing enough energy for continuing human progress."
--BP chief executive, Lord Browne of Madingley.

"The post-petroleum age is approaching rapidly, and who better to herald its arrival than a top journalist for The Economist. In Power to the People, Vijay Vaitheeswaran compellingly describes the vast innovations in technology and policy that are beginning to shake the energy industry to its core. It is a sign of the times that "alternative" energy is now attracting as much interest from business executives focused on the bottom line as it is from ecologists focused on climate change: as described in this book, the "coming energy revolution" is as logical, and perhaps as inevitable, as it is necessary."
--Christopher Flavin, President, Worldwatch Institute

"People need power. The challenge of meeting future energy needs has long moved beyond the realm of increased supply. Vaitheeswaran's analysis offers both a strategic ivory tower perspective as well as a breathtaking review of paradigm shifts and new technological frontiers. This is a book about the future - and the choices we face. Whether you are a pessimist, skeptic or optimist - Power to the People will challenge your assumptions without offering simplistic answers."
--Achim Steiner, Director General, IUCN - The World Conservation Union

"The post-fossil-fuel age is coming faster than you think, and Power to the People shows why. Discover the energy future in an important, lively and highly readable book ."
--Gregg Easterbrook, author of The Progress Paradox



Book Description
A guided tour of a revolution in the making that promises to change our lives

Global warming, rolling black outs, massive tanker spills, oil dependence: our profligate ways have doomed us to suffer such tragedies, right? Perhaps, but Vijay Vaitheeswaran, the energy and environment correspondent for The Economist, sees great opportunity in the energy realm today, and Power to the People is his fiercely independent and irresistibly entertaining look at the economic, political, and technological forces that are reshaping the world's management of energy resources. In it, he documents an energy revolution already underway--a revolution as radical as the communications revolution of the past decades.

From the corporate boardroom of a Texas oil titan who denies the reality of global warming to a think tank nestled in the Rocky Mountains where a visionary named Amory Lovins is developing the kind of hydrogen fuel-cell technology that could make the internal combustion engine obsolete, Vaitheeswaran gamely pursues the people who hold the keys to our future. Man's quest for energy is insatiable. It is also essential. By avoiding the traditional binaries that pit free markets against the wisdom of conservation and the need for clean energy, Power to the People is a book that debunks myths without debunking hope.



About the Author
Vijay V. Vaitheeswaran is The Economist's Environment and Energy Correspondent, covering developments in politics, economics, business, and technology as they relate to energy issues. He has received awards for his journalism, and previously wrote about Latin America as the magazine's regional bureau chief in Mexico City. Born in Madras, India, he grew up in Cheshire, Connecticut and graduated from MIT with a degree in mechanical engineering. He now lives in New York.



Buy from Amazon     Compare Prices



         Book Review

Power to the People : How the Coming Energy Revolution Will Transform an Industry, Change Our Lives, and Maybe Even Save the Planet
- Book Reviews,
by Vijay V. Vaitheeswaran

Power to the People: How the Coming Energy Revolution Will Transform an Industry, Change Our Lives, and Maybe Even Save the Planet

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Global warming, rolling black outs, massive tanker spills, oil dependence: our profligate ways have doomed us to suffer such tragedies, right? Perhaps, but Vijay Vaitheeswaran, the energy and environment correspondent for The Economist, sees great opportunity in the energy realm today, and Power to the People is his fiercely independent and irresistibly entertaining look at the economic, political, and technological forces that are reshaping the world's management of energy resources. In it, he documents an energy revolution already underway--a revolution as radical as the communications revolution of the past decades.

From the corporate boardroom of a Texas oil titan who denies the reality of global warming to a think tank nestled in the Rocky Mountains where a visionary named Amory Lovins is developing the kind of hydrogen fuel-cell technology that could make the internal combustion engine obsolete, Vaitheeswaran gamely pursues the people who hold the keys to our future. Man's quest for energy is insatiable. It is also essential. By avoiding the traditional binaries that pit free markets against the wisdom of conservation and the need for clean energy, Power to the People is a book that debunks myths without debunking hope.

SYNOPSIS

The energy debate typically consists of three camps who alternately argue that energy security is not necessary to worry about, that it is a threat but it can be addressed through developing non-OPEC sources of oil, or that it can only be addressed through conservation measures. The contending "relax, keep pumping, and ride your bicycle" camps all get it wrong, argues Vaitheeswaran (the energy and environmental correspondent for The Economist). The solution to energy security, he believes, lies in the promotion of fuel cells and other technologies that will be unleashed by liberalized market forces, leading to a world in which micropower will be the number one source of energy for households and industry. Annotation ©2004 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR

FROM THE CRITICS

Publishers Weekly

In the wake of this summer's failure of the aging power grid, Vaitheeswaran, the author of this timely book, highlights the trends he believes will transform the energy game: liberalization of the energy markets, the increasing influence of the environmental movement and recent innovations in hydrogen fuel-cell technology. In short essays, he covers many of today's energy problems, such as reliance on oil, global warming, air pollution and the dangers inherent in nuclear power. Micropower from fuel cells-big batteries that produce electricity by combining hydrogen fuel and available oxygen-will be our salvation, he asserts, because this technology makes possible small, clean power plants that can be located close to homes and factories, enabling power to flow not from on high but from the grassroots. Vaitheeswaran, an Economist correspondent, profiles some of the energy visionaries he reveres, such as Amory Lovins, a pioneer in the field of micropower, and Firoz Rasul of Ballard Power Systems, a Canadian fuel-cell firm. He also attempts to debunk some of the "truisms" currently spouted on both the left and the right, arguing, for example, that deregulation is not the problem, and that the Kyoto treaty is flawed and would not have solved global warming problems even if the U.S. had signed it. His lucid and entertaining book is informative and insightful, but his prediction that hydrogen fuel-cell technology will take off in a decade or so will strike some as overly optimistic. Author tour. (Nov.) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

With the largest power outage in U.S. history fresh in our minds, some would argue that such an event is another sign of an energy crisis. Vaitheeswaran, energy and environment correspondent for the Economist, instead sees hope in the world's energy realm. He outlines three trends to support his premise: the global move toward liberalization of energy markets, the growing appeal of environmentalism, and the recent surge of technological innovation. The combination of these three factors, he posits, will advance micropower. If managed properly, micropower locates small power plants close to homes and factories, leads to deregulation, and lowers electric rates. Although Vaitheeswaran offers a balance of international viewpoints from industry, environmental groups, politicians, regulators, and "visionaries," his optimism may seem na ve and unrealistic (i.e., in light of recent loosening of the Clean Air Act). Still, readers wanting a change from the gloom and doom of some environmental writing will appreciate this work.-Eva Lautemann, Georgia Perimeter Coll. Lib., Clarkston Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.


Buy from Barnes & Noble     Compare Prices




HOME  |  Recommend bookstore  |  Rate bookstore  |  Link to us  |  Report bug  |  Contact us
Copyright© 2003 - 2005, PowerBookSearch.com. All Rights Reserved.