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Ending Dirty Energy Policy Joseph P. Tomain (University of Cincinnati)

Ending Dirty Energy Policy By Joseph P. Tomain (University of Cincinnati)

Ending Dirty Energy Policy by Joseph P. Tomain (University of Cincinnati)


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Summary

This book provides a history of the United States' century-old dirty energy policy and uncovers the political and economic assumptions behind it. It then offers an alternative policy based on assumptions supporting a low-carbon energy future. Finally, it discusses the political strategies likely to succeed in achieving the transformation.

Ending Dirty Energy Policy Summary

Ending Dirty Energy Policy: Prelude to Climate Change by Joseph P. Tomain (University of Cincinnati)

Climate change presents the United States, and the world, with regulatory problems of a magnitude, complexity and scope unseen before. The United States, however, particularly after the mid-term elections of 2010, lacks the political will necessary to aggressively address climate change. Most current books focus on climate change. Ending Dirty Energy Policy argues that the US will not adequately address climate change until it transforms its fossil fuel energy policy. Yet there are signs that the country will support the transformation of its century-old energy policy from one that is dependent on fossil fuels to a low-carbon energy portfolio. A transformative energy policy that favors energy efficiency and renewable resources can occur only after the US has abandoned the traditional fossil fuel energy policy, has redesigned regulatory systems to open new markets and promoted competition among new energy providers, and has stimulated private-sector commercial and venture capital investment in energy innovations that can be brought to commercial scale and marketability.

Ending Dirty Energy Policy Reviews

'Tomain's is that rare monograph on a subject as complex and even arcane as energy regulation, which is at once lucid, informative, and compelling in its explication and argument. The book reveals and integrates the wide range of technical, policy, and political issues that together make up the US approach to energy.' John S. Applegate, Indiana University
'Written by one of the nation's foremost authorities on energy regulation, Dirty Energy Policy takes a clear-eyed look at the history of how law and policy have led to the dominance of fossil fuels, and it lays out a path - admittedly mountainous and bumpy - to a transition to more (though certainly not total) reliance on efficiency and renewables. Many readers will agree; all will be provoked.' Michael Gerrard, Columbia Law School
'Dirty Energy Policy is a cogent, careful, and - perhaps best of all - hopeful argument in favor of transforming our energy policy from dirty to clean.' Lisa Heinzerling, Georgetown Law School
'One of the pre-eminent experts in US energy law, Professor Tomain has written a powerful critique of antiquated 'hard path' approaches to energy regulation and offered an accessible introduction to the 'soft path' approaches that [the US] will have to adopt to ensure an economically and environmentally sustainable future.' Thomas O. McGarity, University of Texas, Austin
'Energy policy is the largest failure in US history and the make or break issue for our future. Joseph Tomain offers a remarkably clear, cogent, and insightful assessment of our options and a plausible path forward.' David W. Orr, Oberlin College
'Joseph Tomain presents a carefully researched, clearly written, and persuasive account of how the United States can reform energy policy. While the challenge is daunting, Tomain points the way forward by revealing how law, policy, and politics contributed to the creation of our carbon-based economy, and how these forces can be mobilized to achieve a new energy future.' Sidney Shapiro, Wake Forrest University

About Joseph P. Tomain (University of Cincinnati)

Joseph P. Tomain is Dean Emeritus and the Wilbert and Helen Ziegler Professor of Law at the University of Cincinnati Law School, which he joined in 1987 and where he held the deanship for 15 years. He practised general litigation in New Jersey before beginning his teaching career at Drake University School of Law. Dean Tomain has also held positions as Visiting Professor at the University of Texas Law School; Distinguished Visiting Energy Professor at Vermont Law School; visiting scholar in the program of Liberal Studies at the University of Notre Dame; Visiting Fellow at Harris Manchester College, Oxford University; Fulbright senior specialist in law in Cambodia; and visiting environmental scholar at Lewis and Clark Law School. His most recent book is Creon's Ghost: Law, Justice, and the Humanities (2009). Dean Tomain is chair of the board of KnowledgeWorks Education Foundation, founder and principal of the Justice Institute for the Legal Profession and a board member of the Greater Cincinnati Foundation. He is also a Fellow of the American Bar Association, is actively involved with the ABA Section on Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar and is a member of the American Law Institute. He has published widely in the field of energy law and policy.

Table of Contents

Preface; Introduction; 1. A regulatory history of dirty energy law and policy; 2. Protectionist assumptions; 3. The next generation is now; 4. Consensus energy policy; 5. Fossil fuel future; 6. Electricity future; 7. Venture regulation; 8. Smart energy politics; 9. Conclusion strategies for the energy future.

Additional information

NPB9780521111096
9780521111096
0521111099
Ending Dirty Energy Policy: Prelude to Climate Change by Joseph P. Tomain (University of Cincinnati)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2011-06-20
320
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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