From the reviews:
This is an exceptionally informative book, well structured and well written.Without being too long it covers all the relevant ground thoroughly.
The book is excellent in looking at all the details of energy sources, and shows realism in what is likely to be politically possible. Outstanding in many ways, and it is in sharp contrast to many popular articles and books based on starry-eyed optimism about what technology is likely to deliver.
Andrew Ferguson
Honorary Editor, OPT Journal, Optimisation Population Trust, Manchester UK.
This brief volume seeks to document the consequences of a carbon-based economy, limitations to continued use of fossil fuels, and solutions to reduce the resulting climate change. It thus encapsulates information from the IPCC reports. This work contains a wealth of interesting material . The books structure is coherent and systematic; the index appears accurate. Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates, two-year technical program students, general readers. (S. C. Pryor, Choice, Vol. 48 (8), April, 2011)
Key aspects of global environmental and resource problems and their technical mitigation solutions are considered in this book. It provides a valuable background for anybody who is interested in global climate change and its challenges. In a very instructive way, even amateurs will obtain an overview of what the possible strategies are to solve these current problems. For students, technical professionals, and researchers as well as politicians, this book provides a well-structured overview and a lot of valuable references to continue their study. (Felix Witing and Daniela Thran, Energy, Sustainability and Society, Vol. 2 (17), 2012)
Patrick Moriarty is presently an Adjunct Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Design at Monash University, Australia. For more than three decades he has researched urban transport and urban land-use planning, with emphasis on equity and ecological sustainability issues. More recently, he has become interested in the climate change implications of different fuels/energy sources for both transport and electricity generation. This research is not only future-focussed and interdisciplinary, but also considers problems such as oil depletion and climate change in a global context. For six years in the 1970s, he taught Civil Engineering at Dar es Salaam Institute of Technology in Tanzania, and carried out field research on low-cost housing.
Damon Honnery has been involved in energy related research for more than 25 years. He currently leads the energy research group in the laboratory for Turbulence Research in Aerospace and Combustion in the Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Monash University, Australia. His major research activities focus on the development and performance of alternative liquid fuels for transport. These activities extend into the broader areas of renewable energy systems and their potential to replace traditional energy sources and mitigate the effects of global warming. Although his focus is primarily technical, he also has a keen interest in policy and policy development, particularly as it relates to energy use and carbon emissions.
1. The Problems We Face.- 2. Global Climate Change.- 3. Earth's Resources Are Finite.- 4. Uncertainty in Global Environmental and Resource Problems.- 5. Renewable Energy: Too Little, Too Late?.- 6. Nuclear Energy: The Ultimate Technological Fix?.- 7. Engineering for Greater Energy Efficiency.- 8. Getting Rid of Atmospheric Carbon: Sequestration and Air Capture.- 9. Great and Desperate Measures: Geo-engineering.- 10. The New Economy.- 11. Conclusions.