Sustainable Energy - without the hot air
A popular science book
by David JC MacKay
Professor of Natural Philosophy,
Department of Physics,
University of Cambridge
Review:
A good Talk by David Mackay
[MEDIA]http://video.caret.cam.ac.uk/media/a/CU-CSF/CU-CSF-Lectures_2008-12_David_MacKay/CU-CSF-Lectures_2008-12_David_MacKay-pDL_MP3_64_audio_v06.mp3[/MEDIA]
Slides to go along with the talk
A popular science book
by David JC MacKay
Professor of Natural Philosophy,
Department of Physics,
University of Cambridge
Review:
I should warn you that this is a scary read and it pulls no punches. It uses the UK as an example and justifies it by showing that in the UK our energy consumption is about the European (and developed world) average of about 125 kWh per person per day. The rather strange unit is a “human unit”: 1 kWh is the electricity billing unit used by most utilities in the UK (priced at about 10p), and the number of these we use in a day (note this is all energy, not just electricity) is an easily graspable unit. Multiply by 365 and 60 million and you get our annual energy consumption. If you are interested, the consumption in the USA is double this at 250 kWh /p/d and in China it is about 40 kWh /p/d.
The scary part is his estimates of the amount of resources we have to dedicate to power generation to get anywhere near these totals if we intend to do without fossil fuels. Europe would need to use an area the size of Germany covered in solar collectors and situated in the Sahara to make a significant impact with solar generation. For wind power to make a significant contribution to the UK’s power generation, we need to cover pretty much all the uplands with turbines. This is not a book for Nimby’s to read as the implication is that the a future without fossil fuels requires activity in everybody’s backyard and in their neighbours.
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The scary part is his estimates of the amount of resources we have to dedicate to power generation to get anywhere near these totals if we intend to do without fossil fuels. Europe would need to use an area the size of Germany covered in solar collectors and situated in the Sahara to make a significant impact with solar generation. For wind power to make a significant contribution to the UK’s power generation, we need to cover pretty much all the uplands with turbines. This is not a book for Nimby’s to read as the implication is that the a future without fossil fuels requires activity in everybody’s backyard and in their neighbours.
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[MEDIA]http://video.caret.cam.ac.uk/media/a/CU-CSF/CU-CSF-Lectures_2008-12_David_MacKay/CU-CSF-Lectures_2008-12_David_MacKay-pDL_MP3_64_audio_v06.mp3[/MEDIA]
Slides to go along with the talk
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