ABSTRACT

Energy is at the top of the list of environmental problems facing industrial society, and is arguably the one that has been handled least successfully, in part because politicians and the public do not understand the physical technologies, while the engineers and industrialists do not understand the societal forces in which they operate. In this book, Allan Mazur, an engineer and a sociologist, explains energy technologies for nontechnical readers and analyses the sociology of energy.

The book gives an overview of energy policy in industrialised countries including analysis of climate change, the development of electricity, forms of renewable energy and public perception of the issues. Energy is a key component to environment policy and to the workings of industrial society. This novel approach to energy technology and policy makes the book an invaluable inter-disciplinary resource for students across a range of subjects, from environmental and engineering policy, to energy technology, public administration, and environmental sociology and economics.

part I|55 pages

The big picture

part II|58 pages

Energy Sources and Consumption: Using More, and More, and More …

part III|28 pages

Electric Power

chapter 8|12 pages

Power Grids

chapter 9|14 pages

America's Three Grids

part IV|41 pages

Energy controversies

chapter 10|10 pages

Rationality, Pro and Con

chapter 11|11 pages

The Dynamics of Technical Controversy

chapter 12|19 pages

People Respond to News Coverage

part V|25 pages

Progress and regress

chapter 13|19 pages

Attempted Solutions

chapter 14|5 pages

What Next?