<p>From the reviews:</p><p>“Sangster (emer., Electromagnetic Engineering, Heriot-Watt Univ., Scotland) uses nontechnical language and easy-to-follow logic to assess the limitations of different renewable energy resources and to address one of the main unsolved issues of the renewable energy industry: the intermittency of renewables and the storage problem. … concludes with suggestions to policy makers and researchers in the renewable energy field. … The book can serve as a complementary resource for upper-level undergraduate and graduate-level energy courses. … Summing Up: Recommended. … general readers.” (M. Alam, Choice, Vol. 47 (11), August, 2010)</p>

"Energy for a Warming World" challenges the commonplace notion that the amount of power which mankind can potentially harness from renewable resources is more than large enough to assuage future demand levels.By examining the renewable issue from an electrical engineering perspective, and exercising due regard for the limited capability of current and future electrical generation and transmission systems, this book attempts to provide more realistic statistics for the levels of power which could be extracted from sustainable resources in the critical time frame of 30 to 40 years. The engineering logic leads inexorably to the importance of taking a global outlook on the switch to renewable power supply and transmission – an outlook which has some surprising and uncomfortable ramifications for mankind."Energy for a Warming World" provides a new perspective on renewable resources for academics and researchers in environmental or electrical power engineering, as well as to students in related areas.
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Written from an electrical engineering perspective, this book seeks to present realistic statistics for the levels of power that can be extracted from sustainable resources during the next thirty to forty years.
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The Context and Corollaries.- Energy Conversion and Power Transmission.- Limits to Renewability.- Intermittency Buffers.- Known Knowns and the Unknown.
Climate change, environmental impact and declining natural resources are driving scientific research and novel technical solutions. Green Energy and Technology serves as a publishing platform for scientific and technological approaches to "green" - i.e., environmentally friendly and sustainable - technologies. While the main focus lies on energy and power supply, the series also covers green solutions in industrial engineering and engineering design. Green Energy and Technology is a monograph series addressing researchers, advanced students and technical consultants, as well as decision makers in industry and politics. The level presentation ranges from instructional to highly technical. Energy for a Warming World challenges the commonplace notion that the amount of power which mankind can potentially harness from renewable resources is more than large enough to assuage future demand levels. The presumption of unlimited power from renewables does not take into account the fact that it may not be possible to fully develop this potential, or that the resulting energy may not be available where it is most required. Engineering limitations and deficiencies in production will inevitably undermine the best calculations. By examining the renewables issue from an electrical engineering perspective, and exercising due regard for the limited capability of current and future electrical generation and transmission systems, this book attempts to provide more realistic statistics for the levels of power which could be extracted from sustainable resources in the critical time frame of 30 to 40 years. The engineering logic leads inexorably to the importance of taking a global outlook on the switch to renewable power supply and transmission – an outlook which has some surprising and uncomfortable ramifications for mankind. Energy for a Warming World provides a new perspective on renewable resources for academicsand researchers in environmental or electrical power engineering, as well as to students in related areas. Its accessible approach also makes it invaluable to general readers who want a greater understanding of the engineering-based facts behind the global warming debate.
Les mer
From the reviews:“Sangster (emer., Electromagnetic Engineering, Heriot-Watt Univ., Scotland) uses nontechnical language and easy-to-follow logic to assess the limitations of different renewable energy resources and to address one of the main unsolved issues of the renewable energy industry: the intermittency of renewables and the storage problem. … concludes with suggestions to policy makers and researchers in the renewable energy field. … The book can serve as a complementary resource for upper-level undergraduate and graduate-level energy courses. … Summing Up: Recommended. … general readers.” (M. Alam, Choice, Vol. 47 (11), August, 2010)
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Provides an engineering-based approach to renewable energy Quantifies the levels of electrical power deliverable from various sources Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781848828339
Publisert
2010-02-04
Utgiver
Vendor
Springer London Ltd
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Aldersnivå
Research, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Biographical note

Alan J. Sangster is an electrical engineer and professor at Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh, UK.