Richard Martin is one of America's foremost writers and analysts on energy, technology, and foreign affairs. He is the editorial director at Navigant Research, the premier clean energy research and analysis firm. A contributing editor for Wired, feature writer for Fortune, and energy blogger for Forbes.com, he is the author of SuperFuel, which chronicled the thorium power movement. He lives in Boulder, Colorado.
Richard Martin is an award-winning science writer whose work has appeared in Wired, Time, Fortune, The Atlantic, and The Best Science Writing of 2004. He is the author of SuperFuel: Thorium, the Green Energy Source for the Future. He is the editorial director of Pike Research, a leading clean energy firm. He lives in Boulder, Colorado.
Coal Wars: The Future of Energy and the Fate of the Planet
eBook
-
ISBN-13:
9781466879249
- Publisher: St. Martin's Press
- Publication date: 04/14/2015
- Sold by: Macmillan
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 288
- File size: 720 KB
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Since the late 18th century, when it emerged as a source of heating and, later, steam power, coal has brought untold benefits to mankind. Even today, coal generates almost 45 percent of the world's power. Our modern technological society would be inconceivable without coal and the energy it provides. Unfortunately, that society will not survive unless we wean ourselves off coal. The largest single source of greenhouse gases, coal is responsible for 43 percent of the world's carbon emissions. Richard Martin, author of SuperFuel, argues that to limit catastrophic climate change, we must find a way to power our world with less polluting energy sources, and we must do it in the next couple of decades--or else it is "game over." It won't be easy: as coal plants shut down across the United States, and much of Europe turns to natural gas, coal use is growing in the booming economies of Asia-- particularly China and India. Even in Germany, where nuclear power stations are being phased out in the wake of the Fukushima accident, coal use is growing. Led by the Sierra Club and its ambitious "Beyond Coal" campaign, environmentalists hope to drastically reduce our dependence on coal in the next decade. But doing so will require an unprecedented contraction of an established, lucrative, and politically influential worldwide industry. Big Coal will not go gently. And its decline will dramatically change lives everywhere--from Appalachian coal miners and coal company executives to activists in China's nascent environmental movement.
Based on a series of journeys into the heart of coal land, from Wyoming to West Virginia to China's remote Shanxi Province, hundreds of interviews with people involved in, or affected by, the effort to shrink the industry, and deep research into the science, technology, and economics of the coal industry, Coal Wars chronicles the dramatic stories behind coal's big shutdown--and the industry's desperate attempts to remain a global behemoth. A tour de force of literary journalism, Coal Wars will be a milestone in the climate change battle.
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Praise for SuperFuel:
The race to shut down the coal industry is synonymous with the race to save the climate--and from Appalachia to inner Mongolia, brave activists are leading the fight. This comprehensive account makes it clear why their work is so crucial and so hard, pitting them against not just ingrained tradition but against some of the richest resource barons on earth.
"A clear-eyed and beautifully written narrative of the people, cities and companies whose lives and existence are wrapped up in the 4,000-year-old history of this iconic source of power. Coal Wars is a gripping account of the stakes at play as the world necessarily winds down its consumption of the fossil fuel. Given that the subject might be grim, it is a surprisingly enjoyable read and a unique contribution to the literature."
"Fresh and provocative, Coal Wars brings the hammer down on the world's dirtiest fuel. Richard Martin's deeply reported journey into the dark heart of coal land exposes Big Coal's big lies and offers a new approach to kicking our coal addiction. Entertaining, forceful, and full of insight, Coal Wars is must reading for a warming planet."
"Richard Martin's timely and powerfully written book reveals with clarity the multiple dangers emitted by coal combustion as an energy source. His journey takes him to sites around the U.S. where a number of aging and obsolete installations are being shut down as natural gas plants flourish, and to China and Germany, where coal plants are on the rise despite a growing, science-based recognition that their toxic wastes harm life and their carbon-dioxide emissions imperil ecosystems, significantly acidifying the oceans and contributing mightily to the rapid increase in climate change."
A gripping narrative. The implications of this subject could not be more vital…SuperFuel clearly and fairly spells out the reasons for both optimism and for caution.
Makes the case that thorium, an abundant, safe element that cannot easily be turned into a weapon, should be fuelling our reactors instead of uranium ... Martin is at his best when describing the human struggles of the cold-war era that spelled their ... convincing.
Coal will never stop blighting our planet, writes energy analyst Martin (SuperFuel: Thorium, the Green Energy Source for the Future, 2012), and its good riddance can't come too soon.The author's story is sympathetic to the human consequences of coal-production shutdowns yet unblinking about coal's ruinous effects. There are indications that coal is on the way out but only because of economic calculations, namely costly government regulations and low-cost natural gas. For every step forward in coal's containment, however, two steps are taken back; as a power source, it is abundant, widely distributed and economical, even if toxic for the planet. China and India are developing their coal-energy production at brisk paces (China "burns about as much coal every year as the rest of the world combined"). So, too, are Germany and Japan in the wake of recent nuclear incidents, while the United States has nearly 600 coal plants pumping out carbon dioxide, as well as the toxic sludge of arsenic, mercury, barium, chromium and other equally scary elements. Martin chronicles his visits to a handful of places where coal is an important part of not just daily life, but the region's history and economic circumstances: the Tennessee Valley Authority landscape, now turned on its head with the withdrawal of federal funding; "dark and bloody" Harlan County, Kentucky, which can add a plague of prescription drug addiction to its black lung population; the coal boomtown catastrophe of Gillette, Wyoming; Ohio's rollback of renewable-energy mandates. Then it's on to China, where, despite its nods to reducing emissions, its coal burning will double by 2035, and Germany, which is fleeing the nuclear pipe dream and looking for economic surcease. The author is a levelheaded researcher and a caring individual as well as a graceful, commanding writer. Where he stands, however, is with the climatologist who told him that coal burning must be drastically reduced in the next 20 years or, environmentally speaking, "it's game over." Martin is unequivocal and persuasive: The best use of coal is in holiday stockings.