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CleanTechnica23 days ago

How an Influential Energy Book Became a Drag on Decarbonization

Key Takeaway

Relying on outdated energy analyses can hinder effective decarbonization strategies by misdirecting focus and resources away from current, more viable solutions.

AI Summary

  • Outdated energy analyses, specifically David MacKay's 2008 book 'Sustainable Energy Without the Hot Air,' are still being used to advocate for nuclear power, potentially misguiding current decarbonization efforts.
  • Reliance on historical data risks slowing down the adoption of more current, efficient, and cost-effective decarbonization strategies.
  • Developers and large power consumers should critically evaluate arguments based on older references that may not reflect modern technological advancements, costs, or market realities for energy projects.

Topics

emissionspolicysolarstoragewind

Article Content

I was scrolling through energy posts on LinkedIn recently and came across yet another argument for nuclear power that leaned heavily on David MacKay’s 2008 book Sustainable Energy Without the Hot Air. It was presented as a decisive reference, as if the book still represented the state of the art ... [continued] The post How an Influential Energy Book Became a Drag on Decarbonization appeared first on CleanTechnica .