Académie des technologies

Y. Bamberger, H. Puttgen. Electricity: Humanity’s Low-carbon Future – Safeguarding Our Ecological Niche

Climate change is no longer deniable. Neither is the fact that greenhouse gas emissions due to human activities need to be mitigated. The question is how to rapidly transit to an increasingly low-carbon world while essentially sustaining the quality of life of the fortunate and providing better lives for the less fortunate.

The challenge is to decarbonize both energy consumption and production with electricity at the core of energy systems.

Perhaps Energia, a fictitious country whose 50 million inhabitants endorse climate change objectives and that embodies the energy mutations proposed by the authors, has the answers. Along with Energia, four families living in Africa, America, Asia and Europe who represent us, the consumer, set the stage for the book’s discussions.

On the user front, the presentation primarily focuses on energy consumption at home and for transport. On the energy production front, the focus shifts to the integration of renewables with fossil and nuclear energy. The book’s coverage includes crucial systemic issues related to energy storage, electric power systems and multi-energy systems. In a dedicated chapter, the authors put forward their energy and environmental public policy observations and proposals, including a carbon fee scheme.

Electricity is written for readers interested and concerned by the environmental and energy challenges we face, and who seek to participate, as well-informed citizens, in discussions on future energy-related options. The book provides a balanced, factual and unemotional presentation of readily available energy systems and technologies which, when widely deployed, can contribute, both short and long term, toward a low-carbon and electricity-centered world.

 

Electricity: Humanity’s Low-carbon Future
Safeguarding Our Ecological Niche
https://doi.org/10.1142/11939 | September 2021
Pages: 484

By (author): Hans B (Teddy) Püttgen (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA & EPFL, Switzerland) and Yves Bamberger (EDF, France & National Academy of Technologies of France, France)

https://www.worldscientific.com/worldscibooks/10.1142/11939#t=aboutBook