I agree with all that you say.  Let's start with banning SUVs and bringing
fuel economy up to 50mpg.

Amory Lovins has lots of interesting and compelling ideas, but they are
always "out there." He never takes on established interests.  In fact, the
established interests pay him handsomely to keep crooning his refrains about
how things are going to change "out there."

Make changes today?  Uhhh, got to run off to a meeting to discuss
solar/electric conversion technologies.  Who is paying my way?  Ummmmm.  GM?
Ford?  

Tough choices are tough choices.  They are about now.  

We are wasting energy now, today, tomorrow and the day after.  We know what
we have to do.  It is difficult.  Much easier to publish one more paper,
give one speech on what will happen "out there"  

arthur

-----Original Message-----
From: Keith Hudson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Saturday, December 14, 2002 2:32 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: The Dispersed/Solar Economy


I'm convinced that one of the largest problems of our economy is not
capitalism per se -- or even corruption (which gets sorted out in due
course) -- but the concentrated nature of the pockets of energy resources
which have fuelled our economies since the dawn of the Industrial
Revolution. I believe it is these natural circumstances and the necessary
forms of distribution which have strongly influenced the structural pattern
for the rest of the global economy.

This is why I'm interested in various aspects of the coming solar energy
economy, particularly in those technologies which will be able to tap
directly into the sun's energy almost anywhere on the earth's (or sea's)
surface rather than in specific locations that are only suitable for wave
or wind power. In time, I believe this will create an entirely different
pattern of economic distribution -- and possibly with significantly
different side-effects.

I mentioned Hermann Scheer's "The Solar Economy" yesterday -- reviewed in
this week's New Scientist. Today, in the Economist,  I notice that a
similar, but probably more authoritative, book written by alternative
energy specialist, Amory Lovins, is recommended as one of the best books of
2002. This is "Small is profitable: The Hidden Economic benefits of making
Electrical Resources the Right Size". Amory Lovins is a veteran campaigner
and used to write for my  environmental magazine, "Towards Survival", in
the 60s, before he upstaked and went to the US.

Anyway, this is what the Economist says about Lovins' latest: "In a
provocative and well considered work, Amory Lovins and his colleagues at
the Rocky Mountain Institute, a Colorado natural resources think-tank,
expose the folly of building gigantic power plants and make a convincing
case that the world is about to be turned on its ear by the rise of
micropower."

Keith Hudson
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Keith Hudson, General Editor, Handlo Music, http://www.handlo.com
6 Upper Camden Place, Bath BA1 5HX, England
Tel: +44 1225 312622;  Fax: +44 1225 447727; mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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