
Energy and Civilization A History
Reviews

This book is very, very thorough. It goes through the whole history of how humans use energy, which is basically the whole history of human technological development. It is also very dense, no words are wasted on anecdotes or prose, but rather every sentence contains interesting information. It is quite sobering, we need a lot of energy to maintain something close to our current standard of living and to improve the lives of the people currently living in squalor, but there's no easy way to achieve this. The only viable way seems to be a massive (and politically difficult) scale up of nuclear energy, with wind and solar where it makes sense. And we will still need techniques for synthesizing hydrocarbon fuels for things like aviation and shipping. It is also sobering because the author doesn't care about politics, just the poor allocation and use of energy we have in the world. Why are we placing solar panels in northern europe instead of Africa? Why are we shipping wood chips across the Atlantic to burn them in European power plants? These things are local maxima but bad for the world as a whole. Life is a brutal fight against entropy.

5 stars for giving me new ways of understanding the world; 3 stars for readability and style (regardless, highly recommended)



Highlights

tens of millions of people annually take intercontinental flights to generic beaches in order to acquire skin cancer faster;

The current U.S. performance is about 99.98%, with outages caused not only by weather (tornadoes, hurricanes, snowstorms, extreme cold) but also by vandalism or interruptions of the fuel supply (Wirfs-Brock 2014; North American Electric Reliability Corporation 2015).

the men did not go hunting once, they had just collected their favorite hallucinogen (Anadenanthera peregrina) and spent entire days taking drugs;