Key Concepts in Energy electronic resource by Nuno Luis Madureira.
Material type: TextPublication details: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2014Description: VII, 222 p. 19 illus. online resourceContent type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783319049786Subject(s): Engineering economy | Economics | Energy | Energy Policy, Economics and Management | R & D/Technology Policy | Energy EconomicsDDC classification: 333.79 | 338.926 LOC classification: HD9502-9502.5Online resources: Click here to access online1 -- Primary/Secondary/Final Energy 2 -- The Rebound Effect 3 -- Technological Hybridization 4 -- The Last Gasp 5 -- Probable Oil Reserves 6 -- Energy Intesnity 7 -- Marginal Cost 8 -- Levelized Cost Accounting 9 -- Final Remarks.
Organized around eight fundamental ideas, Key concepts in energy history explores the discoveries, technologies and new paradigms in the field of energy, and how they have changed the course of history. Complex technical concepts such as the “rebound effect”, “technological hybridization”, “marginal cost pricing” are explained in clear terms and a balanced and concise account of t energy sources in the XIX and XX century such as wood, coal, oil, hydroelectricity and nuclear energy is provided. Key concepts in energy considers the process of energy-substitutions and analyzes it as a process of complementary usages, hybridization and technological mixes. The ex-post view tends to focus on replacement from among alternative energy-technologies and is basically innovation-centric. This means that little attention has been given to factors such as the windows of opportunities created by governments, inventors and entrepreneurs. This book highlights how key energy concepts surfaced, tracing their evolution throughout history. It encompasses four economic concepts (rebound effect, energy intensity, marginal cost pricing and levelized cost accounting) and four technological-engineering concepts (primary/final energy, technological hybridization, last gasp and probable oil reserves). The main benefit from reading the book is a cross disciplinary overview of energy fundamentals in a short and focused reading.
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