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Out of Gas
Book

Out of Gas

The End of the Age Of Oil

W.W. Norton, 2005 Mehr


Editorial Rating

9

Qualities

  • Innovative
  • Applicable

Recommendation

Author David Goodstein says the world’s citizens must face the facts: the end of the age of oil is at hand. Those who argue that the world’s oil supply is sufficient for another 30 or 40 years are missing the point, he says, because the economic effects of the oil shortage will begin long before the last drop is pumped from the ground. Goodstein crafted his book for the educated nonscientist, and he does a masterful job of explaining the complex science behind energy supply and production. Goodstein’s prose is neat, clean and straightforward. His explication has a narrative quality that makes it easily readable, and he adroitly avoids oversimplification. Ultimately, the book is limited by science itself: Goodstein admits that science does not yet know the tipping point for the greenhouse effect, and has not yet determined the optimum mix of alternative power technologies. However, he makes it clear that alternative energy development is a matter of pay for it now or pay for it later. getAbstract.com strongly recommends this book, especially for realists who sense a lot of long gas lines waiting just around the corner.

Take-Aways

  • Oil production and consumption will soon begin an inevitable decline.
  • Once declining production causes consumption to begin to drop, economic disruption will follow.
  • A major oil discovery would delay the shortage by only one or two years at most.

About the Author

David Goodstein has written five previous books. He is vice provost and a professor in the California Institute of Technology’s physics department.


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