Mark Jacobson + 100% Energy from RE
Posted: Tue Jan 24, 2023 11:51 am
Been following this guy for 5 years or so, I'm sure I've mentioned him and the studies he and his team at Stanford University publish, many times on here.
The reason I like their reports so much is the simple basis, that we have the technologies today to go 100% RE, we just need to get on with it. They also focus on the delays and delaying tactics of muddying the waters by claiming we need to throw everything at the problem. That tactic results in less action whilst we 'try to work out the best course of action', rather than just acting.
The article is a good read, as are the studies his team produce.
‘No miracles needed’: Prof Mark Jacobson on how wind, sun and water can power the world
The reason I like their reports so much is the simple basis, that we have the technologies today to go 100% RE, we just need to get on with it. They also focus on the delays and delaying tactics of muddying the waters by claiming we need to throw everything at the problem. That tactic results in less action whilst we 'try to work out the best course of action', rather than just acting.
The article is a good read, as are the studies his team produce.
‘No miracles needed’: Prof Mark Jacobson on how wind, sun and water can power the world
“Combustion is the problem – when you’re continuing to burn something, that’s not solving the problem,” says Prof Mark Jacobson.
The Stanford University academic has a compelling pitch: the world can rapidly get 100% of its energy from renewable sources with, as the title of his new book says, “no miracles needed”.
Wind, water and solar can provide plentiful and cheap power, he argues, ending the carbon emissions driving the climate crisis, slashing deadly air pollution and ensuring energy security. Carbon capture and storage, biofuels, new nuclear and other technologies are expensive wastes of time, he argues.
“Bill Gates said we have to put a lot of money into miracle technologies,” Jacobson says. “But we don’t – we have the technologies that we need. We have wind, solar, geothermal, hydro, electric cars. We have batteries, heat pumps, energy efficiency. We have 95% of the technologies right now that we need to solve the problem.” The missing 5% is for long-distance aircraft and ships, he says, for which hydrogen-powered fuel cells can be developed.