Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 296
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-5381-1636-4 • Hardback • January 2020 • $90.00 • (£69.00)
978-1-5381-1637-1 • Paperback • January 2020 • $41.00 • (£32.00)
978-1-5381-1638-8 • eBook • January 2020 • $37.00 • (£28.00)
Christopher A. Simon is professor of political science, Interim Director of the Masters in Public Policy Program, and a former Director of the Masters in Public Administration Program at The University of Utah.
Preface
About the Author
Chapter 1: Why Alternative Energy and Fuels?
Chapter 2: Studying Public Policy and Alternative Energy/Fuels
Chapter 3: Alternative Energy/Fuels as a Public Policy Innovation
Chapter 4: Solar Energy
Chapter 5: Wind Energy
Chapter 6: Geothermal Energy
Chapter 7: New Century Fuels and Their Uses
Chapter 8: Historical Precedents: Alternative Energy/Fuels and Legitimacy Issues
Chapter 9: Conceptualizing Alternative Energy Policy and Future Directions
Index
This second edition is now the definitive overview of the realities of adopting alternative energy technologies. Focusing mostly on the US situation but acknowledging that energy availability and technology choices cannot be understood apart from the international context, Simon makes an unassailable case that the world’s energy needs cannot be met without alternative energy. He points out that adoption decisions are not made in a technocratic vacuum but are instead made according to various political, economic, and social feasibilities. Explaining how the current mix of energy technologies was reached and the possibilities going forward, Simon provides a sophisticated understanding of the policy process. His analysis is comprehensive, accurate, and fair to all technologies—from the more established such as nuclear, solar, and wind to the less common, e.g., biodiesel, geothermal, and hydrogen fuel cells. Neither an advocacy book nor a book for those who want simple answers to solving the US’s (and the world’s) energy problems, this well-written resource is an impressive accomplishment. Summing Up: Essential. All readers.
— Choice Reviews
Christopher Simon’s second edition of Alternative Energy: Political, Economic, and Social Feasibility provides an excellent and comprehensive updated overview of the policy dynamics surrounding the adoption of alternative energy technologies. With the increasingly severe effects of global climate change and the need to move away from fossil fuels, Simon’s book articulately lays out the obstacles and possibilities of alternative energy adoption.— Brent S. Steel, professor and graduate director in public policy, Oregon State University
The world is undeniably undergoing a transition, if not a transformation, to a low-carbon economy. How society harnesses alternative forms of energy such as solar, wind, and geothermal is a central component of both understanding and possibly steering that transformation. This second edition of Alternative Energy is pivotal in equipping readers with the understanding they need of history, legitimacy, policy and even politics for engaging with this highly important topic.— Benjamin K. Sovacool, professor of energy policy at the University of Sussex, and author of Global Energy Justice
A bit over a decade ago I wrote about the 1st edition the following: “The economics, basic science, and cultural and political dynamics associated with public policy reformulation in the area of alternative energy sources are indeed complex…Simon should be commended for his artful framing of this issue, and for his fair and even-handed assessment of the public policy options…” The decade since the publication of the first edition has NOT witnessed the advent of a consensus on any one (or even a few) of these options as a basis for a minimal fossil fuel use future. Quite to the contrary, while the global consensus on anthropomorphic sources of global warming has been bolstered by convincing evidence of a pending disaster, little agreement is to found on U.S. alternative energy policy. New “next generation” developments in the areas of solar thermal energy, enhanced geothermal, ocean thermal energy conversion, pumped hydro, and simultaneous major advancements in the conceptualization of energy storage systems and battery designs have added further to the need for fair and even-handed discussion of the economics, basic science, engineering and socio-political dynamics associated with alternative energy sources. This 2nd edition of the Simon book is even better than the first; while equally balanced in its treatment of public policy options, it is even better in its discussion of the basic science, engineering, and socio-political dynamics at play in formulating an appropriate energy policy for the U.S. Simon’s maturity of thought, clear dedication to mastery over the feasibility of the policy options at play, and genuine desire to provide a sound and reliable foundation for public policy debate are clearly in evidence in this 2nd edition. I can recommend this book in the full confidence that students and policy makers alike will find it informative and insightful, and that it will contribute importantly to the U.S. energy policy literature. — Nicholas P. Lovrich, Jr., regents professor emeritus and Clauius O. and Mary W. Johnson Distinguished Professor of Political Science, School of Politics, Philosophy, and Public Affairs at Washington State University
• Winner, CHOICE Outstanding Academic Title 2020 (2020)