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020 _a9781849731454
020 _a1849731454 (Trade Cloth)
_cUSD 223.98 Retail Price (Ingram Publisher Services)
024 3 _a9781849731454
035 _a(WaSeSS)ssj0000578447
037 _b00154291
040 _aBIP US
_dWaSeSS
_dBD-DhUL
_cBD-DhUL
050 4 _aHD9502.5.C542
082 0 0 _a333.79
_222
_bSOL
100 1 _aSørensen, Bent
210 1 0 _aLife-Cycle Analysis of Energy Systems
245 1 0 _aLife-cycle analysis of energy systems :
_bfrom methodology to applications
260 _aCambridge :
_bRoyal Society of Chemistry, The
_cJune 2011
_aLaVergne :
_bIngram Publisher Services [Distributor]
365 _aUSD
_b207
506 _aLicense restrictions may limit access.
520 8 _aAnnotation
_bLife-cycle assessment of new energy solutions plays an important role in discussions about global warming mitigation options and the evaluation of concrete energy production and conversion installations. This book starts by describing the methodology of life-cycle analysis and life-cycle assessment of new energy solutions. It then goes on to cover, in detail, a range of applications to individual energy installations, national supply systems, and to the global energy system in a climate impact context. Coverage is not limited to issues related to commercial uses by consultants according to ISO norms. It also emphasizes life-cycle studies as an open-ended scientific discipline embracing economic issues of cost, employment, equity, foreign trade balances, ecological sustainability, and a range of geo-political and social issues. A wealth of applications are described and a discussion on the results obtained in each study is included. Example areas are fossil and nuclear power plants, renewable energy systems, and systems based on hydrogen or batteries as energy carriers. The analysis is continued to the end-users of energy, where energy use in transportation, industry and home are scrutinized for their life-cycle impacts. Biofuel production and the combustion of firewood in home fireplaces and stoves are amongst the issues discussed. A central theme of the book is global warming. The impacts of greenhouse gas emissions are meticulously mapped at a depth far beyond that of the IPCC reports. A novel and surprising finding is that more lives will be saved than lost as a direct consequence of a warmer climate. After a 2 C increase in temperature, the reduction in death rates in areas with cold winters would outweigh the increase in the death rates in hot climates. However, this is only one of several impacts from greenhouse gases, and the remaining ones are still overwhelmingly negative. The fact that some population groups may benefit from higher temperatures (notably the ones most responsible for greenhouse gas emissions) whilst others (who did not contribute much to the problem) suffer is one of the main points of the book. The book is suitable as a university textbook and as a reference source for engineers, managers and public bodies responsible for planning and licensing.
521 _aCollege Audience
_bThe Royal Society of Chemistry
942 _2ddc
_cBK
999 _c2877
_d2877