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The Future Is Now

Solving the Climate Crisis with Today's Technologies

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
*NATIONAL BESTSELLER*
Is a global pandemic what it took to show us that saving our planet is possible?

In the absence of motorized boats and gondolas, Venice’s waters have returned to a sparkling blue color. Deer have been spotted roaming cities in Italy, and mountain goats recently took over a small seaside town in Wales. Taking advantage of the decreased boat traffic, whales have returned to roaming Vancouver’s harbours. The absence of “regular” human activities has dramatically affected our environment. In this book, Bob McDonald turns his focus to global energy sources, and shows how the global shutdowns may have been exactly what we needed to show us that a greener future is achievable.
This is not another “wake-up call,” and not another plea to heed the climate science. This is an exploration of the incredible technologies that our species can use to get out of the mess we’ve made for ourselves. It is a work of immense optimism, to counteract the sense of doom that hangs over most discussions of the environment.
Many alternative energy sources such as wind, solar, and geothermal have been available for decades—but they alone will not be enough. Additional power will come from small nuclear reactors the size of an office desk, and space-based solar power satellites with enormous mirrors that can capture sunlight, convert it to microwaves, and beam it to the ground to light up entire cities. Energy will be captured from waves, tides, and hydrogen. Vehicles will no longer have tailpipes that emit smog particles. Food will be sourced locally.
Green technology is one of the fastest growing sectors of the economy, and will only continue to skyrocket as current products improve their performance and new products emerge. A new green age is upon us—let this book be your guide to the future.
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    • Library Journal

      March 1, 2022

      With whales cavorting in Vancouver's harbors and mountain goats visiting a Welsh town, pandemic lockdown revealed green possibilities we thought were lost. But how can they be sustained? Award-winning CBC science reporter McDonald (the host of Quirks & Quarks) goes beyond the long-available wind, solar, and geothermal technologies to show us alternative power sources like desk-sized nuclear reactors, generators run by tides, and space-based satellites that convert sunlight into microwaves that are then sped earthward. Green technology is one of the fastest growing sectors of the economy, so here's a chance to catch up.

      Copyright 2022 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 29, 2022
      Impassioned optimism pervades this layperson’s guide to understanding green energy and the role it can play in lowering carbon emissions. McDonald (An Earthling’s Guide to Outerspace), host of the CBC radio show Quirks & Quarks, explores a wealth of alternatives to fossil fuels, including solar (“The entire world could meet all its electricity needs on solar power alone using an area... roughly the size of Spain”), wind (“a tremendous global resource”), and ocean wave power (via “a 350-kilowatt device that is basically a giant paddle sitting upright on the sea floor”). As well, he covers mini nuclear reactors and fusion-powered electric generators, and along the way highlights amusing anecdotes, such as Archimedes’s legendary (but not proven) use of the sun’s rays to set fire to Roman ships in the third century BCE. The author provides great accessible explanations of how eco-friendly technologies work, but he comes up somewhat short on showing how they could be implemented on a mass scale—he notes, for instance, that tidal power faces the “issue of public acceptance,” but doesn’t discuss how to garner it.
      Still, this is a fine lay of the land for readers getting caught up on green technology. Agent: John Pearce, Westwood Creative Artists.

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  • English

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