2008-09-07
Amory Lovins: the Frugal Cornucopian. The Economist, September 7, 2008. "Amory Lovins, who heads the Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI), a natural-resources consultancy, has been a lonely voice in the wilderness. As far back as the early 1970s, he sounded his first alarm about the potential damage that climate change might bring, but he was ignored. In a paper in Foreign Affairs in 1976, at the height of the energy crises and neuroses of that decade, he argued that what the world needed most was not new energy supplies but more efficiency. He was ruthlessly attacked by the energy industry and the political establishment, and his proposal for an alternative 'soft path' out of the energy crisis was dismissed. Energy and economic growth always grew in lockstep, went the conventional argument, and to think otherwise was dangerously naïve. But history has proved him right.... Mr Lovins should be pleased, but his satisfaction at having been proved right is tempered by lingering unease that there are echoes of the 1980s in today's debate. The main problem with the approach to energy in the 1970s, he argues, was that the issue was defined as a supply shortage. "The question they asked was how to get more energy, at any price, instead of asking: 'How should we use energy, why are we using it so wastefully, and what do people really use energy for?' he says."

No comments:

Post a Comment

Post a Comment