Factor Four: Doubling Wealth - Halving Resource Use : the New Report to the Club of RomeSince the industrial revolution, progress has meant an increase in labour productivity. Factor Four describes a new form of progress, resource productivity, a form which meets the overriding imperative for the future (sustainability). It shows how at least four times as much wealth can be extracted from the resources we use. As the authors put it, the book is about doing more with less, but this is not the same as doing less, doing worse or doing without. In 1972, the Club of Rome published Limits to Growth, which sent shock waves around the world by arguing that we were rapidly running out of essential resources. This Report to the Club of Rome offers a solution. It lies in using resources more efficiently, in ways which can already be achieved, not at a cost, but at a profit. The book contains a wealth of examples of revolutionizing productivity, in the use of energy; from hypercars to low-energy beef; materials, from sub-surface drip irrigation to electronic books, transport, video conferencing to CyberTran, and demonstrating how much more could be generated from much less today. It explains how markets can be organized and taxes re-based to eliminate perverse incentives and reward efficiency, so wealth can grow while consumption does not. The benefits are enormous: profits will increase, pollution and waste will decrease and the quality of life will improve. Moreover, the benefits will be shared: progress will no longer depend on making ever fewer people more productive. Instead, more people and fewer resources can be employed. While for many developing countries the efficiency revolution may offer the only realistic chance of prosperity within a reasonable time span. The practical promise held out in this book is huge, but the authors show how it is up to each of us, as well as to businesses and governments, to make it happen. |
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Contents
FIFTY EXAMPLES OF QUADRUPLING RESOURCE PRODUCTIVITY | 3 |
The Rocky Mountain Institute Headquarters | 10 |
Superwindows and LargeOffice Retrofits | 19 |
Renovating Masonry RowHouses | 25 |
SuperRefrigerators | 33 |
Office Equipment | 41 |
Renewables in a Cold Climate | 48 |
The Frontiers of AirConditioning | 58 |
Utility Regulatory Reform | 158 |
Making Negawatt Markets And Beyond | 164 |
REWARD WHAT WE WANT NOT THE OPPOSITE | 177 |
Responsibility Requires Responsiveness to Feedback | 183 |
Making Prices Tell the Truth | 189 |
ECOLOGICAL TAX REFORM | 198 |
Much Scope for International Harmonisation | 206 |
THE CHALLENGE FROM | 213 |
Quadrupling Energy Productivity in Five Small Steps | 64 |
Durable Office Furniture | 70 |
Electronic Books and Catalogues | 76 |
Water Efficiency in Manufacturing | 82 |
Cotton Production with Less Water | 88 |
Rehabilitating versus Demolishing Buildings | 94 |
A Strategy for Improving Material | 101 |
WideSpan HeavyDuty Wood Construction | 108 |
Electronic Mail | 116 |
The Soft Options for Rapid Trains | 123 |
CarFree Mobility | 130 |
Getting the Village Feeling in the City | 132 |
IF MARKETS CREATE THE PROBLEM | 143 |
Market Theory versus Practice | 150 |
The Greenhouse Effect and the Climate Convention | 222 |
Species Extinction and the Biodiversity Convention | 230 |
AVALANCHES OF MATTER THE FORGOTTEN AGENDA | 237 |
The Factor Ten Club | 244 |
Steering From the Wrong End | 246 |
Ecological Audits Costly but Possibly Enlightening | 254 |
Population Dynamics | 261 |
A BRIGHTER CIVILISATION | 271 |
TRADE AND THE ENVIRONMENT | 278 |
A Role for Factor Four in Trade and the Environment | 286 |
Insatiable Consumption May Outpace the Efficiency | 292 |
300 | |
308 | |
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achieve actually already American average become better building called capital cent Chapter climate companies compared competition construction consumption cooling cost countries customers demand earth ecological economic effect efficiency electricity energy energy efficiency engineering environment environmental equipment example existing factor Factor Four Figure flow fuel further German growth heat human important improvements increase industrial insulation investments least less light limits major manufacturers material means measures million natural nearly normal North planning plant pollution population practice principles problems production profitable reasons recycling reduced Report resource result savings sell shows simple space standards steel supply sustainable technologies thousand tion trade transport typical unit utilities waste
References to this book
Sustainability Assessment: Criteria and Processes Robert B. Gibson,Selma Hassan No preview available - 2005 |
Adventure Tourism: The New Frontier John Swarbrooke,Colin Beard,Suzanne Leckie,Gill Pomfret No preview available - 2003 |