Electrify

An Optimist's Playbook for Our Clean Energy Future

Paperback, 288 pages

English language

Published July 31, 2022 by MIT Press.

ISBN:
978-0-262-54504-4
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3 stars (3 reviews)

Climate change is a planetary emergency. We have to do something now —but what? Saul Griffith has a plan. In Electrify , Griffith lays out a detailed blueprint—optimistic but feasible—for fighting climate change while creating millions of new jobs and a healthier environment. Griffith’s plan can be summed up electrify everything. He explains exactly what it would take to transform our infrastructure, update our grid, and adapt our households to make this possible. Billionaires may contemplate escaping our worn-out planet on a private rocket ship to Mars, but the rest of us, Griffith says, will stay and fight for the future.

Griffith, an engineer and inventor, calls for grid neutrality, ensuring that households, businesses, and utilities operate as equals; we will have to rewrite regulations that were created for a fossil-fueled world, mobilize industry as we did in World War II, and offer low-interest “climate loans.” Griffith’s plan doesn’t rely …

3 editions

Manifesto for green growth technocracy

3 stars

About what I anticipated - essentially a manifesto for traditional green-growth, technocratic climate solutionism. I do admire what Saul has done with Otherlab, building practical solutions outside academia and trying to implement them. Their lab is a model of how to do public-facing applied research outside of a university. But he seems stuck in a Bay Area mindset.

The book's clearest sentence: "It means that instead of changing our energy supply or demand, we need to transform our infrastructure - both individually and collectively - rather than our habits."

I couldn't agree less.

He has read Graeber on debt though!

Assorted notes: book is entirely US-focused. Written for a general audience. Half of residential energy use is space heating. Highway transport uses 10x energy vs. air travel sector. Advocates ditching 70's-style "efficiency/sacrifice" rhetoric for one of clean energy abundance (I also embrace a rhetoric of abundance, but under degrowth). Electrification …

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