Bill Gates

How to Avoid a Climate Disaster

Notify me when the book’s added
To read this book, upload an EPUB or FB2 file to Bookmate. How do I upload a book?
  • ayuphas quoted5 days ago
    sum up, the path to zero emissions in manufacturing looks like this:
    Electrify every process possible. This is going to take a lot of innovation.
    Get that electricity from a power grid that’s been decarbonized. This also will take a lot of innovation.
    Use carbon capture to absorb the remaining emissions. And so will this.
    Use materials more efficiently. Same.
  • ayuphas quoted5 days ago
    making plastics. If enough pieces come together, plastics could one day become a carbon sink—a way to remove carbon rather than emit it.
  • ayuphas quoted5 days ago
    molten oxide electrolysis: Instead of burning iron in a furnace with coke, you pass electricity through a cell that contains a mixture of liquid iron oxide and other ingredients. The electricity causes the iron oxide to break apart, leaving you with the pure iron you need for steel, and pure oxygen as a by-product. No carbon dioxide is produced at all.
  • ayuphas quoted5 days ago
    We emit greenhouse gases (1) when we use fossil fuels to generate the electricity that factories need to run their operations; (2) when we use them to generate heat needed for different manufacturing processes, like melting iron ore to make steel; and (3) when we actually make these materials, like the way cement manufacturing inevitably creates carbon dioxide.
  • ayuphas quoted5 days ago
    We manufacture an enormous amount of materials, resulting in copious amounts of greenhouse gases, nearly a third of the 51 billion tons per year. We need to get those emissions down to zero, but it’s not an option to simply stop making things.
  • ayuphas quoted5 days ago
    Pieces of plastic floating around in the ocean cause all sorts of problems, including poisoning marine life. But they’re not making climate change worse.
  • ayuphas quoted13 days ago
    Sustainable Energy—Without the Hot Air, David MacKay
  • ayuphas quoted13 days ago
    It’s extremely difficult and expensive to store electricity on a large scale, but that’s one of the things we’ll need to do if we’re going to rely on intermittent sources to provide a significant percentage of clean electricity in the coming years.
  • Zap Natahas quoted2 years ago
    read Weather for Dummies, still one of the best books on weather that I’ve found
  • Anna Chasovikovahas quoted3 years ago
    In other words, we’ll save money by building renewables in the best locations, building a unified national grid, and shipping zero-emissions electrons wherever they’re needed.*
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)