Rising Powers, Shrinking Planet: The New Geopolitics of Energy
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Yet another book I'm interested in but haven't read yet. Sigh! This one comes by way of Tom Engelhardt over at today's TomDispatch, speaking, of course, of the on-going tradgedy of the BP "spill" in the Gulph of Mexico. The book was published in 2009, but Klare has been railing, Cassandra-like, against the reckless petroleum industry for years. Well, they're no longer wreckless, and Michael discusses the political and diplomatic aspects and implications of what we've come to call familiarly "Peak Oil."
From Publisher's Weekly:
Looking at the "new international energy order," author and journalist Klare (Resource Wars) finds America's "sole superpower" status falling to the increasing influence of "petro-superpowers" like Russia and "Chindia." Klare identifies and analyzes the major players as well as the playing field, positing armed conflict and environmental disaster in the balance. Currently in the lead is emerging energy superpower Russia, which has gained "immense geopolitical influence" selling oil and natural gas to Europe and Asia; the rapidly-developing economies of China and India follow. Klare also warns of the danger of a new cold-war environment that would suck up resources that should go toward "environmentally sensitive energy alternatives." To avert catastrophe, he urges a U.S. diplomatic initiative to build collaboration with China (rapidly moving to second place in carbon emissions) to develop alternative energy resources, such as biodiesel fuels; ultra-light, ultra-efficient vehicles; and an innovative plan to use new coal plants, currently in-development, to strip carbon waste which can then be buried underground. Well-researched and incisive throughout, Klare provides a comprehensive but approachable overview of a complex problem, and offers promising policy alternatives to disaster.

