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Sustainable Electricity II : A Conversation on Tradeoffs / edited by Jessica Fox, Morgan Scott

Mitwirkende(r): Resource type: Ressourcentyp: Buch (Online)Buch (Online)Sprache: Englisch Reihen: SpringerLink BücherVerlag: Cham : Springer International Publishing, 2019Beschreibung: Online-Ressource (XX, 241 p. 82 illus., 81 illus. in color, online resource)ISBN:
  • 9783319956961
Schlagwörter: Andere physische Formen: 9783319956954 | 9783319956978 | Erscheint auch als: 978-3-319-95695-4 Druck-Ausgabe | Printed edition: 9783319956954 | Printed edition: 9783319956978 DDC-Klassifikation:
  • 333.79
  • 338.926
LOC-Klassifikation:
  • HD9502-9502.5
DOI: DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-95696-1Online-Ressourcen: Zusammenfassung: Realities of power company choices, regulatory boundaries, and stakeholder approvals. Expectations of the responsible investor, environmental advocate, and Silicon Valley companies including Google, Facebook, and Stanford University. Surprising stories show how creativity, innovation, and planning can resolve some of the toughest choices facing electric power companies today, although not in all cases. Building on the first volume, Sustainable Electricity: Case Studies from Electric Power Companies in North America (Fox, 2016. Springer), this book dives headfirst into the economic, environmental, and social tradeoffs power companies face as they strive to be sustainable. With more than 40 contributing experts, chapters include first-hand power company stories, case studies of leading Silicon Valley organizations; socially responsible investor contemplations; environmental advocacy arguments; and regulatory realities. The book provides a window into the choices companies make, the tradeoffs stakeholders accept, and the bottom line that comes with producing sustainable electricity. It will be an important resource that will accelerate collective thoughts on what ‘sustainable electricity’ means and what needs to be considered when the “everyone wins” outcome is elusive. “People have been able to fish, hike, camp and boat on a beautiful AEP property that supports recreational activities for many years. Now AEP has to generate income from this property. Do we build roads and drill to extract the natural gas? Do we sell the timber and keep the property? Do we sell the whole thing? What about the fish, deer and other wildlife? Tradeoffs will be made, and not everyone will like them.” Tim W. Lohner, Ph.D., Environmental Specialist, American Electric Power. (Chapter 3) “Companies are demanding access to clean energy and investors are pressing companies to source 100% renewable. It is essential that utilities develop a comprehensive strategy to reduce climate impact, and clearly articulate the plan and their progress. Customers and investors want to see this progress, and utilities need to develop the right model for their particular business.” John Streur, CEO, Calvert Research & Management (Chapter 4) “At Chevron, we are continually examining the tradeoffs as we work to improve our energy efficiency and reduce our environmental footprint. The complexity of our global, shared challenge to electrify the world without undue compromise to the integri ...Zusammenfassung: Chapter1: Introduction: The Tradeoff Conversation for Sustainable Electricity -- Chapter2: Achieving Balance: Ameren’s Corporate Social Responsibility Reporting Journey -- Chapter3: Reclaiming Value from Former AEP Mine Lands: Balancing Economic and Environmental Benefits -- Chapter4: Sustainable Electric Power from a Responsible Investing Perspective -- Chapter5: Exelon Driving Innovation and the Grid of the Future -- Chapter6: A Regulatory Perspective on Transforming the Power Sector -- Chapter7: The Third "E": LADWP's Commitment to Equity Ensures First Rate Service to All -- Chapter8: Portland General Electric Driving Collaboration for Sustainable Legislation -- Chapter9: Silicon Valley Customer Expectations: Resilience and Innovation in a Changing Climate -- Chapter10: Santee Cooper’s Coal Ash Impoundment Closure Challenge: Risk Reduction through Recycling -- Chapter11: Creating Success for TVA through Sustainable Solutions and Customer Collaborations -- Chapter12: Do We Need Trade-offs to Advance Climate Policy?PPN: PPN: 1038692563Package identifier: Produktsigel: ZDB-2-ENE | ZDB-2-SEB | ZDB-2-SXEN
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Reproduktion. (Springer eBook Collection. Energy)