Abstract

Global oil production is expected to reach a peak before the year 1990. Abundant coal supplies in the United States appear to be something of a mixed blessing, due to the increasingly well-recognized social and environmental problems from mining and burning coal. Nuclear power turns out to be more expensive than it appeared a decade ago, in part because of the formidable safety and environmental hazards posed. Given that supplies of energy are very unevenly distributed across the globe, if energy prices continue to rise over the next decade the potential for violent international conflict is very real. It should therefore be useful to review what is known about world energy supply and demand, and to consider some implications for energy research and development in the United States and abroad. I shall suggest that for various reasons solar energy may look even more attractive in global perspective than it does from a more narrowly United States-centered view. Its successful exploitation on a world scale nevertheless requires careful attention to foreign countries' goals and constraints.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call