The Energy Squeeze

The Energy Squeeze
Author: Bruce Willson
Publisher: James Lorimer & Company
Total Pages: 164
Release: 1980-01-01
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780888623027

When this book was published in 1980, the Energy Crisis of the 1970s continued to cast a long shadow across Canadian society. Its bleak analysis of the energy future shows just how deep that shadow was--and is. Wilson's tough, uncompromising study remains important reading for anyone who wants to understand what's at stake in the politics of energy and what needs to be done by government and industry to ensure that the economy of the future will continue to run when non-renewable sources of energy run out. The Energy Squeeze combines detailed analysis of Canada's energy future with prescriptions for action--nationalized supply and pricing, for example--that reflect the crisis atmosphere of the early 1980s.

Financing Energy Self-reliance

Financing Energy Self-reliance
Author: Canada. Energy Policy Sector
Publisher: Energy, Mines and Resources Canada, Energy Policy Sector
Total Pages: 76
Release: 1977
Genre: Electric power
ISBN:

Energy Policy Modeling: United States and Canadian Experiences

Energy Policy Modeling: United States and Canadian Experiences
Author: William T. Ziemba
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 414
Release: 2012-12-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 940098748X

Alex Cowie As the twentieth century draws to a close, one of our greatest problems is the availability of energy. One way to study the energy problem is to resolve it into four areas; energy demand, energy sources, transportation of energy from sources to demand centers, and the optimal allocation of energy forms to demands. Each of these areas is extremely complex by itself. When efforts are made to tie them together, for example, to produce a National Policy, the complexities are compounded. Another way to study the energy problem, because of its political and so cial consequences, is to resolve it into geographical areas. Individual prov inces of Canada or states of the United States will have their concerns about energy within their geographical boundaries. As producer, consumer, or both, each wants to ensure an energy development program which will work to the maximum benefit of its citizens. Similarly, countries endeavor to pro tect their citizens and undertake energy policies that will assure either a con tinuation of the existing quality of life or - particularly in the case of "Third World" countries - a marked improvement in quality of life. These competing and conflicting goals call for a study which encompasses the whole world. Again, complexity is piled upon complexity. If the prob lem is not yet sufficiently complex, there is an equally complex question of the effect of energy production and use on the ecology.