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Why Energy Conservation Fails: [Paperback]

Herbert Inhaber (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

1567205976 978-1567205978 March 30, 2002
Energy efficiency and energy conservation are often thought to be the same. They are not, according to Herbert Inhaber. Only when less total energy is consumed by all users will energy actually be saved. Energy efficiency schemes do not accomplish this goal of conservation: when one person or nation conserves energy, there is just more of it for others to use elsewhere. This is the first book to answer, comprehensively and objectively, the question: Do government energy conservation programs hinder or help the nation? Says Inhaber, "the fact that billions of dollars have been spent on energy conservation programs, without giving a searching look at what has been accomplished, is a national scandal." Clear, concise, and with numerous useful graphs and tables, this book is an important first step toward making us all aware of what energy conservation actually is--and is not--and how it can and should be implemented. This work includes chapters on how conservation is applied in the electric utility world, whether waste truly exists, the economic aspect of conservation, its relation to Marxism, and past examples of conservation failures. Inhaber reviews many of the points that were first made by Stanley Jevons, the father of modern quantitative economics, who stated more than 130 years ago that increased efficiency often produces greater overall energy use, not less. Inhaber concludes that "a remedy claimed to cure all ills will cure none. The faith placed in conservation as a solution to a mountain of problems is, in large part, misplaced. The words 'energy conservation' have captivated people of almost all political and philosophical persuasions. My book should cause many people to rethink their blind faith."

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Editorial Reviews

Review

?Why Energy Conservation Fails is, in many ways, the most readable book on economics you will ever read. It is so innovative and fascinating in its approach that it is a page-turner.?-Environment and Climate News --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Book Description

Energy efficiency and energy conservation are not the same thing; this work makes clear that true energy conservation will occur only when we all use less energy than we use today.

--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Quorum Paperback (March 30, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1567205976
  • ISBN-13: 978-1567205978
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,425,304 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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9 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Down Goes Another Myth, August 10, 2002
By A Customer
This review is from: Why Energy Conservation Fails: (Paperback)
If one doesn't look too deeply, it is somehow obvious that if our machines are more efficient, we will use less energy overall. But what is superficially obvious isn't necessarily true. If nothing were to change *except* the efficiency, the result would indeed be lower overall consumption. But that is never the case.

For example, if an automobile engine required 500 gallons to get us a few miles to the grocery store, nobody would use automobiles for anything. The consumption of gasoline would be negligible. In truth, as automobile efficiency has improved, the overall usage of gasoline has increased.

In the matter of steel manufacture, superficial logic says that when we improve efficiency, we should reduce consumption of coal used to manufacture steel. But Bessemer's process, which greatly improved efficiency, led to greatly increased consumption of coal, along with an abundance of high-quality steel.

Inhaber presents an excellent case, piling example upon example, to show that improved conservation has consistently resulted in increased consumption. His book is a great antidote to the journalistic nonsense to which we are daily exposed.

Incidentally, Inhaber is not making a case that we should be wastrels. He is merely pointing out the unintended consequences of conservation.

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8 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Review by Dr. Jay Lehr, Environment & Climate News, 11/2002, December 5, 2002
By A Customer
A Page-turner on Economics (!?)

Book review by Jay Lehr
Published: in Environnment & Climate News, November 1, 2002

Why Energy Conservation Fails
by Herbert Inhaber, PhD
Quorum Books, paperback, 237 pages

Why Energy Conservation Fails is, in many ways, the most readable book on economics you will ever read. It is so innovative and fascinating in its approach that it is a page-turner.

Dr. Inhaber uses basic economic theory coupled with our well-known human nature to prove in dozens of ways that no artificial coercive strategy aimed at conserving anything can ever succeed. Through simple prose, supplemented with detailed illustrations and ample calculations, he makes his premise as certain as the law of gravity.

In making his case, Inhaber stands on the shoulders of giants of the past. These truths have been illustrated and handed down for centuries ... and yet the folly of coercive conservation runs rampant even today. Sadly, those who do not study the failures of the past are destined to repeat them, and that we do again and again.

Over the past two decades, Americans have been subjected to an unprecedented barrage of government edicts telling them to save energy, water, natural resources, and many other substances.

If we trade in a large car for a small one, surely we use less gasoline ... or do we? If cars are smaller and driving is cheaper, families may own two cars instead of one, and they will drive more miles with their cars. The counterproductive end result is that people will ultimately use more gasoline. Simple economic reasoning makes it clear: When the price of a commodity falls, more of it will be used than if its price had remained constant.

Conservation on a national scale does not and cannot exist. In the case of gasoline, its use has risen, not fallen, since the imposition of strict mileage standards in the late 1970s. According to those who advocated those laws, gasoline use should have declined.

In our homes, when we attempt to save electricity through improved insulation, our electric bill goes down ... so we tend to use more electricity in other ways, such as by raising our indoor temperature in the winter or lowering our indoor temperature in the summer.

Inhaber points out that Karl Marx made a similar mistake when he reasoned capitalism would fail when production efficiency increased, thereby making many employees redundant. He failed to see that with increased efficiency comes a decline in the effective price of a service or commodity and that in the face of a lower price, increasing demand will require more workers.

The statues of Karl Marx have come down all around the world, but the conservationists who say that saving a kilowatt hour here and there will reduce the total amount of energy we use still have a loyal following. Inhaber feels strongly that their efforts should be-and can be-thwarted by teaching simple economics to coercive conservationists.

Inhaber explains clearly how conservationists have always assumed that man would run out of this or that resource, though it never happens. Why? Because brain-power followed by improved technology leads to better ways to find and refine everything or to replace it with even better substitute materials in even greater abundance. Fiberglass, for instance, is formed from silica dioxide, the most abundant mineral in the Earth's crust.

While many of us try to save energy at home, we may imagine waste occurs frequently at the industrial level. At home we replace light bulbs when they burn out. In a factory, bulbs are replaced on a timed schedule to coincide with the average life of a bulb. Many perfectly good bulbs are discarded in this way ... but a tremendous amount of labor, and thus cost, is saved. Waste is in the eye of the beholder. For a manufacturing company, labor is too valuable to be wasted.

These examples are but a small illustration of the meticulous and comprehensive manner in which Dr. Inhaber dissembles the ill-fated do-gooders' desire to conserve a wide variety of resources that never were, are not now, and never will be in short supply. They overlook at every turn man's indomitable intellectual creativity, which allows him to expand or replace every imaginable resource.

Dr. Jay Lehr is Science Director for The Heartland Institute

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6 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Alan Caruba in Bookviews.com, January 2003, December 26, 2002
By A Customer
An interesting book exposes the fallacies of "conserving" energy. It is a fundamental fact that energy unused is not "conserved." Why Energy Conservation Fails by Dr. Herbert Inhaber, Ph.D. (Quorum Books paperback), an economist, explains why in an interesting book that why artificial and coercive policies aimed at conserving anything simply do not work. Supplemented with detailed illustrations and calculations, he demonstrates this truth that is as certain as the law of gravity. The decades of government mandates, instituted by so-called "environmentalists", to require "saving" energy and other natural resources demonstrates that the failure to use energy is the failure to grow the economy and provide for our national needs to provide the electricity and heat for our expanding population and the creation of new jobs through industry and small businesses. The bottom line is that our improved technology provides ways to both find and use all forms of energy and natural resources. Just one example will suffice. The use of fiberglass, made from the most abundant mineral in the Earth's surface, has transformed communications and reduced the dependence on copper. Americans are beginning to reexamine the claims made by environmentalists, discovering they do not stand the test of scientific or economic facts.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Does conservation as it is described and applauded every day on TV, in our newspapers, and in other media truly exist? Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, Department of Energy, World War, Sun Frost, Oak Ridge, Third World, Georgia Power, Stanley Jevons, Washington State, Saudi Arabia, Bureau of the Census, Energy Information Administration, Buffalo News, Capitol Hill, Environmental Psychology, General Motors, Jerry Taylor, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Monthly Energy Review, Nathan Rosenberg, President Clinton, Prime Minister, Rolls Royce, Scott Geller
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