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The Plot to Save the Planet: How Visionary Entrepreneurs and Corporate Titans Are Creating Real Solutions to Global Warming
 
 
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The Plot to Save the Planet: How Visionary Entrepreneurs and Corporate Titans Are Creating Real Solutions to Global Warming [Hardcover]

Brian Dumaine (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 24, 2008
American entrepreneurs, corporate tycoons, and financiers are plotting what they do best—creating new industries that change the world and making billions in the process—a plot that will ultimately save the planet.

The Plot to Save the Planet is an illuminating and inspiring look at the “conspiracy” to make green technology the Silicon Valley of the twenty-first century—the creator of massive numbers of jobs and huge amounts of wealth. Suddenly, the ugly mudslinging between environmentalists and big business has abated, and these two previously opposed forces are now strange bedfellows in a race to head off climate change.

How is this new frontier being shaped? Brian Dumaine is your guide in this intriguing look into the very near future filled with colorful and informative stories about the entrepreneurs, investors, and corporate mavericks who are managing to pull off the feat of combining economic growth and environmental protection to battle global warming. You’ll read about:

• The savvy investors: Why Warren Buffett is investing heavily in wind power; and why John Doerr, the venture capitalist and early backer of Google, is saying that “green tech is bigger than the Internet and could be the biggest economic opportunity of the twenty-first century.”

• The cars of the future: The competitively priced plug-in hybrids that will get 60 miles to the gallon, and the battle being waged by fifteen start-ups competing to capture the electric car market.

• The fuels without fossils: New sources of energy from plants such as prairie grass and algae that could capture a big chunk of the $300 billion U.S. wholesale gasoline market.

• The corporate mavericks: Companies such as Duke Energy and GE who are creating the low-carbon business models of the future, as well as cleaner ways to provide our power needs.

• The energy-miser homes and buildings: The new Bank of America Tower in New York City and the green low- and middle-income homes being constructed by visionaries who were told it couldn’t be done and still be affordable.

• The “thin film” solar energy: How it is making the cost of heating a home comparable to traditional methods without emitting greenhouse gas.

Plenty of obstacles still exist—among them resistance from the rich and powerful owners of the world’s oil supply, developing nations such as China with their reliance on coal, and an American public reluctant to give up their McMansions, SUVs, and extreme air-conditioning. But the battle cry has been sounded. The green overhaul of the utility, energy, construction, shipping, and automobile industries is well on its way and—contrary to prevailing fears—the ultimate solutions will sustain the environment without demanding huge sacrifices to our contemporary comforts and lifestyles.


Editorial Reviews

Review

"We've all read the dire warnings about global warming. Now, here's a great book about the opportunities for ingenuity and entrepreneurship. Brian Dumaine describes the visionaries who are at the forefront of green technology and how they are not only going to save the planet but create an economic boom in the process. His case studies include inspiring entrepreneurs, mavericks, and imaginative academics all allied in a noble cause."  
—Walter Isaacson, CEO of the Aspen Institute  and author of Einstein:His Life and Universe 

“Brian Dumaine has given us a superb and informative tour of the emerging new energy economy.”
—R. James Woolsey, VantagePoint, venture partner and former CIA director

“Through engaging anecdotes from forward-thinking businesspeople in energy, furniture design, transportation, and more, Dumaine shows that from here on out, it will pay to think green.”
Plenty magazine

“May well be the best survey of private investment and innovation in creating a cleaner, more efficient twenty-first-century economy.”
—Ben Jervey, National Resources Defense Council



About the Author

BRIAN DUMAINE is the editorial director of Fortune Small Business. Prior to that he was the international editor and assistant managing editor of Fortune magazine. Over his twenty-eight-year career at Time Inc. he has written or edited hundreds of cover and feature stories and devoted much of his editorial energies to environmental issues and the rapid rise of the green movement and its impact on capital markets, corporations, and executive thinking.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Crown Business (June 24, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0307406180
  • ISBN-13: 978-0307406187
  • Product Dimensions: 6.2 x 1 x 9.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,529,679 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.7 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Reasons for hope, July 18, 2008
This review is from: The Plot to Save the Planet: How Visionary Entrepreneurs and Corporate Titans Are Creating Real Solutions to Global Warming (Hardcover)
Fortune magazine veteran Brian Dumaine has just published a highly readable new book. It will be of interest to anyone in need of having their spirits lifted from the assumptions that we will be hostages forever to third world oil despots, or that global warming must inevitably lead to Pittsburgh being the next great beach town.
He identifies technological advances that are likely to play a significant role in lessening our middle east oil Jones, and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. What makes this an exciting read is that these are not theoretical laboratory experiments, these are tested technologies that are already working their way into daily economic life, or at minimum are in the prototype stage. My favorite is the algae that eats carbon and poops biodiesel.
Dumaine is a guy who looks more at home in wingtips than Birkenstocks - another reason to feel some optimism after reading the book. He has done his own research and filtered all these ideas through the screen of how much venture capital each idea is attracting. The VCs get plenty of things wrong, but it is not usually because they have failed to thoroughly consider the economic viability of an idea, and these all pass the test.
Read it. You'll sleep better.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Sustainable Future, June 30, 2008
This review is from: The Plot to Save the Planet: How Visionary Entrepreneurs and Corporate Titans Are Creating Real Solutions to Global Warming (Hardcover)
The author explains that "green= growth". Ultimately,
carbon emissions drive costs up on many fronts.
Traffic jams cost $65 billion dollars annually.

The book provides some unique engineering feats to
promote the "green" goal. For instance, a raised floor
in a building facilitates an efficient use of the
duct system so that night air cools the building from
the bottom up. Resultingly, less air conditioning is used.


The Pope Manufacturing Co, of Hartford has built an
electric car costing $98,000. The Tesla auto costs .02/mile
to drive. Transportation is known to account for 20% of
Greenhouse gases. Walmart has cut back energy use by
creating "green supercenters" . Lower energy use means more
profits. i.e. This feat is accomplished by using motion
sensors to control the freezer light.

The German government guarantees that renewable energy
companies will make money. Heiner Gartner has created a
solar energy complex ; wherein, 10,000 solar panels
fuel 1500 houses. Q Cells is a profitable solar energy
company. Carbon sequestration is a process; wherein,
greenhouse gases are buried. The ABB Grid System is a
Swiss company specializing in power. The author explains
a scenario; whereby. the Mojave Desert can power the
entire West Coast.

This book ought to be read by the entire USA Congress.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Light Green, October 19, 2009
A compilation of stories that are timely for Fortune, but not so for a book. Another rehash without ever really exploring the cost benefit analysis of any action and the fact that with world population heading up the human race is moving towards the comfortable Southern California lifestyle rather than away from it. Does it strike odd that California is in the forefront of green legislation while digging itself into such a financial hole?

When Mr. Dumaine writes about Brightsource Energy beginning its massive solar power plant near the California- New Mexico border should I wonder if there are any editors at Crown Publishing and whether the author read his book or just cut and pasted his way to royalties.
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