SuperFuel: Thorium, the Green Energy Source for the Future

Cover
St. Martin's Publishing Group, 08.05.2012 - 272 Seiten

A riveting look at how an alternative source of energy is revoluntionising nuclear power, promising a safe and clean future for millions, and why thorium was sidelined at the height of the Cold War

In this groundbreaking account of an energy revolution in the making, award-winning science writer Richard Martin introduces us to thorium, a radioactive element and alternative nuclear fuel that is far safer, cleaner, and more abundant than uranium.

At the dawn of the Atomic Age, thorium and uranium seemed to be in close competition as the fuel of the future. Uranium, with its ability to undergo fission and produce explosive material for atomic weapons, won out over its more pacific sister element, relegating thorium to the dustbin of science.

Now, as we grapple with the perils of nuclear energy and rogue atomic weapons, and mankind confronts the specter of global climate change, thorium is re-emerging as the overlooked energy source as a small group of activists and outsiders is working, with the help of Silicon Valley investors, to build a thorium-power industry.

In the first book mainstream book to tackle these issues, Superfuel is a story of rediscovery of a long lost technology that has the power to transform the world's future, and the story of the pacifists, who were sidelined in favour of atomic weapon hawks, but who can wean us off our fossil-fuel addiction and avert the risk of nuclear meltdown for ever.

 

Inhalt

Introduction
1
1 The Lost Book of Thorium Power
9
2 The Thunder Element
33
3 The Only Safe Reactor
55
4 Rickover and Weinberg
81
5 The Birth of Nuclear Power
101
6 The End of Nuclear Power
121
7 The Asian Nuclear Power Race
143
8 Nuclears Next Generation
167
9 The Business Crusade
193
10 What We Must Do
215
Acknowledgments
241
Notes
243
Index
257
Urheberrecht

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Autoren-Profil (2012)

Richard Martin was the first to write about thorium in the mainstream press. His feature story in Wired catalyzed the thorium power movement. An award-winning journalist whose work has appeared in Time, Fortune, The Atlantic, and The Best Science Writing, Martin is the editorial director of Pike Research, a leading clean-energy firm. He lives in Boulder, Colorado with his wife and son.

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