The Party's Over

The Party's Over

  • Richard Heinberg
Publisher:Gabriola Island, B.C. : New Society PublishersISBN 13: 9780865714823ISBN 10: 0865714827

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The Party's Over is written by Richard Heinberg and published by Gabriola Island, B.C. : New Society Publishers. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0865714827 (ISBN 10) and 9780865714823 (ISBN 13).

February 1, 2003 The Party's Over (TPO) is an excellently and thoroughly researched treatment of precisely the oil depletion problem, almost entirely free of the usual hidden political agendas, irrelevant personal memoirs, and philosophical delusions. I would recommend TPO to anybody on this list . . . as a convenient and politically neutral "Pack-'O-Facts" that can be offered to friends, family, colleagues, policy makers, and anybody else in your life or world that you may feel needs a sober sit-down and some rational talking-to about the energy future of industrial civilization. The Endnotes section at the book's end, organized by chapter, is the best bibliography I've ever seen on all aspects of the topic. This book bears direct comparison to only three other more-or-less mass or general market books that I'm aware of: Thom Hartmann, Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight; Jeremy Rifkin, The Hydrogen Economy; Kenneth Deffeyes, Hubbert's Peak: The Impending World Oil Shortage. With respect to these, I feel that TPO is: less irrelevantly philosophical than Hartmann's book, more up- to-date, and more pointedly technical in sources used. very similar to the first half of Rifkin's work, where he delineates the problem, but again a more comprehensive and at the same time more focused presentation. The second half of Rifkin's work, where he cheerleads in rather political mode for a salvaging of the world's economy via distributed hydrogen/fuel-cell infrastructure is not directly relevant, except I suppose inasmuch as it would seem to contradict Heinberg's skepticism about propping up global industrial civilization through a 11th hour switch to alternatives. I'd personally go with Heinberg's conclusions. again, in topic/coverage very similar to Deffeye's quite interesting work, but frankly for those who want a quick and focused rollup presentation/package for opening the topic with others, Deffeye's work is overly encumbered with too much aranca about oil geology and personal author's memoirs. Overall, The Party's Over will serve as the state-of-the-art topic-opener on Hubbert catastrophism, for people on this list, well into the foreseeable future. Scott Meredith AlasBabylon list owner