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Volt Rush: The Winners and Losers in the Race to Go Green

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Volt Rush: The Winners and Losers in the Race to Go Green

Contributors:

By (Author) Henry Sanderson

ISBN:

9780861546190

Publisher:

Oneworld Publications

Imprint:

Oneworld Publications

Publication Date:

5th September 2023

UK Publication Date:

22nd June 2023

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Main Subject:
Other Subjects:

Energy technology and engineering
Energy
Energy, power generation, distribution and storage
Energy efficiency
Energy industries and utilities
Climate change
Mining technology and engineering
Social forecasting, future studies
Investment and securities

Dewey:

338.27494

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

288

Dimensions:

Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 21mm

Description

In the twentieth century, wealth and power was dictated by access to oil. This century will have different kingmakers, perhaps different wars. We depend on a handful of metals and rare earths to power our phones and computers. Increasingly, we rely on them to power our cars and our homes. Whoever controls these finite commodities will become rich beyond imagining. Sanderson journeys to meet the characters, companies, and nations scrambling for the new resources, linking remote mines in the Congo and Chiles Atacama Desert to giant Chinese battery factories, shadowy commodity traders, secretive billionaires, and a new generation of scientists endeavouring to invent the next breakthrough. This is the full story of the hidden quest to power all our lives and, in doing so, to take the keys to the twenty-first century.

Reviews

'A remarkably hopeful and useful book...The climate crisis leaves us no choice but to build a new world and as Sanderson makes clear, we are capable of making it a better one than the dirty and dangerous planet weve come to take for granted.'

-- Bill McKibben, Observer book of the week

Sanderson deftly guides us through the convolutions of which company bought what from which, and he livens up that potentially desiccated subject matter with an eye for characterful detail Despite the seemingly insuperable geopolitical quandaries with which it deals, the tone of Sandersons book is one of cautious optimism.

-- The Times

As we glide along serenelyin our electric vehicle, recharging it with clean solar power and perhaps feeling a little smug, we prefer not to be reminded of the vast industries that got us there, industries that gouge out the landscape, exploit workers, spew carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and engage in ruthless geopolitical power plays. Along the way, as Henry Sanderson shows in his essentialbook,we have becomedangerously dependent on China which now dominates global battery supply. Under President Xi Jinping, whouses economic blackmail to extract political concessions, China has got a lock on the future. All this canchangeandVolt Rushshows us how.

-- Clive Hamilton, author of Hidden Hand

'A fascinating study'

* The Times *

Apotent reminder to green power advocates that a world running on batteries and sunshine may not fight over oil, but it wont necessarily be free of conflict

* Financial Times *

Its a vital contribution to the emerging literature thats pulling back the curtain on energy realities.

-- Wall Street Journal

The urgency of a green transition means the world faces new power struggles over access to scarce metals and minerals. Sanderson carefully walks us through the minefields that are the world's finite supplies of lithium, cobalt and nickel and reveals with startling immediacy the Machiavellian machinations for control over these precious resources. A riveting guide to our perilous future.

-- Ann Pettifor, author of The Case for the Green New Deal

'An excellent bookprovides much food for thought'

-- Literary Review

Takes us on a carefully considered and well explained journey to show that [the switch to electric vehicles] may not be as simple a transition as we hoped for Sanderson does a good job of getting the reader up to speed in terms of what goes into an electric battery, and why we need to be cognisant of the environmental impacts very informative and well written in terms of the potentially toxic brew required to power EVs a relevant and vital book.

-- Irish Tech News

From China to Congo to Chile to the U.S., Sanderson lucidly reveals the global connections behind the complex processes of battery production and mining Any reader interested in environmental studies, green politics, the global energy sector, or the mining industry will appreciate Sanderson's deep dive into the transition from fossil fuels to green and clean energy, and how this transition will affect society now and in the near future.

-- Booklist

'Sandersons smooth, limpid storytelling brightens the deadening business of commodities trading: attention to the bizarre, often unpleasant characters populating the industry gives his narrative a personable shine.'

-- Red Pepper

'Volt Rushmakes a great contribution in understanding what a green future entailsand what costs it might involve right now.

-- Foreign Policy

This is a terrific book. Henry Sanderson brings alive one of the most fateful questions of our time: who will controlthe resources that power a post-carbon world What makes the book so compelling is the cast of colourful characters he meets and the insightful judgements he makes.

-- James Kynge, FT China editor

A must-read book, well written and investigated,on one of the most important ecological challengeswell face in the next decades.

-- Guillaume Pitron, author of The Rare Metals War

Author Bio

Henry Sanderson has covered commodities and mining for the Financial Times in London for the last six years, and has written widely about the resource implications of our move towards clean energy. He was previously a reporter in China for Bloomberg, where he co-authored an academic book about Chinas state capitalism and its largest overseas lender, Chinas Superbank (Bloomberg Press, 2013). A Chinese speaker, he has been interviewed by the BBC, Bloomberg Television, CNBC, and Charlie Rose. He tweets at @hjesanderson.

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