Small Is Profitable
Author | Amory Lovins |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Publication date | 2002 |
Media type |
Small Is Profitable: The Hidden Economic Benefits of Making Electrical Resources the Right Size is a 2002 book by energy analyst Amory Lovins and others. The book describes 207 ways in which the size of "electrical resources"—devices that make, save, or store electricity—affects their economic value. It finds that properly accounting for the economic benefits of "distributed" (decentralized) electrical resources typically raises their value by a large factor, perhaps tenfold, through improved system planning, utility construction and operation (especially off the grid), and service quality, and by avoiding social costs. This should change how distributed resources are marketed and used, and make policy and business opportunities explicit.[1]
Small Is Profitable was named 'Book of the Year' by The Economist magazine.[1][2][citation needed]
See also
- Brittle Power
- Soft energy technology
- List of books by Amory Lovins
- Small business
- V2G
References
- ^ a b Small Is profitable
- ^ 'Small Is Profitable' Named 'Book of the Year' by The Economist; Book Brings New Thinking to Electricity Industry
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- Hunter Lovins
- Hypercar
- Negawatt power
- Rocky Mountain Institute
- Soft energy path
- Soft energy technology
bibliography
Energy policy |
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Environment |
- Lovins on the Soft Path: An Energy Future with a Future (1982)
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