Global Warming

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
xx List of figures

(WEC), New York. Original source,Energy Balances of OECD Countries. Paris:
International Energy Agency, 1999. 272
11.4 FromEnergy for Tomorrow’s World – the Realities, the Real Options and the Agenda
for Achievement. WEC Commission Report. New York: World Energy Council, 1993. 273
11.5 FromEnergy for Tomorrow’s World – the Realities, the Real Options and the Agenda
for Achievement. WEC Commission Report. New York: World Energy Council,
1993, p. 28. 274
11.6 FromEnergy for Tomorrow’s World – the Realities, the Real Options and the Agenda
for Achievement. WEC Commission Report. New York: World Energy Council,
1993, p. 29. 275
11.7 FromEnergy Needs, Choices and Possibilities; Scenarios to 2050. 2001. London:
Shell International, p. 39. 283
11.8 From National Academy of Sciences,Policy Implications of Greenhouse Warming,
pp. 211, 212. 282
11.9 Figure 3.7 from Moomaw and Moreira, 2001. In Metz,Climate Change 2001:
Mitigation. 284
11.10 Twidell, J., Weir, T. 1986.Renewable Energy Resources. London: Spon Press. 296
11.11 Adapted from Twidell and Weir,Renewable Energy Resources, p. 100. 300
11.12 Construction of a ‘solar wall’. 301
11.13 From Shell Renewables. 302
11.14 Williams, N., Jacobson, K., Burris, H. 1993. Sunshine for light in the night.Nature,
362 , pp. 691–2. For more recent information on solar home systems see Martinot, E.
et al. 2002. Renewable energy markets in developing countries.Annual Review of
Energy and the Environment, 27 , pp. 309–48. 304
11.15 Adapted from Twidell and Weir,Renewable Energy Resources, p. 399. 311
11.16 From Ogden, J. M., Nitsch, J. 1993. Solar hydrogen. In Johansson,Renewable
Energy, pp. 925–1009. 312

Free download pdf