Amory Lovins

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Amory Lovins

Amory Lovins
Born November 13, 1947 (1947-11-13)
Washington, DC
Occupation environmentalist, physicist

Amory Bloch Lovins (born November 13, 1947 in Washington, DC) is Chairman and Chief Scientist of the Rocky Mountain Institute, a MacArthur Fellowship recipient (1993), and author and co-author of many books on renewable energy and energy efficiency.

Lovins has worked professionally as an environmentalist and an advocate for a "soft energy path" for the United States and other nations. He has promoted energy-use and energy-production concepts based on energy conservation, efficiency, the use of renewable sources of energy, and on generation of energy at or near the site where the energy is actually used. His books include Winning the Oil Endgame, Factor Four, and Natural Capitalism. In the 1990s, his work with the Rocky Mountain Institute included the design of an ultra-efficient automobile, the Hypercar.

Lovins has provided expert testimony in eight countries and more than 20 US states, briefed 19 heads of state, and published 29 books.

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[edit] Early history and personal life

Lovins spent much of his youth in Silver Spring, Maryland and in Amherst, Massachusetts. In 1964, Lovins entered Harvard University. After two years there, he transferred to Magdalen College, Oxford, England, where he studied experimental physics. He became a Junior Research Fellow in Oxford’s Merton College, where he studied for two years and received an Oxford master of arts (M.A.) as a result of becoming a university don.[1] He has received many honorary degrees recognizing his work.[1]

In 1979 he married L. Hunter Sheldon, a lawyer, forester, and social scientist. Hunter received her undergraduate degree in sociology and political studies from Pitzer College, and her J.D. from Loyola University's School of Law. They separated in 1989 and divorced in 1999.[2]

[edit] Work

[edit] Friends of the Earth

It was during his days in the UK that Lovin's career as a writer began. Having become a devotee of Snowdonia National Park, Lovins left academia. In 1971 he wrote about the endangered Welsh park in a book commissioned by David Brower, president of the environmental organization Friends of the Earth.[3] Lovins spent several years as British Representative for Friends of the Earth. He wrote a number of other books published by FOE. During this time his interests settled specifically into the area of resource policy, and most especially, energy policy. An essay that he originally penned as a U.N. paper grew into his first book concerned with energy, World Energy Strategies. His next major work was co-authored with John H. Price and titled Non-Nuclear Futures: The Case for an Ethical Energy Strategy.

[edit] Soft energy advocacy

After returning to the United States, Lovins guided mountaineering trips in the White Mountains of New Hampshire. The shock of the 1973 energy crisis helped create an audience for his ideas, and he appealed to this new audience with the publication of his 10,000-word essay "Energy Strategy: The Road Not Taken?" published in Foreign Affairs, in October 1976.[3]

Lovins described the "hard energy path" as involving inefficient liquid-fuel automotive transport and centralized electricity-generating facilities. He saw these as giant facilities, often burning fossil fuels (e.g., coal or petroleum) or harnessing a fission reaction, that were greatly complicated by electricity wastage and loss. The "soft energy path" which he wholly preferred involves efficient use of energy, diversity of energy production methods (and matched in scale and quality to end uses), and special reliance on "soft energy technologies." Soft energy technologies are those based on solar, wind, biofuels, geothermal, etc. For Lovins, large-scale electricity production facilities had an important place, but it was a place that they were already filling; in general, more would not be needed. One of his main concerns, was the danger of committing to nuclear energy to meet a society's energy needs.[3]

[edit] Rocky Mountain Institute

The markets make a good servant but a bad master, and a worse religion[4]

By 1978 Lovins had published six books, consulted widely, and was active in energy affairs in some 15 countries, as synthesist and lobbyist. In 1982, he and his wife, Hunter, founded the Rocky Mountain Institute, based in Snowmass, Colorado. Together with a group of colleagues, the Lovinses fostered efficient resource use and policy development that they believed would promote global security.[3]

Working with many specialists, Lovins's more recent work at RMI has focused on efforts to transform sectors including the automobile (they designed a hydrogen-powered "hypercar"[5] to provide an example to Detroit), electricity, water, semiconductor, and real estate.

Lovins has briefed 19 heads of state, provided expert testimony in eight countries and more than 20 states, and published 29 books and several hundred papers. His clients have included Bank of America, Borg-Warner, BP, Chevron, CIBA-Geigy, Coca-Cola, Dow, GM, Hewlett-Packard, Lockheed Martin, Mitsubishi, Monsanto, Motorola, Prudential, Rio Tinto, Royal Dutch/Shell, Texas Instruments, Wal-Mart, Westinghouse, Xerox, major real-estate developers, and over 100 utilities. Public-sector clients have included the OECD, UN, Resources for the Future, the Australian, Canadian, Dutch, German, and Italian governments, 13 US states, Congress, and the U.S. Energy and Defense Departments.[1]

RMI has grown into a broad-based institution with more than 60 staff and an annual budget of some $8 million.[1]

[edit] Awards

Amory Lovins has received many honorary doctorates and was elected a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1984. He has received the World Technology Award, the Right Livelihood Award ("Alternative Nobel"), the 4th Heinz Award in the Environment in 1998, and the Nissan, Mitchell, and Lindbergh awards. He is also the recipient of the World Technology and Time Hero for the Planet awards, the Benjamin Franklin and Happold Medals, and the Shingo, Mitchell, and Onassis Prizes. He has also received a MacArthur Fellowship and is an honorary member of the American Institute of Architects (AIA).[1]

[edit] Publications

Books which are authored or co-authored by Amory Lovins include:

[edit] See also

[edit] References

[edit] Bibliography

  • Cousineau; Danitz; Zelov Ecological Design: Inventing the Future (film/video), Knossus, Inc., 1994.
  • Kolbert, Elizabeth. "Mr. Green," [Profiles] The New Yorker, 22 January 2007, p. 34-40.
  • Lambert, Craig. "The Hydrogen-Powered Future," Harvard Magazine, January/February 2004.
  • Thomas, Kas. "Interview with Amory Lovins," The Mother Earth News, No. 48, November/December 1977.

[edit] External links

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