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Factor Four: Doubling Wealth, Halving Resource Use - A Report to the Club of Rome (1998)

por Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker, Amory B. Lovins, L. Hunter Lovins

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Since the industrial revolution, progress has meant an increase in labour productivity. Factor Four describes a new form of progress, resource productivity, a form which meets the overriding imperative for the future (sustainability). It shows how at least four times as much wealth can be extracted from the resources we use. As the authors put it, the book is about doing more with less, but this is not the same as doing less, doing worse or doing without.In 1972, the Club of Rome published Limits to Growth, which sent shock waves around the world by arguing that we were rapidly running out of essential resources. This Report to the Club of Rome offers a solution. It lies in using resources more efficiently, in ways which can already be achieved, not at a cost, but at a profit. The book contains a wealth of examples of revolutionizing productivity, in the use of energy; from hypercars to low-energy beef; materials, from sub-surface drip irrigation to electronic books, transport, video conferencing to CyberTran, and demonstrating how much more could be generated from much less today.It explains how markets can be organized and taxes re-based to eliminate perverse incentives and reward efficiency, so wealth can grow while consumption does not. The benefits are enormous: profits will increase, pollution and waste will decrease and the quality of life will improve. Moreover, the benefits will be shared: progress will no longer depend on making ever fewer people more productive. Instead, more people and fewer resources can be employed. While for many developing countries the efficiency revolution may offer the only realistic chance of prosperity within a reasonable time span. The practical promise held out in this book is huge, but the authors show how it is up to each of us, as well as to businesses and governments, to make it happen.… (mais)
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Dated examination of business concepts, focusing on increasing net worth.
  JoBass | Oct 19, 2017 |
Umwelt / Klima usw.
  elpmaxe | Aug 24, 2016 |
As a book of ideas it is excellent. As a read it is not nearly so satisfying, which is a real shame.

However, those ideas make it a worthwhile read if you are interested in solutions to environmental problems that are economically and scientifically feasible, and, one would like think, politically acceptable.

Quite apart from technical fixes - why aren't we all driving round in hypercars? why aren't all new buildings made to passivhaus standards? - which would make everyone better off, it also suggests solutions to problems with the market system, using, to a large extent market mechanisms. Thought provoking stuff: for example a local government in California wanted to allow new housing in the town but new the water supply was not sufficient. The solution was to tell developers that they could only get planning permission for a new house if they saved twice its projected water usage elsewhere in the existing water system. Developers were happy to do this (incorporating the cost in the cost of the new houses), smart entrepeneurs set up companies to do it for them, existing householders were approached with offers of free new bathrooms (the smart ones refused and were able to charge for the privilege), and the town used less not more water afterwards... imagine applying that approach to energy conservation.

So full of ideas (some of course better than others) but probably not one to read cover to cover. ( )
  daniel.links | Sep 26, 2007 |
Professor John Shepherd has chosen to discuss Factor Four: Doubling Wealth, Halving Resource Use , on FiveBooks(http://five-books.com) as one of the top five on his subject – Science and Climate Change, saying that:

“ … The book is about how we don’t have to go back to living in stone caves and wearing hair shirts in order to sort this problem. If we use our intelligence we could achieve this factor four, which is expressed as doubling wealth and halving resources. And that is quite an appealing message. ….”

The full interview is available here: http://thebrowser.com/books/interviews/john-shepherd ( )
  FiveBooks | Feb 17, 2010 |
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Weizsäcker, Ernst Ulrich vonAutorautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Lovins, Amory B.autor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado
Lovins, L. Hunterautor principaltodas as ediçõesconfirmado

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Since the industrial revolution, progress has meant an increase in labour productivity. Factor Four describes a new form of progress, resource productivity, a form which meets the overriding imperative for the future (sustainability). It shows how at least four times as much wealth can be extracted from the resources we use. As the authors put it, the book is about doing more with less, but this is not the same as doing less, doing worse or doing without.In 1972, the Club of Rome published Limits to Growth, which sent shock waves around the world by arguing that we were rapidly running out of essential resources. This Report to the Club of Rome offers a solution. It lies in using resources more efficiently, in ways which can already be achieved, not at a cost, but at a profit. The book contains a wealth of examples of revolutionizing productivity, in the use of energy; from hypercars to low-energy beef; materials, from sub-surface drip irrigation to electronic books, transport, video conferencing to CyberTran, and demonstrating how much more could be generated from much less today.It explains how markets can be organized and taxes re-based to eliminate perverse incentives and reward efficiency, so wealth can grow while consumption does not. The benefits are enormous: profits will increase, pollution and waste will decrease and the quality of life will improve. Moreover, the benefits will be shared: progress will no longer depend on making ever fewer people more productive. Instead, more people and fewer resources can be employed. While for many developing countries the efficiency revolution may offer the only realistic chance of prosperity within a reasonable time span. The practical promise held out in this book is huge, but the authors show how it is up to each of us, as well as to businesses and governments, to make it happen.

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