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Understanding the complex history of US fossil fuel use can help us
build a sustainable future. In Hydrocarbon Nation, Thor Hogan looks
at how four technological revolutions-industrial, agricultural,
transportation, and electrification-drew upon the enormous
hydrocarbon wealth of the United States, transforming the young
country into a nation with unparalleled economic and military
potential. Each of these advances engendered new government
policies aimed at strengthening national and economic security. The
result was unprecedented energy security and the creation of a
nation nearly impervious to outside threats. However, when this
position weakened in the decades after the peaking of domestic
conventional oil supplies in 1970, the American political and
economic systems were severely debilitated. At the same time,
climate change was becoming a major concern. Fossil fuels created
the modern world, yet burning them created a climate crisis. Hogan
argues that everyday Americans and policymakers alike must embrace
the complexity of this contradiction in order to help society chart
a path forward. Doing so, Hogan explains, will allow us to launch a
critically important sustainability revolution capable of providing
energy and climate security in the future. Hydrocarbon Nation
provides reasons to believe that we can succeed in expanding on the
benefits of the Hydrocarbon Age in order to build a sustainable
future.
Mars Wars: The Rise and Fall of the Space exploration Initiative
investigates one of the most important chapters in the history of
the space program. This is a story of bureaucratic infighting,
personality clashes, cultural struggles, and a deeply flawed policy
that ultimately doomed an effort to provide direction to a
directionless agency by sending humans to the red planet. On the
20th anniversary of the first human landing on the Moon, President
George H.W. Bush stood atop the steps of the National Air and Space
Museum in Washington, D.C. and proposed a long-range human
exploration plan that included the successful construction of an
orbital space station, a permanent return to the Moon, and a
mission to Mars. This enterprise became known as the Space
Exploration Initiative (SEI). The president charged the newly
reestablished National Space Council with providing concrete
alternatives for meeting these objectives. To provide overall focus
for the new initiative, Bush later set a thirty-year goal for a
crewed landing on Mars. Within a few short years after this
Kennedyesque announcement, however, the initiative had faded into
history the victim of a flawed policy process and a political war
fought on several different fronts. The story of this failed
initiative was a tale of organizational, cultural, and personal
confrontation by key protagonists and critical battles. Some
commentators have argued that SEI was doomed to fail, due primarily
to the immense budgetary pressures facing the nation during the
early 1990s. The central thesis of Mars Wars: The Rise and Fall of
the Space Exploration Initiative suggests, however, that failure
was not predetermined. Instead, it was the result of a deeply
flawed decision-making process that failed to develop (or even
consider) policy options that may have been politically acceptable
given the existing political environment.
NASA SP 2007-4410. NASA History Series. Recounts the story of the
rise of Space Exploration Initiative (SEI) and its eventual demise.
Tells of organizational, cultural, and personal confrontation.
Organizational skirmishes involved the Space Council versus NASA,
the White House versus congressional appropriators, and the Johnson
Space Center versus the rest of the space agency--all seeking
control of the national space policy process.
In 1990, NASA began developing Mission to Planet Earth (MTPE), an
initiative aimed at using satellites to study the planet's
environment from space. With the Earth Observing System (EOS) as
its technological cornerstone, MTPE's main goal was to better
understand fundamental processes such as climate change. The View
from Space tells the remarkable story of this unprecedented
convergence of science, technology, and policy in one of the most
significant "Big Science" programs in human history. Richard B.
Leshner and Thor Hogan offer an engrossing behind-the-scenes look
at how and why NASA managed to make an aggressive earth science
research program part of the national agenda-an accomplishment made
possible by the pragmatic and assertive efforts of the earth
science community. This is the first book to focus on describing
and analyzing the historical evolution of the MPTE/EOS initiative
from its formative years in the 1980s to its political and
technical struggles in the 1990s to its scientific successes in the
2000s. Though detailed in its coverage of science and technology,
The View from Space is primarily concerned with questions of
policy-specifically, how MTPE/EOS came to be, how it developed, and
how its proponents navigated the fraught politics of the time.
Compelling in its own right, this in-depth history of the
initiative is also a valuable object lesson in how political,
technical, and scientific infighting can shape a project of such
national and global consequence-particularly in the age of climate
change.
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