Factor Four: Doubling Wealth, Halving Resource Use - A Report to the Club of Rome
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Average customer review:Product Description
Since the industrial revolution progress has meant an increase in labour productivity. Factor Four describes a new form of progress, resource productivity, one 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; and transport, from video conferencing to CyberTran, 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 take it.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #676851 in Books
- Published on: 1998-07-15
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 224 pages
Customer Reviews
Getting more for less
The theme of the book is getting more for less, with the assertion, with copious examples, that the knowledge, technologies and in many cases commercial experience exist to double outcomes while halving resource use across a very wide range of economic activity. Further, these gains are often available very inexpensively and have the potential to yield large increases in profitability as well as in useful outcomes. The report gives examples and then goes on to discuss how to bring about useful change.
A major theme is that the conventional wisdom of both engineering and economics currently work against achieving material and energy productivity, but do not need to do so. There is an underlying theme of the need to change economic incentives and measures within the market system, which goes back at least to Hawken's 1993 The Ecology of Commerce.
The thrust of the book is to demonstrate:
* that, for historical and other reasons the capitalist world is extremely wasteful of resources, particularly materials, energy and transport (effectively another manifestation of energy use), despite the fact that technologies and good examples exist which can lead to dramatic reductions.
* that the failure to take these improvements up is not that they are too costly - in many cases introducing the improvements reduces capital costs - but
- a failure to design or operate systemically,
- the slow accretion in accepted practice (such as car design and manufacture) of 'bells and whistles' that increase weight and energy use but not performance;
- a fixation on reducing labour content at the expense (typically) of increased energy and material consumption through the system; and
- perverse incentives that are built into the economic calculus of business and economic success (including for example externalities).
* that the market is neither a god nor a devil. It is a tool that produces different results according to the guidelines and measures within which it operates. The current guidelines and measures were developed in an era when the natural environment was considered as an inexhaustible 'free good' and need to be changed; and
* that transition to a sustainable world is possible on reasonable assumptions if we all get serious about making use of resource saving technologies and measure our progress in more appropriate ways.
The many examples in Part 1 provide a useful source of ideas for improving economic performance while simultaneously benefiting the environment. The remaining three parts summarize and add to proposals for reconciling corporate, economic and ecological sustainability. Note that, while it is fairly comprehensive in its scope, there are some opportunity areas that it does not explore, such as the scope for 'ecological industrial parks' in which industries are clustered such that the waste of one is economic input for another.
The 'sustainability' literature is often accused of being moralistic and lacking in commercial realism. This book, like The Ecology of Commerce, Natural Capitalism, The Natural Step Story and others offers realistic and practical ways of overcoming waste and using innovative engineering and materials to produce superior value with reduced environmental impact.
Interesting precursor to "Natural Capitalism"
Many of the anecdotes related in this book appear again in "Natural Capitalism", a more recent work by Lovins et al. There are enough differences, however, to merit an inspection. The authors have a real knack for research. You'll probably be surprised by some of the facts they lay before you, e.g. 50-100 kg of nitrates fall out of the sky per hectare in central Europe.



