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Challenged by Carbon
The Oil Industry and Climate Change

A unique geological perspective on the oil industry's impact on climate change and its potential role in stabilizing carbon emissions.

Bryan Lovell (Author)

9780521145596, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 15 October 2009

230 pages, 66 b/w illus. 8 tables
22.8 x 15.2 x 1.1 cm, 0.37 kg

'… this book comes with praise from many scientific and corporate leaders in the oil and gas industry in the UK and the US … an encouraging book …' Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society Bulletin

Is there a low-carbon future for the oil industry? Faced with compelling new geological evidence, the petroleum industry can no longer ignore the consequences of climate change brought on by consumption of its products. Yet the global community will continue to burn fossil fuels as we manage the transition to a low-carbon economy. As a geologist, oil man, academic and erstwhile politician, Bryan Lovell is uniquely well placed to describe the tensions accompanying the gradual greening of the petroleum industry over the last decade. He describes how, given the right lead from government, the oil industry could be environmental saviours, not villains, playing a crucial role in stabilising emissions through the capture and underground storage of carbon dioxide. Challenging prejudices of both the environmentalists and the oil industry, Lovell ultimately assigns responsibility to us as consumers and our elected governments, highlighting the need for decisive leadership and urgent action to establish an international framework of policy and regulation.

Acknowledgements
Preface
1. Geologists on the road to Kyoto
2. A crucial message from 55 million years ago
3. An Atlantic divide in Big Oil
4. What is the oil industry supposed to do?
5. The size of the problem and the scale of the answer
6. Safe storage: from villain to hero
7. Taking it a decade at a time
8. The proof in the Puddingstone
References
Index.

Subject Areas: Petroleum technology [THFP], Meteorology & climatology [RBP], International environmental law [LBBP], Petroleum & oil industries [KNBP], Environmental economics [KCN]

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