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Review: The Solar Century edited by Jeremy Leggett

As we embark on a solar revolution, the author wades in with an easy-to-read guide explaining the why and how of solar power, from thin-film silicon to electric cars
Solar power is ever more present
Solar power is ever more present
(Image: Jillis van Nes / Getty)

is a pioneer, campaigner and visionary. As chief scientist at Greenpeace, he helped coin the phrase “solar centuryâ€, before setting up a company of the same name to build solar panels for British roofs. Now he’s got an easy-to-read guide explaining the why and how of solar power, from thin-film silicon to electric cars.

Many would agree we are embarking on a solar revolution, but there are two models for this empire of the sun. One – the focus of Leggett’s entrepreneurial endeavours – is based on micro-power, where every building powers itself. The other harnesses economies of scale. In this model, deserts will be covered in huge solar farms to harvest energy for distribution via vast supergrids that cross continents.

Advocates of “big is beautiful†include George Monbiot, who has criticised Leggett’s claims about solar roofs in Âé¶¹´«Ã½ (30 September 2006, p 24). Disappointingly, Leggett does not address this row here, simply calling for both solar farms and solar roofs, while asserting the ability of “cloudy Britain†and even “rainy Manchester†to power up from the sun.

Despite the book’s technical probity, it sometimes feels like blinkered propaganda. For example, Leggett and his co-writers eulogise Abu Dhabi’s plans for a carbon-neutral town called Masdar, which would have been a green bubble in a sea of unsustainability. Even so, you have to hand it to Leggett: he doesn’t just hector from the sidelines, he has waded right in.

Jeremy Leggett

Profile Books

Topics: Books and art / Energy and fuels