

#9569
Mentioned in 5 episodes
More and More and More
An All-Consuming History of Energy
Book âą 2024
Mentioned by












Mentioned in 5 episodes
Recommended by 

for explaining why energy transitions are historically difficult and why fossil fuel use can keep rising alongside new energy sources.


Jason Bordoff

1,156 snips
How Bad Could the Iran Oil Crisis Get?
Mentioned by 

as the author of the book, explaining the false history of energy transition.


Rachel Donald

57 snips
The "Energy Transition" is a Pipe Dream | Jean-Baptiste Fressoz
ErwÀhnt von ![undefined]()

, als sie die Geschichte der Energie betrachtet.

Miriam Lang

30 snips
S03E56 - Miriam Lang zu Systemalternativen jenseits des Entwicklungsparadigmas
Recommended by ![undefined]()

for its perspective that there's never truly been an energy transition; rather, previous energy sources become infrastructure for new ones.

Cameron Tonkinwise

11 snips
#133 - Is Another World Possible? Transition Design - with Cameron Tonkinwise
Recommended by ![undefined]()

, this book deconstructs the idea of past energy transitions.

Thea Riofrancos

Bonus - Green Energy and Fossil Capital w/ Thea Riofrancos (Preview)
Mentioned by 

as an exploration of how green innovation and decarbonization differ.


Amy Westervelt

A "Green Transition"? If Only It Were That Simple
Mentionné par ![undefined]()

comme le titre anglais du livre de Jean-Baptiste Fresseau.

Ăloi Laurent

Eloi Laurent, économiste écologique
Mentioned by ![undefined]()

as the book he is very excited to talk about with ![undefined]()

.

Sidney Michelini

Jean-Baptiste Fressoz

Jean-Baptiste Fressoz, "More and More and More: An All-Consuming History of Energy" (Harper, 2025)
Mentioned by Hugh Ferguson (listener) for making the point that we are just consuming more and more energy.

There is no energy transition happening


