Book contents
- In Search of Good Energy Policy
- In Search of Good Energy Policy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Multidisciplinary Perspectives
- 2 Political Science and Energy
- 3 Economics – The Proper Valuation of Security and Environment
- 4 Good Energy: Philosophical Perspectives
- 5 Public Theology – ‘Grounded’: An Energy Policy Rooted in Human Flourishing
- 6 Anthropology and Energy Policy
- 7 History: A Long View?
- 8 Management – From the Drawing Board to Successful Delivery
- 9 Legal Aspects of Energy Policy
- Part II Cases and Multidisciplinary Responses
- Part III Multidisciplinary Cases
- Index
8 - Management – From the Drawing Board to Successful Delivery
from Part I - Multidisciplinary Perspectives
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 June 2019
- In Search of Good Energy Policy
- In Search of Good Energy Policy
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Multidisciplinary Perspectives
- 2 Political Science and Energy
- 3 Economics – The Proper Valuation of Security and Environment
- 4 Good Energy: Philosophical Perspectives
- 5 Public Theology – ‘Grounded’: An Energy Policy Rooted in Human Flourishing
- 6 Anthropology and Energy Policy
- 7 History: A Long View?
- 8 Management – From the Drawing Board to Successful Delivery
- 9 Legal Aspects of Energy Policy
- Part II Cases and Multidisciplinary Responses
- Part III Multidisciplinary Cases
- Index
Summary
Infrastructure projects require collaborative exploration of what is needed and what is possible. Good leadership creates the goodwill and team spirit which generate a good outcome. To develop a whole global industry – e.g., the wind industry – this has to be sustained over a wide geography and a long period of time. Developing a new sector of an industry – e.g., offshore wind energy – raises new problems, particularly problems of the size of larger wind turbines, and all the necessary subsea infrastructure. This is seriously expensive for a market limited in size. Creating a stable market helps reduce the risk but the investment required to establish the physically large factories to build these large turbines in quantity for what remains a limited market appears prohibitive.
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- Information
- In Search of Good Energy Policy , pp. 82 - 88Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019