"Back in the 1970s, in a famous Foreign Affairs article (PDF), Lovins advocated taking "the soft" energy path, comprised of efficiency and renewables, over "the hard" path, the pursuit of fossil fuel at any price. Thirty some years later Lovins continues to make the same arguments, except this time, the world seems to be heeding his counsel, and his prescience on issues from oil supply to nuclear power, is proving exceedingly accurate. See "Does a Big Economy Need Big Power Plants?" in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal's "Oil Industry Braces for Drop in U.S. Thirst for Gasoline."
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RMI Co-founder and Chief Scientist Amory Lovins Receives Time 100 and "Design Mind" Awards
This week RMI Chief Scientist Amory Lovins added two more awards to his collection, TIME Magazine's 100 most influential people designation and National Design Awards' "Design Mind" honor.
The 2009 TIME 100 included Lovins with the likes of Edward Kennedy, Gordon Brown, Angela Merkel, and Barack Obama. A short write-up by Carl Pope, executive director of the Sierra Club, credited Lovins for his foresight on energy strategy.
Back in the 1970s, in a famous Foreign Affairs article (PDF), Lovins advocated taking "the soft" energy path, comprised of efficiency and renewables, over "the hard" path, the pursuit of fossil fuel at any price. Thirty some years later Lovins continues to make the same arguments, except this time, the world seems to be heeding his counsel, and his prescience on issues from oil supply to nuclear power, is proving exceedingly accurate. See "Does a Big Economy Need Big Power Plants?" in the New York Times and Wall Street Journal's "Oil Industry Braces for Drop in U.S. Thirst for Gasoline."
The National Design Awards, which granted Lovins the "design mind" honor, was started ten years ago by Smithsonian’s Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. Recommendations were solicited from a committee of more than 800 leading designers, educators, journalists, cultural figures, and corporate leaders nationwide. The Design Committee attributed Lovins' award to his active involvement at the nexus of energy, resources, environment, development, and security in more than 50 countries for 40 years.
"His uniquely influential and innovative work combines broad syntheses of new solutions to old problems with deep analyses of underlying technical and institutional issues."