Physicist Amory Lovins Is Cofounder And

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Physicist Amory Lovins Is Cofounder And Physicist Amory Lovins (盧安武), 65, is cofounder, Chairman Emeritus, and Chief Scientist of Rocky Mountain Institute (www.rmi.org), an independent, apolitical, nonprofit think-and-do tank that drives the efficient and restorative use of resources. He has advised major firms and governments for 40+ years in 50+ countries, including China and Japan, on advanced energy and resource efficiency and on energy’s links to economy, security, development, and environment. Author of 31 books and over 480 papers, he has received the Blue Planet, Nissan, Shingo, Volvo, Zayed, Onassis, and Mitchell Prizes, MacArthur and Ashoka Fellowships, 11 honorary doctorates, and the Heinz, Lindbergh, Right Livelihood (“alternative Nobel”), National Design, and World Technology Awards. A former Oxford don and a Swedish engineering academician, he has taught at ten universities, including Peking University—most recently at Stanford’s School of Engineering and currently at the [U.S.] Naval Postgraduate School—and continues to lecture widely across Asia and worldwide. In 2013 he was elected to Kyoto Prefecture’s Earth Hall of Fame. His latest books are Natural Capitalism (with Paul Hawken and L.H. Lovins, www.natcap.org, 1999, published in Chinese by Shanghai Popular Science Press and by Commonwealth, and in Japanese by Nihon Keizai Shimbun), the Economist book of the year Small Is Profitable: The Hidden Economic Benefits of Making Electrical Resources the Right Size (2002, www.smallisprofitable.org, published in Japanese by Japan Energy Conservation Center), Winning the Oil Endgame (2004, www.oilendgame.com, published in Chinese by Tsinghua University Press), The Essential Amory Lovins (Earthscan, London, 2011), and Reinventing Fire (Chelsea Green, 2011, www.reinventingfire.com, published in Japanese by Diamond and to be published in Chinese by Hunan Science & Technology Press). Dr. Lovins is a member of the US National Petroleum Council and of the Advisory Board for the Chief of Naval Operations. In 2009, Time named him one of the world’s 100 most influential people, and Foreign Policy, one of the 100 top global thinkers. .
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