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Chasing the Sun: Solar Adventures Around the World | 
enlarge | Author: Neville Williams Publisher: New Society Publishers Category: Book
List Price: $18.95 Buy Used: $8.15 You Save: $10.80 (57%)
New (21) Used (9) from $8.15
Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 676270
Media: Paperback Pages: 320 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 8.8 x 6 x 1
ISBN: 0865715378 Dewey Decimal Number: 333.7923091724 EAN: 9780865715370 ASIN: 0865715378
Publication Date: October 1, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: Inventory subject to prior sale. Used items have varying degrees of wear, highlighting, etc. and may not include supplements such as infotrac or other web access codes. Expedited orders cannot be sent to PO Box. Sorry, not able to ship to APO, FPO, Alaska, and Hawaii.
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Product Description
If millions of people in the developing world can use solar power, why can't we in North America? The question immediately arises from this fascinating account of the author's 12-year quest to bring solar power and light to people in the developing world who have no electricity. Chasing the Sun is a story of dreamers and doers who succeeded in their mission to make the world better by delivering nature's energy to poor people and by building organizations to put the sun at their service in practical, affordable, and effective ways. A green energy development narrative that is fun and eye-opening, the book is also part autobiography. Author Neville Williams' inspiring tale of trailblazing innovation describes: His founding the nonprofit Solar Electric Light Fund (SELF) in 1990, which promoted solar power for a decade by setting up pilot solar rural electrification programs in 11 developing countries, including Zimbabwe, India, Nepal, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, and China His launching of the commercial Solar Electric Light Company in 1997, which became the SELCO group of companies that has overcome daunting challenges to bring solar electricity to 50,000 families in India, Sri Lanka, and Vietnam Filled with colorful characters, the book also features the enthusiasm of maverick devotees to the renewable energy boom of the 1980s and 1990s and their interplay with staid DC-based development institutions, as well as their unique perspective on global solutions to "energy poverty." It will be illuminating to all interested in the environment, development, renewable energy, socially responsible business, and our future at the end of the age of oil. Neville Williams was an award-winning journalist for many years who also worked as the national media director for Greenpeace. He remains involved with SELCO and is currently working on domestic solar initiatives from his Washington, DC, home.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
Chasing the Sun... January 12, 2008 Jacqueline Audige 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Great guide to a business starter, I love this book because the author really separates fiction from facts in it. The book is based on real life adventures which bring out the inspirational and convincing side in writing. It is an interesting book because it gives a lot of easy-to-understand details on renewable energy and good lesson on perseverance. Once you read the first chapter, you are eager to go on to the next one. I would recommend it to anyone who wants to start a business and lack motivation or someone who wants to learn some more on renewable energy.
A great advertisement for the author - and not much else. July 22, 2007 Pinnipal (San Francisco) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
In purchasing this book I was hoping to glean some useful information about the specifics of getting solar energy to those who have no other options. Instead I got 300 pages of the author name-dropping and telling me how great and successful he is. He makes it sound like he is solely responsible for all solar power in all developing nations. There are limited specifics regarding solar power (the author himself admits he knows little about the actual technology involved), and I finished reading still not knowing how to get involved in this industry (apparently the only way to do so is to be good friends with all the rich and powerful businessmen and politicians like he is). That said there is some useful historical information on the industry, it is a recent book with up to date statistics, and thus it may prove to be a decent reference book in a limited way. The final chapter is good, as it discusses the current state of energy policy in the U.S.
What a fantastic book! March 14, 2006 Patrick Wilson (Los Angeles, CA (USC)) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This book is fun to read - it outlines the history of photovoltaics, the history of international development of photovoltaics, and the exciting history of the Solar Electric Light Fund. If you're interested in photovoltaics, and/or international development, this is THE resource of all resources - what works, what doesn't...
Great book on Solar business by someone who has figured out how to actually get things done! March 9, 2006 Chris Ruder (Chicago, IL.) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
First off, I am a solar industry wannabe. This book only heightens my interest in getting involved. It's pretty amazing to see what Mr. Williams has accomplished through his tireless drive to help thousands of people and villages get electricity. This is a great book by someone that seems to know how to cut through red tape and just get things done. He takes some jabs at big government run programs, MBA's, and some various large institutions that seem to get too caught up in theory and do not actually get anything done. It sounds like this criticism is well founded. Mr. Williams has been successful in creating numerous solar businesses around the globe. There are some great stories on him being the first white man to ever visit some villages. Hearing the stories from different villagers tell how their lives have changed since purchasing a solar system is truly inspiring. Not a technical book by anymeans (a nice change from most solar books), Chasing the Sun focuses more on how to make solar panels more commonplace and helping people while creating a successful "for profit" business. He is now trying to figure out how to replicate this in the US. That should make a great book too.
Unique and deeply valuable November 29, 2005 Gerry Braun (Darnestown, Maryland USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Chasing the Sun is not only highly readable and entertaining; it is unique and deeply valuable. It is not about the machinery of solar energy, nor its hows and whys and whens. There are other books, easier to research, mostly harder to read, about these aspects. It is about the human dimension of solar energy, how people and their institutions collaborate or get in the way. It is unique because it is the memoir of a skilled journalist who put aside journalism to immerse himself purposefully in his subject; deeply valuable because the immersion lasted more than a decade. Importantly, it exposed the daunting political and institutional landscape that must be navigated to bring modern lighting and communications to the poorest regions of the world. It reminds of the Journal of Lewis and Clark. Theirs was a voyage of discovery. So was Williams'. Like Lewis and Clark, Williams had a mission, including a starting point and a goal, but no roadmaps or off-ramps. It was either move forward, or turn back; no riches or glory at journey's end, just a treasure beyond price, knowledge of the territory, its risks and its rewards, what works there and what doesn't; hopes and expectations betrayed and beautiful truths revealed. Our generation, Willams' and mine, expected its ideals to be shared and operative in the big world outside the small American heartland towns we grew up in. It turned out to be more complicated than that; the ideals came with a price. Williams leaves no doubt they were worth it. He learned that the poor that we tend to pity for not sharing our material wealth are mostly not dependent and miserable as we assume but rather resourceful and in some ways more credit-worthy than corporate America. They do need solar energy and they can and will in fact pay what it is worth to them. Who should read Chasing the Sun? Those in the ever-expanding global solar industry who have fought the good fight alongside Williams will find validation and encouragement. Those whose contributions are measured in meetings attended may be discomforted. But this is mainly a book for the rising generation. It is a reality book that belongs at the top of college course reading lists, because it speaks to the problems we are leaving to the next generation to solve for themselves and their children. It is a book of practical experience and an antidote to the notion that ideas and results are somehow magically connected. It speaks to the need to make things happen ourselves rather than assume our institutions are working on the problem. In his last chapter Williams addresses making things happen in the US. For many this will be the inspiration to make a difference.
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