Lithium batteries may hold the key to an environmentally sustainable, oil-independent future. From electric cars to a smart power grid that can actually store electricity, letting us harness the powers of the sun and the wind and use them when we need them, lithiuma metal half as dense as water, found primarily in some of the most uninhabitable places on earthhas the potential to set us on a path toward a low-carbon energy economy.
InBottled Lightning, Seth Fletcher takes us on a fascinating journey, from the salt flats of Bolivia to the labs of MIT and Stanford, from the turmoil at GM to cutting-edge lithium-ion battery start-ups, introducing us to the key players and ideas in an industry with the power to reshape the world. Lithium is the thread that ties together many crucial stories of our time: the environmental movement; the American auto industry, staking its revival on the electrification of cars and trucks; the struggle between first-world countries in need of natural resources and the impoverished countries where those resources are found; and the overwhelming popularity of the portable, Internet-connected gadgets that are changing the way we communicate. With nearly limitless possibilities, the promise of lithium offers new hope to a foundering American economy desperately searching for a green-tech boom to revive it.
Fletcher makes a good case that the electric-car trend may soon be able to shed its dubious reputation as a public-private hybrid and roll under its own power. Ronald Bailey, The Wall Street Journal
There's never a dull page as Mr. Fletcher slaloms through the science, the business deals and the political pitfalls. Don Sherman, The New York Times
Bottled Lightningis a gripping introduction to this sophisticated technology and its place in our society. Bruno Scrosati, Nature
A well-written, smart and--when Fletcher gets rolling in the last quarter of the book--rló