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Energy Efficient Law Books

My family is building a house, again. A dislike of reality TV has the effect that the P. and S. Mireau family builds things. One of the features of our new building will be a 38 foot long, full wall height library area extending down a wide hall from the door into the garage past bedrooms and bathrooms and taking up one wall of the living room. It will be lovely, clear fir shelves filled with our large collection of reading material. And I do mean filled. We last packed and moved in September 2008 and 39 boxes of books came with us, not including my children’s collections which I refused to count (they have their own library in “the room”).

We had a decidated library in our straw bale [1] house, an energy efficient building that was our 2001-2003 project. That library was full before we had unpacked all the boxes in 2002. I am a little worried about shelf space since this is the absolutely last time we are building or moving. Until (and if) the Mireau Giggles vacate and their space becomes more library we have to be efficient. Efficiency with resources is important to our family so e-books are a possible option.

Which is more energy efficient a book or an e-book?

I know that many law libraries are considering electronic book options and there are several publishers going down this road as well. Irwin Law’s new E-Library [2] comes to mind. We have talked about Kindles [3] and iPads [4], but never discused the “green” side of these devices. Since yesterday was St. Patrick’s Day, I offer up this short collection of links regarding energy efficient publication.

E-Books v. Newspapers [5] from Fat Knowledge, August 2008
Which is more energy efficient buying books and bookcases or using a Kindle? [6] from WikiAnswers (no date)
Office of Energy Efficiency [7] (a Government of Canada website – nothing specific to books)
Comparison of e-book readers [8] from Wikipedia
Canadian Law search results [9] from PDFDatabase.com (free e-book downloads)