Posts Tagged ‘China’

Drumbeat: September 28, 2009

Monday, September 28th, 2009


The 1.258 trillion-barrel question

The Earth contains a finite amount of oil. Burned to power our vehicles, heat our homes and light our cities, this fuel is a nonrenewable resource. So when Peter Maass, author of “Crude World: The Violent Twilight of Oil,” asked experts how much oil remains, it was not an innocuous question. The answer could spur or doom research into alternative energy sources, even sustain or overthrow governments.

Oil barons around the world, though, confidently reassured Maass. As of this year, they insist, the world’s reserves of crude amount to 1.258 trillion barrels.

Energy Economics and Some Energy Myths for the 21st Century

Taking oil as a case in point, it might be true that the most imaginative myths in circulation today are those being generated by OPEC. Having come to appreciate the supreme importance of oil – and how it functions as a benchmark for the world’s energy systems – that organization has informed the oil importing countries that if the oil price goes up and stays up, then they will invest in more production capacity, and also raise their output of oil.

That sounds good – in fact it probably sounds like something you heard in an introductory economics lecture, or read in your favourite textbook or newspaper – only it is completely untrue. It is a distinguished myth, and unfortunately a myth that is believed by many drowsy academics and their students, and probably more than a few influential but not very brainy decision makers. Instead, although there might be exceptions, the aggregate of OPEC producers is not going to invest in additional capacity, and they are definitely not going to produce or try to produce much more oil. Why should they? Would you if you were in their place?


Systemic Collapse: The Basics

Systemic collapse, societal collapse, the coming dark age, the great transformation, the coming crash, the post-industrial age, the long emergency, socioeconomic collapse, the die-off, the tribulation, the coming anarchy, perhaps even resource wars (to the extent that this is not an oxymoron, since wars themselves require resources) ― there are many names, and they do not all correspond to exactly the same thing, but there is a widespread belief that something immense and ominous is happening. Unlike those of the Aquarian Age, the heralds of this new era often have impressive academic credentials: they include scientists, engineers, and historians. The serious beginnings of the concept can be found in Paul and Anne Ehrlich, Population, Resources, Environment (1970); Donella H. Meadows et al., The Limits to Growth (1972); and William R. Catton, Jr., Overshoot (1980). What all the overlapping theories have in common can be seen in the titles of those three books.


Kunstler: The Season of the Witch

Most curious, though, was when the interviewer, Jim Puplava, probed Dent about his views on Peak Oil. Dent said he didn’t believe in it; that when he was in college in the 1970s (remember the OPEC oil embargo of ‘73), he learned to disregard any suggestions that we are “running out of oil.” He stated this, by the way, as a simple assertion, without any further explanation, and Puplava didn’t belabor him with arguments. But it was a weird moment. Of course, it hardly need be said that Peak Oil story has never been about “running out of oil” per se, but rather about declining flows, geopolitical management of flows, and the effects of depletion on industrial economies — in particular the effect on regular, expected, cyclical “growth” of the type that financial markets utterly depend on to power the trade in investment paper.


Saudi Says Oil Helps All Energy Types

As I wrote a few weeks ago, Ali al-Naimi, the Saudi oil minister, subscribes to the “Goldilocks” view of the current market — in which prices are neither too high for consumers, nor too low for producers, but are just right for all.

The world needs oil prices to be around a barrel to ensure that all investors — whether they produce tar sands or alternative fuels — can invest profitably to boost supplies, according to Mr. Naimi, who spoke to the Nightly Business Report on PBS on Friday evening.


As Oil Enriches Australia, Spill Is Seen as a Warning

SYDNEY, Australia — Visitors hoping to peek at Australia’s exotic marine life usually head straight for the Great Barrier Reef. But conservationists say that an equally remarkable, but lesser known, marine environment is under threat from the booming oil and gas exploration taking place among the reefs and atolls off Australia’s northwest coast.


Dutch gas storage project partners seek exit – sources

AMSTERDAM (Reuters) – Dutch oil and gas company Dyas and Canada’s largest energy firm PetroCanada are looking to sell their stakes in one of Europe’s largest gas storage projects, three people familiar with the matter said. The two companies want to exit the scheme, located in Bergemeer north of Amsterdam, because of disagreements with partner Abu Dhabi National Energy Company over how to take the project forward, one banking source said.


Gazprom unlikely to review gas deals

Russian energy giant Gazprom said today it was unlikely for it to review contracts on gas deliveries with European companies after a Russian newspaper report.


Kenya: Country Turns to Venezuela for Cheap Oil

Nairobi — Kenya and Venezuela have signed an agreement setting the stage for cooperation in oil exploitation and supply.

The agreement also calls for exchange of technical expertise on energy matters including exploitation of the renewable sources of energy.


Venezuela May Extend Cheap Oil Program to Kenya Under Accord

(Bloomberg) — Venezuela may supply Kenya with low cost oil under an agreement, as the South American country extends oil aid beyond the Americas.

Venezuela may supply “affordable oil to Kenya from partners close to East Africa” and will provide technical assistance as Kenya seeks to produce oil, according to a statement sent today by the office of Kenya Vice President Kalonzo Musyoka.


Venezuela says no plans yet on exploring uranium

PORLAMAR, Venezuela (Reuters) – Venezuela has yet to develop a plan to explore or exploit its uranium deposits despite comments by a government official saying it was working with Iran to locate them, Venezuela’s energy minister told Reuters.

On Friday, Mining Minister Rodolfo Sanz said Iran and Venezuela were working together to find uranium, and preliminary tests showed the South American country holds large deposits.


China’s Oil Needs Affect Its Iran Ties

BEIJING — China’s dependence on Iranian oil could deter it from backing tougher sanctions on Iran, though Beijing supports containing nuclear proliferation as part of a broader push to raise its international diplomatic stance.

China’s trade with the U.S., at 0 billion in the first seven months of this year, dwarfs its billion trade with Iran over the same period. But China is the world’s second-biggest oil consumer after the U.S., and the Persian Gulf country is one of Beijing’s biggest suppliers. Chinese imports of Iranian crude grew to 13 million metric tons in the first half, about 15% of China’s total, and up 22% from a year earlier, according to government data.


China Becomes World’s Biggest Energy Producer

China has become world’s largest energy producer thanks to its expanding capacity to supply energy in the six decades since the foundation of the People’s Republic, it said Friday. At a press conference by the State Council Information Office on Friday, Zhang Guobao, deputy chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission and director of the National Energy Administration, said China produced 110 times more energy in 2008 than in 1949, with a self-sufficiency rate of over 90 percent guaranteeing energy security.


China official warns on “too fast” nuclear plans

QINGDAO, China (Reuters) – China may have to put the brakes on the construction of nuclear power plants to ensure the plants are safe, the country’s top energy planning official told reporters on Sunday.

Zhang Guobao, head of the National Energy Administration, warned of signs of “improper” and “too fast” development of nuclear power in some regions.


China’s Wind Farms Come With a Catch: Coal Plants

SHANGHAI—China’s ambition to create “green cities” powered by huge wind farms comes with a dirty little secret: Dozens of new coal-fired power plants need to be installed as well.

Part of the reason is that wind power depends on, well, the wind. To safeguard against blackouts when conditions are too calm, officials have turned to coal-fired power as a backup.


Interview with Sadad al Husseini—“The Facts Are There”

Sadad: I’ve been tracking the number of projects, globally, for a long time both in the Middle East and elsewhere—Russia, Brazil, west coast of Africa, and others. A lot of this information is in the public domain, so there is no mystery there. The International Energy Agency recently reported on the same numbers. The bottom line is that there are not enough projects. There is not enough new capacity coming on line, within say the next five to six years, to make up for global declines. And that’s assuming a very moderate level of declines—6% to 6.5% for non-OPEC, perhaps a 3.5% to 4% decline rate for OPEC.

Even at these modest decline rates, we are basically going to see a shortage of capacity within two to three years. We’re being lulled by this current excess capacity, which has more to do with lower demand than anything to do with supply. So we do have a problem in the near term. In the longer term it’s even worse because in the longer term the lead time to discover, develop and put on line production runs into 10 years. And there isn’t enough being done in the long term as well. So it’s both a short and a long-term problem.


Heinberg: Is the Global Oil Tank Half-Full, Is It Half-Empty…or Are We Running on Fumes?

Let me summarize: the industry needs oil prices that are both stable and near economy-killing levels in order to justify investments necessary to possibly replace depleting reserves and overcome declining production in existing oilfields (I say “possibly” because we have insufficient evidence as yet to conclusively show that new discoveries enabled by expensive new exploration and production technologies can offset declines in the world’s aging giant oilfields).

Should this picture lead the viewer to come away with reassured thoughts of “No worries, happy motoring?” Or does this look more like a portrait of peak oil?


Crude Oil Falls Below as Dollar Strengthens, Equities Slide

(Bloomberg) — Crude oil slipped below a barrel as a stronger dollar reduced the appeal of commodities and declines in equities raised concern a recovery in fuel demand may stall.

Crude slumped more than 8 percent last week, the biggest weekly drop since the week ending July 10, as U.S. stockpiles unexpectedly rose. Oil fell today as the dollar gained, limiting the commodity’s appeal to investors as an inflation hedge. Stock markets in Europe and Asia traded lower.


Price of gas down 7 cents in the last two weeks

CAMARILLO, Calif. – The average price of regular gasoline in the United States has dropped nearly seven cents over a two-week period to .52.

That’s according to the national Lundberg Survey of fuel prices released Sunday.


Heating Oil Prices Cool Down as Winter Approaches

Homeowners who heat with oil were feeling sticker shock just over a year ago as prices soared close to a gallon, but they’re breathing easier now.

Heating oil prices are barely half what they were in summer 2008 — and while prices might go up and even exceed last winter’s, nothing indicates any severe spike this winter.

Those who heat with natural gas and propane can expect dramatic drops, while electric heat is projected to cost slightly less.


Natural Gas Feint Means Prices Poised to Plummet 19% on Storage

(Bloomberg) — The steepest rally in natural gas prices since 2006 is coming to an end as the 400 salt caverns, depleted oil fields and aquifers used to store the fuel in the U.S. reach capacity for the first time.

Stockpiles may surpass the record of 3.545 trillion cubic feet by as much as 350 billion cubic feet this fall, Energy Department estimates show. Gulf South Pipeline Co. says its fields in Louisiana and Mississippi are so full that customers will have to pay penalties for exceeding their limits. With no place to go, producers will be forced to dump excess fuel on the market.


Europe, Gazprom in talks on reduced gas supply-paper

MOSCOW (Reuters) – European consumers of Russian gas, including Germany, Italy and Turkey, plan this year to take up to .8 billion less gas than stipulated in take-or-pay contracts with Gazprom, a Russian newspaper reported.

Consumers plan talks with Gazprom to avoid payment after a sharp drop in gas demand this year and are citing Russia’s lenience with Ukraine as a precedent, business daily Kommersant reported on its front page on Monday.


Gasoline Faces Risk of ‘Meltdown’, PVM Says: Technical Analysis

(Bloomberg) — Gasoline prices face a potential “meltdown” should futures close below a pivotal correction point at .5823 a gallon in New York, according to technical analysis by PVM Oil Associates Ltd.

Gasoline “has very much led the way lower with early negative signals,” PVM said in a report today. On Sept. 25, the fuel “entered a danger zone” after dropping below .6053, a significant threshold during its advance this year, according to the broker. The next level of support is .5823.


Aramco looks to develop Brazil’s offshore oil

A senior official from Brazil has said that state-owned hydrocarbons giant Saudi Aramco is among the companies interested in helping the South American country to develop its pre-salt oil reserves.


India May Attract Billion in Oil, Gas Exploration Round

(Bloomberg) — India may attract as much as billion in work commitments in the country’s largest auction of oil and gas areas as explorers such as BP Plc, BG Group Plc and Santos Ltd. seek new deposits, a government official said.


Kuwait’s crude oil exports to China plummets 35.8pc in August

Crude oil exports from Kuwait to China fell by 35.8 percent in August to 122,000 barrels per day (bpd) compared to the same period in 2008, reported the nation’s government news agency KUNA on Monday, citing official data released by the Chinese government.


Russia to raise oil export duty to 0.7 per ton from October 1

MOSCOW (RIA Novosti) – Russia will raise oil export duty on its benchmark Urals blend from 8.6 per metric ton to 0.7 per metric ton from October 1, following trends on global oil markets, the government said on Monday.


Aramco offers 6th fuel oil lot in firm market

Saudi Aramco has offered a sixth-straight cargo of fuel oil within the past three weeks, in the face of the tight Middle East and East Asian markets and following outages at its refineries, traders said on Monday.


NY Moves Closer to Natural Gas Drilling Upstate

NEW YORK, NY September 28, 2009 —New York State will move a step closer this week to opening up the Catskills and the Southern Tier to natural gas drilling, as a key environmental assessment is made public.


Nigeria: MAN Challenges FG On Refineries

Lagos — As clock ticks towards the December 2009 deadline promise to provide the nation 6,000mw electricity power supply, the Federal Government has been urged to make the country’s refineries work to reduce heavy dependence on importation of petroleum products, in particular, Low Pour Fuel Oil (LPFO) and Automated Gas Oil (AGO).


Winter gas shortage looms large for Iran

Iran will be short of around 200 million cubic metres per day of gas this winter due to rapid growth in demand, a daily newspaper reported Iran’s oil minister as saying.

Iran has bought its first diesel cargoes for six months in September to supplement gas it is burning in power plants.

The country sits on the world’s second-largest gas reserves but has failed to develop them fast enough to meet domestic demand.


Iran fires off long-range missiles in latest test

(CNN) — Iran test fired two types of long-range missiles on Monday, including the two-stage Sajil, state-run Press TV reported.


U.S. Is Seeking a Range of Sanctions Against Iran

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is scrambling to assemble a package of harsher economic sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program that could include a cutoff of investments to the country’s oil-and-gas industry and restrictions on many more Iranian banks than those currently blacklisted, senior administration officials said Sunday.


Fisking Scientific American on Peak Oil

I have now read the Scientific American article. It is perhaps one of the more, if not the most insidious of the recent media pieces on peak oil, in that it leverages the truth about technological advances in oil exploration and extraction to create a falsehood: that these technological advances increase aggregate flows in world supply. It was bad enough that the NYT piece invoked Kashagan as an example–a howler of an example really–because of course Kashagan was discovered in 2000 and not a drop of oil will flow until 2014 (at huge expense and after many western oil cos have abandoned the project after huge losses). That the NYT would invoke Kashagan as an example of recent discoveries is almost absurdist.


Do you want to know why Iran has a nuclear program?

It’s called peak oil, and it has global consequences.


Buy local, think global — with oil subsidies?

Back to the subsidy issue: With or without that subsidy, Americans would have demanded more oil than we could have produced. Without the subsidy, more of the production meeting that demand would likely have been outside the U.S. in regions where environmental standards are much lower. So — is the subsidy a net benefit for the environment?


The Age of Wisdom?

The need to address climate change is going to transform entire industries, our infrastructure, and our lifestyles. But will this transformation be driven by wise policy, oil depletion, or a real climate crisis? Will it be a benign process that creates new jobs and technologies and leaves our societal structures intact, or will it cause violent economic and social disruption that threatens the fabric of democratic societies?


San Francisco holds hearings on Peak Oil and the consequnces affecting Qulity of Life

I attended some of the first meetings linked to Peak Oil in San Francisco and the consequences facing humanity all over the world. While, San Francisco has been on the fore front of such issues – other Nations like England, Germany, Denmark too have vetted such pertinent issues and come out with many practical solutions. Abuse of the world’s natural resources stems from GREED and lack of Spirituality. The First Nations and the First People had it right for thousands of years. Contemporary society has just woken up and is trying to figure out how to resolve waste and especially the consumption of vast resources of petroleum – gradually running out.


Sustainable farm practices needed

AMES, Iowa — Less than 1 percent of Americans are full-time farmers and the average age of those individuals is around 57, said Richard Heinberg, a leading expert in sustainability education.

“We don’t even know who’s going to be growing our food in 20 years,” Heinberg said.


Sustainable Farming – Finding a New Way to Farm

How food arrives at the supermarket or the local restaurant is largely a mystery to most consumers. It is taken for granted that upon arrival at the supermarket, everything on your list will be on a shelf somewhere in the 20 or so aisled store. But the constant supply of beef, chicken, pork, and farm raised fish to market has a direct effect on our planet and our health. The amount of resources necessary for just one hamburger (6 gallons of water) is simply staggering. Here is a little information to help you ponder your diet, your health, and the health of the planet.


The Spirit Thrives at Perma Detroit

Caring for mother earth goes beyond recycling garbage and replacing carpet with bamboo flooring. On the east-side of Detroit and in midtown Detroit, there are magickal gardens growing and uplifting the spirits of the people who tend to them and benefit from their harvest. Fueled by the will of the spirit, sweat and bold determination, Perma Detroit has magickally transformed urban decay into natural beauty. And that’s the gospel truth. I spoke with Perma Detroit about the power behind this wondrous transformation.


Saving the World, Without U.S. Consumers

Victorian consumers invested in their possessions, and treated them as heirlooms to be handed down through the generations. Think of your great-grandmother’s china cabinet full of cut glass. She loved it, treasured it, and hoped that you and your children would, too.

The Victorian “treasure chest” idea gradually began to disappear in the late 20th century with the birth of a “throwaway” culture. As retailers competed primarily on price, newer generations of consumers began to see their purchases as being temporary. A new family in 1870, 1925, and 1955 scrimped to furnish their home or apartment, investing in things they would keep for a lifetime. In contrast, today’s newlyweds shop at IKEA for starter furniture, expecting to upgrade again and again through life, exacting a price on the environment.


Farmers Become Guardians of Ethanol Plant

A group of farmer-owned ethanol plants in Minnesota, Iowa and Nebraska have teamed up become the guardians of a former VeraSun facility in Janesville, Minn.


Pakistan plans biodiesel project to reduce imports

ISLAMABAD: To overcome the shortage of petroleum products and reduce its import bill, the government of Pakistan plans to present a pilot project “Jatropha Plantation and Production of Biodiesel” with an estimated cost of .6m, official sources said here yesterday.


Palm Oil Drops the Most Since June, Tracking Crude Oil Losses

(Bloomberg) — Palm oil tumbled the most in more than three months after a leading industry buyer said prices must slump 13 percent from current levels to stoke demand for food and fuel applications and as crude oil fell.


China’s Threat Revives Race for Rare Minerals

HONG KONG — A Chinese threat to halt exports of rare minerals — vital for high-performance electric motors in wind turbines, hybrid cars and missiles — appears to have backfired.

With control of more than 99 percent of the world’s production of these minerals, China could try to use a ban to force other countries to buy the crucial motors for these high-tech end products, instead of just the minerals, directly from China.

But other governments and businesses reacted quickly as word of the proposed ban spread late this summer.

The Chinese threat has touched off a frenzied international effort to develop alternative mines, much as the 1973-74 Arab oil embargo’s repeated increases in oil prices prompted a global hunt for oil reserves.


Garbage economics

You might not think of the dump as a leading economic indicator, but garbage men are some of the first to know when there’s a downturn.

Because when people buy less stuff, they throw out less packaging.

…So far, the reduced volume hasn’t forced Xcel to idle any plants, Kuhn said. Instead, they are running below capacity. Because the French Island plant also burns waste wood chips, it can switch fuels if it runs out of trash.


Enter the Recession’s Waiting Room

Few of the employees of Katana Summit, a wind-tower manufacturer, saw it coming. On that day in early August, and in another round of cuts a few weeks later, about half of the plant’s 195-person payroll was eliminated, a shock that came with one notable consolation: the executives said they hoped to hire everyone back soon.

They seemed to mean it, too. As Kevin Strudthoff, the chief executive, explained that day, this was a “temporary layoff,” but there was a limit to what Katana could promise. The company, privately held, said it landed a multimillion-dollar deal last year to provide 225 wind towers to a turbine maker that it declined to identify. But when the credit crisis hit, wind-farm developers found it all but impossible to raise money, killing demand for wind towers.


E.ON, RWE Rise as Merkel Win May Extend Nuclear Life

(Bloomberg) — E.ON AG and RWE AG, Germany’s biggest utilities, jumped the most in a month in Frankfurt trading on speculation Chancellor Angela Merkel’s favored coalition government will scrap a nuclear phase-out law.


U.A.E. May Pick Nuclear Plant Contractor by Year End

(Bloomberg) — The United Arab Emirates may award the contracts by year end to build nuclear power plants in the country, according to an official at Areva SA.

The selection of contractors for the billion project to build two reactors by 2017, scheduled this month, has been delayed, Bertrand Castanet, Areva’s corporate vice president for business development, said today at a workshop in Doha. A decision may be made in this year’s “final quarter.”


Solar Power, Without All Those Panels

THE main way for homes to harness solar power today is through bulky panels added to the rooftop or mounted on the ground.

But companies are now offering alternatives to these fixed installations, in the less conspicuous form of shingles, tiles and other building materials that have photovoltaic cells sealed within them.


Greens criticise home insulation scheme

A high-profile Scottish Government home insulation scheme was “set up to fail”, the Green party said today.

The accusation was made after ministers revealed it will take 66 years to bring Scottish homes up to standard – compared with 10 under rival Green proposals.


Google Earth climate change 3D map unveiled

Google is using its Google Earth mapping tool to simulate on a 3D map of the world the predicted effects of climate change until the year 2100.

Using data provided by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the search giant created new layers for Google Earth showing the range of expected temperature and precipitation changes under different global emissions scenarios that could occur throughout the century.


Climate change: A history of fear

Scientists and journalists have been warning us of impending climate disasters for more than 100 years. Many of today’s global warming believers probably don’t even realize their claims are not original.In the 1930s the media was in a global warming fervor over shrinking Arctic ice.

This global warming movement came on the heels of the great global cooling scare of the 1900s. During that movement, the Las Angeles Times warned the entire human race that it “will have to fight for its existence against cold.”


Nepal feels heat of climate change

KATHMANDU (Xinhua) — The golden apples it once produced were famed in Nepal and across the border area in the Tibet Autonomous Region of China for their luscious taste.

But now, the northern district of Mustang, some 195 km west of Nepali capital Kathmandu, lying in the lap of the Himalayan ranges, is feeling the heat of global warming and the ensuing climate change.


James Hansen, In His Own Words

Dr. James Hansen–scientist, father, grandfather, and activist–is often called the “grandfather of climate change science,” although he eschews the moniker. In the 1970s and 80s, his advanced climate modeling and impassioned pleas for action brought the issue of global warming to the forefront, but since then too little has been done to slow our emissions. Hansen recently sat down with the Earth Island Institute for a taped interview to discuss his legacy and the prospects for a climate bill this year.


Ships, Planes Should Cut Emissions Up to 20%, EU’s Dimas Says

(Bloomberg) — The European Union may propose that the shipping and airline industries reduce emissions by as much as 20 percent over the next decade as part of any new United Nations accord to fight global warming.

Ships would have to cut pollution blamed for climate change by a fifth in 2020 compared with 2005 and airlines would need to trim discharges by 10 percent over the period under a proposal for the UN being prepared by EU Environment Commissioner Stavros Dimas.


E.U. Alone and Lonely on Carbon

BRUSSELS — Carbon trading put the European Union in the environmental vanguard.

Since 2005, the trade bloc has operated the world’s only continentwide system that puts a cap on greenhouse gas emissions and that requires major polluters to hold tradable allowances.

But the system has also been the most “costly climate policy program in the world,” according to Jürgen R. Thumann, the president of BusinessEurope, a powerful confederation of industry and employer groups.


Climate Envoys Meet Anew as Time ‘Has Almost Run Out’

Bloomberg) — Climate envoys met today in Bangkok with a new sense of urgency, saying negotiators are racing against a December deadline to devise a global deal.

“Time is not just pressing, it has almost run out,” said Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. “But in two weeks, real progress can be made toward the goals that world leaders have set for the negotiations, to break deadlocks, and to cooperate toward concrete progress.”


Met Office: catastrophic climate change could happen with 50 years

An average global temperature rise of 7.2F (4C), considered a dangerous tipping point, could happen by 2060, causing droughts around the world, sea level rises and the collapse of important ecosystems, it warns.

The Arctic could see an increase in temperatures of 28.8F (16C), while parts of sub Saharan Africa and North America would be devastated by an increase in temperature of up to 18F (10C).


Is 350 the New 450 When It Comes to Capping Carbon Emissions?

When it comes to fighting climate change, pick a number — any number.

Nearly 200 countries have signed a U.N. treaty pledging to avoid “dangerous” climate change. But lately, it seems, “dangerous” is lost in translation. Fifteen years since that agreement took effect, scientists and governments are still grappling with what carrying out its promise means.


World consumption plunges planet into ‘ecological debt’, says leading thinktank

Rich consumers are still voraciously gobbling up the world’s resources, despite the worst recession in a generation, with their appetite pushing the planet into “ecological debt” from today , according to a report by think-tank the new economics foundation.


What’s Wrong With the National Parks?

Natural resources are meant to be used; in fact, every generation has left future generations with more resources than existed when that generation arrived on the planet. Today we have more coal, minerals, and oil and gas, for example, than were predicted would exist a few short years ago. Months ago, many predicted peak oil and a future of declining supplies.

But today we celebrate the discovery of a vast deposit of oil in the Gulf of Mexico, and a huge natural gas find in Pennsylvania and New York. Given what we have accomplished in the natural resources field in past decades, who knows what the future holds. In the meantime, we must use what has been provided for us.

As the business columnist Warren Brookes once remarked, “The learning curve is green.” Thus, it is not government but the free market that yields better and wiser use of the resources available to us.


High tech may pinpoint Antarctica sea rise risks

Studies indicate that in the Eemian about 125,000 years ago, for instance, temperatures were slightly higher than now, hippopotamuses bathed in the Rhine — and seas were 4 metres higher.

“We need to know where the extra four metres came from,” said David Vaughan, a glaciologist at the British Antarctic Survey (BAS), adding that one possibility was that West Antarctica’s ice had collapsed.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 28, 2009

Drumbeat: September 27, 2009

Monday, September 28th, 2009


‘A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster’ by Rebecca Solnit

The bad news is that more disasters are coming, arising from any number of sources: climate change, widespread infrastructural vulnerabilities, toxic threats brewed at cellular or weapons-grade levels, seismic or oceanic volatility, and so on and so on. Whatever their cause, disasters will be born of some mixture of human and natural action or inaction, lives will be irrevocably altered, and absurd numbers of people will die.


Yet Rebecca Solnit sees human possibilities inherent in the certainty of big trouble. In “A Paradise Built in Hell: The Extraordinary Communities That Arise in Disaster,” this writer of impressive versatility explores disasters and the goodness that can come to characterize them. A careful student of the sociology of catastrophe, Solnit argues that the human experience of disaster so alters convention that a different social milieu can emerge, if briefly, within them; one distinguished by altruism and the absence of social hierarchies. In contrast to the presuppositions of the powerful (and Hollywood), steadfast about the inevitability of anarchic mayhem and riot, Solnit makes a convincing case for the sheer dignity and decency of people coming together amid terror.


Study may shift where foods grow

WASHINGTON — New York may be the nation’s second leading producer of apples, and Maine is near the top in potatoes — but the vast majority of the fruit and vegetables eaten in the Northeast come from other parts of the country.


A federal study aims to change that, by figuring out what could be grown more in the Northeast to satisfy big-city markets.


The U.S. Department of Agriculture said this week it is pouring an additional 0,000 into the food security effort, which will examine soil types, climate and economic issues that could shed light on the region’s potential to produce more of its own food. Doing so could dull the effect of high fuel prices and other transportation-related woes than can drive prices up in grocery stores.


New Presentations from Matt Simmons

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 27, 2009

What Lies Beyond The Fossil Fuel Horizon?


Investing In Energy: A Nightmare Or An Enlightened Dream


How Did Our Energy Hole Get So Deep?


Pemex’s Export Revenues Down 55.5 Percent

MEXICO CITY – Mexican state oil giant Petroleos Mexicanos said the value of its crude exports during the first eight months of the year totaled .4 billion, 55.5 percent less than in the same period of 2008.


UK acts to back Cadogan Petroleum

THE British government has intervened on behalf of Cadogan Petroleum, the quoted oil explorer embroiled in a dispute with Ukraine that has pushed it to the brink of liquidation.


Climate change bill may drift

WASHINGTON — Although President Barack Obama confidently assured world leaders last week that the U.S. was determined to combat global climate change, that resolve isn’t shared in the U.S. Senate.


The chamber has instead been consumed by other domestic priorities — including the administration-backed push to overhaul health care — and Sen. Barbara Boxer, D-Calif., is months behind her original timetable for introducing legislation that would cap greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming.


With all of the obstacles, it is increasingly likely the Obama administration will not have a new climate change law — or even a preliminary version passed by the Senate — to bring to international negotiations on a global warming pact this December in Copenhagen.


Heavier Rainstorms Ahead Due To Global Climate Change, Study Predicts

ScienceDaily — Heavier rainstorms lie in our future. That’s the clear conclusion of a new MIT and Caltech study on the impact that global climate change will have on precipitation patterns.


Dust storms spread deadly diseases worldwide

Huge dust storms, like the ones that blanketed Sydney twice last week, hit Queensland yesterday and turned the air red across much of eastern Australia, are spreading lethal epidemics around the world. However, they can also absorb climate change emissions, say researchers studying the little understood but growing phenomenon.


Small island states warn ecosystems already threatened by climate change effects, urge drastic reduction in greenhouse gases

Still reeling in the aftermath of a global economic crisis begun far beyond their shores, leaders of small island nations, among others addressing the General Assembly today, exhorted large economies to drastically reduce greenhouse gases that were threatening their ecosystems and sending shock waves through the very markets and industries on which their fragile economies depended.


Paul Roberts – The Future of Food in a Peak Oil

Roberts pointed out that in 1900, the average household spent half its daily income and half its hours providing food. Today, we spend much less time and much less money as a percent of our income, thanks to the industrialized food system. “I don’t think too many people want to go back to 1900, spending that much time making food,” he said later in response to a question about how disconnected we’ve become from our food sources.


“But,” he continued, “we have recognized that there are also costs. At the end of the day, food is not an industrial product. Food is not iPods or SUVs and there are troubling questions when industrialization is applied to food.” In a system where the inspection person on the chicken processing line has only three seconds to look for defects, he elaborated, it was only a matter of time before something like the 2007 recall of 22 million pounds of potentially E. coli-tainted hamburgers, which sickened dozens and ultimately put the meat company out of business.


Iran Plans 1 Billion-Euro Bond Sale to Fund Gas Field

(Bloomberg) — Iran plans to sell 1 billion euros (.47 billion) of bonds by December to fund the development of the South Pars natural-gas field, the Oil Ministry’s Shana news agency reported today.

Saudi not in favour of high prices

Saudi Arabia, the world’s biggest oil exporter, wants to keep crude prices from rising to the record of 7.27 a barrel seen last year, said the kingdom’s oil minister.


Saudi jobless rate to ease by 2014

Saudi Arabia’s festering unemployment problem could ease at the end of the forthcoming five-year development plan as the world’s oil powerhouse is intensifying efforts to find jobs for citizens, a local report said yesterday.


Unemployment in the kingdom, which sits atop a quarter of the world’s recoverable oil deposits, stood at nearly 10.5 per cent at the end of 2008 and it is expected to shrink to 7.1 per cent at the end of 2014, said the report by the Riyadh Chamber of Commerce and Industry.


U.S. to Demand Inspection of New Iran Plant ‘Within Weeks’

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration plans to tell Iran this week that it must open a newly revealed nuclear enrichment site to international inspectors “within weeks,” according to senior administration officials. The administration will also tell Tehran that inspectors must have full access to the key personnel who put together the clandestine plant and to the documents surrounding its construction, the officials said Saturday.


Smuggling Europe’s Waste to Poorer Countries

Exporting waste illegally to poor countries has become a vast and growing international business, as companies try to minimize the costs of new environmental laws, like those here, that tax waste or require that it be recycled or otherwise disposed of in an environmentally responsible way.


Rotterdam, the busiest port in Europe, has unwittingly become Europe’s main external garbage chute, a gateway for trash bound for places like China, Indonesia, India and Africa. There, electronic waste and construction debris containing toxic chemicals are often dismantled by children at great cost to their health. Other garbage that is supposed to be recycled according to European law may be simply burned or left to rot, polluting air and water and releasing the heat-trapping gases linked to global warming.


U.S. Panel Shifts Focus to Reusing Nuclear Fuel

OXON HILL, Md. — With a federal plan to handle nuclear waste in deadlocked disarray, an advisory panel that has spent 20 years studying a proposed repository at Yucca Mountain turned Wednesday to discussing ways of reusing the fuel instead.


But the meeting of the panel, the Nuclear Waste Technical Review Board, made evident that such reuse was uncertain, along with the future of Yucca Mountain, in Nevada, about 100 miles from Las Vegas.


Solar Module Prices Halt Slide on German Demand, Barclays Says

(Bloomberg) — Solar module prices, which have dropped by more than half in the past year, have stopped declining as a seasonal demand increase in Germany reduces inventories, according to Barclays Capital.


Schwarzenegger to Children: Hurry Up in There!

LOS ANGELES — In a new twist on an old saw trotted out by generations of parents who think their children have it easier, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger has taken to monitoring his children’s water use by timing how long they spend in the shower. If they are in there too long, he said, he turns off the hot water midstream, inciting screams.


The Future of Cars Was Hydrogen, Once

The enthusiasm for electric vehicles keeps growing, but only few years ago the auto industry was betting on hydrogen-powered fuel cell cars.


Tiny Cars Feel Smart

The Slaughters, both 86, are among several owners of ultra-compact Smart fortwo cars at Lake Ashton, a gated retirement community in Lake Wales.


It might seem odd to find so many of the cars, which project an air of European futurism, in a place where Cadillacs are common and the entertainment leans toward Joe Piscopo.


Then again, when you don’t have kids you don’t need a back seat.


Australia: Cutting the train line won’t ‘fix our city’

The report’s supporters obscure its true nature by focusing on the urgent need to reverse urban decay. But the reality is that the main goal of the “fix our city” campaign is to cut the rail line.


The rail line sits on prime land. Developing this land (especially the last 500 metres of it) has been the goal of a 25-year push by developers to get rid of the line.


E.P.A. Ordered to Reconsider New Mexico Power Plant Permit

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — A federal appeals board has ordered the Environmental Protection Agency to reconsider an air permit issued for a planned coal-fired power plant on the Navajo Nation.


The decision, in part, grants a request by regional agency officials who wanted to take another look at parts of the permit for the billion Desert Rock Energy Project, which is planned for tribal land in northwestern New Mexico.


There’s nothing ‘clean’ about it

Have you ever had that nightmare where you’re being chased by a monster and yet your legs feel like lead and you can’t get away?


That’s how I feel every time Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty start babbling about the joys of dragging us into a global cap-and-trade market, supposedly to lower man-made carbon dioxide emissions.


Fossil fuels are running out anyway; so why fight about climate-change?

Since fossil fuels are, in fact, running out, it seems senseless to keep arguing about climate change. The point is, whether or not you care to believe the evidence under our noses, what we need to be concentrating on is finding new, clean, renewable, eco-friendly energy sources.


Population: Overconsumption is the real problem

THERE is a pervading myth that efforts to fight climate change and other environmental perils will be to no avail unless we “do something” about population growth. Even seasoned analysts talk about the threat of “exponential” population growth. But there is no exponential growth. In most of the world fertility rates are falling fast, and the countries where population growth continues are those that contribute least to our planetary predicament.

Drumbeat: September 26, 2009

Monday, September 28th, 2009


Our oil, U. S. need

Canada’s oilsands may take a daily beating in the international media and from environmentalists, but the arithmetic of U. S. consumption and supply all but ensures a long, prosperous future for our dirty oil.


The United States imports 60% of its daily fuel requirements. President Barack Obama has vowed to wean his country off Middle East oil within 10 years. The U. S.’s other nearby secondary suppliers are either hostile (Venezuela) or their production is dwindling so quickly that they could be a net importer of oil within five years (Mexico). For every five barrels of oil America consumes a day, one comes from Canada. One barrel of every 20 now consumed in the United States is pumped straight out of the oilsands, a number that could triple inside of 15 years.


That leaves the United States with one stable long-term oil option. And we’re it.


Robert Bryce – America: A World Leader in Oil Exports!

There has never been a more global, more integrated, more transparent market than the modern crude oil and oil products market. And yet, the calls for America to be “energy independent” continue to be heard from both the Right and the Left.


Iran threatens oil transport route

With the prospect of Israel bombing Iran’s nuclear facilities looming, Tehran has renewed its threat to shut down the strategic Strait of Hormuz, through which up to 40 percent of the world’s oil supplies pass, according to a report from Joseph Farah’s G2 Bulletin.


Iran’s massive oil revenue discrepancies

TEHRAN (UPI) — Massive discrepancies between Iran’s oil revenues and official statistics over the last four years are being covered in the national press.


Wednesday, Tehran’s reformist daily E’temad carried a report headlined, “Find the billion.”


Venezuela, Petrobras to build billion refinery in Brazil

PORLAMAR (MarketWatch) — Venezuela state-run energy firm PdVSA and Brazil’s Petrobras plan to ink an agreement Sunday to move forward with plans on building a refinery together, a top Venezuelan official said Friday.


Soaring cost estimates for the Brazilian refinery had in recent months threatened to kill the project before it begins. But Venezuelan Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez, who also is president of PdVSA, said the issues are being ironed out.


Ukraine seeks new natural gas suppliers

KIEV, Ukraine (UPI) — A top Ukrainian official said Ukraine should review its existing natural gas contract with Russia in order to purchase natural gas from Central Asia.


One day, all houses will be built this way

Social housing tenants could soon be living in state-of-the-art green homes built from natural materials such as clay, hemp and sheep’s wool, which are being pioneered as part of Prince Charles’ campaign to create beautiful sustainable property.


The next wave

Cars with bodies and parts made from seaweed and powered by biofuel derived from algae and saltwater could be the wave of the future if a couple of companies have anything to say about it.


Ethiopia embraces renewable energy

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (UPI) — The Ethiopian Electric Power Corporation has signed contracts with three Chinese companies for renewable energy projects.


One on One with Ali al-Naimi, Oil Minister of Saudi Arabia

GHARIB: But Mr. Naimi, when you — what are you going to focus on? What will be the biggest growth industry outside of oil ultimately?


AL-NAIMI: Number one is food. Number two is water. Number three, believe it or not, is energy and environment. These are the three areas of focus. Now, why do I say energy? It’s a different energy. It’s solar energy.


Oil and gas reforms announced after B.C. bombings

DAWSON CREEK, B.C. — In the wake of six bombings targeting natural-gas pipelines on the B.C.-Alberta border, the B.C. government announced Friday a package of reforms aimed at improving relations between the oil and gas industry and residents.


Pemex oil theft case nabs second exec

The president of an Edinburg gas company pleaded guilty today in Houston federal court on charges relating to theft of an oil product from Mexico’s oil giant, Pemex.


Oil prices impact Mexico’s budget

MEXICO CITY (UPI) — Mexico’s Chamber of Deputies speaker urged those dissatisfied with the president’s 2010 budget to present options not based on high oil price projections.


El Universal reported Thursday that Speaker Francisco Ramirez Acuna of the Partido Accion Nacional suggested that legislators who disagreed with President Felipe Calderon’s proposed 2010 budget offer options not based either on an increase in debt or high expectations regarding oil production and sales.


Ghana: Fuel shortage hits Tamale Metropolis

The Tamale Metropolis is facing fuel shortages as most of the petrol filling stations in the area had not received supplies, causing most motorists to park their cars and motorbikes.


Some of the fuel stations the GNA visited had only diesel on sale and the only fuel station with petrol was the Total station one along the Tamale Teaching Hospital road, which was crowded with buyers struggling for hours to buy the commodity.


Connecticut: Price war pumps up gasoline business

The statewide average is .52 a gallon. It was .70 a gallon at this time last year, according to the AAA Fuel Gauge Report. But prices dropping a penny at a time were a regular occurrence Friday as two stations battled for the lowest price.


Carbon Emissions Can Really Build Up

The challenge of climate change usually brings to mind images of industrial smokestacks or gas-hungry SUVs. But commercial and residential buildings consume nearly two-fifths of all energy produced worldwide and spit out 8.4 billion tons of CO2 emissions each year, or 30 percent of the global total. And while the price tag for reducing greenhouse gas emissions is cheaper for buildings than for transportation or hard industries, construction of more energy-efficient buildings won’t pay for itself through lower energy bills. Pure market incentives aren’t enough; governments must get involved.


Canada MIA in carbon talks

With climate negotiations limping into the home-stretch, the United Nations pulled out all the stops this week. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon brought 100 heads of state together to tackle greenhouse gas emissions in a bid to re-energize bargaining.


While world leaders exchanged ideas, Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper sent his environment minister, Jim Prentice, to listen in, take notes, and make excuses.


S.D. farm products take a price dive

Going into the 2009 harvest, all the state’s major farm products and ethanol are well below record highs set the past few years. Impatience is rampant as producers are looking for a recovering economy to jump start demand that will help use up stored grain and spur new production of milk, meat and renewable motor fuel.


Making that itch even more prickly is a projected bumper corn crop that would further upset the supply-demand balance.


Area pushes for rapid transit system

A group of community leaders plans to meet with U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson, D-Fla., to request federal money for a rapid transit system that would link east and west Gainesville, the University of Florida and Santa Fe College, and major shopping and employment centers.


The estimated cost is 5 million and would include money from developers of several large projects along the route.


Mother knows breast

Breastfeeding saves energy, cuts greenhouse gases and uses fewer natural resources.


Oil-related firms feel impact of credit curbs

ITS Tubular Services (Holdings) says that economic conditions and the fall in available credit facilities have had a major impact on operators’ capital investment programmes.


Directors of the Aberdeen-based provider of specialised products and services to the global oil and gas industry say this has resulted in cancellations or delays in activity.


They add in their annual report for 2008, which has just been released by Companies House, that the near-term outlook is difficult to assess given the state of credit markets.


Rhine Barge Rates for Oil Products Advance on Low Water Levels

(Bloomberg) — The cost of shipping oil products on the Rhine River advanced as lower than usual water levels reduced the amount of fuel barges can carry.


Time to put pressure on Russia

What a difference a slump makes. Chief executives of the big western oil and gas companies met a kinder, gentler Vladimir Putin on Thursday in Salekhard, Western Siberia. The Russian Prime Minister had invited them to a town with a population of 36,000, right on the polar circle, to highlight the promises of the gas fields of the Yamal Peninsula, and to throw open the doors to Western investment and technology.


Venezuela says France’s Total to invest B in heavy oil production

PORLAMAR, Venezuela – Venezuela’s state oil company says France’s Total SA will invest billion in the nation’s Orinoco Oil Belt.


Natural Gas Declines on Concern Demand Will Increase Slowly

(Bloomberg) — Natural gas futures declined for the first day in four as a government report showing a drop in orders for durable goods signaled that a recovery in fuel consumption may be slow.


Demand for goods meant to last several years dropped 2.4 percent, the worst performance since January, the Commerce Department said today in Washington. Economists expected an increase. Purchases by industrial users such as carmakers and chemical plants account for about 29 percent of consumption.


U.S. Gas Fund May Shrink With CFTC Rules, Hyland Says

(Bloomberg) — U.S. Natural Gas Fund, the largest exchange-traded fund in the fuel, may be forced to shrink if U.S. regulators tighten limits on energy speculation, said John Hyland, the fund’s chief investment officer.


The Commodity Futures Trading Commission may cap energy investments amid concern speculators contributed to record-high commodity prices last year. New limits may force the fund to reduce shares, Hyland said in a Bloomberg television interview.


Natural gas crusader

Randy Eresman’s job description is changing, and it is not just because EnCana Corp., the naturalgas and integrated oil company he now leads, is spinning off its oil and refining operations into a new company called Cenovus Energy Inc. He’s a petroleum engineer by training but increasingly is becoming a lobbyist and marketer for the natural-gas industry. His challenge? To convince legislators, auto manufacturers and consumers that natural-gas vehicles are the way of the future. Goodbye drill bit, hello podium. Mr. Eresman sat down with the Financial Post’s Carrie Tait to explain his changing role and the challenges in his way.


Phibro Fund Rose 22% as Commodity Indexes Fell, Document Shows

(Bloomberg) — Phibro LLC, the Citigroup Inc. energy-trading unit that the bank may be forced to sell, said funds that it manages for outside investors rose 22 percent since the start of 2008 as commodity indexes fell, a solicitation document showed.


Schlumberger ranks high on list of ‘green’ companies

Horseheads, N.Y. – This week’s issue of Newsweek magazine ranks America’s 500 largest corporations according to how “green” they are, and a company planning to build a controversial facility in Horseheads fared pretty well.


GE Energy bulking up in Houston

If the global energy complex were a giant roulette table, GE Energy would have a chip down on nearly every number. From wind turbines and solar panels to offshore oil and gas equipment and coal and nuclear power plants, the Atlanta-based arm of U.S. industrial and media conglomerate General Electric Co. is in the business. And a growing portion of that business is being done in Houston, GE Energy CEO John Krenicki said during a visit to local company facilities this week


The End of Oil?

Oil is the curse of the modern world; it is “the devil’s excrement,” in the words of the former Venezuelan oil minister Juan Pablo Pérez Alfonzo, who is considered to be the father of OPEC and should know. Our insatiable need for oil has brought us global warming, Islamic fundamentalism and environmental depredation. It has turned the United States and China, the world’s biggest consumers of petroleum, into greedy, irresponsible addicts that can’t see beyond their next fix. With a few exceptions, like Norway and the United Arab Emirates, oil doesn’t even benefit the nations from which it is extracted. On the contrary: Most oil-rich states have been doomed to a seemingly permanent condition of kleptocracy by a few, poverty for the rest, chronic backwardness and, worst of all, the loss of a national soul.


We can’t be rid of the stuff soon enough.


Oil shipping sector heading for downturn: Teekay

“Today’s voyages are barely paying owners enough to get the ship from point A to B. It’s just paying for the fuel and certainly not paying enough for owners to pay back their bank financing and debt costs,” Chan said.


This in turn is leading to poor maintenance of ships by some owners who are running out of cash, he added.


Mexico’s Cantarell oil field may be stablizing

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Mexican oil production fell again in August but state oil company Pemex said it had some early indications the rapid fall in output at its giant Cantarell field may be slowing.


Mexico pumped 2.542 million bpd in August, a decline of 7.9 percent on a year ago but production at Cantarell edged higher for the first time in more than two years.


Oil price to rise on stronger demand: Goldman Sachs

(Reuters) – Goldman Sachs said oil prices are likely to be higher in the future due to a recovery in demand and a decline in production, and expects European integrated oil companies to struggle to sustain the current level of production.


Tank farm opposition files petition
Community Strength asking judge to repeal Petroplex permit

VACHERIE – A community group is asking a Baton Rouge judge to appeal the state’s approval of an air quality permit for a proposed petroleum storage tank farm along the Mississippi River near Vacherie.


The New Case for Natural Gas

Natural gas has recently emerged as a vital but neglected complement to the paragons of low-carbon energy: renewable energy and energy efficiency. Recent developments in technology, from gas wells to home appliances, suggest a need to fundamentally reevaluate the role of natural gas in the energy system. Together with renewable energy and energy efficiency, natural gas should be a cornerstone of strategies to advance energy security and reduce the threat of climate change – a conclusion that has recently been supported by U.S. environmental leaders, including Robert Kennedy, Jr., John Podesta, Carl Pope, and Tim Wirth.


Hartwick College picks ‘energy’ as 2009-10 theme

On Oct. 16, the college will present “Energy Roundtable: Peak Oil” from noon to 1 p.m. Associate Professor of Education Mark Davies will lead a discussion of issues surrounding peak oil.


…The theme will include educating the Hartwick community about fossil fuels, peak oil and alternative-energy sources, involving the campus and community in efforts to reduce their ecological impact. Local energy topics such as natural-gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale will also be addressed.


Worldchanging Interview: Paul Hawken

Hawken was this year’s Sustainable Industries: Economic Forum keynote speaker. During the event, Hawken asked the 300 plus sustainably-minded business leaders, entrepreneurs and political heads to truly look at the data: dangerous levels of atmospheric CO2, peak oil, peak soil – peak everything. Despite this, he said he remains optimistic. He focused much of his talk on solutions such as innovative solar design and collaborations, like linking green banking with affordable, green housing, food and transportation.


U.S. Chamber of Commerce in climate rift

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – A rift widened between the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and some utilities as another major power provider quit over the business group’s hard stance on pending climate regulation.


The Public Service Company of New Mexico, the state’s largest utility, quit the chamber Friday just days after California’s largest utility, Pacific Gas and Electric Co., said it was leaving because of the chamber’s “extreme” positions.


California funds biggest energy efficiency plan

LOS ANGELES – California is embarking on the most aggressive energy efficiency plan among U.S. states, having earmarked .1 billion to retrofit homes and other programs that will cut power needs equivalent to three medium-sized power plants.


Some grapes are purple, but this winery has gone green

The air conditioning runs 24 hours a day, seven days a week in the new building. His first electric bill for the new structure was .


That’s because Carroll, his wife, Christine, and son Tom Jr. care about the environment and spent a small fortune to use the latest technology, geothermal heat and solar roof panels to power their business.


Tom Carroll is a prime example of what state Rep. Steve Santarsiero, D-Bucks, and Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection’s John Hangar want to see as they are working to push House Bill 80 through to passage.


Talking transportation — NuRide: The secret way to a cheaper commute

I have the solution to highway congestion — a simple plan to cut traffic by 50 percent. All we have to do is get every SOV (single-occupancy-vehicle) driver to carry one additional passenger who’d otherwise be driving alone. But don’t call this “carpooling” or it’ll never succeed.


Scrubbing the Atmosphere

Governments are doing practically nothing to study the removal of carbon dioxide directly from the atmosphere, but this technology could be a much cheaper form of climate protection than photovoltaic cells and other approaches getting lavish support, according to an article published today in Science.


“An Idea Whose Time Has Come”

The OECD has just released a new book: “The Economics of Climate Change Mitigation: Policies and Options for Global Action beyond 2012.” To quote from the Executive Summary (pp. 5-6): “Closing the gap between domestic and international fossil fuel prices could cut GHG emissions drastically in the subsidising countries, in some cases by over 30% relative to BAU levels by 2050, and globally by 10%.” Further, “Energy subsidy removal would also raise GDP per capita in most of the countries concerned, including India and, to a lesser extent, China.”


Inhofe on why global warming isn’t real: ‘God’s still up there. We’re going through these cycles.’

On C-Span’s Washington Journal this week, Sen. James Inhofe (R-OK), the godfather of global warming deniers, said that he will travel to the climate change summit in Copenhagen this fall to present “another view.” “I think somebody has to be there — a one-man truth squad,” he said.


Indian PM on climate deal: ‘I’m not an astrologer’

PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (AFP) – Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said Friday he could not predict whether the world will meet a deadline on a climate deal, saying a summit here only took up global warming in broad terms.


“I’m not an astrologer,” Singh told a news conference when asked if a December conference in Copenhagen would succeed in sealing a successor framework to the landmark Kyoto Protocol.


Calif. OKs fee to pay for global warming program

Despite industry objections and threats of lawsuits, California air regulators on Friday approved the nation’s first statewide carbon fee on utilities, oil refineries and other polluting industries.


Bill McKibben: Why 350 is the most important number on the planet

We’ve been running a huge ­ campaign – it’s blown up into the first real grassroots global political protest about global warming – called 350.org. The number comes from new science that followed the shocking melt of Arctic ice in the summer of 2007. Researchers became convinced that climate change was happening faster than they had previously expected, and that they had enough data to put a real number on it. That number was 350, as in parts per million CO2 in the atmosphere. Above that level, in the powerful (and peer-reviewed) words of Nasa scientist James Hansen, we can’t have a planet “similar to the one on which civilisation developed or to which life on earth is adapted”.


Unusual Arctic Warmth, Tropical Wetness Likely Cause for Methane Increase

Unusually high temperatures in the Arctic and heavy rains in the tropics likely drove a global increase in atmospheric methane in 2007 and 2008 after a decade of near-zero growth, according to a new study. Methane is the second most abundant greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide, albeit a distant second.


Science Report: Climate Change Speeding Toward Irreversible Tipping Points

Losses from glaciers, ice-sheets and the Polar Regions appear to be happening faster than anticipated, and melting of the Greenland Ice Sheet surface also seems to be accelerating. In the summer of 2007, the rate of melting was some 60 percent higher than the previous record in 1998.


Some scientists are now warning that sea levels could rise by up to two meters (6.5 feet) by 2100, drowning low-lying countries and coastal cities.


So Shall You Reap: How Climate Change Will Affect Farms

Many farming communities think global warming won’t hurt them. They’re wrong.


You might think a little global warming is good for farming. Longer, warmer growing seasons and more carbon dioxide (CO2)—what plant wouldn’t love that? The agricultural industry basically takes that stance. But global warming’s effects on agriculture would actually be quite complicated—and mostly not for the better.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 26, 2009

Drumbeat: September 25, 2009

Monday, September 28th, 2009


Denninger: The Horrible Conundrum Facing The Fed

But Japan had an advantage we do not – a weak currency benefited to a tremendous degree their exporters, and they are an export-based economy. As a consequence the damage done internally to import prices by the continued downward pressure on their currency was counterbalanced by an improving balance-of-payments picture.


America, on the other hand, has a huge trade deficit. Attempting to reverse this is essentially impossible as we have offshored production to low-labor-cost locales such as Vietnam and China. We are also absolutely dependent on foreign energy sources and despite 30 years of political promises to resolve that problem we have refused to take the steps necessary to do so, including funding massive nuclear energy development and drilling for all of our currently-known resources as a bridge while those nuclear plants are brought online. There is and has been zero political or public will behind accepting that resolving these problems does not lie in “pie in the sky” battery, solar and wind technologies, but rather through aquaculture-produced bioldiesel, massive nuclear power development and full exploitation of our existing fossil-fuel stores, all of which will cause energy costs to rise and exact what amounts to a tax on the American people. In short we demand not only cheap TVs from China and cheap blue jeans from Vietnam but cheap gasoline from Saudi Arabia, and combined this makes addressing trade imbalance politically impossible.


An alternative G20 model

On the eve of the world summit, G20 leaders – who have presided over the biggest financial expansion and the most catastrophic economic failure since the 1930s – bickered over the arrangement of the IMF’s “deck chairs” and squabbled over whether to rap bankers on the knuckles.


No leader has risen above the fray to address the scale of the “triple crunch” threatening the world: sustained economic failure, the climate change threat and peak oil. Nor is there a world leader willing to confront, subdue and discipline the finance sector as Roosevelt did in 1933. Instead today’s leaders scramble with undue haste for a return to “business as usual”.


Cabot Oil ordered to shut fracturing ops in Penn.

(Reuters) – Pennsylvania regulators said they ordered Cabot Oil & Gas Corp (COG.N) to stop all hydraulic fracturing (fracking) operations in Susquehanna County until it completed a number of important engineering and safety tasks.


Cabot voluntarily shut down fracking operations at the Heitsman well in Dimock Township on Tuesday afternoon, following three separate spills in less than one week, said the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection in a statement.


The Resolute Ahmadinejad Knows How To Survive

Ahmadinejad is a survivor.


The first time he ran for the presidency of Iran, while careful not to offend the establishment, he said all the right things to get elected — promoting economic and social justice, cash payments from oil revenues to families in the name of equity, eradication of corruption, better educational opportunities and health care for all, an Iran that could defend itself against foreign aggression, and no compromise on Iran’s right to nuclear enrichment. His tactics worked.


Gore-Backed Car Firm Gets Large U.S. Loan

WASHINGTON — A tiny car company backed by former Vice President Al Gore has just gotten a 9 million U.S. government loan to help build a hybrid sports car in Finland that will sell for about ,000.


The award this week to California startup Fisker Automotive Inc. follows a 5 million government loan to Tesla Motors Inc., purveyors of a 9,000 British-built electric Roadster. Tesla is a California startup focusing on all-electric vehicles, with a number of celebrity endorsements that is backed by investors that have contributed to Democratic campaigns.


U.S. natural gas rig count climbs 5 to 710 for week

NEW YORK, Sept 25 (Reuters) – The number of rigs drilling for natural gas in the United States climbed five this week to 710, according to a report on Friday by oil services firm Baker Hughes in Houston.


The U.S. natural gas drilling rig count has gained in nine of the last 10 weeks but is still down sharply since peaking above 1,600 in September last year, standing at 849 rigs, or 54 percent, below the same week last year.


During the week ended July 17, 2009, the natural gas rig count dipped to 665, its lowest level since May 3, 2002, when there were 640 gas rigs operating.


Oil market response to Iran-West tension

LONDON (Reuters) – Heightened tensions between the West and oil exporter Iran pulled crude prices off an eight-week low on Friday, sending them back above per barrel.


News of Iran’s second uranium enrichment plant may heighten Western calls for tougher U.N sanctions against the Islamic Republic — a move which could ultimately increase the risk of a supply disruption in the key crude producing region.


The Himalayan Gas Tango

Through September 2009, the government of India has issued a variety of statements designed to quell India’s long-lived China bogey. It has done so to contain what it calls panic and scare-mongering about alleged incursions over the India-China border by units of the People’s Liberation Army. The ‘incidents’ (as the Indian media like to call the events) have all occurred over India’s north-western border with China, in the mountainous Jammu and Kashmir state.


China to rely on coal ‘for long time’: Beijing official

BEIJING (AFP) – China will continue to rely on coal for most of its energy needs “for a long time”, a senior official said on Friday, just days after President Hu Jintao pledged action on its greenhouse gas emissions.


“It is an indisputable fact that China mainly relies on coal for its overall energy structure. Such a structure will remain hard to change for a long time,” Zhang Guobao, head of the National Energy Administration, told reporters.


China discovers combustible ice in land-based regions

BEIJING (Xinhua) — China has successfully excavated combustible ice, a kind of natural gas hydrate, in permanent tundra in the south margin of the country’s northwestern Qilian Mountains, the Ministry of Land and Resources said Friday.


Detroit: The Death — and Possible Life — of a Great City

Detroit must address the fact that a 138-sq.-mi. city that once accommodated 1.85 million people is way too large for the 912,000 who remain. The fire, police and sanitation departments couldn’t efficiently service the yawning stretches of barely inhabited areas even if the city could afford to maintain those operations at their former size. Detroit has to shrink its footprint, even if it means condemning decent houses in the gap-toothed areas and moving their occupants to compact neighborhoods where they might find a modicum of security and service. Build greenbelts, which are a lot cheaper to maintain than untraveled streets. Encourage urban farming. Let the barren areas revert to nature.


Precious Metal

Battery-powered electric vehicles may be heralded as the next big thing, but will lithium reserves that are already being devoured by consumer electronics be enough meet future demand?


Nuclear Loan Guarantees Should Be Doubled – US Energy Secretary

WASHINGTON -(Dow Jones)- Federal loan guarantees for new nuclear power plant construction should be at least doubled to allow construction of four to five additional plants, U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu said late Thursday.


Recession slows U.S. wind power growth rate

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The United States will add 6,000 megawatts in wind power this year, down nearly 30 percent from last year as the credit crisis slowed expansion of the renewable energy source, an industry group said on Thursday.


Wind power has been one of the fastest growing sources of power generation, and the 2009 additions are equivalent to about six coal-fired power plants.


“The lion’s share of that was commissioned on or before the economy went south,” Denise Bode, head of the American Wind Energy Association told a news conference.


The End Of Globalization

Jeff Rubin has gone as far as to suggest the present global financial crisis wasn’t started by the sub prime mortgage crisis. Instead it was the July 2008 price peak to 7 per barrel that caused the financial meltdown. Rubin writes, “What put the world economy really in recession, is not Wall Street, but triple digit oil prices…”


Many economists disagree with Rubin’s hypothesis but do believe the massive oil price rise may well have been the tipping point that started what now is called “The great recession”-there’s still a reluctance to use the word depression and thereby conjure up images of “The Great Depression”.


Chesapeake to Sell Half Its Pipelines in Barnett Shale

Oklahoma City-based Chesapeake Energy, which has a large regional office in Fort Worth, said late Thursday that it will raise 8 million in cash by selling half its natural gas pipelines in the Barnett Shale of North Texas, as well as properties in other petroleum basins.


EU: carbon policy could leave UK in the dark

Britain’s old coal-fired power plants have only six more years to live at the most. Their death sentence has been passed by the European Union, which decreed that the most polluting stations must be retired after a fixed number of hours. But experts predict that the phasing out of these reliable but dirty old beasts will leave the UK facing a catastrophic shortage of energy that may lead to power cuts and vastly inflated bills.


Russia plays pipeline politics

BEIJING – While the United States is engrossed in Iraq and Afghanistan – even planning a troop surge in the latter – a new and bigger strategic risk looms in a much more sensitive area – Europe and Russia. The challenge is about energy and influence in the “old continent”, still the richest industrial area in the world.


Kazakhs mulls over transport for oil boost

Kazakhstan, which plans to double oil production in the next decade, is in talks with Caspian Sea neighbour Azerbaijan to find new routes for delivering its extra crude volumes to the Black Sea and beyond.


The ex-Soviet republics are considering various options, including construction of a new pipeline, to add to the volumes now shipped by tanker across the Caspian Sea, Reuters reported Kazakh and Azeri officials as saying today.


South Korea Predicts Oil Prices to Rise to in 2010

South Korea on Friday predicted the international oil prices are likely to rise to an average of per barrel in 2010.


According to a report prepared by the Ministry of Strategy and Finance, the price of the benchmark Dubai crude stood at per barrel this year, and it will rise to in 2010 as the global economy is showing signs of recovery.


EU: energy security is in the pipeline

After years of dithering, and despite Moscow’s threats, agreement has been finalised for a project to bring non-Russian gas to Europe.


LNG terminal opens in Saint John

Repsol and Irving Oil officially opened their controversial liquefied natural gas terminal in Saint John, N.B., on Thursday.


About 400 people attended the Canaport LNG commissioning ceremony, including politicians and energy-sector officials, who were all shuttled in from the facility’s entrance on Red Head Road to a large white tent, where violinists played.


The -billion terminal is the first to be built in Canada and the first land-based LNG-receiving and re-gas terminal built on the East Coast of North America in 30 years.


Petrobras Eyes Ultra-Deepwater Prospects Off Bahia

Brazilian state-run energy giant Petrobras (PBR) is currently researching possible ultra-deepwater oil prospects off the coast of northeast Brazil, company CEO Jose Sergio Gabrielli said Friday.


Quoted by the local Estado news agency, Gabrielli said in Brasilia that “there could be (subsalt oil there), we’re there conducting research. We have to drill to see.”


Officials Tout Offshore Drilling in Bipartisan Letter to Salazar

Georgia’s two Republican senators joined their colleagues in the upper chamber of the U.S. Congress in pitching for opening offshore waters to new natural gas and oil development and leases.


Sens. Saxby Chambliss and Johnny Isakson were among 35 signers of a bipartisan letter to Interior Secretary Ken Salazar asking him to support a proposal by the U.S. Minerals Management Service to open up new offshore areas.


Chevron Seeks to Foist Billion Amazon Liability on Ecuador

(Bloomberg) — Chevron Corp., the second-largest U.S. oil company, may force Ecuador’s government to foot the bill for a billion environmental lawsuit marred by allegations of bribery and political interference.


Chevron asked the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague to shift responsibility to Ecuador for paying any damages that a group of Amazon Basin residents could win in a 16-year- old toxic-waste lawsuit, according to a company statement yesterday. An investigator appointed by the Ecuadorean court overseeing the case estimated that damages could be billion, more than half of the Andean nation’s gross domestic product.


Saudi offers mid-October Jubail fuel oil

SINGAPORE: Saudi Aramco is offering via private talks a cargo of 380-cst fuel oil for mid-October loading, its fifth parcel in three weeks, as it rides on buoyant Middle East and east Asian demand, traders said yesterday.


Malta: Gas supply was about to finish, report reveals

A three-day cold spell in December 2007 and a delayed shipment of gas because of bad weather left Enemalta with “only 90 minutes” of gas supplies, a dossier published by the government has revealed.


The internal Enemalta dossier, drawn up in March 2008, just two days before the general election, said the corporation had a low capacity of storage and this meant it was “not in a position to secure continuity of gas during peak periods arising from abnormal cold spells”.


Nigeria: Government Must Save Manufacturing Companies From Folding Up

Lagos — Niger Delta Budget Monitoring Group (NDEBUMOG) has called on the Federal Government to introduce policies that would save manufacturing companies from folding up or relocating from the country.


The call is coming at a time most manufacturing companies in the country are experiencing multidimensional difficulties, ranging from deteriorating infrastructure, energy crisis, as well as low patronage of locally manufactured products.


China Considers Cutting Wholesale Power Prices, Citigroup Says

(Bloomberg) — The Chinese government is considering cutting wholesale power tariffs to lower costs for grid companies, Citigroup said, without citing anybody.


Grid companies who buy electricity from generators are making losses and they have “huge” capital expenditure requirements, analysts Pierre Lau and Maggie Mok said in a research note today. The companies’ capital spending between 2009 and 2011 is estimated at 1.5 trillion yuan (0 billion), twice the expenditure for 2006 to 2008, the analysts said,


Motoring Memories: American diesel cars

Although diesel engines are more efficient and economical than gasoline engines, the clatter, smell and smoke of earlier models found little favour with North American motorists until the 1970s when energy crises threatened gasoline supplies. And even then, their popularity in cars was fleeting.


In Europe, where fuel is much more expensive, motorists enthusiastically embraced the oil sipping diesel. Daimler-Benz introduced the world’s first diesel production car, the Mercedes-Benz 260D, in 1936. Although meant for taxi use, the 260D’s economy and durability appealed to ordinary motorists and Daimler-Benz became a strong diesel car advocate.


An Immune System for the Planet: Bill McKibben on Organizing Popular Action When Political Leaders Disappoint

I thought Obama was quite disappointing. It felt to me like he was pre-excusing failure both in Washington and in Copenhagen. If this is as important as he says it is–and in fact, it’s far more important than he says it is–then you’ve got to do more than the occasional speech or reference. You’ve got to go out and campaign. This guy knows how to campaign. I think we’ll know he’s completely serious the day he fires up Air Force One and the day begins with the whole press corps in tow in Barrow, Alaska and ends in McMurdo Station in the Antarctic.


North Sea has potential to store over 100 years worth of UK power station CO2 emissions says DECC

Energy and Climate Change Secretary Ed Miliband said:


“There’s enough potential under the North Sea to store more than 100 years worth of CO2 emissions from the UK’s power fleet. We are also working closely with Norway and other North Sea Basin countries to ensure the North Sea fulfils its potential in the deployment of CCS in Europe. We want to get the UK regulatory framework in place so we can harness that potential and make the North Sea part of the CCS revolution.


We need land to grow food. We need a Community Land Bank

The concept is simple. The Bank would negotiate for land, hold it and then release it to user groups under legally enforceable contracts, attracting charitable funding as appropriate, and facilitate transfers of tenants (community gardening groups) across a portfolio of land holdings. The Land Bank would also arrange insurance and ensure legal and technical compliance. In effect, it would be a safe pair of hands in which both land owners and users could trust.


The catalyst behind this idea is the rapid rise in demand for land to cultivate for food. Hardly a day seems to go by without some reference to the growing waiting lists for allotments – some estimates suggest that there are now 100,000 people on waiting lists for the current 300,000 plots. In London you might have to wait for ten or more years, in Bristol the wait can be up to three years.


Author’s ‘Food’ Lecture Draws Attention On Campus

MADISON, Wis. — The author of a book about food that has sparked debate on the University of Wisconsin-Madison campus gave a lecture Thursday night in which he presented his ideas to supporters and critics in attendance.


UW-Madison selected Michael Pollan’s best-selling book “In Defense of Food” for a campus-wide reading program, and the book’s selection has set off a debate over the American diet and food production system in classrooms and far beyond campus borders.


For the World’s Hungry, the Recession Is Far from Over

It’s late morning and Minara Khatoon’s five young children haven’t eaten yet. They sit huddled on the dirt floor of their mud thatch hut, waiting as their mother stokes a makeshift fire with straw and dry leaves to prepare what will be their main — and perhaps their only — meal of the day. Minara has just returned to her home in the riverside village of Kapasia, 192 kilometers north of Bangladesh’s capital, Dhaka, with a monthly supply of wheat grain given to destitute rural families like hers by the United Nations’ World Food Program (WFP). The food aid helps, but only lasts Minara’s landless peasant family —among the poorest of the poor in what is already Bangladesh’s most impoverished district — for 20 days. Her husband doesn’t work due to a chronic asthma condition so to make ends meet she toils as a maid in wealthier households during the day and at night cobbles together handicrafts to sell in a local market. “This is how we survive,” says Minara, pounding fistfuls of wheat on an earthen plate, her tired face far older than that of a woman of her 30 years.


Drought to Pare India Oilseed Crop, Supporting Palm Oil Imports

(Bloomberg) — India, the biggest buyer of palm oil after China, may producer fewer monsoon-sown oilseeds as dry weather in the main growing areas reduced sowing of peanuts.


Russian Oil and Gas Industry Surprises Analysts

Russia is the biggest oil producer in the world, but the Russian domestic market is not as big as the oil production. Russia’s consumption of hydrocarbons is only about 25% of the domestic oil production, so Russia exports the majority of oil it produces and whatever it refines.


I think the biggest issue that concerns most investors as far as Russian oil production is concerned is the growth rate or decline rate. At the start of the year, there were calls made by quite a large number of commentators that Russian oil production would decline this year by quite a considerable amount. The numbers published were between 1% and 5% and even 7%.


In actual fact, the Russian production is up this year. Year to date it is up 0.4% and we believe it will be up 0.3% for the full year. This growth has really surprised a lot of market commentators.


Arctic Oil Tempts Norway to Seek Drilling at ‘Gates of Hell’

(Bloomberg) — Norway started a push to explore for oil and natural gas in more remote regions like its Arctic volcanic island of Jan Mayen, as the country seeks to reverse almost a decade of dwindling North Sea output.


“We’ve explored an increasingly large part of the Norwegian shelf,” Oil Minister Terje Riis-Johansen said in an interview on a trip to the barren outpost on Sept. 23. “If we now wish to develop Norway as an oil and gas nation, it will have to be in other areas.”


Diminishing access to traditional reserves is prompting countries to turn to unconventional sources such as oil sands and shale-rock formations to meet demand. Russia, Canada, the U.S. and Iceland are vying for a stake of the Arctic, which may hold as much as 50 percent of the world’s undiscovered oil, according to BP Plc.


Shell Output Set to Pass BP With Billion Spent on Projects

(Bloomberg) — Royal Dutch Shell Plc, held back by almost seven years of falling production, is set to overtake BP Plc after about billion of investment from Qatar to Brazil.


Shell will boost its oil and gas output by a third, adding 1 million barrels a day to capacity by the end of 2012, according to company estimates. That would push Shell to 4.25 million, more than the 4.1 million BP anticipates for 2012.


Indonesia’s Cepu Oil Field to Miss 2010 Output Target

(Bloomberg) — Indonesia’s Cepu oil field, jointly run by Exxon Mobil Corp. and state-owned PT Pertamina, will miss its 2010 crude output target of 165,000 barrels per day, BPMigas, the country’s oil and gas regulator, said.


“Peak production should be in May 2010, but it is impossible for Exxon to achieve it,” Hadi Purnomo, vice chairman head BP Migas said today in Jakarta.


Slumping Energy Demand Has Bottomed, Fund Manager Melis Says

(Bloomberg) — The decline in energy demand and drop in German electricity prices may have ended, according to the chief executive officer of hedge-fund manager Energy Capital Management BV.


“The forward prices are at lows, the spot prices are at lows,” CEO Marcel Melis said yesterday at an energy markets and derivatives conference in London. “One thing is for sure — energy consumption will not decrease anymore.”


Oil Heading to Test Support in Low s: Technical Analysis

(Bloomberg) — Crude oil may test support in the low s after breaking a trend of rising prices that began in February, according to technical analysis by Newedge Group.


If prices drop below a barrel, there will be support in the .60-to-.75 area and then at .38, said Veronique Lashinski, a senior research analyst for Newedge USA LLC in Chicago. Crude oil for November delivery fell 3.9 percent to .97 on Sept. 23, ending more than seven months of price gains that started on Feb. 18 when the contract slipped to .87.


Crude Oil May Decline Amid Rising Fuel Supplies, Survey Shows

(Bloomberg) — Crude oil futures may decline in anticipation of extended increases in U.S. fuel supplies as demand drops.


Twenty-four of 44 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News, or 55 percent, said futures will drop through Oct. 2. Seven respondents, or 16 percent, forecast that the market will rise and 13 said prices will be little changed. Last week, 38 percent of analysts said oil would fall.


China to build third phase strategic oil reserves

BEIJING (Xinhua) — China will “certainly” build a third phase of strategic oil reserves to meet international standards of reserve capacity, Zhang Guobao, head of the National Energy Administration said Friday.


Zhang, also vice minister of the National Development and Reform Commission, said China was aiming for enough oil reserve to cover 90 days, the standards of Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).


China’s oil reserves at present is far from meeting that standard, he said.


Iran acknowledges second nuclear facility

(CNN) — Iran has acknowledged the existence of a second uranium enrichment plant in a letter sent to the International Atomic Energy Agency, a spokesman for the nuclear watchdog agency said Friday.


Recession Fallout: Fewer Women Having Kids

If the sidewalks seem less clogged with Bugaboo strollers these days and you can’t remember the last time you had to diaper a doll at a baby shower, it’s not your imagination or fuzzy memory. Birth rates in the U.S. fell 2% in 2008, the biggest drop in nearly four decades, and that trend is expected to continue. A new study out Sept. 23 from the Guttmacher Institute suggests that the timing is not a coincidence; the recession may be to blame, as women factor economic anxieties into their decision about having children.


How to Sustain a Local Economy

When The Chronicle entered the lower level meeting room of the downtown Ann Arbor library, the first things we noticed were three large trays of peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, cut into bite-sized wedges. As public forums go, this was an offbeat gnoshing choice.


It turned out that the sandwiches – and apples, soft drinks, potato chips and other food – were all sourced from Michigan, in keeping with the theme of Wednesday night’s event. The panel discussion focused on the state’s economic crisis, and how the community can respond to it. Buying local products is one example.


Joe Berlinger’s “Crude”

Yesterday, San Francisco’s Peak Oil Preparedness Task Force released their much anticipated report, a comprehensive and important tome that will hopefully serve as a primer, as well as a clarion call. Recently, films like Josh Tickell’s wonderful “Fuel”, “The Age of Stupid” and “An Inconvenient Truth” have also served as important reminders that we face real challenges in a world of diminishing resources.


Another fantastic film is “Crude”, now playing at the Landmark Lumiere. Three years in the making, this cinéma-vérité feature from acclaimed filmmaker Joe Berlinger (Brother’s Keeper, Paradise Lost, Metallica: Some Kind of Monster) is the epic story of one of the largest and most controversial environmental lawsuits on the planet. The inside story of the infamous “Amazon Chernobyl” case, Crude is a real-life high stakes legal drama, set against a backdrop of the environmental movement, global politics, celebrity activism, human rights advocacy, the media, multinational corporate power, and rapidly-disappearing indigenous cultures. Presenting a complex situation from multiple viewpoints, the film subverts the conventions of advocacy filmmaking, exploring a complicated situation from all angles while bringing an important story of environmental peril and human suffering into focus


Author speaks of future oil, environmental, economic crises

The kind of society Americans know and support cannot continue, said James Howard Kunstler, author of “The Long Emergency”, a book about the issues future generations will face regarding the oil crisis, global warming and living in suburbia. Kunstler spoke on Tuesday in Lewis Lab.


America does not know how to pay back its debt, and our resources are approaching their scarcity limits, he said.


Kunstler also spoke about the future of America and what must happen for the country to be able to thrive in the future.


Urging a conclave on transportation in the Northampton-Greenfield-Amherst triangle

With the inexplicable non-green recent proposal by the Transportation Section of Pioneer Valley Planning Commission to take the train away from Amherst and give it to Northampton and other centers on the west side of the Connecticut River, many feathers have flown, as you surely know.


Since trains have lower carbon per passenger per mile than do buses, and buses lower than cars, and cars lower than SUVs, don’t we need to publish that authoritatively far and wide right away to residents in the Northampton-Greenfield-Amherst triangle?


Horizons Community Planning Article

I believe that planning strategies inadvertently influence people’s lifestyle choices, amplifying their ease or hardship – which has everything to with people’s economic circumstances (i.e. poverty). Therefore, it is critical to the health and wealth of communities to adopt a framework on which to grow that promotes healthy and useful development. All too often, towns grow according to the activities of the few with commercial interests and not necessarily in a way that is advantageous to all. I am not sure local leaders realize how affected we are by these decisions.


The most obvious and impactful case in point is how development is planned to cater the automobile and how those decisions dictate our lifestyle choices. During the settling of the west, small towns dotted the landscape because people needed to have access to goods and services near enough so the trip could made in one day by horseback or buggy. Many modern and prominent academics claim that the rise of the automobile has caused the widespread decline of small rural communities all over the world.


Ask AP: Wind power and wildlife, jobless benefits

Wind power has its fans, but the turbines that turn breezes into energy are also generating concerns: Some worry that the huge contraptions might put wildlife at risk.


So has anyone considered illuminating them with floodlights or painting them hot pink, so animals know to stay away?


Our future: a biomass-powered economy

AUSTRALIA should aim to run its economy on renewable energy sources by 2051, a new analysis argues, with rural areas playing a leading role in the creation of energy from biomass.


Within 40 years, given an early commitment, 90 per cent of Australia’s transport fuel and 20 per cent of its electricity generation could come from bio-methanol or ethanol produced from wood, according to the report, “Powerful Choices”.


For this to happen, currently cleared farmland, by 2051, will need to carry 40–60 million hectares of timber in plantings tightly integrated with traditional cropping and livestock production systems.


Clean-energy jobs touch off bidding wars between states

When Arizona economic development officials look across their state, they envision the Saudi Arabia of solar.


The state has sun, land, workers and proximity to California, the biggest solar market in the U.S.


Yet for years, Arizona has failed to attract the big solar manufacturers that build the mirrors, panels and other components for solar equipment. In the past three years, about 50 renewable-energy companies considered Arizona but opted to put plants — and jobs — in other states, says Barry Broome, CEO of the Greater Phoenix Economic Council.


“We’ve lost every one of the projects to incentives offered by other states,” Broome says.


Duke, FPL to switch to hybrid, electric vehicles

COLUMBUS, Ohio – Two of the nation’s largest power generators said Thursday that they plan to begin switching their company cars and trucks to plug-in hybrid vehicles or all-electric vehicles starting Jan. 1 to help cut greenhouse gas emissions.


China Backs Market Price for Wind Power

BEIJING — A top Chinese energy policy official said Friday the price for wind power and other renewable energy should be set by market forces, rejecting calls for fixed prices, a system used in some countries to promote the use of renewable energy.


As China looks to renewables to fill more of its energy needs, many Chinese power companies are looking to develop wind energy but are worried about profitability and thus looking for price guarantees.


New California rules allow timber firms to sell carbon credits

Environmental groups criticize the Schwarzenegger-backed changes, which allow the companies to benefit from the fight against global warming while continuing to clear-cut forests.


Climate Change in Alps to Leave Europe High and Dry

Picturesque views of the snow-covered Alps may soon be relegated to picture books due to increasing climate change, a new European environmental report says. And it’s not just skiers and tourism officials who are getting nervous about the fate of the continent’s famous mountains.


Temperatures in the Alps are increasing at a rate more than twice the global average, according to a recent report by the European Environment Agency, “Regional climate change and adaptation: The Alps facing the challenge of changing water resources.” The change has serious ramifications not only for the alpine climate itself, but also for the broad swath of Europe that relies on the water these “cherished but endangered mountains” collect and deliver.


‘Super-typhoons’ forecast for second half of century

The effects of global warming will spawn “super-typhoons” packing winds of up to 288 kph in the second half of this century, causing unprecedented damage to Japan’s coastlines, researchers warned.


“If a super-typhoon lands on Japan, the high tides could bring about more serious damage than that in the Isewan Typhoon,” said Kazuhisa Tsuboki, associate professor of meteorology at Nagoya University and a member of the research team.


The Isewan Typhoon that struck the Ise Bay area facing Nagoya in 1959 killed more than 5,000 people, many of whom were swept away in the high tides.


The researchers from Nagoya University, the Japan Meteorological Agency’s Meteorological Research Institute and other organizations said the super-typhoons will also be stronger than Hurricane Katrina, which killed more than 1,000 people in the southern United States in 2005.


Calif. bans high-emission paint thinners, solvents

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – California air regulators approved strict regulations Thursday for aerosol air fresheners, paint thinners and solvents as a way to lessen smog-forming emissions and reduce a health threat.


Has China Really Gotten Serious About Climate Change?

To get a sense of how far the Chinese leadership has come on the issue of climate change in a relatively short period, consider a conference held two years ago on the tropical island of Hainan, where, every year, China invites the high and mighty from around the world to address the weighty issues of the day at a plush resort. The theme of the conference was “Green China,” and if there was a single underlying idea, it was that China, having just become the world’s largest emitter of CO2 gases, was going to jump wholeheartedly on the global bandwagon to combat climate change. But on the conference’s final day, during the main event and keynote address, President Hu Jintao talked about China’s commitment to economic reform, to maintaining its extraordinary pace of economic growth, to opening China’s market further to foreign investment and products — but only the barest nod in the direction of climate change. A confused American environmental consultant left the speech sputtering. “What was that about?” he asked former U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell, who was walking out with him. Powell laughed. “You know what the first thing is that Hu Jintao doesn’t think about when he wakes up every morning?” Powell joked. “Climate change.”


EU CO2 Permits Rise After Commission Vows to Prevent Surplus

(Bloomberg) — European Union carbon permits rose the most in almost eight weeks as the European Commission pledged to prevent surplus credits following a court ruling that overturned pollution limits on Poland and Estonia.


Group Plans Market Standard for Emissions in China

WASHINGTON — A French emissions exchange and a Chinese exchange are forming a carbon market standard for China, marking a step toward a voluntary system to limit greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture and forestry in the world’s top emitter.


Rather Than Melt, some Glaciers Race to the Sea

The seas are rising, and climate scientists say they’ll keep rising as the globe continues to warm, causing all sorts of problems along tens of thousands of miles of coastline around the world. What the scientists can’t say for sure, though, is how much sea levels will go up, or how fast. That’s largely because nobody knows for sure how the vast ice sheets covering Greenland and Antarctica — especially the glaciers that flow down and into the sea — will respond.


At summit, doubts grow on reaching climate deal

PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania (AFP) – European leaders voiced growing doubts on whether the world will meet a December deadline for a new climate deal as a summit here looked set to take up global warming in generalities.


Krugman: It’s Easy Being Green

Even corporations are losing patience with the deniers: earlier this week Pacific Gas and Electric canceled its membership in the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in protest over the chamber’s “disingenuous attempts to diminish or distort the reality” of climate change.


So the main argument against climate action probably won’t be the claim that global warming is a myth. It will, instead, be the argument that doing anything to limit global warming would destroy the economy. As the blog Climate Progress puts it, opponents of climate change legislation “keep raising their estimated cost of the clean energy and global warming pollution reduction programs like some out of control auctioneer.”


Steven Chu to greenhouse gases: we will bury you

The U.S. Secretary of Energy—channeling former Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev perhaps?—has one thing to say in this week’s Science to the greenhouse gases emitted by coal-fired power plants: we will bury you. Nobel Laureate Steven Chu’s department has funneled .4 billion in stimulus dollars to research and develop the technology known as carbon capture and storage (CCS).


Behind the Furor Over a Climate Change Skeptic

WASHINGTON — Alan Carlin, a 72-year-old analyst and economist, had labored in obscurity in a little-known office at the Environmental Protection Agency since the Nixon administration.


In June, however, he became a sudden celebrity with the surfacing of a few e-mail messages that seemed to show that his contrarian views on global warming had been suppressed by his superiors because they were inconvenient to the Obama administration’s climate change policy. Conservative commentators and Congressional Republicans said he had been muzzled because he did not toe the liberal line.


But a closer look at his case and a broader set of internal E.P.A. documents obtained by The New York Times under the Freedom of Information Act paint a more complicated picture.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 25, 2009

China’s wind farms come with a catch: coal plants.

Monday, September 28th, 2009

China’s ambition to create "green cities" powered by huge wind farms comes with a dirty little secret: Dozens of new coal-fired power plants need to be installed as well.

Going to San Jose? Bring Your Own Shopping Bag

Monday, September 28th, 2009

plastic-bags
Reusable shopping bags have become ubiquitous.  They’re available at almost every retail store you walk into, but the majority of Americans still aren’t using them.  That may change soon as more and more cities are taking away the choice and making them a necessity.

On Tuesday, the City of San Jose voted to place a ban on all plastic and paper bags at stores.

The ban won’t go into effect until 2011 – after a lengthy environmental review of its impact.  This will allow all retailers and consumers to become prepared in time.  For stores who still want to offer shoppers a one-time use option, bags made from at least 40 percent recycled materials can be made available, but at a fee.

Other cities, like San Francisco, have banned plastic bags or levied a tax on them, but San Jose is the first to take action on paper ones.  China’s ban on plastic bags, while not strictly adhered to, still resulted in 40 billion less bags being used and cut their petroleum use by 1.6 million tons.

We might see more cities inacting these types of bans very soon. It seems plastic bags are starting to go the way of the incandescent bulb.  In June, the U.N.’s Environment Program Chief called for a global ban on plastic bag production.

via Treehugger

World Leaders Spare Details at Climate Summit

Monday, September 28th, 2009

When more than 100 world leaders met at a United Nations climate change summit yesterday, observers hoped that China or the United States would unveil a bold plan for reducing greenhouse gas emissions.

The event at the UN headquarters in New York allowed the presidents of the world’s two largest carbon dioxide polluting nations to articulate their climate policies, but the speeches provided few policy details.

U.S. President Barack Obama said that developing countries should receive support to adapt to the impacts of climate change and pursue low-carbon development.

"We must energize our efforts to put other developing nations – especially the poorest and most vulnerable – on a path to sustainable growth," Obama said, although he did not clarify the level of assistance. "These nations do not have the same resources to combat climate change as countries like the United States or China do."

Chinese President Hu Jintao took the podium next. In the next 10 years, Hu said, his country would "endeavor" to reduce carbon dioxide emissions per unit of economic growth. Rather than promise a reduction target, Hu offered to cut emissions by a "notable margin."

While the statement provides more clarity to China’s position – officials said last month that the country’s emissions would continue to rise until 2050 – it appears that China will not announce more specific reduction commitments until industrialized nations specify how much funding developing countries will receive.

"Developed countries should take up their responsibility and provide new, additional, adequate, and predictable financial support to developing countries to enable them to have access to climate-friendly technologies," Hu said.

Climate-related financing is currently well below what will be needed to help developing nations weather the most serious impacts of climate change. Some US billion has been provided annually in recent years for developing countries to transition to low-carbon economies, but an estimated 0 billion will be necessary each year by 2030, according to the World Bank.

Adaptation funding is also far below the needed amount. Less than billion annually has been provided, whereas the estimated need is billion, the Bank said in its latest World Development Report.

Less than three months remain before world leaders gather in Copenhagen, Denmark, to finalize a successor agreement to the Kyoto Protocol. With only 15 negotiating days before the Copenhagen summit begins, UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged world leaders to find a common ground.

"Failure to reach broad agreement in Copenhagen would be morally inexcusable, economically short-sighted, and politically unwise," Ban said. "The fate of future generations, and the hopes and livelihoods of billions today rest, literally, with you."

But the negotiations are progressing far too slowly, said Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt.

"The negotiations are still lacking real progress. We are close to a deadlock," said Reinfeldt, speaking on behalf of the European Union.

"Our job is to break the deadlock and climb up from the trenches."

French President Nicholas Sarkozy proposed that leaders of the world’s main economies meet in mid-November to accelerate the negotiations before Copenhagen.

"What we lack today is confidence and determination," Sarkozy said. "The time has passed for diplomatic tinkering, for narrow bargaining. The time has come for courage, mobilization, and collective ambition."

Among the speeches, newly elected Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama reiterated his campaign pledge of reducing Japan’s emissions 25 percent by 2020.

"I am resolved to exercise the political will required to deliver on this promise by mobilizing all available policy tools," Hatoyama said. "These will include the introduction of a domestic emission trading mechanism and a feed-in tariff for renewable energy, as well as the consideration of a global warming tax."

Hu announced that China would increase its use of renewable and nuclear energy, with the goal of elevating non-fossil fuel energy consumption to 15 percent of the total by 2020. In addition, he said, China would plant 40 million hectares of forests.

Obama also said that he would work with leaders of the world’s 20 largest economies to phase-out fossil fuel subsidies when the G20 meets in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, later this week. The United States provided .2 billion for fossil fuel subsidies and .2 billion for renewable energy subsidies, not including corn ethanol, from 2002 through 2008, according to an Environmental Law Institute study.

Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), said that the current pace of emissions will lead to an increase in global temperature of more than 4 degrees Celsius by mid-century. Industrial leaders agreed in July to halt warming to 2 degrees.

"The IPCC has clearly specified that if temperature increase is to be limited to between 2.0 and 2.4 degrees Celsius, global emissions must peak no later than 2015. That is only six years from now," Pachauri said. "Science leaves us with no choice for inaction now."

Ben Block is a staff writer with the Worldwatch Institute. He can be reached at bblock@worldwatch.org.

This article is a product of Eye on Earth, Worldwatch Institute’s online news service.

Help us change the world – DONATE NOW!

(Posted by Ben Block in Politics at 11:35 AM)

Read Article: World Leaders Spare Details at Climate Summit

Yingli Green Energy Wins Global Renewable Energy Award

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

BAODING, China, Sept. 22 /PRNewswire-Asia-FirstCall/ — Yingli Green Energy Holding Company Limited (NYSE: YGE) (”Yingli Green Energy” or the “Company”), one of the world’s leading vertically integrated photovoltaic (”PV”) product manufacturers, has received a Euromoney and Ernst & Young Global Renewable Energy Award. The Awards were founded in 2004 to recognize the projects, companies and individuals who have made significant contributions to the global renewable energy sector.

The 6th annual Euromoney and Ernst & Young Global Renewable Energy Awards, dubbed the “Green Oscars,” were presented at the London Science Museum on September 21, 2009. Awards were given in nine categories, from “Lender of the Year” to “Climate Change Investment Program of the Year.” Mr. Bryan Li, Chief Financial Officer of Yingli Green Energy, was present on behalf of the Company to accept the “Equity Deal of the Year – Technology” award in recognition of the Company’s successful June 2009 equity follow-on offering of 18,390,000 ADSs which helped to raise investors’ confidence in the renewable energy sector.

“We are honored to be the first Chinese Company to receive the most prestigious financial award in the renewable energy industry,” commented Mr. Li, “At Yingli Green Energy we strive to support sustainable development by supplying global solar markets with low cost, high-quality PV modules. This award is a confirmation and acknowledgment of Yingli Green Energy’s continuous efforts and commitment to making a greener world.”

Read Article: Yingli Green Energy Wins Global Renewable Energy Award





German Solar Industry Group Considers Seeking Regulatory Action Against Chinese Competitors

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Not content to sit idle as their Chinese rivals implement aggressive
pricing strategies overseas, German solar manufacturers are fighting
back by looking to a higher power. BSW (Bundesverband Solarwirtschaft, the German Solar Industry Association) has stated that it will decide whether or not to request regulatory action by the end of the year over what it considers dumping by Chinese solar manufacturers.

“We will take it to (the European Union in) Brussels if
we observe distortions of competition,” Carsten Koernig said at the
European Photovoltaic Solar Industry Conference in Hamburg.

For those who would like a brushing-up on their Economics 101, the
following is economist and NYT columnist Paul Krugman’s definition of dumping, as taken from his textbook International Economics. (Ah, I knew it would be good for something…)

Dumping: a pricing practice in which a
firm charges a lower price for exported goods than it does for the same
goods sold domestically. Dumping is a controversial issue in trade
policy, where it is widely regarded as an “unfair” practice and is
subject to special rules and penalties.

This is serious business for German solar companies, especially since they have recently lost a good chunk of their market share
to their Chinese counterparts, who offer competing products at a
fraction of the cost. One item of concern (and up for review) is the
financial environment in which Chinese solar companies can take out
loans from domestic banks, a factor which, combined with low production
costs and China’s 50% solar subsidy for investments in solar power
projects, would rattle any firm worth its credit score.

“It cannot be the aim of our environmental and economic
policy to lose to the Far East our pioneering role with regard to the
last great future technology, which was raised here with great
efforts,” Dieter Ammer, CEO at Conergy, Germany’s second-biggest solar
group by revenue, said in August.

Source

ASPO-USA Denver Conference Oct. 11 – 13 Reminder

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

This is a guest post from ASPO-USA.

2009 ASPO International Peak Oil Conference is less than three weeks away, October 11-13, 2009. Don’t miss this opportunity to hear up to date information, analysis, and discussion from the world’s leading experts on energy and our future. The conference includes over 70 speakers and a Saturday pre conference workshop on creating personal plans for the coming decades.

The complete agenda is shown below, with links to details and speaker biographies. The version on the ASPO-USA web site can be reached at this link.


Experts from The Oil Drum are represented in a The Oil Drum focused breakout session ( Sunday 10:15 to 12:00 ) and throughout the program. The Oil Drum breakout session includes

  • Kyle Saunders (Prof. Goose)
  • Gail Tverberg (Gail the Actuary)
  • Dave Murphy
  • Jeff Vail
  • Brian Maschhoff (Joules Vern)
  • Rembrandt Koppelaar (Rembrandt)

Jason Bradford and Nate Hagens are speaking in other sessions.

Things to Remember:

  • Hotel Room Block Closes Sept 29, 2009
  • Special Monday Evening Speakers dinner is filling up and may sell out
  • ASPO 2009 International Peak Oil Conference

    System Reset: Global Energy and the New Economy
    Sheraton Hotel, Denver, Colorado
    Sunday, October 11- Tuesday, October 13, 2009

    Saturday, October 10, 2009

    1:00 PM to 9:00 PM Pre-Conference Workshop: Survive and Thrive After Peak Oil

    Creating Personal Plans for the Coming Decades

    The Challenge:  How should we plan our lives in the face of peak oil, global climate change, and the ongoing financial crisis?     Much thought has gone into policy questions around energy, but less attention has been given to helping people prepare their own plans for such concerns as finance, careers, education, nutrition, community, housing, and transportation.  It’s time for all of us to help fix that! Continued “business as usual” planning for individuals, families, and communities will not be good enough any more. Cost: Learn More

     
     

    Sunday, October 11, 2009

    8:30 AM to 7:30 PM Day 1 – Concurrent Sessions
    7:30 AM to 7:30 PM Conference Registration
    9:00 AM to 10:00 AM Concurrent Sessions 1

    Two concurrent sessions:

    TRACK A: Peak Oil: Train The Trainers
    Moderator: Debbie Cook, ASPO-USA Board of Directors
    Presented by Robert Hirsch, Senior Energy Advisor, MISI

    TRACK B: Charting a Sustainable Future ( Part 1 of 2 )
    Moderator: Dave Bowden, Executive Director, ASPO-USA

    - David Wann, author, Affluenza, Superbia "Building Sustainable Communities"
    - Pat Murphy, Community Solutions
    - Jason Bradford, Founder, Willits Economic Localization

    10:00 AM to 10:15 AM Break
    10:15 AM to 12:00 PM Concurrent Sessions 2

    Three concurrent Sessions

    TRACK A: Analyses from The Oil Drum
    Moderator: Kyle Saunders ("Professor Goose")

    - Gail Tverberg, Editor, The Oil Drum "What’s Ahead? Two Scenarios"
    - David Murphy, Lead Researcher, EROI Institute "Recent Advances in EROI Research"
    - Jeff Vail, Associate, Davis Graham & Stubbs LLP "The Renewables Gap"
    - Brian Maschhoff, Contributor, The Oil Drum "More Saudi Oil? Really?"
    - Rembrandt Koppelaar, Contributor, The Oil Drum "Oil Megaprojects: A Quarterly Approach"

    TRACK B: Charting a Sustainable Future ( Part 2 of 2 )
    Moderator:Dave Bowden, Executive Director, ASPO-USA

    - David Wann, author, Affluenza, Superbia "Building Sustainable Communities"
    - Pat Murphy, Community Solutions
    - Jason Bradford, Founder, Willits Economic Localization

    TRACK C: International Perspectives

    Moderator: Dick Lawrence, Board member, co-founder, ASPO-USA

    - Kjell Aleklett, President, ASPO International, Professor, Uppsala University, Sweden "The Peak of the Oil Age"
    - Paul Sears, Systems Research Analyst, Natural Resources Canada
    - Carlos Rossi, Venezuelan Hydrocarbon Association
    - Daniel Gomez, President, ASPO Spain "Renewable Energy in Spain – Update"

    12:00 PM to 1:00 PM Break and Networking
    Sunday lunch break will not be hosted. You may visit one of the many Denver restaurants outside the hotel.
    1:00 PM to 2:30 PM Concurrent Sessions 3

    Three concurrent sessions:

    TRACK A: Energy and Investment
    Moderator: Jim Hansen, Independent Financial Consultant

    - Nate Hagens, Editor, The Oil Drum "Why We Invest: Some Foundational Tenets"
    - Richard Vodra, Vice President, Spire Investment Partners
    - Byron King, Whiskey & Gunpowder
    - Allen Stevens, Stifel-Nicolaus

    TRACK B: North American Energy System Vulnerabilities
    Moderator: Sally Odland, ASPO-USA Advisory Board

    - Jeffrey Brown, Independent petroleum geologist "Are We in the Early Stages of a Permanent Net Oil Export Crisis?"
    - Rick Munroe, Energy Security Analyst, National Farmers Union of Canada "Government plans for liquid fuel emergencies"
    - Scott Pugh, US Department of Homeland Security "Protecting America’s Electric Grid"

    TRACK C: International Perspectives ( Part 2 of 2 )
    Moderator: Dick Lawrence, Board member, co-founder, ASPO-USA

    Hannes Kunz, President, IIER, Zurich "Economic Scenarios for an Age of Declining EROIs"
    - Richard Meyer, EPURON GmbH "Concentrating Solar Thermal Power Helps Offset Fossil Fuel Depletion"
    - Feng Lianyong, Professor, School of Business Administration in the University of Petroleum "Progress of the Peak Oil Debate in China"
    - Bengt Söderbergh "Coming European Gas Crisis? – Future Supply from Norway and Russia"

    2:30 PM to 3:30 PM Extended Networking Break with Topic Table Discussions
    3:30 PM to 5:00 PM Concurrent Sessions 4

    Three concurrent sessions:

    TRACK A: Stalking the Wild Taboo: The Missing Discussions About Population and Energy
    Moderator: John Theobald, UC Oil Forum, University of California, Davis

    - Hon. Richard Lamm, former Governor of Colorado, Co-Director of the Institute for Public Policy Studies, University of Denver
    - Albert Bartlett, Professor Emeritus, University of Colorado, Boulder

    TRACK B: Connecting Peak Oil and the Recession
    Moderator: Robert Hirsch, Senior Energy Advisor, MISI

    - Terry Backer, State Representative, State of Connecticut "Promoting Sound Energy Policy in Cash-Crunched Governments"
    - Steven Kopits,
 Managing Director Douglas-Westwood LLC, New York "A Peak Oil Recession"
    - Nate Hagens, Editor, The Oil Drum "Abstract Energy Gain and the Permanent Recession"

    TRACK C: The Economics of Climate Change and Atmospheric Carbon Reduction
    Moderator: Randy Udall, Energy Analyst & Co-Founder, ASPO-USA

    - Heidi VanGenderen, Climate Change Analyst
    - Chuck Kutscher, National Renewable Energy Laboratory
    - Susan Capalbo, Chair, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, Oregon State University "Economic Dimensions of Carbon Sequestration: How Does It Stack Up?"

    5:00 PM to 6:30 PM Meet and Greet Opening Reception
    Join the conference speakers; network. Hors d’oeuvres and cash bar.
    6:30 PM to 7:30 PM Evening Keynote

    Super Giant Pre-Salt Petroleum Systems recently discovered in Offshore Greater Campos Basin, Brazil

    Marcio Rocha Mello, President HRT Petroleum, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil,
    Introduced by Vince Matthews, Director, Colorado Geological Survey

     
     

    Monday, October 12, 2009

    7:00 AM to 5:00 PM Day 2: Linking Energy Supply and the Economy

    7:00 AM to 8:00 AM Continental Breakfast
    7:30 AM to 5:00 PM Conference Registration
    8:00 AM to 8:30 AM Welcome and Introductions

    Kjell Aleklett, President, ASPO International, Professor, Uppsala University, Sweden
    Steve Andrews, Senior Analyst & Co-Founder, ASPO-USA
    Mayor John Hickenlooper, Denver, Colorado

    8:30 AM to 10:00 AM The Future of Oil Supply in an Unpredictable-Price Environment
    Moderator: Steve Andrews, Senior Analyst & Co-Founder, ASPO-USA

    • Randy Udall, Energy Analyst & Co-Founder, ASPO-USA
    • Chris Skrebowski, Energy Institute in London, Editor of Petroleum Review
    • Jeremy Gilbert, Barrelmore, Ltd., formerly BP Chief Petroleum Engineer
      "Why won’t they listen to us?"

    Question & Answer

    10:00 AM to 10:30 AM Break and Networking
    10:30 AM to 12:00 PM Natural Gas Game Changers?

    Moderator: Randy Udall, Energy Analyst & Co-Founder, ASPO-USA

    • Peter A. Dea, President & CEO, Cirque Resources LP
      "Abundant Natural Gas Supply, An American Treasure"
    • Arthur Berman, Director, Labyrinth Consulting Services, Inc.
      "Cautionary Lessons from the Barnett Shale"
    • Edward Warner, Founder, Expedition Oil Company
      "No Guts, No Glory: The Discovery of Jonah Field"

    Question & Answer

    12:00 PM to 1:30 PM Lunch Keynote and Awards

    Presentation of M.K. Hubbert and Whipple awards

    The Nexus of Energy, the Economy and Politics
    Kevin Phillips, Commentator and Author of Bad Money

    1:30 PM to 3:00 PM The Great Recession and Energy Markets

    Moderator: Dave Cohen, ASPO Writer and Analyst

    Question and Answer ( including Kevin Phillips )

    3:00 PM to 3:30 PM Break and Networking
    3:30 PM to 5:00 PM Energy and the Media: On the Watch or Asleep at the Wheel?

    Moderator: John Theobald, UC Oil Forum, University of California, Davis

    • Peter Maass, Author Crude World: The Violent Twilight of Oil, Contributing Writer, The New York Times Magazine
      "Crude and Confusing: Why Oil Is Harder to Write About Than Any War I Covered"
    • Tom Whipple, Writer, Editor ASPO-USA’s Peak Oil News, Peak Oil Review
    • Lisa Margonelli, Author, Oil On The Brain, New America Foundation
    • Richard Heinberg, Author, Blackout: Coal, Climate and the Last Energy Crisis, Senior Fellow, Post Carbon Institute
      "Report from the Front: A Peak Oil Educator Reflects on What’s Worked and What Hasn’t"

    Question and Answer

    5:00 PM to 5:30 PM Summary / Responder and Wrap-Up

    5:30 PM to 6:30 PM Networking Reception
    Please join us for hors d’oeuvres and cash bar.
    6:30 PM to 7:30 PM Evening Keynote

    Matthew Simmons, Simmons & Company International

    7:30 PM to 10:00 PM Speakers Dinner

    Advanced registration and payment required

     
     

    Tuesday, October 13, 2009

    8:00 AM to 5:00 PM Day 3: Reactions, Challenges, and Opportunities

    7:00 AM to 8:00 AM Continental Breakfast
    7:30 AM to 5:00 PM Conference Registration
    8:00 AM to 8:30 AM Tuesday Opening Remarks

    Kjell Aleklett, President, ASPO International, Professor, Uppsala University, Sweden
    Steve Andrews, Senior Analyst & Co-Founder, ASPO-USA

    8:30 AM to 10:00 AM Eastern Hemisphere: Perspectives and Outlook

    Moderator: Kjell Aleklett, President, ASPO International, Professor, Uppsala University, Sweden

    • Ray Leonard, CEO and President, Hyperdymanics Corp; former VP of Exploration, Kuwait Energy
    • Simon Ratcliffe, Energy Advisor, department for international development, government of the United Kingdom
    • Michael Rodgers, PFC Energy Partner based in Asia; senior member PFC Upstream and Gas practice

    Question and Answer

    10:00 AM to 10:30 AM Break and Networking
    10:30 AM to 12:00 PM Western Hemisphere: Perspectives and Outlook

    Moderator: Dick Lawrence, Co-Founder, ASPO-USA

    • David Shields, journalist and author of the book Pemex: The Oil Reform "Outlook for Mexican oil production"
    • Vince Matthews, Director, Colorado Geological Survey
    • RoseAnne Franco, South America Analyst, PFC Energy
      "Outlook for Oil & Gas in South America"

    Question and Answer

    12:00 PM to 1:30 PM Lunch and Keynote

    Alternative Transportation Energy – A Major Game Changer or Overrated Strategic Option?
    Tom Petrie, Founder, Petrie, Parkman, Inc. / Merrill Lynch

    1:30 PM to 3:00 PM Navigating Competing Priorities in Energy, Food, and Water Policy

    Moderator: Debbie Cook, ASPO-USA Board of Directors

    • Larry Irving, Former Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information, Policy Challenge
      "Making Sausage: An insider’s perspective on the evolution of a bill"
    • Michael Webber, Associate Director, Center for International Energy & Environmental Policy, University of Texas, Austin
      "Thirst for Power: The Global Nexus of Energy & Water"
    • Jason Bradford, Founder, Willits Economic Localization
    • U.S. Senator Mark Udall, Colorado

    Question and Answer

    3:00 PM to 3:30 PM Break and Networking
    3:30 PM to 5:00 PM Strategies from the Forefronts of the Transition

    Moderator: Sally Odland, ASPO-USA Advisory Board

    Question and Answer

    5:00 PM to 5:30 PM Special Guest

    Colorado Governor Bill Ritter, Jr.

    5:30 PM to 6:30 PM Networking Reception
    Please join us for hors d’oeuvres and cash bar.
    6:30 PM to 7:30 PM Closing Remarks

    Nate Hagens, Editor, The Oil Drum " Chicken Little at A Crossroads"

     
     
    Sunday, October 11 – Tuesday, October 13, 2009

    Read Article: ASPO-USA Denver Conference Oct. 11 – 13 Reminder

Is SolarFun The Only Chinese Solar Company With A Bright Future?

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

While China’s President Hu is in the United States laying out the
nation’s ambition to tackle global warming, a tone that you can not
find in other leaders’ speeches, Premier Wen Jiabao is hosting a conference
with the nation’s top economists to pledge more investment in
low-carbon industries, such as renewable energy, and next generation
automobiles. China apparently is looking for a new spot to lead the
world for the decades to come. These new…



go to solarfeeds for the rest of this story>>>>>

Read Article: Is SolarFun The Only Chinese Solar Company With A Bright Future?

Eco Bikes: Chinese man invents amphibious bike, hopes to get it patented

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

amphibious bike

Eco Factor: Amphibious bike made from recycled materials.

We’ve seen DIYers in China invent amphibious bike to take their pedal-powered machine to the open waters. While that bike didn’t seem practical enough for a land ride, another inventor from the same land has come up with an amphibious bike that is a little more practical.

(more…)

Applied Materials Awarded 5 Year Contract From ENN (AMAT)

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Applied Materials just announced that it has been awarded a 5-year
contract by ENN Solar Energy Co., Ltd. Under the contract, Applied
Materials will provide maintenance, spare parts management, and
analytical services for the Applied SunFab™ Thin Film Line at ENN’s
solar plant in Langfang, China. Applied Material’s expertise will help
ENN obtain optimum performance and the best possible output from the
line.

In a press release, representatives…



go to solarfeeds for the rest of this story>>>>>

Read Article: Applied Materials Awarded 5 Year Contract From ENN (AMAT)

Top 5 Tips for Cleantech Startups Headed to Washington

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

800px-US_Capitol_SouthWith so much activity in Washington, D.C., these days — from funding opportunities to policies like cap and trade — that could affect cleantech industries, many startups have sent their executives to the capital or hired lobbyists in the hope of adding their voices to the debate. But cleantech startups need to be careful when it comes to dedicating their limited resources to these efforts. While spending time in D.C. can certainly bring rewards, once there it’s easy to spend tons of cash without much to show for it. Here’s our list of the top 5 things startups should know before hopping on a plane to Washington.

Don’t hire a lobbying firm first. Before ever stepping foot in D.C., identify which issues you think you can add value to, says John Stubbs, executive director of the Global Innovation Forum, a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit that works to promote innovation for solutions to global problems. Those issues could be cap-and-trade legislation, renewable portfolio standards, tax credits, stimulus, patent reform or others.

Then, if you want to dip your toe in the water, join a group that has a presence in the nation’s capital, like the American Council on Renewable Energy. Through the group, Stubbs says, you can participate in efforts to talk to legislators, their staff members and Obama administration officials. This will help you learn how you can fit in and how you can influence government decisions. Through this learning process, you’ll become more informed about what type of lobbying firm, if any, you might want to hire.

Don’t threaten to go to China. Business executives often think they can scare legislators and their staff into making policy changes by threatening to build their factories or take their businesses to China. Don’t do it, John Gimigliano, a principal at professional services firm KPMG, said during a panel discussion at the recent AlwaysOn GoingGreen conference in Sausalito, Calif. Even if it’s true, the threat has “lost its punch” because so many have used it, Gimigliano said. You have to come up with something else to grab their attention.

Focus on building relationships. What Congress and their staff are really looking for are experts on different topics to whom they can turn to for advice, says Betsy Mullins, senior vice president of government affairs for TechNet, which promotes technology and innovation in Washington, D.C. You’ll stand out if you can prove to policymakers that you’re an expert in your field and you have solutions to current problems. Focus on building relationships and demonstrating that you’re a thought leader in your field. If successful, Congress and their staff will start coming to you. Don’t leave the capital without having asked legislators: “What can I do for you?”

Don’t outsource your public affairs efforts. This relates to building relationships. Some executives think they can hire high-priced lobbyists who will then do their bidding for them, said Gimigliano. If a startup is serious about having an impact in D.C., then C-level executives will have to spend time there. They will have to meet with staffers and build trust. One smart way to do that is to form networks with other organizations around issues that matter, says Global Innovation Forum’s Stubbs. You can then approach legislators together, and you’ll be taken more seriously because it will appear that your issue isn’t just about you, but about an entire industry.

Manage your expectations. Many issues that involve government take a great deal of time to flesh out, says TechNet’s Mullins, for example patent reform has been under way for seven years and still isn’t resolved. You need to think about how you measure success. Certainly if your main goal is to get, say, an extension of a tax credit and it is extended, then that’s a success. But there are other ways to have influence. You could develop a strong relationship with a legislator or you could produce a white paper that gets broad circulation among staffers. Efforts in the capital should be seen as any other investment. They take time, and it’s not enough to just bring a checkbook.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

This article also appeared on BusinessWeek.com.



Subscribe to GigaOM Pro and gain access to our Webinar, “Biggest Opportunities in the Smart Grid,” on Oct. 7, 2009.

UN Speeches Ramp Up Rhetoric in US – China Climate Change Arms Race

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

After spending some time bringing together Israel and Palestine for a handshake photo-op in New York, President Obama turned his attention to a problem that may prove equally daunting: global cooperation on climate change.

In his first UN appearance since taking the Oval Office, Obama staked a lofty position for the US, promised that the US is “determined to act,” and that the US “will meet our responsibility to future generations.” Chinese President Hu Jintao matched Obama’s rhetoric, pledging that the Chinese would commit to a host of progressive steps around renewable energy and emissions reductions, but also cautioning that developing economies like China’s “should not … be asked to take on obligations that go beyond their development stage.”

The summer saw a lot of pre-positioning in advance of Copenhagen, and with today’s UN General Assembly marking the beginning of a series of mini-summits in the lead-up to December’s big climate change conference, the volume on those announcements will only increase along with their frequency and grandeur.

Still, with Obama facing an uphill battle on domestic climate change legislation and China hiding behind their “developing” status, Copenhagen is threatening to become little more than a public relations event with little real concerted action. The US will have to avoid making the push for global leadership on climate change into a new breed of arms race that would find Obama and US policymakers at a significant disadvantage against the Chinese in the following ways:

Paying Lip Service is Costly – China, India and other developing countries want the US-led West to subsidize their carbon reduction efforts. If the West balks and no comprehensive global agreement emerges, the US could still find itself saddled with costly commitments made in going toe-to-toe with China as a demonstration of leadership and willingness to cooperate. For example, at the UN, President Jintao made the headline-grabbing promise to plant enough new trees in China to cover the area of Norway. Jintao also promised to get China to 15% renewable energy within 10 years, a much more ambitious timeline than any US plan. While it may not represent the kind of economy-crippling commitment that China fears will result from a global agreement, these programs will be costly, and Obama has his hands full just trying to pay for health care.

Democracy’s Dilemma - Not only is Obama hamstrung by health care, an increasingly troublesome war in Afghanistan, and an economy that is still teetering; but, he also has the mettlesome matters of bipartisanship, political pressure and budget restraints. While a strongly Democratic House could barely pass a weakened climate bill, Jintao and the Chinese have a one-party system overseeing a command economy that gives the Chinese a lot more adaptability as circumstances dictate in Copenhagen, in the world press, and on the geopolitical landscape.

The World Won’t Grade on a Curve - The Chinese are already crying foul over efforts to stifle their economy for the sake of climate change action and the world community is not expecting much from the world’s fastest growing economy and most voluminous emitter. Commitments like those above are enough to make a splash and convince the world that China really is trying. By contrast, Senators from Obama’s own party are refusing to discuss the prospect of domestic climate change legislation unless it includes trade protections. That kind of opposition in his own party makes a lot of his words ring hollow while the Chinese will certainly be able to deliver on whatever proposals they float. There are no handicaps in this game, so even if they overshoot on a much lower standard, the Chinese promise to steal Obama’s thunder.

Conventional wisdom says you should never enter a land war in Asia. The same might be said for wars of words.

Flickr photo.

Tiger Protection Plan in India ‘Failing’; China Ambivalent About Tiger Poaching

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Tiger image for article about Chinese demand fueling tiger poaching in India

Wildlife experts warn that India’s tiger protection plans appear to be failing – and a recent meeting reveals that China is not interested in curtailing its demand for endangered tiger parts.

Despite millions of dollars in funding, a new protection force, forest dweller relocation plans, and other measures, wildlife experts fear that India’s attempts to protect endangered tigers from poaching are failing.

A further blow to tiger protection efforts came when a recent meeting between India’s Minister of Environment and Chinese officials did not make any progress on the issue.

Read more of this story »

The Advent of Smart, Green Cities in Asia and Europe Shows Leadership for Copenhagen Climate Agreement

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

by Warren Karlenzig

songdo7.jpg
Songdo International Business District, South Korea

On the eve of G-20 meetings this week in the heart of the United States, the momentum of climate change leadership is ironically taking shape in Asia and Europe.

That is borne out by new announcements on smart, green city programs, as well as other major developments coming from China and South Korea leading up to December’s Copenhagen Climate Change Conference.

Before I get to the wired city news, some relevant signs from the tea leaves of Asian political leadership:

Both China and South Korea are home to an emerging model of cities that are being planned with combined IT infrastructure and management systems that reduce carbon and resource use in construction, waste production, water and energy use, teleworking, transportation and mobility.

South Korea, in particular, is designing its national stimulus program and economic development strategy around the convergence of sustainability planning, IT innovation and energy usage.

It’s not surprising that South Korea’s largest development project, Songdo International Business District, optimizes low-carbon design with ubiquitous information technology.

In China, IBM announced last week an eco-city research center, which will feature a collaboration between the global technology provider and the national government on the latest IT-based water management systems and more.

China is also designing Eco City standards through its central government’s Ministry of Housing, Urban-Rural Development; it is looking to such planning and management systems that can scale up to meet 350-400 million more people that its cities will house by 2020. China is said to be looking beyond reducing carbon emissions and water use: it is taking into account other macro design factors such as as climate change adaptation, including natural disaster risk. 

The developer of Korea’s Songdo, Gale International, and Cisco also announced last month an agreement with China to develop a city district in Changsha, Hunan Province.

Meanwhile, the European Union is not sitting idle when it comes to wiring its cities for sustainability. After hosting a “Green and Connected Cities” session before The European Union’s Committee of Regions last year (at which I addressed delegates), Europe announced last week it is putting significant investment into wiring and enabling 30 cities for advanced IT energy efficiency capabilities.

And the United States? Beyond Boulder, Colorado, which has recently implemented the model for the nation’s first Smart Grid-connected city, looks like we will be spending our days leading up to Copenhagen mired in a decades-old health care debate while the rest of world is shaping a future of innovation.   

 

This piece originally appeared on Common Current’s Green Flow

Help us change the world – DONATE NOW!

(Posted by WorldChanging Team in Politics at 5:19 PM)

New Metallization Pastes from Ferro Electronic Material Systems Improve Performance, Ease Manufacturing of PV Silicon Solar Cells

Monday, September 21st, 2009

CLEVELAND–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Ferro Electronic Material Systems, a leading supplier of materials for fabricating photovoltaic silicon solar cells for more than 25 years, broadened its product line with the introduction of five new products at the 24th European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference and Exhibition held in Hamburg, Germany September 21–24. The products improve electrical output, efficiency, and manufacturability, enabling solar energy to become a more cost-competitive energy generation alternative.

Front Silver Pastes for Shallow Emitters

Products in this family, NS 33-510 and NS 33-520, yield greater power output, fire through silicon nitride anti-reflective coatings, and provide a broad processing window. They form excellent contact on 55-70 ohms/square high sheet resistivity emitters, and their rheology is suitable for high aspect ratio grid lines. The products are compatible with all Ferro rear silver pastes as well as lead-free and low-bow aluminum pastes. Both NS 33-510 and NS 33-520 are for use with emitters having a low surface concentration diffusion profile. They also are RoHS compliant and Cadmium-free.

In addition, NS 33-510 and NS 33-520 offer the advantages of Ferro’s patented Hot Melt ink technology. This specially designed silver conductor system eliminates the drying process of conventional pastes, resulting in higher throughput rates, increased productivity, improved yields, and reduction of volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Solid at room temperature, Hot Melt pastes are resistively heated above their melting points to screen print similarly to conventional thick film pastes. Unlike conventional pastes, they instantly re-solidify when transferred to the solar cell surface and are ready for the next printing sequence. This unique property also improves the aspect ratio of printed grid lines and reduces shading, contributing to a higher cell efficiency than can be achieved with conventional screen printing materials. Fired line resolution of 80 microns wide x 30 microns thick has been achieved under optimal conditions.

Back Side Aluminum Paste

Ferro’s AL 53-110 Series are lead- and cadmium-free aluminum conductors for the back surface of 180–220-μm thick silicon wafers. They exhibit less than 1.5 mm camber on 150 x 150-mm wafers at 180-μm thickness, enabling solar cell manufacturers to reduce silicon usage and costs. They eliminate aluminum bead formation during the firing process and can be fired over a broad range of conditions, including co-fire processes with front contact silver inks. AL 53-110 Series inks provide a shallow eutectic and a uniform back surface field (BSF) to yield a smooth surface and high electrical efficiency.

High Adhesion Rear Silver Pastes

PS 33-610 and PS 33-612 are cost-effective thrifted silver conductor pastes that provide high adhesion and excellent solderability when used with lead-free solders. Low interfacial resistance yields improved electrical performance. Both products are cadmium-free, and PS-610 is led-free. Both inks also offer the additional manufacturing benefits of Ferro’s Hot Melt ink technology.

About Ferro

Ferro Electronic Material Systems has locations in Vista, CA; Penn Yan and Niagara Falls, NY; South Plainfield, NJ; Haverhill, United Kingdom; Uden, The Netherlands; Hanau, Germany; Tsukuba, Japan; and Suzhou, China. Its products include metal pastes and powders for solar energy applications, advanced packaging and thick film conductors; chemical mechanical planarization (CMP) slurries for semiconductors and advanced integrated circuits; dielectrics used in chip components and multilayer ceramic capacitors (MLCC); and surface finishing materials for LCD, hard disk, and ophthalmic polishing.

Ferro Corporation (NYSE:FOE) is a leading global supplier of technology-based performance materials for manufacturers. Ferro materials enhance the performance of products in a variety of end markets, including electronics, telecommunications, pharmaceuticals, building and renovation, appliances, automotive, household furnishings, and industrial products. Headquartered in Cleveland, Ohio, the Company has approximately 6,700 employees globally and reported sales of .0 billion in 2006. Additional information about the Company can be found at www.ferro.com.

Read Article: New Metallization Pastes from Ferro Electronic Material Systems Improve Performance, Ease Manufacturing of PV Silicon Solar Cells





Eco Architecture: China Science and Technology Museum goes bigger, better and greener

Monday, September 21st, 2009

china science and technology museum_1

Eco Factor: New premises of China Science and Technology Museum to generate renewable energy using on-site generators.

After serving more than 20 million tourists with the rich scientific heritage of China, the old China Science and Technology Museum closed its doors and was repositioned in a much bigger and greener facility in Beijing.

(more…)

RoseStreet Labs Discover Direct Solar to Hydrogen Production Method

Monday, September 21st, 2009

I’ve talked about direct solar to hydrogen production in the past including discoveries by the Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics in China, researchers at the California Institute of Technology and scientists at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Northeastern University.

This time I wish to talk about RoseStreet Labs in Phoenix, Arizona who have come up with a unique method of producing hydrogen directly from solar energy. The researchers used a photoelectrochemical cell (PEC) to spontaneously generate H2 without external power.

This discovery by RoseStreet Labs is coupled with their use of full spectrum Nitride Thin Film semiconductors. In the past, photovoltaic cells had been limited to using the ultraviolet range of the spectrum to produce direct solar to hydrogen. This new technology can use the full visible and non-visible spectrum of light to create hydrogen.

According to RoseStreet CEO Bob Forcier, “We are excited about this new development in capturing the full spectrum of the sun for not only instantaneous power generation, but also for energy storage via liquefied hydrogen or to assist the emerging biofuel and biodiesel efforts. Although this is a significant milestone in our scientific research in Nitride Thin Film photovoltaics, it also represents the opportunity to commercialize this technology to the next level with RoseStreet’s partners.”

RoseStreet has not announced, however, if they are using water as a feedstock for the direct solar energy or some other hydrogen rich chemical compound. No matter, since with the amount of R&D into direct solar to hydrogen technology it is only a stone’s throw away until commercialization becomes a reality in this field.

Drumbeat: September 21, 2009

Monday, September 21st, 2009


The New Homesteaders: Off-the-Grid and Self-Reliant

You may have heard about them: Off-the-gridders living in radical opposition to modern amenities by growing their own food and cutting themselves off from the rest of society. Not so. Sure, more people are choosing to cut their dependence on the power grid, the grocery story and fuel pump. But these new homesteaders are hardly radicals—they are simply DIYers who, for a variety of reasons, revel in self-reliance. This is their story.


…The specters of financial crisis, climate change, uncertain energy reserves and a fragile food supply loom large for the new generation of survivalists—and though I don’t share their apocalyptic mind-set, I find myself relating to the urge to run for cover. In April, the top-selling action and adventure book on Amazon.com was Patriots: Surviving the Coming Collapse, a work described to me by its author, James Wesley Rawles, as a “survival manual dressed as fiction.” Its plot appeals to those on the political right, who fear a too-powerful government—and the anarchy to come in the wake of its inevitable collapse. Leftie off-the-gridders gravitate more to the “grow-local” approach championed by author Michael Pollan. “We’re using up the world’s resources more quickly than you could imagine,” says Ruby Blume of the Institute of Urban Homesteading. “I think we need to be prepared.”


Lately, homesteaders of all political stripes have settled upon a common concern: globalization. The shock waves of any crisis—for instance, the subprime meltdown—now spread far, fast and wide. Many doubt that major institutions can be counted upon to save the day. “You’re on your own, your job is at risk, and a lot of the commodities you rely upon are vulnerable to disruption,” says John Robb, author of Brave New War, which describes how terrorists could exploit global systems. To my ear, such statements straddle the line between reasonable advice and hyperventilated threat. One day you’re sipping a frappuccino. The next you’re using a pitchfork to fend off rioting mobs. But even if I don’t fully agree with the dystopian diagnosis, I like Robb’s proposed cure: “You’re going to have to start doing more for yourself.” The beauty of the DIY solution is that the exact problem doesn’t matter; greater self-sufficiency makes sense to survivalists and eco-utopians alike.


Greens Not Happy About EPA Guidelines

New fuel-economy rules proposed by the federal Department of Transportation and the Environmental Protection Agency are the first major move by the U.S. toward cracking down on greenhouse-gas emissions. The proposed program includes miles-per-gallon requirements and national emissions standards under the EPA’s greenhouse-gas-emissions guidelines for model years from 2012 to 2016.


You’d think that environmental groups would be overjoyed.


Hardly. What has them worried are all the pro-industry rule tweaks and what they see as slanted calculations. “Automakers lobbied hard to include loopholes in the Administration’s proposal,” says Dan Becker, director of the Safe Climate Campaign at the Center for Auto Safety.


Toyota falling behind rivals in the race to go electric

TOKYO — Despite Toyota’s image as the world’s greenest automaker, the company that brought us the Prius — totem of the environmentally conscious — has fallen behind in the race for the all-electric car.


Firms Start to See Climate Change as Barrier to Profit

As the real-world impacts of climate change begin to materialize and regulation of greenhouse gases appears more likely, corporate America has begun to grapple with a challenging question: How do you quantify the risks associated with climate change?


The answer depends on one’s perspective. But companies are beginning to show increased willingness to disclose the extent to which they’re contributing to global warming and what they’re doing to keep it from harming their business.


“If we don’t move now, it just becomes more expensive, more complicated and a bigger risk,” said Brad Figel, director of government affairs at Nike, at a Capitol Hill briefing last week sponsored by Oxfam America.


Sentance warns of oil price shock

The oil price will stay high for the next decade and could be the cause of the next “big global shock” in the worldwide economy, according to Andrew Sentance, one of nine economists at the Bank of England charged with keeping a lid on inflation.


Bracing for a time of tumult

It was all Sturm und Drang at the Friday morning presentations at the Global Business Forum.


Participants were jolted awake by the comments made by author and journalist Gwynne Dyer, whose grim message was that the world is heating much faster than scientists anticipated. Without strong and swift action aimed at reversing the trend, said Dyer, the world faces an apocalyptic future of famine, unpredictable weather patterns and drought. And these were just a few of the highlights.


Fair carbon means no carbon for rich countries

WHAT might a truly fair and effective solution to climate change look like? One answer to that question has just been released and it makes for disturbing reading. For one thing, the scale and speed of emissions cuts required by developed nations is far greater than the commitments governments are currently willing to make.


2009 Green Rankings

Our exclusive environmental ranking of America’s 500 largest corporations.


Randy Udall: Can Shale Gas Save the Planet?

In late August the Vancouver Sun ran an article on the bullish prospects for Canadian shale gas. The piece began this way: “What energy crisis? Despite what you may be hearing about a global peak in oil production, waning reserves, and 0-plus oil prices, North America is suddenly awash in fossil fuel.”


The most arresting quote came from Mike Graham of EnCana, a Canadian company that holds dominant positions in British Columbia’s Montney and Horn River plays. “Natural gas will displace coal. It will displace oil. There is no reason North America shouldn’t be energy self-sufficient if we can displace a lot of the oil with natural gas.”


Are we all of a sudden “awash in fossil fuel?” On the road to “energy self-sufficiency?”


Medvedev bears gifts and a growl

MOSCOW – Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev, who makes a state visit to Switzerland on Monday, has presented two bear cubs to the capital Bern, along with a growl that if any harm comes to Victor Vekselberg, a Russian oil and aluminum oligarch, all the Russian money that goes into, or is at present sitting in, Switzerland may vanish.


China’s August Fuel Sales Rise to Highest This Year on Recovery

(Bloomberg) — China’s domestic oil-product sales rose to the highest this year as the economic recovery spurred demand, the China Petroleum and Chemical Industry Association said in a report.


Fuel sales in August increased 3.2 percent to 18.78 million metric tons from a year earlier and 8.1 percent from July, the association said in the monthly report sent to Bloomberg News on Sept. 19.


Iran eyes launch of gas deal with Switzerland: official

TEHRAN (Xinhua) — Managing director of National Iranian Gas Export Company expressed hope on Monday that the gas deal between Iran and Switzerland would be implemented within the next few months, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.


“The agreement to sell natural gas to Switzerland is among the most important deals… It has been finalized and there only remained some pricing differences which will be resolved within the next few days,” Seyed Reza Kassaeizadeh was quoted as saying.


Libya Wealth Fund to Buy Verenex in Cash Deal

Canada-based oil producer Verenex Energy said it has agreed to be sold to the Libyan Investment Authority for about 314.1 million Canadian dollars (3.7 million) in cash, after a better deal with a Chinese firm fell through.


Norway to consider increasing 2020 CO2 cuts

OSLO (Reuters) – Norway will consider cutting its greenhouse gas emissions by more than a planned 30 percent by 2020 if it helps a U.N. climate deal due in Copenhagen in December, Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg said Monday.


Norway, the world’s number five oil exporter, has already adopted a goal of cutting its emissions by 30 percent by 2020, partly by using its vast oil wealth to buy carbon emissions quotas on international markets.


Audit Finds Waste in ‘Green’ Projects

The four drafty buildings had been fixtures of the Energy Department complex in Oak Ridge, Tenn., for more than half a century. They burned energy like 1950s sedans.


The buildings seemed like perfect candidates for a federal conservation retrofit program that relies on private contractors that receive a percentage of the money they save. A deal was struck in 2001. The contractors reworked lighting and heating systems, among other things, and began collecting payments.


The project was counted among the department’s “green” successes — until auditors discovered that the buildings had been torn down several years ago, and the government had paid 0,000 for energy savings at facilities that no longer existed.


Obama Allows Sen. McConnell to Appoint Foxes to Guard Chicken Coops

President Barack Obama’s willingness to follow the tradition of allowing the Senate GOP leader to appoint members to two oversight boards has government watchdogs upset. Senator Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has chosen former aide and energy lobbyist Scott O’Malia to sit on the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and Michael V. Hayden, who headed the National Security Agency under President George W. Bush, to the Public Interest Declassification Board. In both cases, the appointees’ previous work has raised concerns because they contradict the missions of their new oversight bodies.


Seeking the Smart Money

Utilities have been flooding the U.S. Department of Energy with applications for a piece of the .5 billion set aside in the federal stimulus package for smart-meter and demand-response projects.


Smart-grid companies provide technologies like meters, software, networking infrastructure and voltage regulators to help customers consume energy more efficiently. Demand-response companies provide technologies and services designed to reduce or shut off energy use during times of peak demand, relieving pressure on the grid.


UK: Worry over energy cuts

CONSERVATIVE Parliamentary candidate David Mowat has warmed homes and businesses across town that they could be facing power cuts.


For the first time since the three-day week of the 1970s, consumers will be told to prepare for blackouts, since the supply of electricity will fail to meet demand at peak times he argued.


Three Gorges Power Plant among world’s top ten renewable energy projects

As the world’s largest hydropower station, the Three Gorges Power Plant has been chosen by internationally-renowned science magazine Scientific American as one of “the world’s top ten renewable energy projects,” reporters learned from China Three Gorges Project Corporation.


Kunstler: Original Sin

Suburbia was engineered as the antidote to the Kramden’s apartment: country-living-for-everybody. The evacuation of the cities to the new outlands proceeded as relentlessly as the landings at Normandy. It wasn’t until the program was well underway that the self-destructive essence of it became obvious — that every new housing subdivision killed the original rural character of the land, with the result that suburban life quickly became a cartoon of country living in a cartoon of a country house in a cartoon of the country. With additional layer-on-layer of, first, the shopping in the form of highway strips, then malls, along with the office “parks,” these places elaborated themselves into a kind of cancer-of-the-landscape, a chronic and expensive condition that Americans had no choice but to live with, because of the monumental investments they had already made in it. The discontents it produced lent it to psychological depression and dark humor, just as chronic illness does. But we were stuck with it.


Don’t despair — get out there and do something

Yes, we’ve entered the Anthropocene Era, an epoch in which human activity is overpowering the natural world. This is what Bill McKibben means by “the end of nature.” And let’s be clear, too, that there’s no going back. The world you grew up in is gone forever. We are already feeling the impact of climate change, which has such momentum that if we stopped greenhouse gas emissions tomorrow, the changes would continue for decades.


But, Turner says, that doesn’t justify surrender. The environmental battle needs to be intensified, possibly using startling new weapons like “geoengineering,” the deliberate alteration of the planet to counteract the changes we’ve already set in motion. Or nanotechnology. Perhaps we need a philosophy of “social-ecological resilience,” accepting change as “the natural state of being on Earth” and targeting our conservation efforts on the life forms with the best chance of survival. But this is a time for action, not for despair.


Study reveals that Europe must change perspectives towards food security

A new report by leading food and sustainability scientists calls for Europe to take a new approach on food security, prioritizing health and sustainability in research and using a holistic view when making policy. The report has been jointly chaired by Peter Raspor, professor of food science and technology at the University of Ljubljana, Slovenia and Rudy Rabbinge, professor of sustainable development and systems innovation at Wageningen University, the Netherlands.


Carolyn Baker – Disaster: the gift that keeps on giving, or finding paradise in hell

Solnit notes that horrible disasters have shaped the lives of some people who have become luminaries of healing and social change. One notable example is Dorothy Day who was eight years old when the San Francisco earthquake struck, and the most profound memory she took from the disaster was that “While the crisis lasted, people loved each other.” The impact of that love shaped Day’s life and work as she devoted herself entirely to organizing people to meet the needs of the poor and to create a more just and magnanimous society.


How can lower-carbon behaviour be mainstreamed?

Changing the public’s use of energy at home and on the move is critical for reducing the UK’s overall contribution to climate change. However, beyond the environmentally inclined, there is a very substantial group of people who are doing very little in response to climate change communications and policies. ippr’s Consumer Power research has investigated why this has been the case and how lower-carbon behaviour can be stimulated among a key segment of this group.


Soap Box Derby hopes green image sprouts a sponsorship

The Soap Box Derby, an American icon clinging to nostalgia in a digital age, has hit a financial pothole that threatens the winner’s-circle dreams of kid cart racers coast-to-coast.


Desperate for a title sponsor after two years without one, the 75-year-old youth racing program is on a mission to reinvent itself as something it’s always been but never thought to promote: green.


Russian oil exports called unsustainable

Russia can’t sustain the rise in oil exports that saw it surpass Saudi Arabia as the world’s top exporter for the first time in the post-Soviet period, according to OAO Rosneft, the country’s biggest oil producer.


The trend of increasing oil exports isn’t sustainable as the domestic market becomes more attractive for Russian oil producers and tax breaks for exports are lifted, Peter O’Brien, Rosneft’s vice president for finance and investment, told reporters Sunday near Moscow.


Oil Options Hit Highs as Verleger Predicts 44% Plunge

(Bloomberg) — Oil traders are paying more than ever in the options market to protect against a plunge in crude prices.


The gap between prices of options betting on a decline and those that would profit from a rise in oil widened to a record 10 percentage points, according to five years of data compiled by Banc of America Securities-Merrill Lynch. Crude stockpiles in the U.S. are 14 percent larger than a year ago and OPEC is pumping 600,000 barrels a day more than the world needs, according to the International Energy Agency.


N.Y. Natural Gas Set to Decline Below : Technical Analysis

(Bloomberg) — Natural gas futures, which jumped 28 percent last week, may revisit seven-year lows after surging into an “overbought” area of resistance between .58 and .87 per million British thermal units, according to a technical analysis by Barclays Capital.


Gas tumbled 82 percent from a high of .694 per million Btu in July 2008 to touch .409 on Sept. 4. Gas then surged 57 percent through Sept. 18. The futures have entered a resistance zone and the downtrend is likely to resume, MacNeil Curry, a New York-based analyst at Barclays, said in an interview.


Aruba Premier Expects Agreement With PetroChina Soon, ANP Says

(Bloomberg) — Aruban Prime Minister Nelson Oduber expects to be able to agree soon with PetroChina Co. about the sale of a Valero Energy Corp. refinery on the island, Dutch news agency ANP reported, citing the politician.


The refinery is placed “well in the market” given the billion oil exploration agreement between China and Venezuela earlier this month, the Dutch-language agency cited Oduber as saying in a report dated Sept. 20. Talks are under way, he said, according to ANP. Aruba is in the southern Caribbean Sea, north of Venezuela.


EarthTalk: using rainwater and goats

For most of us, the rain that falls on our roof runs off into the ground or the sewer system. But if you’re motivated to save a little water and re-distribute it on your lawns or plants—or even use it for laundry, dishes or other interior needs—collecting rainwater from your gutters’ downspouts is a no-brainer.


If it’s allowed in your state, that is. Utah and parts of Washington State have antiquated but nonetheless tough laws banning anyone but owners of water rights from collecting rainwater flowing off privately owned rooftops. Such laws are rarely enforced, however, and one in Colorado was recently overturned.


Guerilla gardening better choice

The use of subversive tactics to change notions of land ownership may not seem like something that would have a reason to catch on in this country.


Why would anyone care when any kind of food imaginable can be obtained in one trip to the grocery store?


However, guerilla gardening is taking hold in many industrialized nations to demonstrate exactly why we should care about the land and be involved with how it is used.


Brighton seeks to become UK food capital

A drive to turn Brighton and Hove into the food growing capital of the UK was launched today.


The Harvest Brighton and Hove initiative aims to show why urban agriculture should be taken seriously by decision-makers and supported by planning policy.


It wants to encourage food growing on allotments, gardens, parks, vacant land, balconies, rooftops, around public buildings and on housing estates.


The scheme aims to tackle the challenge of maintaining a sustainable and secure food supply in the face of climate change, peak oil and other global uncertainties.


Fans take to bicycles to hear tunes

A little pedal power gave the third annual Can Change Festival a little extra push Saturday, as hundreds of people visited the waterfront for the environmental festival.


While the festival boasted an increase in attendance, more displays and vendors and workshops, musical guests Mr. Something Something performed a bicycle-powered concert.


The group has been using their audience’s energy and bicycles to power their amps and microphones for the past year as they have travelled across Canada playing unconventional venues.


Once Slave to Luxury, Japan Catches Thrift Bug

In the 1970s and ’80s, and even as the economy limped through the ’90s, a wide group of consumers spent generously on Louis Vuitton bags and Hermès scarves — even at the expense of holidays, travel and, sometimes, meals and rent.


Now, the Japanese luxury market, worth billion to billion, has been among the hardest hit by the global economic crisis, according to a report by the consulting firm McKinsey & Company. Retail analysts, economists and consumers all say that the change could be a permanent one. A new generation of Japanese fashionistas does not even aspire to luxury brands; they are happy to mix and match treasures found in a flurry of secondhand clothing stores that have sprung up across Japan.


East German auto ‘icon’ might return as EV

FRANKFURT – A vastly updated version of the boxy, smoky Trabant compact made in communist East Germany could be in production by 2012 as an electric powered green machine — but only if the company finds the right investor.


Electric bikes start to gain traction

SEATTLE (Reuters) – Ever wondered what it would be like to have Lance Armstrong pedal your bike for you? Well now you can find out, sort of.


About 15 companies are now offering bicycles with an electric power option — as opposed to a purely engine-powered moped — for around ,000 to ,000 — and they are catching on with some green-thinking commuters.


Beans might give you and your car gas

A Lehigh Valley, Pa., environmentalist is pushing ahead with plans to power vehicles not with gasoline or diesel, but with the moldy bread, banana peels and rotten meats that would otherwise be dumped in area trash heaps.


Microbiologist Rex D’Agostino wants to build a pilot plant that would transform food waste into natural gas to power specially suited vehicles.


If he’s successful, officials believe, the plant would be the first of its kind on the East Coast.


For car makers, it’s suddenly all about electric

A visitor to the Frankfurt Auto Show, the biggest event of its kind, might think all is well in the car world.


Outside the vast exhibition halls, auto makers may be firing tens of thousands of workers and losing billions. But inside, the cars gleam like polished gemstones, exhibitors swill champagne and executives and engineers burble enthusiastically about the dawn of a new era: The electric car is here.


China Submits New-Energy Plan to Cabinet Before Copenhagen Meet

(Bloomberg) — China submitted a plan to develop alternative forms of energy such as wind and nuclear to the Cabinet for approval and may announce the proposal before the Copenhagen climate talks, said a government researcher.


The New-Energy Development Plan is pending final approval from the State Council, Zhou Fengqi, an adviser to the energy research institute at the National Development and Reform Commission, said in a telephone interview today. The plan will include some revised “bigger and bolder” goals to develop new types of energy, Zhou said.


China hydropower to near double by 2020: state media

BEIJING (AFP) – China’s hydropower capacity is expected to nearly double to 300,000 megawatts by 2020, state media said, as the nation powers ahead with the development of renewable energy sources.


Water resources minister Chen Lei, who was quoted by the official Xinhua news agency as giving the target, also said hydropower would play a more important role in China’s strategy for energy security in the future.


China May Raise Hydro-Power Price in Near Future, Journal Says

(Bloomberg) — The Chinese government may increase hydro-electric power prices in the “near future,” the China Securities Journal reported, citing Zhang Guobao, the head of the National Energy Administration.


Economy, policies energizing Canada’s wind sector

TORONTO (Reuters) – Canada’s wind power companies are getting a lift from rising oil prices, a healthier economy and energy-friendly government policies, even as tight capital markets continue to curb the recovery of the fledgling sector.


College students protest coal use on campuses

COLUMBIA, Mo. – College students nationwide are urging their schools to stop using coal produced at campus power plants or purchased from private utilities in favor of cleaner energy sources ranging from wood chips to geothermal power.


World’s River Deltas Sinking Due To Human Activity, Says New Study

ScienceDaily — A new study led by the University of Colorado at Boulder indicates most of the world’s low-lying river deltas are sinking from human activity, making them increasingly vulnerable to flooding from rivers and ocean storms and putting tens of millions of people at risk.


While the 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change report concluded many river deltas are at risk from sea level rise, the new study indicates other human factors are causing deltas to sink significantly. The researchers concluded the sinking of deltas from Asia and India to the Americas is exacerbated by the upstream trapping of sediments by reservoirs and dams, man-made channels and levees that whisk sediment into the oceans beyond coastal floodplains, and the accelerated compacting of floodplain sediment caused by the extraction of groundwater and natural gas.


World Needs Carbon Limit of 35 Billion Tons By 2030, Stern Says

(Bloomberg) — The world needs to limit its greenhouse gas emissions to 35 billion tons by 2030 to avoid temperature increases of 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit), said Nicholas Stern, former chief economist of the World Bank.


Emissions will need to be cut to 20 billion tons in 2050 from about 50 billion tons today, Stern, who’s chairman of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at London School of Economics and Political Science, said today in an e-mailed statement.


Australia’s Copenhagen warning, aims at compromise

CANBERRA (AFP) – Australia on Monday said crunch climate change talks in December would fail if a “one size fits all” approach was adopted, instead suggesting a compromise deal aimed at developing nations.


Climate Change Minister Penny Wong said that under the scheme, developing countries would agree to binding goals in areas such as deforestation or renewable energy, rather than signing up to economy-wide emissions targets.


US ties, climate change focus of Hatoyama’s debut

TOKYO – Just five days in office, Japan’s prime minister left Monday for his debut on the world stage, where he is to meet with the leaders of the U.S., China and Russia and promote his ambitious plan to cut greenhouse gases in a speech at the U.N.


Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama was scheduled to hold talks with Chinese President Hu Jintao after arriving in New York late Monday, then attend a climate summit at the U.N. starting Tuesday.


Is Lieberman at it again?

Sen. Joe Lieberman alienated a lot of Democrats last year when he campaigned for John McCain and dismissed Barack Obama as a “talker” rather than a leader.


He may be on the verge of doing it again.


In an effort to resuscitate some version of the House climate change bill in the Senate, the Connecticut independent is trying to get Republicans and moderate Democrats on board by adding money for coal power and nuclear plants — changes that would infuriate many of the bill’s liberal supporters.


Climate-Talks Deadlock May Ease as Obama, Hu Offer Views at UN

(Bloomberg) — China and the U.S., the biggest producers of greenhouse gases, may propose new steps to fight global warming this week as they remain at odds over who should pay for a low-carbon world.


Blair touts 10 million jobs from climate action

UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Former British Prime Minister Tony Blair says he hopes to break the “deadlock” in global climate talks with evidence that 10 million jobs could be created by 2020, if developing nations agree to big cuts in greenhouse gases.


Blair, heading up a climate initiative, released a report that also shows a global climate agreement could increase the world’s GDP by 0.8 percent by 2020, as compared with the projected gross domestic product with no climate action.


China Emerges as the Yin and the Yang of the Global Warming Problem

BEIJING — Staring up at the dazzling, million screen of light-emitting diodes suspended above one of this city’s luxury shopping malls, it’s hard to see China as a struggling “developing” country.


Sitting on a stone ledge with 34-year-old Wai Shen Ching hundreds of miles away in the remote village of Bai Bulou, it’s hard to see China as anything else.


Residents of this Hebei Province grassland community have no running water. Lately, devastated by drought, the village has had little water at all. Men in straw hats and blue Mao jackets smoke the days away because, they say, farming has come to a standstill.


“There’s no water, and there’s no way to get water,” Ching says, tugging at his gray-and-white camouflage t-shirt as two women in the distance leasd a herd of cows into a rocky pasture. “I don’t think we have a future. I think it will be the same if you come back here in 10 years.”


Carbon emissions fall with global downturn: report

LONDON (AFP) – Greenhouse gas emissions have fallen thanks to the global downturn, handing the world a chance to move away from high-carbon growth, a report said Monday, citing an International Energy Agency study.


The unpublished IEA study found carbon emissions from burning fossil fuels had dropped significantly this year — further than in any year in the past four decades.


Falling industrial output is largely responsible for the plunge in emissions, but other factors also played a role, including shelving plans for new coal-fired power stations because of falling demand and lack of financing.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 21, 2009

Drumbeat: September 20, 2009

Monday, September 21st, 2009


Lester R. Brown: On Energy, We’re Finally Walking the Walk

The United States has entered a new energy era, ending a century of rising carbon emissions. As the U.S. delegation prepares for the international climate negotiations in Copenhagen in December, it does so from a surprisingly strong position, one based on a dramatic 9 percent drop in U.S. carbon emissions over the past two years and the promise of further huge reductions.


…For a country where oil and coal use have been growing for more than a century, the fall since 2007 is startling. Last year, oil use dropped 5 percent, coal 1 percent and overall carbon emissions 3 percent. Projections for this year, based on Energy Department data for the first eight months, show oil use down by an additional 5 percent. Coal is estimated to fall by 10 percent. Altogether, carbon emissions from burning fossil fuels, including natural gas, dropped 9 percent over the two years.


In the past, I’ve been considered a pessimist in my work on mounting population pressures and looming food crises. I’m still very concerned about these issues. But today the improving numbers on carbon emissions are not debatable.


Squeezing the last bit of oil from Mother Earth: As the debate rages over how much longer the flow will last, valuable time is wasted

It follows as night the day that the unquestionably finite nature of fossil fuels inevitably will cause significant changes in the global economy and our way of life.


But the continued lack of absolute certainty – which will continue for many years – about the timing and severity of the crisis offers room for diehard “denialists” to continue with their arguments that a world without oil that can be extracted viably is a myth.


With the final week of August marking the 150th anniversary of commercial oil development, peak-oil deniers have become even more forceful in their arguments.


Oil Crisis was a Peak into the Future

The stuff in the Arctic is a drop in the bucket. You are losing sight of what the Cambridge Energy Research Associates and Exxon don’t tell you about. They hold big press conferences to talk about, ‘Oh we just discovered the Jack Field – 10,000 feet under the hurricane-ravaged waters of the Gulf of Mexico, isn’t that fantastic.’


They don’t hold press conferences [to announce], ‘See this field here? It has been producing for 50 years. It’s about to run dry.’


Oil, gas should not be shoved aside for alternative energy

Over a career that spanned 15 years as a newspaper reporter starting at The Courier to more than 20 years in my current position at the Louisiana Mid-Continent Oil and Gas Association, I have heard about the demise of the oil-and-gas industry more times than I can count.


Just recently, I read an article about the peak-oil theory. There is a compulsion among some to determine when the world will reach its peak oil-production point. From that point on, the production curve will go downward, forcing us to abandon oil as a major fuel source and building block.


Freedom from foreign oil might be a mirage

Inflated union contracts didn’t cripple Detroit but shortsighted energy policies did and the same thing could happen again unless the U.S. as a nation adopts a more rational approach to energy policy.


I don’t know if we’ve reached “Peak Oil” but the discussion is probably irrelevant. The larger fact is the U.S. economy will continue to face serious difficulties unless it finds a way around the OPEC blockade.


Energy independence, security? How about energy realism

Even with major increases in efficiency and conservation efforts, the world must triple its energy supplies over the next 40 years. Where will this energy come from? The answer is — where it comes from now: mostly conventional fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas), with a limited amount coming from boutique “renewable” sources such as solar, wind and biofuels.


Fossil fuels will remain pre-eminent for a simple reason: They are abundant, cheap and offer energy superior to so-called renewables. One pound of gasoline, for example, has 100 times more energy than a 1-pound lithium ion battery, which is one of the reasons why electric cars still aren’t very practical.


Russian Bear vs. OPEC: A battle of wits!

With the global energy equation undergoing another adjustment-albeit a temporary one-a battle royal seems on the cards. For the first time since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia has surpassed Saudi Arabia as the top oil exporter. Exports of crude oil and refined products from Russia have risen to 7.4 million barrels a day in the second quarter of this year, up from 7.25 million in the first quarter, according to the Russian Energy Ministry. Russia ‘s crude oil production climbed 1.3 percent in August from the same month in 2008, to 9.97 million barrels a day. Exports grew 5.9 percent in the same period.


‘Big players face output struggle’

Credit Suisse expects the major US and European integrated oil companies to struggle to boost output to 2020, saying the sector is unlikely to see any volume growth over the coming cycle.


New oil finds in West Africa lure investors

DAKAR: The prospect of new oil finds in West Africa will lure big investors to the region but firms can expect regulatory headaches and other obstacles in countries still recovering from years of war and instability.


Big Oil Goes Green for Real

Remember back in 2001 when BP went “Beyond Petroleum”? It was a brilliant marketing campaign, but it had less to do with changing the company’s business model than positioning Lord John Browne as the Teflon oil executive. All but a tiny fraction of BP’s revenue came, and still comes, from oil. So how should we take the spate of new green announcements from the world’s major oil firms? In July, ExxonMobil announced big plans to grow green algae to fuel cars; last week, Chevron unveiled the world’s largest carbon-sequestration project in Australia; and in recent months, Valero, Marathon, and Sunoco carried out a series of acquisitions that resulted in Big Oil controlling 7 percent of the U.S. ethanol business.


The rise and fall of BP boss John Browne

Stung by the ambiguous attitudes towards Bad Big Oil, Browne pondered how to rebrand BP, consolidating the new acquisitions, and to rid the industry of the legacy of the Exxon Valdez spill and Brent Spar decommissioning controversy. At the same time he had become preoccupied by his latest passion: to save the planet from global warming. The energy companies, he believed, could lead the campaign to limit climate change.


Energy security is national security

My first command in the Navy was the guided-missile fast frigate USS Samuel B. Roberts. It was a ship that had been heavily damaged during the Iran-Iraq War and was saved only by the heroism of its crew, many of whom were injured.


It had struck an Iranian mine while escorting oil tankers in the Persian Gulf. Under my command it returned to the gulf and again we were protecting oil tankers in dangerous waters.


That’s what I think of first when I think of the energy crisis — the American military extending itself to protect the vulnerable supply lines of foreign oil that keeps this nation afloat. We cannot consider ourselves secure if we do not have a secure American energy supply.


How the Libyan connection will keep our lights on

Could the release of Adelbasset Ali Al-Megrahi, the alleged Lockerbie bomber, be connected to Britain’s energy crisis?


Pakistan: Likely gas supply cut in winter irks owners of CNG stations

KARACHI: The owners of compressed natural gas (CNG) stations have taken a strong exception to reports that the government intends to switch off gas supply for CNG to meet burgeoning domestic and power sector requirements in coming winter.


Malik Khuda Bux, the Chairman of CNG Station Owners Association, told a press conference on Saturday that news reports and television interviews of gas industry officials have created a lot of scare among its members who had bitter memories of last year fresh in their minds.


Southeast Asian oil firms scout for foreign assets

Tokyo: Southeast Asia’s major oil and gas firms are gearing up for an aggressive expansion to overhaul local operations and snap up foreign assets to meet the needs of a fast-growing, power-hungry region.


From the archipelagos of Indonesia and the Philippines to the rapidly developing economies of Malaysia and Thailand, energy firms are signing loans or tapping fixed income markets to finance expansion plans at a time when some Western oil majors such as Royal Dutch Shell Plc are scaling back spending.


Left behind by Iraq’s oil rush

Critics of the US invasion six years ago often said its ultimate aim was to control Iraq’s vast deposits of oil.


So it is ironic, perhaps, that the first foreign oil company to start drilling operations in the country since 2003 should be from America’s growing rival, China.


‘Crude’ tactics in Ecuador

For director Joe Berlinger, the painstaking road to making the powerful documentary “Crude,” all started with what he dubs his “toxi-tour” of a contaminated swath of Ecuador’s Amazonian rain forest. After massive oil exploration that began in the mid-1960s by Texaco (in a consortium formed with Gulf), the area — approximately the size of Rhode Island — is now home to some of the world’s most heinous environmental destruction.


Eco-dystopia: Trendy Cinematic Vision for the Planet?

“Reams of depressing data, loads of hand-wringing about the woeful state of humanity,” that’s how film critics described Leonardo DiCaprio’s The 11th Hour. So where are we two years later? If the environmental documentaries screened at Toronto International Film Festival, closing tonight, are any indication, catastrophe is inevitable if we don’t fix things asap. Ticking clocks provides great suspense in movies, train wrecks grab attention, horror sells. So does this account for the doom and gloom of the latest wave of eco-film fare?


Warm, fuzzy dictatorship

When Prime Minister Stephen Harper meets with U.S. President Barack Obama tomorrow in Washington, they will not be discussing the following hypothetical news story:


WASHINGTON–The U.S. National Energy Corp., recently created by the Obama administration to secure America’s long-term energy security, will today announce a takeover bid for all the shares of Suncor Energy of Calgary.


Put a terrorist in your tank

Citgo is not just a gas station run by a Marxist-Leninist dictator who hates America, calls George Bush the devil and believes Jesus is a socialist.


Citgo Petroleum Corp. — a wholly owed subsidiary of Hugo Chavez’s Venezuela — is a company that cares.


Perhaps you’ve seen Citgo’s most-recent television commercials featuring its independent station owners as they fuel local economies, provide needed jobs and donate to causes in their all-American communities.


A Day in the Park(ing Space)

The installations in New York were part of an international annual event called Park(ing) Day in which people in 100 cities in 20 countries turn parking spots into “human-friendly places” for a day. The goal, organizers say, is to inspire discussions about alternate visions of urban living and how cities divvy up common assets.


Tuna Town in Japan Sees Falloff of Its Fish

But now the town faces a looming threat, as the number of tuna has begun dropping precipitously in recent years because of overfishing. This has given Oma another, less celebrated distinction, as a community that has stood out by calling for greater regulation of catches in a nation that has adamantly opposed global efforts to save badly depleted tuna populations.


Just a decade or two ago, each boat here could routinely catch three or four tuna a day, fishermen say. Now, they say Oma’s entire fleet of 30 to 40 boats is lucky to bring in a combined total of a half-dozen tuna in a day.


Health Ills Abound as Farm Runoff Fouls Wells

MORRISON, Wis. — All it took was an early thaw for the drinking water here to become unsafe.


There are 41,000 dairy cows in Brown County, which includes Morrison, and they produce more than 260 million gallons of manure each year, much of which is spread on nearby grain fields. Other farmers receive fees to cover their land with slaughterhouse waste and treated sewage.


In measured amounts, that waste acts as fertilizer. But if the amounts are excessive, bacteria and chemicals can flow into the ground and contaminate residents’ tap water.


Obama Seeks National Oversight of Waters

The Obama administration called Thursday for a comprehensive national system for regulating the use of federal waters along the nation’s marine and Great Lakes shores, now administered by a hodgepodge of federal, state or other agencies with often-conflicting goals.


Author Heinberg to discuss post-carbon food system

Richard Heinberg, senior fellow in residence at the Post Carbon Institute and author of eight books, will speak at three locations around the state this week. He is regarded by many as one of the world’s foremost Peak Oil educators.


Life without toilet paper is better than you’d think

Anyone who decides to give up electricity for an entire year to draw attention to climate change has to be a little crazy, right? So how crazy would someone have to be to give up electricity and elevators and toilet paper, along with a million other comforts we take for granted?


Not that crazy at all, Colin Beavan would tell you. The author, blogger and self-described “guilty liberal” says he did the experiment not as a way to save money or “stick it to the man,” but to answer some fundamental questions.


Zeta to Mass-Produce Efficient Homes

The same economic downturn that wreaked havoc on home manufacturers appears to be creating opportunities for Zeta Communities, a hopeful purveyor of ultra-efficient multifamily housing.


California Unveils TV Efficiency Standards

California today unveiled energy-efficiency requirements for televisions, becoming the first state in the nation to devise regulations for one of the largest users of energy in American households.


T.V.A. to Pay Million on Projects in Spill Area

The Tennessee Valley Authority said Monday that it would spend million on economic development projects in Roane County, Tenn., the site of a huge coal ash spill at one of the authority’s power plants last December.


The spill devastated property values, brought tourism virtually to a halt and diverted the stream of retirees who were supposed to be settling down on Watts Bar Lake.


Next issue: energy sprawl?

The study – “Energy Sprawl of Energy Efficiency: Climate Policy Impacts on Natural Habitat for the United States of America” – has surprised a lot of people who think it’s a warning against turning to sustainable energy. It isn’t – but it is a candid look at an issue policymakers need to be thinking about: how much land will be required to develop projects such as large-scale solar and wind farms compared to traditional energy plants.


As Tennessee Sen. Lamar Alexander pointed out the other day in an op-ed piece in the Wall Street Journal, nuclear energy requires one square mile; coal plants require four square miles including mining. Solar requires six square miles, while wind farms need 30 square miles or more.


Getting real on electricity challenges

Vermont currently has the lowest electricity prices in New England and the second-lowest per-capita carbon emissions rate of any state in the country. A key reason for this is the low-cost power provided by Vermont Yankee.


These are among the basic facts ignored in the recently released “study” by the Vermont Public Interest Research Group about Vermont Yankee and the state’s energy future. In fact, the VPIRG study is rife with unrealistic notions, major omissions and misleading information, and should be dismissed completely.


Danish Conservative Prepares for Climate Debate

COPENHAGEN — Connie Hedegaard, Denmark’s minister of climate and energy, feels little kinship with the green end of the political spectrum — people who stage sit-ins at power plants or vote for the Green parties in elections.


“I’ve never understood why the environment should be a left-wing issue,” said Ms. Hedegaard, with an exasperated sigh. “In my view there is nothing as core to conservative beliefs — that what you inherit you should pass on to the next generation.”


Billion-Dollar Floodgates Might Not Save Venice

The construction of mobile floodgates aims to safeguard the 1,300-year-old island city of Venice. It’s an ambitious engineering project, but some scientists say it may not be sufficient to protect Venice from rising sea levels due to climate change.


White House quietly lobbies Senate as climate bill stalls

Climate-change legislation has stalled on Capitol Hill, but the White House’s unofficial “Green Cabinet” is quietly trying to revive the effort by lobbying dozens of senators.


President Obama has dispatched Energy Secretary Steven Chu, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa P. Jackson to Capitol Hill. White House aides said that they and other executive branch staffers, such as climate-change czar Carol Browner, have met with “dozens” of senators.


Group sees dangerous heat waves in Ill. by 2050 due to climate change

“The Midwest climate is already changing. Over the past 50 years, we’ve seen higher average annual temperatures, more frequent downpours, longer growing seasons, and fewer cold snaps,” said Don Wuebbles, a climate scientist at the University of Illinois who co-authored the UCS report.


“They think, ‘That’s not going to affect me. That’s going to be polar bears and the coastal cities,’ ” added Burke. “But we’re talking about completely transforming the face of the earth if we don’t reign in global warming.”


Japan to offer green technology, funding

Japanese Prime Minister Yukio Hatoyama will unveil a plan to support developing countries in technology and funding to fight climate change at a UN meeting this week, Japan’s environment minister said on Sunday.


Kenya rainmakers called to the rescue

MASENO, Kenya (AFP) – Long vilified as sorcerers, Kenya’s Nganyi rainmakers — with meteorological equipment consisting of trees, pots and herbs — are being enlisted to mitigate the effects of climate change.


A chilling message to the global warming lobby

Meg Whitman, the former CEO of eBay who is running for governor in 2010, has promised that, if elected, she will immediately suspend the job-killing, economy-retarding Global Warming Solutions Act, Assembly Bill 32.


A world of mass disaster

Professor McMichael is giving the annual Florey Lecture at the University of Adelaide at 5.30pm.


He will warn that society has a “rather naive and false view” of the main determinants of human health, stating: “Ninety-nine per cent of the discussion has been about what individuals do, whether they smoke, drink, practice unsafe sex, whether they wear their seatbelts, whether they’ve inherited good or bad genes.


“We’ve forgotten that the big deal is the wider environment out there as the support structure for the health of population.”

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 20, 2009

Turkmenistan Natural Gas

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Turkmenistan holds significantly large quantities of natural gas (they hold the world’s fourth largest reserves) and these have, over the years, proved attractive to Russia, China and the West. Until fairly recently, despite some bad relationships from time to time, the natural gas that the country produced made its way towards the West through Russia. With only Russian pipes as the conduit, Turkmen gas was under the real control of those who chose whether to pump the gas, or not.

Read Article: Turkmenistan Natural Gas

Map of Central Asia, including Turkmenistan. Map provided by Relief Web.
Click for larger image.

However, when times were flush for the industry (can this be just over a year ago) and in order to ensure supplies for its customers in the West, Russia agreed to a much more beneficial pricing for the Turkmen gas, and was buying some 50 bcm a year. This was all arranged after the Russian Presidency changed hands, and was one of the first items on the new President’s agenda.

Since then things have not really gone well for the relationship as a whole. Turkmenistan has agreed to send natural gas to China, providing it with a second customer, while the price of natural gas has fallen with the recession in demand, around the world. That pipeline is now expected to be in place by the end of next year, and I saw pipelines being laid in China on my recent visit, as they extend the network. The pipeline is expected to carry some 40 bcm (more than Russia will buy this year).

Turkmenistan has also agreed to supply Iran with 14 bcm of natural gas with a new pipeline to carry gas down into Iran being planned for the near future.

Gazprom profits, meanwhile have dropped 62%, as the demand from Europe has dropped dramatically – with Gazprom market share falling to 16%. There was an “accident” to a pipeline between Russia and Turkmenistan, and since then no gas has flowed through the pipelines.

So, in this day of solar car racing (I hear that the route for the new competition has now been agreed), it is perhaps appropriate that the Russians and Turkmen are hoping to improve their relations with an off-road race that has Gazprom and Turkmengas as the main sponsors, of what is known as the Silk Way Rally. President Medvedev will stop by again on Sept 13th intending to renew the deals.

The need for Gazprom to sweeten relationships with Turkmenistan has much to do with the face of the gas pipelines planned to flow into Southern Europe from further East. There are two competing options, the Nabucco pipeline that the Western nations favor, and the South Stream that is being pushed by Gazprom and friends.

Gazprom, working with Italy’s ENI , has so far received backing from Bulgaria, Serbia, Italy, Greece and Hungary for the pipeline that would carry gas from Central Asia under the Black Sea to Europe by 2015. Austria and Slovenia are close to signing up to the deal, Gazprom said.

Among those happy to purchase from Gazprom is the UK, that now gets some 16% of what it needs from Russia.

To provide some of these gas needs for Europe (which collectively has been getting about 25% of its gas from Gazprom) Gazprom is building a collector pipeline known as the Caspian Gas pipeline that will carry gas from Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan to the tune of some 20 bcm a year. There was a meeting of officials from Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Russia, and Turkmenistan in Aktau, Kazakhstan’ today to discuss the project. Iran was somewhat upset about not being invited.

Gazprom has also opened a new pipeline into Lithuania and beyond to Kaliningrad. It will be known as Red Junction, and carry 2.5 bcm per year. First shipments are due in December. Thus it has the customers, and can profit well from the transport of gas through its pipelines.

But with Gazprom happy to promise new and existing customers a secure supply, there have to be some concerns over how much can come from Turkmenistan:

Turkmenistan has two options. It can refuse to agree to lower gas prices to Russia. How long can it hold out without gas revenue from Russia? It may use part of the Chinese credits to tide itself over until gas flows to China in 2010. The other option is to agree to lower gas prices to Russia for a short period. At present Russia does not need Turkmen gas to supply the European market. However if EU economies recover in 2010 or 2011 it will need Turkmen gas. Europe faces the risk that Gazprom will not be able to deliver the necessary gas. That would mean high prices for the available gas. Hence the Chinese deal is good news for Turkmenistan. It is bad news for Russia but also the EU.

More thoughts–two days later

A couple of days ago I was writing of the promise inherent in a meeting between the Turkmen President, Gerbanguly Berdymukhamedov and President Medvedev of Russsia. Well the meeting has now taken place, and there was a story in the Moscow Times that the meeting had not gone well. However, before writing this post I went to dinner, and now it seems that story has quietly disappeared. Instead there is now a story in The Daily Star that reports that the meeting went well, and that the two leaders “clinked champagne glasses.”

As I mentioned in the first part of this post, the meeting included the end of the Silk Way Race, which is now over. The dispute may not be, since, although stories talked of the dispute being resolved:

There were also signs that the sides had reached a breakthrough on the export row that would allow stalled talks to go forward. Berdymukhamedov said all technical problems relating to the blast had been fixed, and a top Kremlin aide said that Turkmenistan and Gazprom would hold a meeting within days to discuss “further cooperation in the gas sphere,” Russia’s Interfax news agency reported.
It appears that the agreement is only to continue talks, and not to resume gas shipments.

Now at the moment Turkmenistan is extracting gas and storing it, since the Russians aren’t accepting it into their pipelines, but that may be a bit of a dangerous game for Gazprom, given that the Chinese pipeline may be ready to receive shipments before the end of the year. At the continuation of discussions, but now in Kenderly, Kazakhstan, the Turkmen President mentioned all the commitments, but the one to Russia.

Berdimuhamedov noted his country would begin operating a gas pipeline to China by the end of 2009 with the capacity to pump some 1.6 trillion cubic feet of gas per year. Meanwhile, he emphasized the importance of the proposed Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) while a rival project from Iran moves forward in the region.

On Nabucco, the natural gas project for Europe, Berdimuhamedov said his country was ready to make pledges in support of the .3 billion pipeline.

Now of these the Nabucco continues on life support since there is not yet enough gas committed to be supplied to justify construction, despite an agreed market for sales into Western Europe. There is already a crude oil pipeline in place, the Baku-Tbilisi- Ceyhan pipeline, and the West would like a similar natural gas equivalent, but it keeps running into obstacles. Azerbaijan has doubled its commitment to the line, with supplies proposed from the Shah Deniz field.

Production at Azerbaijan’s giant Shah Deniz natural gas field has risen to 24 million cubic meters (847 million cu ft) daily, Azerbaijani and Russian news sources reported May 4. In 2008, the daily output averaged 22 million cubic meters (777 million cu ft).

Field operator BP said that production increased despite ongoing drilling, the Regnum news agency reported. BP is preparing for a second production phase when annual output is expected to reach 12 billion cubic meters (423 billion cu ft) and, later, 20 billion cubic meters (706 billion cu ft).

Yet this is still not enough to make the pipeline work – it needs the gas from Turkmenistan.

The TAPI pipeline on the other hand would feed natural gas into downstream economies that are desperate for natural gas supplies. Afghanistan is the first of these, and energy shortages are rarely discussed as one of the problems of their economy, but with only 10 – 12% of the populace having access to electricity and with only limited natural gas resources (perhaps enough for a 100 megawatt power station), the country needs to import natural gas in large volumes. The question is, as always, from where? Turkmenistan is a logical place.


Proposed pipeline from Turkmenistan to India

But the route of the pipeline, while agreed, does not end up delivering gas without a pipeline being installed, and though the project has been nearly ready to start since 2003, with a projected construction time of 3-years, there has yet to be a significant physical start.

Pakistan, while getting help for construction of hydro-electrical projects is still desperate for help with natural gas and other energy fuels. But so far there is no pipeline to help.

Looking at it from Turkmenistan’s point of view the pipeline to China will soon open and revenues can come from thus new customer. The price will be at double the price China has been paying for its own gas.

Chinese wellhead prices at .5 to per million British thermal units (mmBtu) are now comparable with US onshore gas prices and spot LNG cargoes, but still half of term LNG supplies signed last year for delivery beyond 2012, estimated at -.

While the cheapness of gas has made it a favoured choice for power plants compared to fuel oil, it has done little to encourage import deals or drilling during a near four-fold rise in demand in the last decade. By raising prices, Beijing will provide an incentive to increase supplies while gradually getting industries used to paying the market rate for raw materials, part of Beijing’s drive for a greener economy and prominent role in global climate talks.

. . . . . Turkmenistan gas will be priced at 2 yuan per cubic metre ( per kcf) at the border point in Khorgos, sharply above the average 0.79 yuan for local gas flowing in China’s flagship West-East pipeline, China’s leading financial magazine Caijing reported in March.

Chinese demand is anticipated to grow from a current 7.3 bcf/day to 18 bcf/day by 2020, with 2.9 bcf coming from the new pipeline by 2011.

While this may be an expensive price for China to pay, it will certainly relieve Turkmenistan of the old option that was to either provide natural gas to Russia, or starve, and will give it more income until other options (such as TAPI or selling natural gas to Iran) become a reality.

Drumbeat: September 19, 2009

Monday, September 21st, 2009


Small used cars aren’t big sellers as gas stays cheap

Despite all the talk about small cars, many used car buyers are thinking big again.


Used small cars are taking the biggest hits on value in the resale market, Kelley Blue Book says. Even the once-hot, tiny Smart ForTwo is suffering, KBB says.


“It’s part of a larger trend that’s been happening all year,” says Alec Gutierrez, a senior market analyst for KBB. “Some of the weakest segments are subcompact, compact and hybrids.”


Africa: Emerging From the Crisis of Capitalism Or Emerging From Capitalism in Crisis?

The principle of infinite accumulation, which defines capitalism as synonymous with exponential growth, and the latter, like cancer, results in death. John Stuart Mill, who understood this, imagined that a ’stationary state’ would put an end to this irrational process. John Maynard Keynes shared this optimism of the Reason. But neither was equipped to understand how the necessary overcoming of capitalism could come about. Karl Marx, in giving its full place to the new class struggle, could, on the contrary, imagine overturning the power of the capitalist class, which is currently concentrated in the hands of the oligarchy.


Oil Billionaire Touts Energy Alternatives

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — A Texas billionaire oil tycoon who spent million promoting a plan to wean the nation off foreign oil spoke at Indiana University Friday about advances in wind power and natural gas.


T. Boone Pickens, 81, has written a book, made numerous media appearances and gone on tour to support his plan, 6News’ Jennifer Carmack reported.


“It’s not my problem. I can make it to the finish line … and my standard of living’s not going to change, but for you and the generations to come, you better get it fixed,” Pickens said.


Huge corn crop helps ethanol industry argue its case

PRIMGHAR, IOWA — Last year, with corn prices at record levels and Americans’ grocery bills climbing, the ethanol industry struggled to explain how using corn for fuel was a good long-term answer for reducing U.S. dependence on oil.


This year, however, the industry is getting some help making its case, thanks to a near-record U.S. corn crop that has bolstered claims that the country has enough corn to satisfy both its food and fuel needs.


The U.S. Department of Agriculture said this month that it expects the domestic corn crop to rise to 12.954 billion bushels, up 7 percent from a year earlier and the second-biggest in history.


Nuclear No-Contest

Before the 1950s, the future confronting the human race was bleak. With the global population increasing and becoming more dependent on energy-dense technologies to sustain its food supplies and rising living standards, there seemed no escape from the catastrophe that would come eventually when the coal and the oil ran out. But few worried unduly. It was only after an escape from the nightmare presented itself with the harnessing of nuclear processes and the prospect of unlimited energy that people began to worry. People can be very strange.


Disputed Solar Energy Project in California Desert Is Dropped

A proposed solar energy project in the California desert that caused intense friction between environmentalists and the developers of renewable energy has been shelved.


BrightSource Energy Inc. had planned a 5,130-acre solar power farm in a remote part of the Mojave Desert, on land previously intended for conservation. The company, based in Oakland, Calif., said Thursday that it was instead seeking an alternative site for the project.


On Wood Road: Couple continues ’solar’ lifestyle

For Joe and Rose Mato, “going green” is not a new philosophy — they’ve lived a low-consumption, energy-efficient lifestyle for some time, and their home on Wood Road is a testament to it.


“I built this home for what I needed,” Mr. Mato said. “I built it in stages, added things as I got the money to do so.”


Hacking the Sky

Since the scale of the climate crisis became clear, the strategy for fixing this glitch has focused on remediation. To maintain the atmosphere’s equilibrium, we need to reduce our emissions of greenhouse gases. Our chief goal should be to return the climate to something approximating the pre-industrial status quo.


But what if such a return isn’t possible? What if the planet has gone permanently haywire? As the effects of climate change become obvious and global leaders remain unable to halt emissions, a growing number of scientists say we need to begin researching what’s called “geo-engineering” – ways to artificially reduce global temperatures and/or manipulate plants or the oceans to absorb huge amounts of CO2. Having unintentionally warmed the planet, we may have little choice but to intentionally cool it back down.


Following Trash and Recyclables on Their Journey

Where does all the trash go?


Karin Landsberg, 42, a self-described “eco-geek” in Seattle, was so curious that she invited researchers from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology into her home last month to fish 12 items out of her garbage and recycling bins — a can of beans, a compact fluorescent light bulb — and tag them with small electronic tracking devices.


Oil sands need positive spin

Alberta and Canada have an image problem and it’s called the oil sands. Non-government organizations such as Greenpeace and others have made these gigantic open-pit mining operations their current whipping boy. And by deploying hyperbole or inaccuracies, these organizations are winning the public relations game in the United States where the lion’s share of this oil is destined.


“The world has changed. You have a big problem and it is going to get worse unless you get your story out there,” said Richard Edelman, CEO of Edelman, the world’s largest independent public relations firm, to a gathering of oil and government officials at Alberta’s Global Business Forum in Banff this week. “Once the facts are understood, there’s acceptance of the need for oil sands oil.”


How much in subsidies do fossil fuels get anyway?

At least some members of the Obama Administration plan to call for an end to fossil fuel subsidies as part of next week’s G20 economic leaders summit, citing positive impacts ranging from improved energy security to combating climate change. But how much does the U.S. government pay? Well, according to a new analysis from the Environmental Law Institute released today, roughly billion between 2002 and 2008.


How case against BP traders went wrong

When federal investigators alleged in 2006 that a group of BP propane traders tried to manipulate that market, it seemed like a strong case.


There was the clear spike in propane prices at the time of the alleged manipulation in 2004.


There were the taped phone conversations between some of the traders discussing the scheme, including one in which a trader notes how “… we could control the market at will.”


One trader even pleaded guilty. BP entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with the government and paid 3 million in fines, including million to reimburse customer losses.


But on Thursday, U.S. District Judge Gray Miller threw the indictments out, saying the law used in the indictments didn’t prohibit BP’s transactions.


Alberta workers flee angry Maritimers

CALGARY – Dozens of Alberta workers are being flown back from New Brunswick today after being swarmed by protesters from the local workforce, who claim the westerners stole their jobs.


A number of tradespeople from the Alberta-based contractor Integral Energy Service Ltd. were flown to Saint John 10 days ago after being hired by the engineering firm SNC-Lavalin to help complete the Canaport Liquefied Natural Gas plant, belonging to Irving Oil.


Libya to buy Canadian oil producer Verenex

NEW YORK (Reuters) – Verenex Energy Inc, a Canadian oil producer focused on Libya, said on Friday it had entered into an agreement to be bought by a Libyan sovereign wealth fund, after the collapse of a deal reached with China.


The Libyan Investment Authority has agreed to pay C.09 a share for all of Verenex’s outstanding shares, the company said. The offer is well below China National Petroleum Corp’s C-a-share deal.


Petrobras Freezes Overseas Investment. Full Steam Ahead in Brazil Waters!

Brazil’s state-controlled oil and gas multinational Petrobras will freeze overseas investments as the company concentrates on its primary role to develop recently discovered offshore oil reserves, CEO Jose Sergio Gabrielli said this Thursday, September 17.


Driving us crazy

It has become increasingly fashionable to question the Kiwi love affair with the car.


The sandal brigade has long been fond of dissing the petrolheads among us (though they really should shoe themselves in more suitable footwear whenever they crank up their Raleigh Twenties.)


Automakers including Tesla try to energize electric-car business

FRANKFURT — The race is on among the world’s auto companies to make electric cars go farther on a single charge, bring the price down to compete with gas-powered vehicles, and give drivers more places to recharge them than just the family garage.


Electric is the big buzz at the 63rd Frankfurt Auto Show this week, and nearly every major automaker has at least one on display. Renault introduced no fewer than four electric models, while San Carlos-based Tesla, the only company producing and selling purely electric cars, handed over the keys to its 700th all-electric vehicle, a blue Roadster Sport, to a German buyer at the show.


Detroit swap: Auto plants for fashion showrooms

DETROIT (CNNMoney.com) — Detroit’s auto industry trained generations of workers in design and manufacturing. As that business fades and its jobs disappear, city planners are hoping to redeploy the city’s creative minds and craftsmen toward a new and growing field: fashion.


A drought of ideas is putting water in peril

Unlike peak oil, peak water doesn’t refer to the global reserves – there’s plenty of fresh water in the world. The problem is that there isn’t enough water in the places where people live. This threatens civilisation not only in the affected areas, but for everyone. If one of these regions finds crop yield declining and water becoming short, then the economy and social stability will implode. The consequences of that will be felt as much in rainy Glasgow as in Delhi.


The food and commodities grown and made in arid regions will not keep coming when the water runs out – the meat and cotton and fruit and wine in our shops will become precious items. Further, a waterless society is an uncivilised one. Not only will we have less stuff to buy, but we’ll live in a world where chaos becomes commonplace. When the water runs out, the world will come to our border and ask to be let in – there is no army that could hold back so many desperate people.


Drought fuels sales of artificial grass

“Lake Elsinore is our newest yard and that’s outselling all of our other locations because the drought is worse there,” Mattox said. “The homes just have dead grass. It’s one house after another.”


Artificial grass sales have also been boosted by stricter water policies from both cities and water agencies, according to Mattox.


“The cities are saying, `OK, you can only water two to three days a week,’ but the water company is saying you can only water two days a week,” he said. “And the city of Los Angeles has a rebate program where the water company will pay individuals a dollar per square foot when they put in artificial grass. This is a big thing and we’re only touching the tip of it now.”


Maori Party laughing all the way to the bank

It is hard to credit that just weeks back, the Maori Party issued a minority report taking issue with the outcome of the parliamentary select committee reviewing New Zealand’s emissions trading regime.


In essence, the party continued to oppose the introduction of an emissions trading scheme and “would do so more strongly” if a replacement scheme was to be less effective and more inequitable than Labour’s existing scheme.


The Maori Party was unconvinced the market was the best mechanism to set a carbon price: “The continued rise in oil costs from pending peak oil production and global shortages of fresh water alert us to the fact that the world’s economy is not so much in a temporary recession as in a state of major change, and that the current mode of living in developed countries is simply not sustainable into the future.”


Familiar Issues Vex Climate Pact

The key questions that have dominated the talks from the beginning remain unresolved: What level of emissions cuts are both industrialized and major developing countries willing to embrace? What sort of financing will developed countries provide to help vulnerable nations adapt to climate change and to help emerging economies embark on a more environmentally sustainable growth trajectory?


‘The Age of Stupid’: a wakeup call on climate

PARIS (AFP) – Could we, the human race, really miss an ever-narrowing chance to save the planet from the ravages of global warming? “The Age of Stupid,” which will be screened in hundreds of venues around the world next week, contemplates this grim scenario with the open aim of galvanising a collective effort to prevent it.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 19, 2009

a fresh serving of eco news

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Seeing is believing…UN Climate Chief Says China Poised to Lead – yahoo! news
You made the mess, now clean it up…River Heals as Lawsuit Against Big Poultry Looms – msnbc
I bet electric rates rise, too…U.S. Utilities Scramble for Smart-Grid Stimulus Cash – reuters
I’m a sucker for ‘mystery creatures’…Mystery Creature Found Dead in Panama (video) – aol/cnn
Damn [...]

Read Article: a fresh serving of eco news

Daily Sprout

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Tech On Top in Green Rankings: Five out of the top 10 greenest companies in the U.S., according to Newsweek, are tech firms — HP, Dell, Intel, IBM, Applied Materials. The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) S&P 500 Report was also released today and included Cisco and HP — Newsweek and release.

Fuel Cell Oorja Fuels Up: Fuel cell startup Oorja Protonics (which we’ve covered here and here) has raised 0,000 according to a regulatory filing — VentureBeat.

Chinese EV Pioneer Seeing Slow Sales: China’s plug-in vehicle maker BYD has reportedly only sold 100 plug-in hybrids cars over the last eight months, less than the expected 3,000 to 4,000 vehicles — MIT Tech Review.

Solyndra Awards Construction Contract: Construction company Tutor Perini says it will build the first phase of a 3 million thin-film solar panel facility in Fremont, Calif., for Solyndra — Forbes.

Conference Week: Get ready for news from GridWeek, the Clinton Global Initiative, Climate Week NYC and the G20 in Pittsburgh – I’m already tired thinking about it.



Become a GigaOM Pro member and attend our webinar, “Biggest Opportunities in the Smart Grid.”

Another Battery IPO on the Way, This Time in China

Monday, September 21st, 2009

eve-energy-logoThe initial public offering of battery maker A123Systems has been in the works for more than a year, and now that the company has finally set the terms for its offering, it’s carrying the hopes of a lot of startups and investors that it will jumpstart the IPO markets, especially for cleantech companies.

A123 isn’t the only battery firm gearing up for a public offering, however. A lithium battery company called EVE Energy, which holds 39 percent of the market in China, has just gotten the green light from regulators to make an initial public offering next month on the country’s new Growth Enterprise Market, or GEM.

The GEM is meant to fund technology-driven startups with high-growth potential, including companies working in the renewable energy and “environmental protection” sectors. But as the Wall Street Journal noted this week, the initial application approvals have been going to more established companies (such as EVE), likely in an effort to get the exchange off to a stable start when it launches in mid-October.

China’s securities regulator approved EVE’s application along with 13 other companies this week for the GEM. At least 155 firms have applied to go public on the GEM since the gates opened in late July, according to the official Xinhua news agency (hat tip Reuters).

Within a decade, China’s potentially 0 billion vehicle market will be dominated by electric cars, research and consulting firm Frost & Sullivan anticipates. In the U.S., A123 will likely serve to test the waters for future energy storage and EV tech IPOs. If China’s GEM ever develops into the market it’s envisioned as for less-established companies (a mighty if), then EVE may be one to watch for EV battery startups, as the Chinese lithium battery market that the company now dominates comes to encompass more and more vehicle applications.



Read our latest analysis piece, “Can the News Industry Move Beyond Its Napster Phase?” Only on GigaOM Pro.

Vestas Receives 99-MW Order for Indian Project

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Vestas has received an order for 60 units of the V82-1.65 MW wind turbine for a wind power project located in Theni in the state of Tamil Nadu, South India. The order has been placed by CLP, who is one of Vestas’ long-term global customers, with installations in both China and Australia.

China emerges as the yin and the yang of the global warming problem.

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Staring up at the dazzling, million screen of light-emitting diodes suspended above one of this city’s luxury shopping malls, it’s hard to see China as a struggling "developing" country. First in a series.

China Could Replace Coal with Wind

Monday, September 21st, 2009

china-wind
It’s clear that China is taking on renewable energy projects at a fast pace.  The country has doubled its installed wind power every year for the past five years and a new study shows the country should keep it up.  Researchers from Harvard and Beijing Tsinghua University have found that China could meet all of their electricity demands from wind power through 2030.

The scientists came up with meteorological and financial forecasts that show that China can run on wind alone.  They mapped the wind potential for different regions and then assumed that each had a smattering of 1.5 MW turbines.  They excluded metro areas or unusable terrain.  Once they calculated how much energy each area could generate, they then came up with the cost of the energy.

They discovered that many areas, especially northern and western parts of the country, could generate energy at about 6 – 8 cents/kWh.  This meant 6.96 trillion kWh could be generated annually at a profit, which is twice the current energy demand and close to what the demand is expected to be in 2030.

If China chose this route instead of adding more coal, it could prevent 3.5 billion tons of CO2 from being emitted.

Since China is already installing wind at a rapid pace, the researchers think it’s entirely possible that they could make these projections a reality.  The major hurdle for the country would be upgrading and expanding their transmission system to handle new wind farms.

While a world powered by renewable energy is still a long ways off, it’s really promising to hear of studies like these that show that it’s definitely accomplishable.

via MIT Technology Review