Posts Tagged ‘Europe’

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 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

Crossing Diesels with Plug-In Hybrids: Good or Bad Idea?

Monday, September 28th, 2009

Volvo V70_PHEV_dieselDiesels and hybrid-electric cars have often been posed as competitors racing to capture the green-automotive market. Diesels are more popular in Europe, while hybrids are more popular in the United States. Both have their advantages and disadvantages: diesels can get impressive fuel economy without complicated drivetrains (providing a cost advantage over hybrids today), while plug-in hybrids bundled with a renewable energy-powered grid can be even cleaner.

But now, it looks like these competitors are coming together. Volvo Car Corp. announced Friday that it plans to bring a diesel plug-in hybrid to the market by 2012. The news comes after Peugeot earlier this month unveiled a diesel PHEV minicar that it plans to bring to the market next year, and BMW also showed off a sporty diesel PHEV concept car at the Frankfurt auto show. While companies have been tinkering with the concept for some time, it looks like diesel PHEVs are finally starting to gain some traction.

It’s an exciting idea. First of all, diesel fuel packs 10-20 percent more energy per gallon than gasoline, according to Fusel, a site that advocates running diesel engines on vegetable oil. That higher energy content, combined with some engine advantages, means modern diesel cars can get about 40 percent more miles per gallon than their gasoline counterparts, according to the site.

With that kind of diesel fuel economy, it means the new crop of clean diesels, such as the Volkswagen Jetta TDI, achieves similar fuel economy to hybrids like the Toyota Prius without a complex drivetrain, according to AutoblogGreen. On top of that, advocates say diesels are more fun to drive, because they deliver more torque. Perhaps the most important factor to consumers: diesels often cost less than hybrids. According to an Edmunds comparison earlier this year, the 2009 Jetta TDI cost ,890, compared with ,933 for the Prius. And plug-in hybrids are expected to cost even more.

But diesels also emit more particulates than gasoline, and while new technologies have enabled companies to meet strict U.S. standards for particulates, those technologies cost money. Diesels also have an image problem. In the United States, many people still think of diesel as the “loud, smoke-belching beast” they remember from the 1970s, as this Edmunds.com article puts it, even though they have changed dramatically.

A marriage of diesel and plug-in hybrid technology could produce a wonder child that brings out the best of both technologies, boosting fuel economies to their highest levels yet while avoiding the range issues of pure electric vehicles. An electric motor could help diesels easily meet even the strictest potential particulate standards being considered today, while a diesel engine could boost the fuel economy of a PHEV.

But some think that the match could also produce a monster. Adding the technologies together could result in an even more complex drivetrain that ends up being far more expensive than its worth. And it could still have trouble winning diesel converts in the United States. We’ll be waiting with our fingers crossed to see what automakers produce. What do you think?



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

PV Group announces new SEMI Standards Committees in Japan and Taiwan

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

The PV Group announced an important milestone in the scope and coverage
of PV global standards efforts through the formation of Photovoltaic
Standards Committees in Japan and Taiwan.

The initial focus of
work in the Japan Committee will be to standardize the dimensions of
thin-film substrates, while Taiwan recently started developing
standards for crystalline-silicon cell appearance as well as a
vibration test method. The new standards development groups join SEMI
Standards committees in Europe and North America, which have been
active since 2006.

Industry stakeholders believe that creation
of consistent cross-border manufacturing standards and safety
guidelines can dramatically lower costs, improve quality and accelerate
innovation in the PV industry. SEMI has 36 years of experience and
proven expertise in this area with nearly 800 manufacturing standards
and safety guidelines currently in place.

The PV Group, a
special interest group of SEMI, promotes standards development for all
aspects of PV manufacturing including thin films, machine interface,
process control and others through the SEMI International Standards
process and in collaboration with partner associations around the globe.

The
PV Standards Committee’s charter is to explore, evaluate, discuss, and
create consensus-based standard measurement methods, specifications,
guidelines, and practices. Through voluntary compliance, these
consensus-based standards will promote mutual understanding and
improved communication between users and suppliers of photovoltaic
manufacturing equipment, materials and services— enhancing
manufacturing efficiency, shortening time-to-market, and reducing PV
industry manufacturing cost.

In 2008, a Taiwan PV Standards
Working Group was formed. The group held more than 30 meetings over the
last year, consolidating the needs and requirements of the Taiwan PV
industry. The Taiwan PV Standards Committee consists of key players
from all segments of the PV manufacturing chain— manufacturers of
materials, equipment, wafers, cells, modules, thin films, as well as
academia, local industry associations and research institutes.
Committee leaders include staff from Chroma, DelSolar, UL Taiwan, and
ITRI.

The Japan PV Committee will work to include liaisons and
synergies with other SEMI technical committees for the development of
PV-related standards. The PV Standards Committee will explore and
develop standards that pertain to common criteria, guidelines, methods
for control and comparison of PV-related process/metrology equipment,
materials, components, or manufacturing operations.

It will
seek to support the international need for increasing PV
product/process yield and reducing related PV costs per Watt peak. This
committee will investigate opportunities towards harmonization of
PV-related efforts with other SDOs. In addition to the above, the
committee will facilitate any industry initiatives towards product
standardization needs.

Recently, the SEMI PV Group released a
Standards Guidance Document that identified 64 SEMI Standards topics as
“Applicable” to the PV industry. Thirty-one SEMI Standards topics were
rated as “Top Priority” for their potential to deliver immediate cost
benefits to the industry with limited revision.

This summer,
an important Standard was passed that defines a unified equipment
communication interface for PV production systems (PV2-0709). Earlier
in the year, a standardized test method for detecting elemental
impurities in photovoltaic silicon feedstock was approved (PV1-0309).

Konarka Names Two New Executives

Wednesday, September 23rd, 2009

Konarka Technologies Inc. has hired Alessandro Zedda
as vice president of materials development. He will lead Konarka’s
materials and device research and partnerships in developing
higher-performing organic photovoltaic (OPV) modules.

For the
past decade, Zedda has worked in various roles at Ciba Basel, a global
producer of high-value effects for a wide range of products. Most
recently, he was head of the company’s business printed electronics,
responsible for the research and development of printable semiconductor
materials based on proprietary low band-gap conjugated polymers and
other applications.

In addition, Alex Valenzuela has joined the
company as vice president of European business development. With
extensive experience in the solar energy market in Europe, he will
focus on business development efforts to further expand and deliver the
company’s patent-protected thin-film solar materials fabricated from
OPV into the region.

Valenzuela was previously regional manager
at United Solar Ovonic, a manufacturer of integrated rooftop
photovoltaics, focusing on development efforts in Spain and Portugal.
He has extensive business development and product positioning
experience in building-integrated photovoltaics and building-attached
photovoltaics innovations for thermal and photovoltaics products.

Source

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

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Applied Materials Details Progress Towards Industrializing PV Solar

Monday, September 21st, 2009

HAMBURG, Germany–(BUSINESS WIRE)–At its annual solar analyst and press briefing today at the Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference and Exhibition (PVSEC), Europe’s largest solar tradeshow, Applied Materials executives provided updates on Applied’s solar strategy, including highlights of the company’s business and technology roadmaps for both crystalline silicon (c-Si) and thin-film solar photovoltaics (PV). The company also announced a number of new c-Si solar PV products.

“We are seeing substantial progress in the global industrialization of the solar industry,” said Mike Splinter, chairman and CEO of Applied Materials. “The technology and products Applied is delivering allow our customers to improve solar panel efficiency and reduce cost per watt, leading us rapidly toward a future where solar proves itself as the cleanest, most logical and cost-effective way of generating power.”

Preparing for the Crystalline Silicon Factory of the Future

In his keynote presentation, Dr. Mark Pinto, chief technology officer and general manager of Applied’s Energy and Environmental Solutions Group (EES), highlighted how factories that make c-Si solar panels are becoming more technically advanced, with new process steps and automation boosting solar panel efficiency, lowering manufacturing cost, and driving up factory scale. New tools from Applied’s Precisions Wafering Systems and Baccini Cell Systems divisions are enabling thinner wafers, precision alignment and deposition, faster processing times and higher wafer throughput. Advanced automation is leading to better tool-to-tool process management, substantial material cost reductions and higher quality. The semiconductor industry serves as an example of how increasing investments in manufacturing technology can produce cost-effective gains in productivity and output and enable dramatic cost per watt reductions for end-users.

Pinto contrasted today’s mainstream c-Si factory running approximately 1,500 wafers per hour at 16% efficiency – with as much as 2% line breakage – with the “crystalline factory of the future.” With substantial improvements in equipment and full automation of facilities by 2012, Pinto predicted that output will double to more than 3,000 wafers per hour at greater than 20% efficiency – with breakage cut by more than half.

“To drive performance and reduce costs, the industry will become more technology-intensive, with new materials, applications, integration schemes, and factory automation and control,” said Pinto. “In the factory of the future, Applied expects to address over 55% of the c-Si PV solar manufacturing opportunity. With Applied’s capabilities in equipment and processes, we continue to look for new areas where we can work with our customers to increase their output, quality and profitability.”

A number of new products and developments were announced at PVSEC to help industrialize c-Si manufacturing:

  • Applied Baccini Esatto Technology™, a high precision, multi-step screen printing capability designed to increase the efficiency of c-Si solar cells by enabling the fabrication of advanced contact structures.
  • DuPont and Applied Materials announced a collaboration to advance multiple-printing technology for increasing the absolute efficiency of c-Si cells.
  • Applied HCT Diamond™ Squarer, an innovative new system with novel diamond wire technology, designed to reduces the cost of squaring silicon ingots by up to one-third while offering at least twice the cutting speed of conventional squaring processes.
  • The Applied HCT MaxEdge™ wire saw is now in volume production for PV wafering applications at key customers in Europe and Asia, including Wacker Schott Solar. The MaxEdge system revolutionized wire saw technology with the industry’s first dual-wire management system, enabling significantly higher throughput and load capacity than competitive systems, while requiring much less factory floor space and fewer operators for equivalent megawatt output.
  • LDK Solar qualified Applied’s HCT MaxEdge™ wire saws for volume production, as part of a large-scale expansion that includes the installation of more than 50 MaxEdge systems due to be completed in October.

SunFab Thin Film Lines Ramping Around the World

Pinto also provided a global update on the company’s SunFab thin film lines, which deliver the world’s largest PV solar panels, capable of producing over 500 watts each when using Applied’s tandem junction technology. Pinto provided performance data obtained from aperture only testing, which is the industry’s most consistent measure of conversion efficiency. The data showed that the tandem junction line in volume production today, is achieving greater than 9% stable aperture area efficiency in manufacturing.

“We continue to make progress in every aspect of the SunFab lines and are well on our way to delivering 10% efficient SunFab panels and per watt production costs in 2010, with modules demonstrating this efficiency in our laboratories today,” said Pinto. “This ramp is among the most aggressive in the history of the solar industry, adding more than 240 megawatts of solar panel manufacturing capacity in five countries in less than two years.”

Discussing the future of SunFab development, Pinto laid out plans for panels with 12% conversion efficiency and module costs below {content}.70/watt by 2012.

A Bright Future

George Davis, CFO discussed the FY 2010 financial outlook for the company’s solar businesses and its Energy and Environmental Solutions Group. Applied believes this new area of the company’s business will lead to increasing revenue and profitability as the global economy recovers and governments around the world look to technologies like PV solar panels, energy-efficient glass and LED lighting to help produce and conserve energy. Davis noted that Applied’s c-Si solar business is already generating positive returns and that the company’s EES segment is on track to operating profitability in 2010, excluding certain charges.

“We are moving out of the learning phase of this business to a point where we believe we can realize the true opportunity,” said Davis. “We have successfully integrated several acquisitions, launched numerous new products and are seeing renewed interest in our SunFab products. It is a very exciting time.”

More information available on Applied’s Web site

For further information about this event, including a webcast and slides, please visit Applied Materials’ website at: http://www.appliedmaterials.com/investors.

Read Article: Applied Materials Details Progress Towards Industrializing PV Solar





HaWi and SolarEdge Announce Sales and Distribution Partnership

Monday, September 21st, 2009

EGGENFELDEN near Munich and HERZLIA, Israel–(BUSINESS WIRE)–HaWi Energietechnik AG, a European leader in solar power system planning and distribution and SolarEdge Technologies have announced a strategic partnership in which HaWi will offer the SolarEdge innovative power harvesting solution to its customers. HaWi is headquartered in Germany, and has additional offices in Italy, Spain, France, Greece and soon Israel.

The announcement follows over six months of cooperation during which the SolarEdge solution was tested by HaWi in comparison to traditional inverters, under a variety of real-life conditions.

“The features and possibilities the SolarEdge system provides are very impressive,” said Hans Wimmer, HaWi CEO. “Our company regularly encounters cases where SolarEdge can provide our customers with unprecedented value. We are excited to add the innovative SolarEdge system to our portfolio of solutions we provide to the solar market. We look forward to continuous cooperation with fruitful results.”

“We are thrilled to enter what is sure to be a successful partnership with a solar industry leader,” said Guy Sella, Chairman, CEO and Founder of SolarEdge. “We are confident the cooperation between HaWi, a prominent company in the solar market, and SolarEdge, with its unique technology, will result in benefits to both companies and to the entire solar market.”

The SolarEdge solution is unique in offering not only a module-embedded PowerBox for optimized module-level Maximum Power Point Tracking, but also a simplified, highly reliable inverter, and built-in module-level monitoring. The SolarEdge inverter maintains fixed string voltage, thus removing string sizing limitations. The result is a highly beneficial system: energy generation is increased, maximum flexibility is achieved due to the removal of design constraints, exceptional safety mechanism overcomes DC voltage hazards, and an online monitoring portal provides unparalleled fault detection and management. This enables SolarEdge to offer an optimal end-to-end solution at a competitive price offering.

About HaWi Energietechnik AG

HaWi Energietechnik AG is a leading company in the planning and distribution of solar power systems. It also manufactures small wind turbines and block-type thermal power stations using the latest technology. As a specialist wholesale supplier, HaWi provides its business partners throughout Europe with grid-linked and grid-independent solar power systems, as well as wind turbines and block-type thermal power stations. It advises and supports companies in the planning and development of their projects, and supplies components as well as complete systems, giving it a comprehensive range of services and products in the field of renewable energy.

About SolarEdge Technologies

SolarEdge is a provider of smart, holistic PV power harvesting and monitoring solutions for maximum energy at a lower cost per watt. The company works with industry-leading partners to embed its active electronic solution directly into PV panels. Unlike centralized architectures that cannot optimize the power of each panel, only SolarEdge performs MPPT per panel while communicating across existing power lines for granular visibility and control. As a result, the SolarEdge systemic approach provides more power from any given installation, eliminates design constraints, provides complete visibility, solves all safety issues and provides anti-theft, all while reducing the cost of energy. SolarEdge is online at www.solaredge.com.

Read Article: HaWi and SolarEdge Announce Sales and Distribution Partnership





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

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 18, 2009

Monday, September 21st, 2009


Forget Conventional 401(k)s; Think Goat Cheese and Fennel

Woody Tasch wants to rewrite the gospel of financial growth.


A former venture capitalist, Mr. Tasch now travels the country warning that money moves too fast. Billions zip through global markets each day, bundled into financial packages so complex that it is hard to know what you own.


His antidote: A fundamental shift in our attitude toward investing. Taking a page from the Slow Food movement, which calls on consumers to take the time to savor home-cooked meals, Mr. Tasch dubbed his philosophy Slow Money.


The crux of the movement is persuading investors to put some of their assets into businesses they can see, smell and even taste — to measure growth not by the flashing numbers on a stock ticker, but by the slow ripening of a tomato.


Treating Oil Addiction Fuel (2008)

“Fuel,” Josh Tickell’s unabashedly intimate, 11-years-in-the-making attack on America’s addiction to oil, is not so much a green documentary as a red, white and blue alarm. But if you can resist the urge to run for the exit, you may leave the theater feeling a lot more hopeful than when you went in.


A sustainable-energy evangelist whose church is a van that runs on grease, Mr. Tickell contends that the oil industry poisons our environment, corrupts our government and cooks our planet. Galvanized by a childhood spent among the oil refineries and pollution problems of Louisiana, Mr. Tickell was an early adopter of alternative fuels. But his exhaustively wide-ranging film is more than an expression of personal affront: though his mother, Deborah Dupré, suffered nine miscarriages (“Factor that into the cost of gasoline,” he says), “Fuel” seldom feels vindictive.


Author outlined dangers of foreign oil dependency

In order to be prepared for a sudden oil shortage, Black suggested that the country should revive the century-old technologies of alternative energy.


“We don’t need to reinvent the wheel; we need to unbury it,” he said.


As he sows: An interview Michael Pollan

I mean, there was a whole movement to draft me for secretary of agriculture, which is my idea of a complete nightmare job. It was not a smart idea on anybody’s part. Maybe it sent a message and helped the new administration see this movement out there, but I write as one and I speak as one person. And that’s the difference between acting politically, and acting as a writer.


When [former Iowa Gov. Tom] Vilsack was appointed, I was asked what I thought. I gave a modest personal answer, which may not have been smart politically. I said something like it was a good day for corn, not so good for America’s eaters, and I said it was agribusiness as usual. And a lot of activists were kind of ticked at me, they said: “We’re trying to get in with this guy. We think we can work with him. So keep your powder dry.” I kept hearing that.


Energy Industry Slowdown Means Idle Rigs, Cuts in Jobs

John Cromling isn’t jumping out any windows, even though the struggles of the oil and gas industry have idled a large number of Tulsa-based Unit Corp.’s drilling rigs.


That has forced Unit to lay off about 800 employees in Oklahoma.


“That’s really the only thing you can do to cope with the market. The market is what it is,” said Cromling, executive vice president of Unit’s drilling company. “You just have to figure out how to stay alive with it being that.”


He said only about 35 percent of the company’s rigs are working, compared with a 97 percent utilization rate last year.


U.S. natgas rig count climbs 6 to 705 for week

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The number of rigs drilling for natural gas in the United States climbed six this week to 705, 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 eight of the last nine weeks but is still down sharply since peaking above 1,600 in September last year, standing at 884 rigs, or 56 percent, below the same week last year.


Analysis: Drilling Picks Up in the Mediterranean and Black Seas

While the Mediterranean and Black Seas have not always been global hot spots for offshore oil and gas exploration, drilling in these two areas has increased substantially. With multiple projects upcoming and prolific production existing, both the Mediterranean and the Black Sea are logging more rig time every year.


China’s quest for African oil

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton may have peddled democracy when she breezed through Angola in August, but there were few doubts she was thinking oil. And though she denied any interest in what China was up to in the African nation, she couldn’t possibly have ignored it.


Beijing and Washington’s rivalry for African oil — particularly the coveted resources of Angola and Nigeria — has never been stronger, as America tries to bolster its dwindling reserves, while China seeks resources to fuel its rapid industrial expansion. Both Angola and Nigeria are among America’s main oil suppliers. They are also chief sources of crude for China, and with huge Chinese investment now pouring in, Beijing seems to be seeking a lion’s share.


Biden talks oil in Iraqi Kurdistan

ERBIL, Iraq (UPI) — Kurdish leaders in Iraq welcomed U.S. Vice President Joe Biden to discuss outstanding issues with the central government regarding national oil wealth.


Biden met with Iraqi President Jalal Talabani and Massoud Barzani, the president of the Kurdistan Regional Government of Iraq, in an effort to find a resolution to oil issues with the central government in Baghdad.


Alaska Gov Says Gas Pipeline Competitors Should Work Together

Alaska Gov. Sean Parnell said Thursday that he expects developers of two competing natural gas pipelines, from Alaska’s North Slope to Canada and the contiguous U.S., to find a way to work together before he will consider agreements on production tax incentives for the projects.


Utilities prepare for winter energy shortages

Faced with the strong possibility of a shortfall in utility natural gas deliverability in the event of a severe cold snap in the coming Southcentral Alaska winter, gas and electric utilities around the region are completing a contingency plan in an effort to avert the need for power cuts and to ensure that, if power cuts are required, the impact on power consumers is minimized.


Total May Face Strikes on Possible Refinery Sales

(Bloomberg) — Total SA, Europe’s biggest oil refiner, may face strikes as workers protest the possible sale of some of its plants, a union said.


“Let’s be ready for a strike to defend jobs and our refining,” the Confederation General du Travail said today in a statement. Total is willing to “sacrifice” European refining capacity to expand in Asia and the Middle East, the union said.


Top military minds mull climate change, energy efficiency, new fuels and national security

Even accounting for the recent discovery of deep sea oil reserves in the Gulf of Mexico, America controls only 3 percent of the world’s oil supply while we consume 25 percent of the oil produced every year. Making the assumption that fuel is going to be available and affordable whenever and wherever we need it leads to a fundamentally flawed strategy. It will neither be available nor affordable.


The growing divergence of supply and demand curves for global oil dictates ever-greater scarcity and ever increasing cost. By remaining dependent on oil the United States will continue to be entangled with unfriendly rulers and undemocratic nations — simply because we need their oil. And we cannot produce enough domestic oil to change this dynamic. That is just a short-term solution that simply continues our harmful addiction to oil. We need to recognize that we cannot drill our way to sustained prosperity and security — we have to wean ourselves from our reliance on oil, starting now. ”


Bad drought sparks boost for portable power team

A brutal drought that has swept through East Africa has created opportunities for Aggreko, the Scottish-based portable power generation company.


Cameco cuts 79 jobs at fuel manufacturing plant

TORONTO (Reuters) – Canadian uranium producer Cameco has laid off 79 non-union employees at its two nuclear fuel manufacturing plants in Ontario due to a two-week-old strike at the facilities, a company official said on Thursday.


Fuel manufacturing at Cameco’s Port Hope, Ontario, facility has been completely halted, while the company’s nearby Cobourg operation is running on a partial basis, Cameco spokesman Lyle Krahn said.


Tapping wind power potential for now and future

In the power front, the situation is distressingly bad in Bangladesh. With per capita energy consumption just reaching 220 KGOE (kilogram of oil), Bangladesh is one of the low energy consuming countries in the world. The national grid could so far cover only 35 percent of the population, and only 3 percent people receive piped gas supply. 70 percent of the people live in rural areas, where the situation with every passing year continues to be precarious.


Justice Dept. investigating former Interior Secretary Gale Norton’s ties to oil company

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department has launched an investigation into whether former Interior Secretary Gale A. Norton illegally used her position to steer lucrative oil leases to Royal Dutch Shell PLC, the company she works for now, officials with both departments confirmed to The Associated Press.


The criminal investigation is focused on a 2006 decision by the Interior Department to award three oil shale leases on federal land in Colorado to a Shell subsidiary. Oil from the leases could eventually earn the company hundreds of billions dollars.


Oil barons needn’t fear the green machines

LONDON (ShareCast) – Oil bosses are furiously spending billions of dollars trying to find enough of the black stuff to help us maintain our love affair with the car. So, imagine the look on their faces this week when the world’s biggest auto makers
wheeled out an army of electric concept cars at the Frankfurt motor show.


Amid Africa’s oil boom, U.S. binds ties

Obama vowed that he would rid the United States of the “tyranny of oil” by developing alternative sources of energy when he got to the White House in January.


But Michael T. Klare, a U.S. energy specialist and professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, argues that in the years ahead the United States, as well as Europe, will condemn millions of people to the tyranny of dictators.


The United States, he said, “will remain dependent on oil derived from authoritarian regimes, weak states and nations in the midst of civil war.”


That pretty much covers Africa as it is today.


GOP Senator Considering Rider to Limit EPA Authority on Greenhouse Gases

Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) may attempt to handcuff U.S. EPA’s ability to regulate stationary sources of greenhouse gases with an amendment to the agency’s annual spending bill.


Natural gas producers to start lobbying effort

WASHINGTON – Natural gas producers are planning a major lobbying effort to shape climate change legislation in the Senate, aiming for incentives to boost the use of their resource in power plants and vehicles.


The aggressive push is meant to make up for the gas lobby’s relative absence from climate-change negotiations in the House, where a bill that passed in June reserved most goodies for coal-burning utilities and manufacturers seeking incentives to shield them from the cost of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.


Iranian president raises stakes against Israel

TEHRAN (Reuters) – President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has raised the stakes against Israel by describing the Holocaust as a lie, just as world powers are trying to decide how to deal with the nuclear ambitions of an Iran in political turmoil.


Diverting Aid for Climate Change Threatens Children, Oxfam Says

(Bloomberg) — Diverting overseas aid from economic development to fight global warming may threaten the lives of at least 4.5 million children in the poorest nations, the anti-poverty group Oxfam said.


Bangladesh fears climate change will swallow a third of its land

Bangladeshi Foreign Minister Dipu Moni warned Thursday that rising oceans from climate change could swallow up to a third of her low-lying country and urged other nations to take action at an upcoming environmental summit to mitigate the damage.


The Peak Oil Crisis: The Next Price Spike

The peak oil thesis holds that the cessation of further growth in world oil production will be accompanied by wild price swings as the world attempts to adjust to the new state of affairs.


Now that mankind’s oil supply has not grown significantly in the last four years despite some very high prices in the interim, many people believe that the peak has arrived in the form of a bumpy plateau and will soon begin the inevitable fall that must come with the depletion of a finite commodity. To be fair, some optimists don’t see a significant decline coming for another 10, 20, 30 or more years, but few, including perennially optimistic government forecasters, predict significant further growth – at least not for conventional oil.


Oil Investors Embark on Voyage of Discovery

Barely a week goes by without a major oil discovery being announced. Recent hot spots include the Gulf of Mexico, Brazil and West Africa. But beware jumping to conclusions about how much this changes the dynamics of energy supply, for oil bears or peak-oil pundits.


New trade flows threaten Europe’s oil refiners

BRUSSELS (Reuters) – An anticipated bounce in fuel demand next year will not be enough to prevent European refiners from cutting runs or even closing because of fierce competition in traditional export markets.


Demand is set to pick up for most fuel next year as economies return to growth, but refiners will no longer be able to count on a gasoline exports to the United States, which has traditionally provided a lucrative revenue stream, refiners and analysts said.


Ecuador warns oil companies to keep up investments

QUITO (Reuters) – Ecuador could cancel contracts with petroleum companies if they do not fulfill their investment plans, Oil Minister Germanico Pinto said on Thursday in the government’s latest warning to the private sector.


The socialist government has a troubled relationship with foreign investors, punctuated by tax and other legal disputes. But Pinto said that so far, he sees no signs of companies failing to live up to their investment commitments.


Is There Something Wrong with the Crude Oil Market?

With the official end to summer, the Labor Day weekend, behind us and the nation’s largest energy company investor conference underway, the oil market received several shot-in-the-arm positives last week. Wall Street talking-heads had a difficult time understanding what was going on with the price of gold and crude oil futures soaring on the first trading day following last Monday’s holiday. Gold futures traded over ,000 an ounce and crude oil prices jumped by a barrel. The inability of the talking-heads to explain the phenomenon left us wondering if we were seeing a global investor reaction to Washington politicians returning to work.


Oil surplus peaking this year, bank says

The world supply, or surplus, of oil will peak this year after the economic crisis and low prices in the first quarter slashed much-needed investment, says a senior executive at Australian investment bank Macquarie.


“This is our view–capacity has pretty much peaked in the sense that declines equal new resources,” Iain Reid, head of European oil and gas research at Macquarie, said in an interview.


Not your average peak oil theory, from Macquarie

Mainstream financial analyst types tend to shy away from talking about peak oil – even when they are talking up a looming supply crunch, this is usually attributed to the short- to mid-term under-investment problem. So a presentation by Iain Reid, a senior oil analyst at Macquarie Bank, stirred much excitement when some details were published this week.


2009 Annual Report: Magellan Flagship Fund

We attempt to increase our understanding of important markets, such as oil supply and demand. Global
petroleum usage has declined in the recession from about 88 million barrels per day to about 85 million. The
US motorist is currently a key factor in terms of demand, with the US consuming about 25% of daily oil usage
and about 55% of that is used to power the 200 million + consumer motor vehicles. As the marginal cost of
production of oil is well below the market price, producers have not meaningfully rationed supply over past
decades and probably will not in the future. Hence, the world is vulnerable to Peak Oil if left simply to the
working of market forces. Market forces may result in a rapid crossover from relatively plentiful, relatively
inexpensive oil to shortages and price shocks.


Thus, we are looking at US Energy Policy as it evolves. Similarly the recent rapid improvement in
commercialisation of hybrid and other long life battery motor vehicles is very meaningful. As well as
impacting oil usage downward, foreseeable future benefits of improved battery technology also include
storage of electricity at solar and wind facilities, and improvements in the cost effectiveness of desalination.
Major technological advances and commercialisation will have profound impacts, including on food
production as well as on energy cost and usage.


KGB Interrogation: John Dashwood

I would just say that our perception is that there is about twice as much oil out there to be discovered or to be produced than has been produced in history so far. Certainly the phrase that we use is that yes fossil fuels are indeed ‘finite’, but they’re not finished.


Crude Oil May Fall as U.S. Fuel Supplies Increase, Survey Shows

(Bloomberg) — Crude oil futures may decline as U.S. fuel stockpiles increase and refiners prepare to idle units for seasonal maintenance.


Sixteen of 42 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News, or 38 percent, said futures will drop through Sept. 25. Fourteen respondents, or 33 percent, forecast that the market will rise and 12 said prices will be little changed. Last week, 45 percent of analysts said oil would fall.


Citigroup CEO Pandit Says Phibro Business Will Be Restructured

(Bloomberg) — Citigroup Inc. Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit said the bank will restructure its Phibro LLC energy-trading business as the bank faces what may be a 0 million payday for the unit’s chief, Andrew Hall.


“That business will be restructured and rationalized,” Pandit said yesterday at the 92nd Street Y in New York. When asked if 0 million was too much to pay, he replied, “Yes.”


Pdvsa’s bond issue cuts price of dollar in the unofficial market

The US dollar has reached its lower level thus far this year in the unofficial market due to the higher supply of dollars through the issue of Pdvsa’s foreign currency-denominated bonds.


According to financial sources, the state-run oil holding Petróleos de Venezuela (Pdvsa) is selling to brokerage houses part of the papers maturing in 2017 and 2011 that were bought back recently by the oil company.


BG Venture Said to Seek 0 Million From Kazakhstan

(Bloomberg) — A BG Group Plc venture will seek to recover at least 0 million in export duties from the Kazakh government at an arbitration hearing in London later this month, two people familiar with the matter said.


The U.K.’s third-biggest oil and gas producer said it paid duties “under protest” last year in relation to Karachaganak, its largest project in Kazakhstan. BG and its partners in the development, including Eni SpA of Italy, are now looking to claw back the taxes, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the case is confidential.


Sinopec Tianjin to delay new refinery to Dec – source

BEIJING (Reuters) – Top Asian refinery Sinopec Corp has delayed the start up of its new 200,000 barrel-per-day (bpd) refining plant in Tianjin to around mid-December or later, an industry official said on Friday.


The delay of the plant, the fourth major new facility to come online in China this year, could help ease the heavy surplus in Asian diesel market despite the approach of winter heating oil demand, partly due to heavy exports from China.


UAE is oil-rich, but struggles to get power to all

SHARJAH, United Arab Emirates — In dusty and sweltering Industrial Area 13, just beyond the glow of Dubai’s illuminated skyscrapers, Abdullah Kuttakunnil serves patrons of Kannur Restaurant by candlelight.


It’s a matter of necessity, not ambiance. For much of the past month, residents of Sharjah, an increasingly teeming city hugging an interstate border with the wealthier city-state of Dubai, have suffered through power failures often lasting most of the day.


Russian Utility Threatens to ‘Hang’ Customers for Unpaid Bills

(Bloomberg) — A Russian utility in the city named after the founder of the Bolshevik secret police is threatening “to hang” customers who don’t pay their bills.


The Federal Anti-Monopoly Service is investigating whether Nizhny Novgorod Utility Systems violated advertising laws by posting photographs of delinquent consumers on billboards under the rubric: “Hanged As Promised.”


Timor Sea Oil Spill May Worsen, Australian Conservationists Say

(Bloomberg) — An oil spill from a leaking well off Western Australia that has polluted the Timor Sea with 1,200 metric tons of oil may worsen and is a “major ecological disaster in the making,” a conservation group says.


“This is a disaster that risks blowing out further in terms of its scale and impact on the ocean,” Darren Kindleysides, director of the Australian Marine Conservation Society, said in an e-mailed statement today. The spill has covered 15,000 square kilometers (5,800 square miles), with 400 barrels a day leaking from the Montara field, the group said.


The Financial Crisis and Imperialism: Interview of John Bellamy Foster

BMR:What is the likely impact of the present financial crisis on geopolitics, especially if the crisis is considered in the context of the energy crisis including the peak oil issue, the food crisis, The Great Hunger, the environmental crisis, and the declining dollar? Will the world experience war(s) as an effort to survive? Will monopoly-finance capital attempt to create another bubble, as capital is gripped with contradictions within and without?


JBF: The Great Financial Crisis and the Great Recession that followed close upon it have uncovered the depth of the contradictions facing capitalism in this phase, which I have labeled “monopoly-finance capital.” Specifically, the overall crisis has revealed that capitalism, at its vital core, is caught in a stagnation-financialization trap with no visible way out. The geopolitical implications of course are vast.


The Iran Whisperers

As I’ve said many times, the Iranians would be foolish to acquire a nuclear weapon. It would be tantamount to painting a bull’s eye on their backs. The Israelis (and we) would have a perfect excuse to blow their entire nuclear industry to smithereens. And as I’ve also said many times, with peak oil either here or just around the corner, it’s the energy, not a weapon, that makes Iran’s nuclear program worth having.


Resilience Takes Form — A Handbook for Transition

Something strange has happened over in old Blighty. I’m not sure if the Utopian dreams of the 1960’s are making a comeback or if a new movement, one grounded in reality but focused on our future, has taken shape. No matter how cynical you are, you can’t ignore one of the fastest growing grassroots movements in the UK — The Transition Network.


Chaos & Claustrophobia: Toronto ‘09 titles from “Lebanon” to “Collapse”

Ruppert encourages a sort of Darwinian survivalism with a priceless anecdote about a bear that invades a camp: “You don’t have to run faster than the bear,” he says. “You only have to be faster than the slowest camper.” A lesson for us all.


If Ruppert sounds bitter and misanthropic, he also ultimately comes across as deeply human, vulnerable and sad. One of the biggest revelations of the film isn’t the CIA’s role in drug smuggling, Smith’s initial entry-point into the subject, or the value that organic seeds may have as a future currency, but that the high-point of Ruppert’s day is walking down the street with his dog in Culver City, eliciting as many smiles as he can from passersby.


Canning revival

Back in June, McMahon organized a “green café” for the East Toronto Climate Action Group. Twenty-five neighbours crowded into the local coffee shop to watch Al Gore’s latest flick, talk about potential energy shortages and climate change and brainstorm about what could be done.


“What came up was a lot of food,” McMahon says. Food security, community gardening, shopping locally and canning.


As the world edges closer to peak oil capacity and communities are forced to become more self- sustainable, McMahon says re-learning the old home trades, or “reskilling,” will be crucial.


“I’m sad my grandparents aren’t around any more to teach me this,” she says. “I don’t know how to darn a sock. We’re trying to tap into seniors, or anyone who learned (these skills) from their grandparents.”


Western Rail Network Key to Regional Sustainability

There are so many issues one could cover here. Glaeser admits that more spending won’t relieve congestion in the Eastern corridors, yet calls for more spending in those corridors. Samuelson also claims that there is no economic gain to be had from building rail which is completely unbelievable because U.S. history since the 1850’s cannot even be understood without contemplating the development of the railroad.


Putin Deputy Blames ‘Corporate Ethics’ for Siberian Dam Deaths

(Bloomberg) — Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s energy chief, Igor Sechin, blamed local managers and faulty equipment for the accident that killed 75 people at Russia’s largest hydropower plant last month.


“There is something wrong with corporate ethics here,” Sechin told journalists late yesterday in Abakan, capital of the Khakassia region of Siberia where OAO RusHydro’s Sayano- Shushenskaya station is located. “RusHydro needs to address this issue and probably certify its personnel on ethics.”


Utah geothermal plant runs into cold-water problem: Geothermal plant’s cold water means it buys nearly as much power as it makes

The problem: The plant can’t operate at full capacity because its production wells are producing geothermal water that isn’t hot enough, even though its temperature is higher than the 180 degrees Raser initially said it would need.


Success of Palm Oil Brings Plantations Under Pressure to Preserve Habitats

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Idyllic scenes of palm trees swaying over sandy beaches have long decorated brochures meant to lure tourists to Indonesia and Malaysia. But few visitors see the giant palm plantations away from the shore.


Each year, the plantations produce millions of tons of palm oil, which has soared in popularity since the 1970s and is now found in foods like margarine, potato chips and chocolate, as well as in soap, cosmetics and biofuel.


Brazil eyes limits on Amazon sugar cane growth

BRASILIA — The Brazilian government presented new legislation Thursday intended to protect the Amazon from deforestation by banning any new planting of sugar cane, widely cultivated for ethanol production.


“Now we can say that our ethanol is 100 percent green,” said Environment Minister Carlos Minc announcing the proposed rules.


Interest in algae’s oil prospects is growing

To many, algae is little more than pond scum, a nuisance to swimmers and a frustration to boaters.


But to a growing community of scientists and investors in Southern California, there is oil locked in all that slimy stuff, and several dozen companies are racing to try to figure how best to unleash it and produce an affordable biofuel.


Algae Fuels Are Too Darn Expensive

Unlike other types of renewable alt-fuel sources, like corn and switchgrass, algae can be cultivated in harsh, even toxic environments that aren’t viable for less hardy forms of plant life. As a plus, algae creates a CO2 absorber. So growing it and then burning the oil derived from it as fuel creates a nice, efficient feedback loop that gets us away from petroleum while simultaneously reducing greenhouse gases.


Sounds great, except that the numbers don’t work. This is what any alt-fuel source is up against when it does battle with petroleum: Dinosaur oil is packed with energy, and it’s still super-cheap. It’s also tucked away in environmentally benign fields underground. One it gets out, and is, say, burned as gas or … um … spilled from tankers in pristine Alaskan waters, well, that’s when it causes problems. But we don’t currently have to expend any effort to make it. It’s just there, and has been for millions of years.


World’s largest turbine blades to be made in Britain

Britain will manufacture the world’s largest wind turbine blades, thanks to grants for offshore wind energy firms arranged by the Department for Energy and Climate Change (DECC).


Energy and Climate Secretary Ed Miliband has announced grants will go to Clipper Windpower, Artemis Intelligent Power and Siemens Wind Power UK.


India’s Gujarat to Give Contracts for Solar Project

(Bloomberg) — Contracts to build the world’s largest solar power facility in India’s Gujarat state, valued at billion and backed by former U.S. President Bill Clinton, will be awarded by January, a state government official said.


Disappearing Wetlands Taint New Orleans’ Rebound From Katrina

(Bloomberg) — Carlton Dufrechou can fly 10 minutes from New Orleans and be over the open waters of the Mississippi Sound. Two decades earlier, before erosion took its toll, he would have looked down on lush wetlands.


The destruction accelerated four years ago last month, when Hurricane Katrina struck. The third-deadliest storm in U.S. history claimed more than 1,800 lives, displaced 1 million residents and damaged more than half of New Orleans’ housing stock. Katrina also wiped out 80 square miles of marsh within hours, four times the amount lost by the entire state in a year.


Kenya: Country at Crossroads in Fight Against Poverty

Nairobi — Kenya is at the crossroads between tackling climate change and reducing poverty levels. Debate is rife that conserving the environment will end drought, famine and disease and lead to a drop in food prices.


Poverty reduction in Kenya and other countries is also expected to take centre stage when world leaders join President Obama at his first United Nations address on climate change in New York.


Chevron Australia CO2 Liability Deal May Be Precedent

(Bloomberg) — Chevron Corp., Exxon Mobil Corp. and Royal Dutch Shell Plc agreed to invest in the billion Gorgon natural gas venture only after Australia’s government assumed liability for potential damages hundreds of years from now. That may set a precedent in this resource-rich nation.


Twiddling our thumbs while waiting for a U.S. climate-change bill

Having ceded important parts of Canada’s climate-change policies to the United States – or, to put matters more mildly, having decided to wait on the United States – the Harper government can hardly take a lead in North America on reducing greenhouse-gas emissions.


With climate-change talks resuming in Copenhagen in December, the U.S. remains a long way from developing a coherent position – which means Canada is stalled, too.


Drought Causing India Farmers to Sell Wives

One farmer in Jhansi, named Kalicharan, told The Telegraph that he had borrowed money to buy a water pump. When the money lender came for the repayment, he took his wife and three children.


“I told him to give me some time to arrange money but he forcibly entered my house and took my wife and children,” Kalicharan told the newspaper.


Arctic ice melts to third – smallest area

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The Arctic ice pack melted this summer to its third-smallest size on record, up slightly from the low points of the past two years but continuing an overall shrinking trend symptomatic of climate change, U.S. scientists said on Thursday.


Northern sea ice retreated to its minimum extent for 2009 on September 12, when it covered 1.97 million square miles (5.1 million square km), and now appears to be growing again as the Arctic starts its annual cool-down, the National Snow and Ice Data Center reported.


That level falls 20 percent below the 30-year average minimum sea ice cover for the Arctic summer since satellites began measuring it in 1979, and 24 percent less than the 1979-2000 average, the Colorado-based government agency said.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 18, 2009

Applied Materials Working on Slicing Solar Silicon for Less

Monday, September 21st, 2009

AMATimage1Solar panels are getting cheaper, and as prices decline, companies are looking for ways to reduce manufacturing costs to stay competitive. Here’s the latest innovation from Applied Materials: on Monday the chip and solar equipment maker announced two new technologies that it claims can reduce the costs of conventional crystalline-silicon-based solar.

Both of the technologies are aimed at more efficiently turning silicon ingots — the silicon slices that solar cells are made of — into wafers. The first, the Applied HCT Diamond Squarer system (see image above), uses diamond particles – instead of the usual abrasive slurry – bonded to a metallic wire core to slice silicon ingots into bricks. Applied claims the technology can cut up to one-third of the cost of producing silicon ingots, partly by using half of the electricity of a conventional slicing process, while also doubling the cutting speed, which saves manufacturers’ money. Customers such as Silicio Solar, a Spanish solar manufacturer owned by Dutch holding company Pillar Group, have tested the technology, according to the company’s press release.

AMATimage2The second technology, the Applied HCT MaxEdge wire saw, slices those silicon bricks into wafers. Using two wires, instead of just one, the wire saw is able to slice wafers thinner than with conventional technology, using less silicon per wafer.

Ken MacWilliams, a vice president in the company’s solar group, previously told me that Applied expects its wire saw to reduce wafer thickness from 200 microns in 2008 to 120 microns in 2011. The technology also reduces tension and wear on the wires, resulting in more reliability and less downtime, Applied claims. Unnamed key customers in Europe and Asia already are using the wire saw in mass production, according to the release.

The new squarer and wire saw are part of a pack of new technologies that Applied is developing to cut costs. According to a Photon Consulting report in December, new technologies could cut crystalline silicon costs more than 27 percent by 2011.

Figures like that would bring average panel manufacturing costs to .47 per watt, down from .04 per watt in December, but would still make crystalline solar more expensive than the lowest-cost thin-film solar today. Industry darling First Solar reached a manufacturing cost of 87 cents per watt in the second quarter.

Of course, Applied – which also supplies thin-film equipment – is hardly the only company working to lower crystalline-silicon solar costs. Massachusetts-based startup 1366 Technologies last week announced two technologies to make multicrystalline solar cells cheaper and more efficient. And Honeywell (NYSE:HON) on Monday announced a new anti-reflective coating material that could potentially help crystalline, as well as thin film, solar panels collect more light and increase their efficiency.

Oil Company Begins Wind Test of Off-Shore Floating Platform

Monday, September 21st, 2009

Europe’s Cap and Trade has reduced fossil energy use and grown renewable energy

Here’s an example of how fossil energy companies could switch to renewable energy.  The Norwegian company  StatoilHydro is celebrating the off-shore wind inauguation this month of their Hywind pilot in the North Sea. Off-shore oil drilling companies are in a good position to leverage their expertize to develop off-shore wind; (just as fossil companies on land could also switch from oil drilling to geothermal drilling.)

StatoilHydro’s million Hywind project draws on the company’s long years of experience in offshore oil and gas drilling to easily make the switch to renewable energy. Because of the long previous experience with suppliers they were able to deliver the off-shore wind project on budget and on schedule.

Siemens built the turbine, while Technip built and installed the offshore floater. Nexans Norway laid the submarine power line to the receiving station operated by grid operator Haugaland Kraft who will deliver the power to the grid

Read more of this story »

Eco Tech: Mitsubishi Electric’s high-output solar panels reduce installation cost

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

mitsubishi electric solar panels

Eco Factor: High-output solar cells by Mitsubishi Electric.

In a bid to lower the cost of solar energy, Mitsubishi Electric has come up with 10 new models of high-output solar panels, five of which will be marketed in Europe and the rest in North America and Asia. The new range includes panels with outputs ranging from 210W to 235W.

(more…)

Drumbeat: September 15, 2009

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009


Mexico’s Carstens warns oil slump will last years

MEXICO CITY (Reuters) – Mexican Finance Minister Agustin Carstens urged lawmakers on Tuesday to approve new taxes to offset lower oil revenues, saying the country’s struggling energy industry would not recover quickly.


The government of President Felipe Calderon has proposed hiking income and consumption taxes in 2010 to offset lower revenues from crude exports as output from Mexico’s state-run oil industry is expected to remain weak.


“This fall (in oil production) is going to last for years … The future has caught up to us … we’ve been living as oil addicts,” Carstens said at a congressional hearing on the budget proposals.


Fuel standards: More mpg coming

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — A final proposal for new fuel economy standards was unveiled Tuesday in a joint announcement by the Department of Transportation and the Environmental Protection Agency.


The regulation requires all passenger cars and light trucks sold in the United States to get an overall average of 35.5 miles per gallon by model year 2016. By that year, cars will be expected to average about 39 mpg and 30 mpg for trucks.


Russia wants foreigners to tap offshore oil and gas

ST PETERSBURG, Russia (Reuters) – Russia wants foreign companies to help develop its massive offshore oil and gas reserves as domestic firms lack the means to do so alone, Natural Resources Deputy Minister Sergei Donskoi said.


Suncor to significantly downsize natural gas assets

CALGARY — A “significant downsizing” of conventional natural gas assets is in the works at Suncor Energy Inc. as it continues to digest Petro-Canada following a -billion merger that resulted in 1,000 job losses.


Norway Government Win May Prolong Curb on Arctic Oil

(Bloomberg) — The re-election of Norway’s Labor Party-led coalition may prolong a ban on oil exploration in environmentally sensitive areas in the Arctic coveted by producers such as StatoilHydro ASA, analysts said.


Labor and its partners, the Socialist Left and Center parties, won 86 seats out of 169 in parliament in yesterday’s general election, securing four more years in power. Labor, split between promoting jobs and protecting the environment, is undecided on opening more areas, while its coalition partners oppose new drilling.


The result wasn’t what “the oil industry had hoped for at all,” Thina Saltvedt, an analyst at Nordea Bank AB in Oslo, said by phone today. “Given that oil production is falling as rapidly as it is, there will be a lot of pressure from the oil industry.”


Sietch Nevada: Desert Oasis for a Drought-Stricken Future

Sietch Nevada is a futuristic concept city that envisions a dystopian water-hoarding society where drought is a constant state and wars are fought over water. Designed by Matsys Designs, the underground city is situated within a network of tunnels and caverns that offer protection and water storage, creating an oasis in the desert. The dense underground community includes a network of waterways and canals enclosed by residential and commercial cavern structures that forms an underground Venice so to speak.


Greenpeace shuts Shell oil sands mine

Protestors from environmental group Greenpeace snuck into the Albian Sands Muskeg River bitumen mine and chained themselves to equipment, forcing a temporary halt to operations.


At about 8 am local time, protestors blocked access to a dump truck and hydraulic shovel, then climbed up and chained themselves to the equipment.


Another group of protestors put banners on the ground that read “Tar Sands: Climate Crime.”


World Bank Report Slams ‘Inertia’ in the Face of Climate Change

A major new World Bank report out today concludes that the world can fight poverty and climate change at the same time. But it won’t be easy, and it won’t be cheap.


Dyer: Population, famine and fate in Ethiopia

Infant deaths are already over two per 10,000 per day in Somali, the worst-hit region of Ethiopia. (Four per day counts as full-scale famine.) Country-wide, 20 percent of the population already depends on the dwindling flow of foreign food aid, and it will get worse for many months yet. What have the Ethiopians done wrong?


The real answer is they have had too many babies. Ethiopia’s population at the time of the last famine 25 years ago was 40 million. Now it is 80 million. You can do everything else right and if you don’t control the population, you’re spitting into the wind.


Last chance to change our behaviour

There is growing awareness of the damage we are doing to the planet and the natural resources on which we depend, says David Hillyard. Yet, he argues in this week’s Green Room, we still carry on along the same track regardless, refusing to make much-needed changes to our behaviour.


Toyota: Electric cars ‘too expensive’ for mainstream

Electric vehicles are the clear favored technology for concept cars at the Frankfurt Motor Show this week. But Toyota, the leader in hybrid cars, thinks that the high cost of the lithium ion batteries will keep electric cars from penetrating the mass market for another decade.


The Old Man and the Sea of Oil

Oil bulls are putting their faith in an old man and a little boy. They hope the former, septuagenarian Saudi Oil Minister Ali Naimi, is right in saying there has been “a fundamental change” in the oil market. They hope the latter, the weather pattern called El Nino, “the boy,” will go easy on them.


Mr. Naimi, speaking ahead of last week’s summit for the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, was trying to draw attention from extraordinarily high oil inventories, emphasizing instead that the global economy is recovering.


Mr. Naimi’s language, with shades of a “new paradigm,” should unnerve bulls. So should market data.


What Glut? Oops, Maybe There Is A Glut After All

For weeks the talk in the investment world and the energy business was what would happen when the glut of natural gas rendered winter storage no longer an option. The debate focused on what would happen to the surge in natural gas production if we completely filled the nation’s available storage capacity before the start of the heating season. How would producers handle involuntary well shut-ins? What would happen to the price of natural gas – would it be like some periods in recent memory in which Rocky Mountain gas sold for pennies?


Kunstler: Reality Receding

American perestroika really boils down to this: we have to rescale the activities of daily life to a level consistent with the mandates of the future, especially the ones having to do with available energy and capital. We have to dismantle things that have no future and rebuild things that will allow daily life to function. We have to say goodbye to big box shopping and rebuild Main Street. More people will be needed to work in farming and fewer in tourism, public relations, gambling, and party planning. We have to make some basic useful products in this country again. We have to systematically decommission suburbia and reactivate our small towns and small cities. We have to prepare for the contraction of our large cities. We have to let the sun set on Happy Motoring and rebuild our trains, transit systems, harbors, and inland waterways. We have to reorganize schooling at a much more modest level. We have to close down most of the overseas military bases we’re operating and conclude our wars in Asia. Mostly, we have to recover a national sense of common purpose and common decency. There is obviously a lot of work to do in the list above, which could translate into paychecks and careers — but not if we direct all our resources into propping up the failing structures of yesterday.


Dmitry Orlov: Time’s Up! An Uncivilized Solution to a Global Crisis by Keith Farnish

Keith’s book is a reader challenge: the reader is tasked with developing a survivable future for her progeny. Very carefully and delicately, with many references to academic research and a rich bibliography, Keith lays out the case that extinction is the default choice – unless you, dear reader of such books, along with a few other people, people like Keith, who would like to help you, come up with a better plan.


Petrobras’ Oil Production Up 5% in August

Petrobras’ average oil production, in Brazil, reached the mark of 1,980,222 barrels in August, a 5% increase over a year ago. Compared to last July, the growth was 42,000 barrels of oil per day. This increase resulted from resumed operations at platforms that had undergone scheduled shutdowns in the previous month (Cherne 1, P-9, and P-40) and from production going on stream at new wells connected to Campos Basin platforms.


India Cos Unlikely to Produce Oil from Iran Block

India’s state-run oil companies will likely not produce any oil from Iran’s Farsi block due to the low value of high-sulfur crude and low returns on investment, but natural gas resources could be developed, a senior executive with one of the companies told reporters late Monday.


“We may not produce oil due to high sulfur content in crude but we will explore ways of exploiting natural gas from the block,” said the executive, who declined to be named.


Kuwait tackles energy plans with power plant contract

Kuwait has approved plans to build the country’s largest power station for US.65 billion (Dh9.73bn) in a bid to close its persistent electricity shortage.


Bader al Shuraian, the minister of electricity and water, signed the contract with General Electric and Hyundai Heavy Industries late on Sunday to construct a 2,000 megawatt plant at Sabiya that will burn both natural gas and fuel oil.


OECD: nuclear output unaffected by recession

According to official data released today by the OECD Nuclear Energy Agency (NEA), nuclear electricity generation in OECD member countries has only marginally declined despite the economic downturn. Nuclear power plants provided 21.5% of the total electricity generated in the OECD area in 2008 against 21.6% in 2007.


A Mad Dash for Smart Grid Cash

By the time the late August application deadline had expired, a United States Department of Energy program to distribute 5 million to fund projects demonstrating smart grid technology had attracted 140 proposals requesting a total of .3 billion.


“The response is very encouraging,” said Jen Stutsman, a spokeswoman for the Energy Department. “We expect some very competitive projects.”


Pursuing a Battery So Electric Vehicles Can Go the Extra Miles

SAN JOSE, Calif. — A future generation lithium-air battery might be the much sought after power source for electric vehicles with ranges that match gasoline powered cars of today.


Hawaii Tries Green Tools in Remaking Power Grids

NAALEHU, Hawaii — Two miles or so from this tiny town in the southernmost corner of the United States, across ranches where cattle herds graze beneath the distant Mauna Loa volcano, the giant turbines of a new wind farm cut through the air.


Sixty miles to the northeast, near a spot where golden-red lava streams meet the sea in clouds of steam, a small power plant extracts heat from the volcanic rock beneath it to generate electricity.


These projects are just a slice of the energy experiment unfolding across Hawaii’s six main islands. With the most diverse array of alternative energy potential of any state in the nation, Hawaii has set out to become a living laboratory for the rest of the country, hoping it can slash its dependence on fossil fuels while keeping the lights on.


U.S. CO2 Emissions Plan Depends on ‘Unlikely’ Offsets

(Bloomberg) — The “cap-and-trade” bill for greenhouse gases that passed the U.S. House June 26 depends on an “unlikely” supply of cheap carbon credits from developing countries, the National Commission on Energy Policy said today.


While the House-passed bill would allow as many as 1.5 billion so-called carbon offsets from tropical rainforests and clean energy projects in poor countries to count toward U.S. greenhouse gas targets each year, 300 million or less will probably be available, the commission said in a report.


Climate deal must be wide, not “overwhelming”: Chu

VIENNA (Reuters) – Nations aiming to agree on a new global climate deal should focus on achievable greenhouse gas emissions targets, to involve as many nations as possible, said U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu.


The world is meant to thrash out in December in Copenhagen a new international climate change pact beyond 2012, to replace the Kyoto Protocol.


EPA to propose ways to cut car emissions

McLEAN, Va. — The chief of the Environmental Protection Agency said Monday that the Obama administration is studying how to curb global-warming gases from big industrial polluters such as power plants and factories.


In an appearance before the USA TODAY editorial board, Lisa Jackson also said the agency will soon propose rules to cut greenhouse emissions from cars.


“We will continue to move stepwise down the path toward regulation of greenhouse gases,” Jackson said, assuming that the EPA adopts a preliminary finding that greenhouse gases are a danger to public health.


Factoring People Into Climate Change

It’s a sure bet that women won’t be high on the agenda, or even listed on the program, when UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon convenes a climate change summit of world leaders on September 22. Women are also likely to be missing at the make-or-break emissions reduction conference in Copenhagen in December.


Even less likely to be discussed at either event is the potential environmental role of reproductive health. Family planning is a toxic subject in too many places, best buried as a malingering relative of Malthusian population “control.”


Governments, which dominate these huge confabs, and the people who work independently in the field, down at village level, disagree sharply on the perils of omitting women and their reproductive choices when the future of the earth is at stake.


Hard Times In The High Desert

For most exurbanites, moving back to the city–the preferred option of planners and urban boosters–is not an attractive option. These people could never afford a charming townhouse in Portland’s Pearl District or a loft in New York’s SoHo. For them, the “urban option” means the prospect of a dreary blocky apartment complex in a noisy, crowded, less-than-genteel section of Los Angeles or another large city.


…To my mind, harboring ill will toward the aspirations of exurbanites is hardly “progressive,” at least from a social democratic point of view. Yet many on the so-called left feel that what is generally considered upward mobility needs to be curbed so that the hoi polloi can better live according to the prescriptions of their more enlightened, usually higher-educated and more affluent “betters.”


In contrast, a more humane, and fundamentally democratic, approach would be to find ways to help these communities thrive. The first step: local job creation. Even without the excessive prices associated with “peak oil” theories, gas prices and car expenses do place a considerable burden on many exurbanites. Developing more economic opportunities closer to these communities would relieve this financial burden, while also cutting energy consumption.


OPEC Raises 2009, 2010 Oil Demand Forecasts on Economic Rebound

(Bloomberg) — The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries raised its global oil demand forecasts for this year and 2010 on expectations the world economy will return to growth.


OPEC, responsible for about 40 percent of worldwide oil supply, boosted its 2010 outlook by 150,000 barrels a day and 2009 by 140,000 barrels a day. The group now predicts that consumption will contract 1.8 percent this year to average 84.05 million barrels a day, and then expand 0.6 percent in 2010 to 84.56 million a day.


“Evidence of an impending upturn in the world economy appears to be gathering,” OPEC’s Vienna-based secretariat said today in its monthly market report. Oil prices around a barrel “are likely to persist.”


‘Oil price rise may hurt recovery’

If oil prices continue to rise, they could damage a fragile economic recovery, the International Energy Agency’s executive director Nobuo Tanaka warned today.


U.S. Crude-Oil Supplies Fell Last Week, Survey Shows

(Bloomberg) — U.S. crude-oil inventories probably fell last week as refineries took delivery of less of the raw material before they idle units for seasonal maintenance, a Bloomberg News survey showed.


U.S. refineries often shut units for maintenance in September and October as gasoline demand drops and before heating-oil use increases. Crude-oil imports fell 5 percent to an average 9.1 million barrels a day in the week ended Sept. 4.


Total Struggles to Reverse Output Drop Amid Slowdown

(Bloomberg) — Total SA, Europe’s third-largest oil producer, is struggling to counter falling production as the economic slowdown erodes demand for energy and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries limits output.


The Paris-based explorer pumps about one third of its output from OPEC members, a larger proportion than rivals such as BP Plc partly because of France’s links with the Mideast and Africa. It has also made finds off the Angolan coast and is investing in Venezuela, where President Hugo Chavez has expelled producers refusing to accept new contract terms.


Angola Is U.S. Priority as Rising Oil Output Boosts Influence

(Bloomberg) — Donald Steinberg arrived in Angola in 1995 as U.S. ambassador to find American oilmen doing more than drilling for coastal crude.


“They were, in fact, the American ambassadors to Angola in that period,” Steinberg recalls. “The only real relationship was through the oil companies.”


Angola, currently Africa’s top oil producer, is now a priority in Washington. Hillary Clinton’s overnight visit last month — the first for a U.S. secretary of state — sent the message that America is eager to help transform the former Cold War battleground into a stable energy giant with strong democratic institutions and transparent business practices.


Petrobras Finds More Oil as Gabrielli Sees ‘Fantastic Moment’

(Bloomberg) — Petroleo Brasileiro SA found another deposit of oil and natural gas in Brazil’s Santos Basin as Chief Executive Officer Jose Sergio Gabrielli sought to reassure international investors about the company’s prospects.


The discovery was made together with BG Group Plc and Repsol YPF SA after a fourth well was drilled in the BM-S-9 block off the country’s southeastern coast, Petrobras, Brazil’s state-run oil company, said in a statement last night. The Abare Oeste field is neighbor to the Carioca, Guara and Iguacu fields, where the company has already reported the existence of crude.


Bharat Petroleum Oil Imports May Rise 50% to Record

(Bloomberg) — Bharat Petroleum Corp., an Indian state-refiner, said its crude-oil imports may rise 50 percent to a record next year after completing expansions to meet demand in the second-fastest growing major economy.


Overseas purchases may climb to 24 million metric tons in the year starting April 1, from 16 million this year, finance director S.K. Joshi said in an interview in Mumbai yesterday.


Eni Shuts Livorno Refinery as Unions Protest Job Plan

(Bloomberg) — Eni SpA, Italy’s biggest energy company, closed its refinery in Livorno, potentially curbing fuel supplies amid Europe’s glut, as unions protested against a risk of job cuts in a possible sale.


All deliveries have been blocked except chemicals needed for plant security, said Antonio Fidanza, secretary general for the petroleum energy division of Italy’s biggest union, Cgil, in an interview. The plant has been shut since Sept. 13, he said. An Eni spokeswoman couldn’t immediately comment.


Mexico Oil Bonds Raise .4 Billion to Bolster Public Finances

(Bloomberg) — Mexico’s government raised 32 billion pesos (.4 billion) by selling oil-backed debt to local banks, part of an effort to alleviate budget shortfalls among states, Mexican Finance Minister Agustin Carstens said.


The 13-year debt, yielding 181 basis points over the interbank TIIE swap rate, was sold in a private offering to 12 banks in Mexico, Carstens said yesterday in Mexico City. The debt issuance is backed by a rainy-day oil fund that gets money when crude oil exports sell for more than the budgeted amount.


Newcastle Weekly Coal Exports Fall, Ship Queue Drops

(Bloomberg) — Coal shipments from Australia’s Newcastle port, the world’s biggest export harbor for the fuel, fell 5.6 percent last week while the number of vessels waiting to load declined.


E.ON Delays Building Russian Electricity Unit on Weak Demand

(Bloomberg) — E.ON AG, Germany’s largest utility, postponed the commissioning of a coal-fired unit in Russia and ruled out further power acquisitions in the country for at least three years because of the economic slowdown.


Audit: Gov’t could lose millions in gas royalties

WASHINGTON – The federal government risks losing millions of dollars in royalties from natural gas production because it does not promptly determine and collect when it gets shortchanged, according to congressional auditors.


The Government Accountability Office said in a report Monday that the Minerals Management Service, which manages oil and gas production on public lands, does not have the tools or staff necessary to check that companies are paying the government what it is owed in royalties.


Pakistani Police Thwart Militant Attack on Karachi Oil Terminal

(Bloomberg) — Pakistani police say they thwarted an overnight attack on an oil terminal in the southern city of Karachi and are investigating whether it was carried out by Taliban militants.


Russia should sell oil and gas for roubles – Dvorkovich

MOSCOW (Itar-Tass) – Russia should gradually switch to selling its oil and gas and other raw resources for roubles to turn the rouble into a key regional reserve currency, the Kremlin’s top economic adviser, Arkady Dvorkovich, said on Tuesday.


“If we can somehow interlink the rouble with those goods that we have today, i.e. energy resources – oil, gas and other raw materials, and begin to trade in oil and gas contracts for roubles, the rouble will gradually become an essential currency for many countries,” he said.


Russian energy in disarray

The once all-powerful Russian energy sector appears to be on unpredictable and shaky grounds today. The development of the giant Kovykta gas field, once considered as a major project, has been placed on hold; the jewel in the crown Shtokman field is in trouble; Sakhalin-2 is being forced to divert its gas to the strategic Russian Far East for domestic consumption, while original plans to sell this gas to China are being abandoned.


These fundamental changes come at a time when less-than-transparent deals are taking place in the ownership of Russian oil and gas companies. That raises the question of whether these developments are related and if so, what impact, if any, they could have on European and Asian energy security.


Ghanem ‘is gone’

Shokri Ghanem, the chairman of Libya’s National Oil Company (NOC), is no longer in the post, a senior source in the Libyan General People’s Congress, said today.


Asked about media reports that Ghanem had resigned, the source, speaking on condition of anonymity, told Reuters: “He is gone.”


Obama Urged to Ready Tougher Iran Sanctions, Military Strike

(Bloomberg) — The U.S. should begin preparing crippling sanctions on Iran and publicly make clear that a military strike is possible should the Iranian government press ahead with its nuclear effort, a bipartisan policy group said.


“If biting sanctions do not persuade the Islamic Republic to demonstrate sincerity in negotiations and give up its enrichment activities, the White House will have to begin serious consideration of the option of a U.S.-led military strike against Iranian nuclear facilities,” said the study from the Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington.


China showers gifts on resources-rich Timor

DILI (Reuters) – Dili’s gleaming new Presidential Palace and Foreign Ministry, gifts from China, stand in stark contrast to nearby burned-out buildings and are symbols of how the energy-hungry superpower is growing closer to tiny, oil-rich East Timor.


Norway hands left historic win

Norway’s left-wing coalition held onto a razor-thin majority in Monday’s general election after a campaign pitting improvements to the welfare state against tax cuts in the oil-rich economy.


Labour Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg declared victory for his government, which was seen winning a slim, one-seat majority with 99.4% of votes counted.


California feud breaks out on clean energy plan

SAN FRANCISCO/LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger will veto a bill requiring the state to get a third of its electricity from solar, wind and other renewable sources, his staff said on Monday in a fight that shows the difficulties of addressing climate change fast.


New Oil Discoveries You Should Know

Peak oil enthusiasts seem convinced that the world is heading for a cataclysmic change as the production of oil declines over the next generation. Predictions range from food riots to mass starvation to the extinction of the human race. There’s only one problem with all this – the industry keeps finding more and more oil.


Peak Oil Theory in Crisis

Peak Oil cult membership may wane now that scientists have proved fossil fuels can be created synthetically by replicating the high pressure, high temperature conditions found in the upper mantle of the earth’s crust. In other words, the fossils of animals and plants aren’t needed to produce oil and gas, which means oil and natural gas will be easier to find and may abound all over the world.


Peak oil and an economic recovery

Peak Oil is widely known to be the point at which oil production reaches its highest point and thereafter declines. Most people expect that this point will be reached in the very near future. Others believe we reached the highest point of oil production in the first half of the present decade and that from now on it is all down hill. They are correct.


A detailed analysis prepared for The Oil Drum by Tony Erikson provides reasonable evidence that Peak Oil occurred in 2008. It contends that peak production of 74.8 million barrels per day was achieved in July 2008 and has been in decline since then. Current production is estimated to be about 71 million barrels per day, a decline of 5 per cent, with a further decline of about 7 per cent expected over the next 15 months.


Blind Spot: Peak Oil & the Coming Global Crisis

In this haunting portrait of America’s oil-fueled excesses, director Adolfo Doring explores the inextricable link between the energy we use, the way we run our economy, and the multiplying threats that now confront the environmental health and stability of our planet. Taking as its starting point the inevitable energy depletion scenario known as “Peak Oil,” the film surveys a fascinating range of the latest intellectual, political, and scientific thought to make the case that by whatever measure of greed, wishful thinking, neglect, or ignorance, we now find ourselves at a disturbing crossroads: we can continue to burn fossil fuels and witness the collapse of our ecology, or we can choose not to and witness the collapse of our economy.


Apocalypse Now? Dark Visions At Toronto Film Festival

TORONTO (Reuters) – A new wave of documentaries at this year’s Toronto International Film Festival poses a disturbing question: is environmental and social disaster on a global scale imminent and perhaps inevitable?


Doomsday visions captured by three filmmakers at the annual industry event may have seemed a bit implausible only a couple of years ago. But after the global economy’s near-death experience over the past 12 months, such ideas may no longer strike audiences as radical or hard to fathom.


Against the grain on Norman Borlaug

The criticism was not so much aimed at the man himself, but for the biotech legacy he played such a major role in creating. After all, this was the man who arguably did more than any other to nurture the era of monocrops, GM foods and the intensive use of petrochemical pesticides and fertilisers. He may well have saved a billion people from imminent starvation, but by doing so, say his critics, he also inadvertently helped to plant the seed for future environmental woes.


China committed to peaceful nuclear policy

Wang said China’s peaceful use of nuclear energy had entered a fast development phase. China had established a complete nuclear industrial system and had the capacity to assure a requisite fuel supply for its nuclear energy development.


1.27 million displaced by China’s Three Gorges Dam

BEIJING (AFP) – China has relocated 1.27 million people to make way for the controversial Three Gorges dam development, the world’s largest hydroelectric project, state media reported.


The figure was the total number of relocations as of the end of June, a top dam construction official was quoted as saying by Xinhua news agency in a report issued late Saturday.


Birth defects rise in parts of China: state media

BEIJING (AFP) – The number of newborns with birth defects in many parts of China is rising rapidly as women have children later in life and environmental pollution takes its toll, state media reported Tuesday.


Japan to demand US forces clean up pollution: report

TOKYO (AFP) – Japan’s incoming government plans to oblige US forces stationed in the country to clean up any environmental damage when they move bases, a report said Monday.


The coalition led by the centre-left Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ), which takes power this week, wants to add an environmental clause to the Japan-US Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA), the Sankei newspaper said, without naming its sources.


One in six Mediterranean mammals face extinction

MADRID (AFP) – One in six Mediterranean mammals is threatened with extinction at the regional level, mainly due to the destruction of their habitat from urbanization, agriculture and climate change, nature body IUCN said Tuesday in a new study.


Many climate change costs seen avoidable

LONDON (Reuters) – Climate change could cost some countries up to 19 percent of their gross domestic product by 2030, a panel including major insurance, banking and consulting companies as well as the European Commission said on Monday.


Developing nations will be most vulnerable to the effects of climate change but a lot of their economic loss could be avoided, a report by the Economics of Climate Adaptation (ECA) Working Group said.


Together with prevention and mitigation measures, risk transfer like insurance or catastrophe bonds can play an important role by capping losses from catastrophic events, increasing willingness to invest and providing price signals to financial markets, the working group said.


Greenpeace calls Canada polluter, climate change ‘bully’

MONTREAL (AFP) – Environmental group Greenpeace on Monday accused Canada of contributing to a “global climate crisis” by seeking to expand extraction of oil from tar sands in Alberta province.


In a report entitled “Dirty Oil” the organization also says that Canada, along with Japan, is seeking to block progress towards a new global climate change agreement to be finalized at a December summit in Copenhagen.


Alberta’s ‘firewall’ approach to climate change

There’s been talk lately that the Harper government’s climate change policy will favour oil sands production at the expense of Ontario and Quebec’s manufacturing sector.


Environment Minister Jim Prentice has publicly denied that he is promoting such a scheme in private meetings.


But the suspicion lingers on, mainly because the Harperites have yet to produce a clear and detailed plan that spells out exactly how they intend to curb greenhouse gas emissions in Canada, and particularly in Alberta, the country’s largest emitter.


Aussie rocker Garrett won’t join climate change song

SYDNEY (AFP) – Left-wing rocker turned Australian environment minister Peter Garrett said Tuesday he would not join 55 world celebrities in reprising one of his greatest hits in the name of climate change.


The former Midnight Oil frontman said he and the band had collaborated with the Geneva-based Global Humanitarian Forum on a revamp of their 1980s hit “Beds Are Burning”, but would not take part in the recording.


Ethiopia seeks climate change answers from public

ADDIS ABABA (AFP) – Ethiopia will conduct a nationwide canvass of opinion to enable people to submit their ideas on how to tackle climate change, state media reported on Tuesday.


The Ethiopian News Agency said the Horn of Africa country’s population would be consulted over two months and the results of the forum would help shape Africa’s position during key talks in Copenhagen in December.


Climate Mystery

‘The Climate Mystery’ is a new computer game available for free on the internet as teaching aid for teens in the weeks leading up to the December climate summit in Copenhagen. ‘We wanted to use an engrossing story to capture and maintain interest in on climate issues,’ Christian Fonnesbech, creative director of Congin, the game’s designer, said during its launch yesterday.Each week players will be presented with a new problem they need to deal with in order to solve the mystery. The problems, such as floods and forest fires, should also help them to find the four main characters.


Re-elected Norway premier to fight climate change

OSLO – Norway’s prime minister on Tuesday said fighting climate change would be a priority in his second term after his left-leaning government beat a splintered opposition to win re-election.


Jens Stoltenberg’s Labor-led coalition won 86 seats to keep a slim majority in the 169-seat Parliament after using oil money to shield the Nordic welfare state from the global recession.


El Niño, Global Warming Link Questioned; Possible Link Between 1918 El Niño And Flu Pandemic?

ScienceDaily — Research conducted at Texas A&M University casts doubts on the notion that El Niño has been getting stronger because of global warming and raises interesting questions about the relationship between El Niño and a severe flu pandemic 91 years ago. The findings are based on analysis of the 1918 El Niño, which the new research shows to be one of the strongest of the 20th century.


By 2055, state’s climate could look more like Missouri’s, study finds

The first detailed research on Wisconsin’s climate is forecasting a jump in average annual temperatures of 4 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit by midcentury, which could push humans and nature to adapt to weather conditions that at times resemble Missouri today.


The findings are unique for climate research in Wisconsin because researchers are making predictions about the future on a local scale.


New study makes dire prediction for Minnesota forests

St. Paul, Minn. — A new article by University of Minnesota ecologists says Minnesota’s forests could shrink more rapidly than expected, as droughts, fires, and growth of native and exotic species accelerate the changes caused by global warming.


The authors argue that prairie lands could expand by as much as 300 miles in the next 50 to 100 years, pushing Minnesota’s forests further north. The changes would significantly alter the state’s landscape, and could impact industry and development.


Interior Launches Climate Strategy

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar launched the Obama administration’s first coordinated response to the impacts of climate change Monday, which he said would both monitor how global warming is altering the nation’s landscape and help the country cope with those changes.


Salazar will lead a new “climate change response council” that will coordinate action among the department’s eight bureaus and offices. A secretarial order will create eight “regional climate change response centers” in areas ranging from Alaska to the Northeast and build landscape conservation cooperatives that will create strategies for the eight regions with the help of state and local groups, and other federal agencies.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 15, 2009

Drumbeat: September 14, 2009

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009


Kjell Aleklett: Peak Oil is not a theory; Peak Oil is the reality of past and future oil production.

Over the past five years, Mr. Michael Lynch and I have debated future global oil production at meetings in Gothenburg (Sweden), Paris and Shanghai. We have also conducted the debate through an exchange of emails published in the British journal Science and Public Affairs in December 2008. The arguments that Mr. Lynch advances are, therefore, well known to me. The fact that he is an economist and I am a natural scientist means that we see the future of oil production from two different perspectives, but are in agreement that access to oil is of great importance to the world economy and our future.


What has prompted Mr. Lynch to write his recent opinion piece in the New York Times appears to be a statement from Dr. Fatih Birol of the International Energy Agency (IEA) that Peak Oil is near. At the same time, Mr. Lynch attempts to discredit a number of dedicated and qualified people who work on the Peak Oil issue as well as ASPO, the Association for the Study of Peak Oil&Gas. To suggest that Dr. Birol would base his assertion on “anecdotal information” is astonishing. One wonders what secret information Mr. Lynch possesses and does not wish to share with the IEA.


The first peak oil recession: Interview with Steven Kopits

Question: When did you learn about the peak oil story?


Kopits: I was preparing investor documentation—a prospectus for a public offering. As part of my work, I was looking at oil supply and demand issues, in particular as they related to China. When I ran the numbers, I found that projected demand turned out to be considerably greater than what the EIA was stating. Just for the sake of completeness, I thought to confirm that the oil supply was adequate to meet Chinese demand growth. Now you should keep in mind that, at the time, I thought peak oil was pure fantasy. But when I checked, supply growth promised to be much less than the EIA was indicating. I became concerned because I couldn’t find the resources on paper.


Raymond J. Learsy: Chairman of Gazprom Predicts 0 Oil Because of Speculation. Speculation, Really?

This weekend, there was Alexei Miller, Chairman of Russia’s major energy company, Gazprom, predicting that the price of oil would jump to 0 a barrel because of ’speculation’. Now there is a man who should know what he is talking about, or certainly what he shouldn’t be talking about. And he should know when the fix is in. One little detail however. His language, one could surmise, is willfully misleading. ‘Speculation’ should not be the operative word. Rather ‘manipulation’ would be more to the point.


Same Old Hope: This Bubble Is Different

Economists also worry that commodity bubbles, which tend to be more cyclical, may strike again. Oil and gold prices are rising, and though both of those commodities have boomed and busted many times in the last century, investors may bet on unrealistically high growth once more. Gold prices, for example, have risen more than 30 percent from a year ago.


“With every commodity bubble, you see a whole new set of rationalizations,” Mr. Yergin said. “People find ways to shut out the reality of economic processes. If oil prices shoot up, investors are always surprised to see demand go down again.”


Crude awakening

Today’s regulators are fixated on banking reform, and rightfully so. Financial industries have buckled under fallout from the credit crisis. Although oil price gyrations also share blame for the recession, commodity futures markets are receiving less urgent attention than banking system repairs. Because crude oil prices have been relatively well-behaved in 2009, the dangers of spikes and squeezes seem less drastic now.


Yet authorities who postpone energy regulation may do so at their peril.


Resource nationalism

Opec left quotas unchanged last week, but oil is still high enough to produce stirrings of resource nationalism, which had earlier waned as oil prices slumped. Brazil’s president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has proposed rules that would give government-controlled Petrobras a privileged role in developing its vast “pre-salt” offshore reserves. Petrobras is this week meeting international oil companies to reassure them they will not be squeezed out.


Recovery Drives Commodities ‘Hiring Boom,’ Lai Says

(Bloomberg) — Global banks are engaged in a hiring boom for commodity traders as they add staff to benefit from surging metals and energy prices, offering million packages for top employees, recruiters Robert Walters Plc said.


There’s “huge demand for physical traders,” Gary Lai, manager of financial services at Robert Walters in Singapore, said today in an interview. “For top traders, especially investment bank traders, million is not unexpected, it’s easy to get,” Lai said, referring to salaries and bonuses combined.


Pertamina may retain oil supply rights – regulator

JAKARTA (Reuters) – Indonesia’s state oil firm Pertamina may retain its exclusive right to supply and distribute subsidised oil products next year, a regulator said Monday, beating out interest from several international oil firms.


Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Malaysia’s Petronas [PETR.UL] were among the companies that have joined an Indonesian tender to distribute subsidised gasoline and diesel oil.


Libya’s Peace Offering To Big Oil

A billion oil fields upgrade is an attempt to pacify its foreign partners as political tensions escalate.


Venezuela’s Chavez Agrees to .2 Billion Russian Arms Pact

(Bloomberg) — Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said Russia will provide a .2 billion credit line for weapons purchases and will jointly develop oil fields and nuclear energy.


Venezuela will buy 92 T-72S tanks, Smerch missiles with a range of 90 kilometers and an S-300 Antey-2500 anti-aircraft defense system including radar and missiles with a range of 400 kilometers, Chavez said yesterday during his weekly program “Alo Presidente” on state television.


Trinidad and Tobago: Oil, gas and the budget

T&T earned substantial revenues when energy prices were high. The collapse of the world economy and the demand and prices of petroleum are normally laid at the feet of the sub-prime mortgage issue. The large and rapidly increasing demand for oil and other commodities by, say, China and India coupled with the supply constraints (economic, geological and political-Peak Oil) drove the price of oil rapidly to US7/bbl and gas US/mmcf. This forced countries to look towards renewables and with ethanol-driven land use the prices of food rose considerably. The world economy began to contract, destroying demand for fossil fuels while the financial crisis hastened the global economic collapse.


Kuwait, Saudi ‘delivering Opec cuts’

Core Gulf Arab Opec members Saudi Arabia and Kuwait are delivering 98 per cent of the crude output cuts they have pledged under Opec deals, Kuwait’s oil minister was reported as saying by state news agency Kuna.


The crude realities of diplomacy

‘Follow the money’ is the advice routinely offered to detectives in low-budget thrillers. For anyone attempting to understand the ebbs and flows of international politics, I offer a variant of that old line: “Follow the oil”. Any suggestion that the search for energy is fundamental to the foreign policy of Britain and the US is often treated as faintly indecent. In Britain, the government is currently angrily brushing off suggestions that the decision to release Adbelbaset Ali Mohmed Al Megrahi, the Libyan convicted of the Lockerbie bombing, had anything to do with Libya’s oil and gas.


Russia and Turkmenistan fail to reach new gas deal

Russian and Turkmen leaders failed yesterday to set a timeframe for the return of Turkmen gas flows to Russia, halted since April after a pipeline blast that left the nation short of revenues.


The meeting between Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev and Turkmen leader Kurbanguly Berdymukhamedov had been expected to generate a breakthrough and mend ties. Relations were hit after Turkmenistan accused Russia of suspending gas imports because Russia’s gas export monopoly Gazprom faced reduced demand in Europe.


Statoil: “open” on Shakh Deniz gas sales

MOSCOW (Reuters) – The president of StatoilHydro in Russia said on Monday gas sales from the second phase of the Shakh Deniz project in Azerbaijan was ‘an open issue’.


Shakh Deniz has been courted by Russian gas giant Gazprom and an EU-sponsored consortium which is working on the Nabucco gas pipeline, which is expected to rival Russian plans to supply Europe with the fuel.


Total Executive: Gasoline Demand To Fall In US, Europe

BRUSSELS -(Dow Jones)- Gasoline demand in the U.S.and Europe is expected to fall through to 2020 due to the recession, climate change legislation and new refining capacity, a Total SA (TOT) executive said Monday.


“We are quite convinced at Total that in both regions the consumption will decrease very sharply,” Andre Tricoire, senior vice president of refining, said.


Chevron, Exxon, Shell Agree to Build Gorgon LNG Plant

(Bloomberg) — Chevron Corp. and its partners approved development of Australia’s Gorgon project, clearing the way for a venture forecast to earn A0 billion (8 billion) in gas sales to China, India and Japan in its first 20 years.


The project will cost A billion in its first phase, with work on a liquefied natural gas plant to start immediately on Barrow Island, a nature reserve off the northwest coast, 50 percent-owner and operator Chevron said today. LNG exports from the 15-million-metric-ton-a-year venture are due to start 2014.


Repsol’s Venezuelan Find Will Need 5 Years to Develop

(Bloomberg) — Repsol YPF SA, the Spanish oil company that announced one of the world’s largest natural-gas discoveries last week, said the field will take as many as five years to be developed.


“Four to five years is the time that is needed to develop a project of this quantity and quality,” Chief Executive Officer Antonio Brufau said in an interview in Madrid today. “The next five years will be an investment process.”


Reliance May Seek Oil Fields Overseas to Cut Risk

(Bloomberg) — Reliance Industries Ltd. may buy oil fields in the Gulf of Mexico and Brazil to hedge the risk of investing in India where a dispute over pricing of gas is shaving 0 million off monthly sales.


“We put too many eggs in one basket, we put too much time into one asset,” P.M.S. Prasad, president of the oil and gas business at India’s most valuable company, said in an interview at Reliance’s gas-processing terminal at Gadimoga in the southern state of Andhra Pradesh. “We might change our strategy now and look to spread our geographical and geological risks.”


E.ON Sees EDF Capacity Swap Soon, Delays Russian, German Plants

(Bloomberg) — E.ON AG, Germany’s largest utility, expects to reach an agreement with Electricite de France SA on swapping power-generating capacity soon, while putting projects in Russia and Germany on hold as the recession erodes demand.


Brazil and Mexico: Pitfalls of Protectionism

Brazil and Mexico are in danger of going down the path blazed by Venezuela: after years of opening up trade and improving their economies they are reintroducing protectionism in oil and gas.


This energy analyst describes how the real patriotic move would be to stimulate exploitation – and therefore employment and the economy – by welcoming foreign firms instead of favouring state-run and domestic firms.


Nigeria’s Planned 500MW Power Plant To Cost 0 Million Official

IBADAN, Nigeria -(Dow Jones)- The first phase of an independent power project to be built in the industrial city of Aba in Nigeria’s southeast Abia state is to cost 0 million, the state-run Bureau of Public Enterprises, or BPE, said Sunday.


Sasol’s Annual Profit Falls 39% on Oil Price Decline

(Bloomberg) — Sasol Ltd., the world’s largest producer of motor fuels made from coal, said annual profit fell 39 percent after oil prices declined.


Net income fell to 13.6 billion rand (.8 billion) in the 12 months through June from 22.4 billion rand a year earlier, Johannesburg-based Sasol said in a statement to the JSE stock exchange’s news service today.


Long-term coal supply a threat

(Reuters) – South Africa’s power utility Eskom faces considerable pressure to sustain long-term coal supplies, its chief executive said in remarks broadcast on Saturday.


“Now we are doing the long term. It is by no stretch of the imagination complete. It is still a big issue. The whole issue of the availability of coal long term. The price and the logistics,” said Jacob Maroga.


The global economic crisis badly hit the utility’s ability to borrow and Eskom was forced to buy coal on more expensive short-term contracts to boost supply during last year’s crisis.


A new security paradigm is needed to protect critical US energy infrastructure from cyberwarfare

On the 8th anniversary week of 9/11, the US remains vulnerable to a devastating cyber attack directed at its critical infrastructure. Despite all the warning signs of this threat, policy makers continue to prepare for the last war, ignoring the major lesson of both 9/11 and Pearl Harbor–not to be prepared, but to understand the changing nature of warfare. US policy makers need to adopt a new security paradigm to defend its critical assets in cyberspace, especially energy infrastructure, from a devastating cyber strike.


District 719: Author is no ‘Fossil Fool’

At 77 years old, Joe Shuster doesn’t have much of a personal stake in the impending depletion of fossil fuels, or the havoc such energy sources can wreak on the planet. But that didn’t stop him from penning a tome he hopes will steer future generations clear of an energy-fueled disaster.


In “Beyond Fossil Fools: The Roadmap to Energy Independence by 2040,” Shuster lays out a step-by-step plan to get the United States and the rest of the world off fossil fuels and onto a multi-sourced diet of renewable energy sources.


Is Sustainable Development an Oxymoron?

As modern society increasingly becomes a single, globalized civilization, the quality of life that post-industrial nations have come to expect is now is becoming achievable around the world. Living on a planet of finite resources, widespread development can only last so long; it’s not sustainable over the long-term. The Western ideals being spread to developing nations are material intensive and would be physically impossible to achieve.


Offshore Wind to Provide One-Fifth of EU Power, Producers Say

(Bloomberg) — Offshore wind may provide as much as 17 percent of European Union electricity demand by 2030, surging from almost nothing now as the bloc promotes renewable energy, an industry group said.


Where have all the little cars gone?

But the shortage of cars out there in rental-land is also a function of the economy.


“It’s the fallout from the credit crunch,” Brown said, explaining that rental companies are suffering from high-interest rates and a decline in manufacturing because of the auto industry slump. As as result, car rental fleets have diminished.


Customers are also more educated about mileage. “After what happened last summer with gas at a gallon, no one wants to upgrade,” Brown said.


Repair Options for Ailing Electronics

Mr. Sanderson also repairs iPods and iPhones, and his business is booming.


“There’s definitely a huge surge in the amount of repairs” in this economic climate, he said, as people choose to keep what they have rather than spend twice as much on the newest model.


City life is a honey trap for France’s beleaguered bees

“We notice that apiaries located in the heart of Paris get better results than those in the countryside,” explained Nicolas Géant, the French bee-keeper who initiated the project at the Grand Palais in order to draw attention to the predicament of rural bees.


“Towns offer myriad small flowers in parks and on balconies, as well as a wide variety of trees along streets and in public gardens. By contrast, there is no longer enough food for bees in rural and cultivated areas. The mortality there is 30 to 50 per cent but very small in Paris.”


Henri Clement, president of France’s main apiarist union, Unaf, says changes in French agriculture have damaged the bees’ habitat. “Both monoculture and the intensive use of pesticides, fungicides and fertilisers kill massive numbers of bees,” he explained.


Climate bill politics are heating up

Reporting from Washington – After months of promoting President Obama’s climate plan as a vehicle to create millions of clean-energy jobs, supporters of the legislation are increasingly pushing another strategy — its benefits for national security.


It’s a deliberate, anxiety-themed effort to press a handful of fence-sitting moderates to support a bill that will probably be the administration’s next great legislative push after healthcare.


Sweden urges US Senate to pass climate bill

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Sweden’s environment minister urged the U.S. Senate on Monday to pass legislation to control greenhouse gases, saying a delay in the vote is impeding negotiations on a new international climate treaty.


Minister Andreas Carlgren said America’s complex debate over health care reforms is sidelining its vote on a climate bill that is needed to persuade other nations — especially the fast-growing economies of India and China — to commit to lowering their greenhouse gas emissions at the Copenhagen climate summit in December.


New Zealand floats new climate change policy to cut consumer costs

Wellington – New Zealand’s centre-right government released details Monday of a new climate change policy that it said would halve forecast price rises for power and fuel as the country moves to cut greenhouse gas emissions blamed for global warming. The minority government which came to power in November said its plan would reduce the initial extra cost on the average household to 3 New Zealand dollars (2.10 US dollars) a week over the next three years.


It also gave New Zealand’s farmers, whose animals’ methane production account for about half the country’s greenhouse gases, another two years before they have to start paying for their emissions.


Report predicts the severe economic cost of climate change

Climate change could cut gross domestic product in countries at risk from extreme weather by a fifth in little more than ten years, a report said on Monday.


Unless urgent action is taken to cut carbon emissions, countries prone to severe weather-events such as floods, droughts or hurriances could have up to 19% knocked off their annual GDP by 2030.


UK: Could rationing be back?

The Institute for Public Policy Research (ippr), has published a report warning that 70 years after wartime rationing was introduced, the government may need to look to rationing again – this time of carbon rather than food – in the fight against climate change.


Putting cattle on a diet to curb climate change

(CNN) — Much has been made of the problem of livestock emissions of methane — a far more potent greenhouse gas than CO2 — but a solution might be just around the corner.


“I really think it’s a solvable problem,” Professor Jamie Newbold of the Animal and Microbial Sciences Division, Aberystwyth University, Wales, told CNN.



JPMorgan Offers 3 Million for Carbon-Trader EcoSecurities

(Bloomberg) –A JPMorgan Chase & Co. subsidiary offered to buy EcoSecurities Group Plc, manager of the largest number of emission projects overseen by the United Nations, for 122.9 million pounds (3 million).


Breakthrough

The mystery of the Northeast Passage has been broken, but at a terrible price.


A new Dark Age?

We need to do more to prevent the world descending into a new Dark Age as a result of climate change, argues Professor Tim Flannery.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 14, 2009

Offshore WindCould Supply 10% of Europe, EWEA Says

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

New research findings revealed by the European Wind Energy Association (EWEA) show that existing and planned European offshore wind projects would, if implemented, supply 10% of Europe’s electricity.

Drumbeat: September 11, 2009

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009


Analysis: Pemex Strives to Increase Production through Offshore Drilling

The petroleum industry in Mexico is in a race to catch up. Although a major non-OPEC country and the seventh-largest oil producer in the world, production in the Latin American country is on the decline.


In fact, the EIA reports that the country’s production has fallen from 3.5 million barrels of oil a day in 2007 to 3.19 million barrels of oil a day in 2008. Furthermore, according to the agency’s Short-Term Energy Report published in March 2009, production is expected to slip even further. In 2009, production in Mexico is expected to average 2.9 million barrels of oil a day, and then in 2010, production is predicted to fall to 2.7 million barrels of oil a day.


Mexico’s PRI May Favor Raising Oil Price Estimate in Budget

(Bloomberg) — Mexico’s largest party in the lower house of congress might seek to raise the estimate for the price of Mexico’s oil exports in next year’s budget, lawmaker Oscar Levin said.


U.S., Canada to conclude joint survey of extended continental shelf in Arctic

SAN FRANCISCO (Xinhua) The United States and Canada will conclude a joint 41-day exploration of the continental shelf and ocean basins in the Arctic, which may find evidence to support the two countries’ claims to the rich oil resources sleeping under the sea floor.


According to the U.S. State Department, two ice breakers, the U.S. coast Guard Cutter Healy and the Canadian Coast Guard Ship Louis S. St-Laurent launched the joint mission on Aug. 7. The two ships were scheduled to cross the icy areas from the north of Alaska to Alpha-Mendeleev Ridge and eastwards toward the Canada Archipelago. The mission will conclude next Wednesday.


Shell CEO says price hike

CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) – Another round of significant oil price increases could come within four to five years because oil companies slashed investments to cope with last year’s plunge in oil prices, Peter Voser, Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s (RDSa.L) chief executive, said on Friday.


Shell Sees Time, Not Technology, as Renewable-Energy Challenge

(Bloomberg) — Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe’s biggest oil company, said large-scale deployment is a bigger challenge than technological advances in replacing fossil fuels with renewable energy sources.


It typically takes 25 years for new energy sources to build their share of global energy supplies to 1 percent, Shell Chief Executive Officer Peter Voser said today at a conference in Calgary. The Swiss-born Voser, 51, succeeded Jeroen van der Veer as CEO at Shell, based in The Hague, in July.


Repsol Says It Makes Venezuela’s Biggest Gas Find

(Bloomberg) — Repsol YPF SA, Spain’s biggest oil company, discovered a Venezuelan gas field containing as much as 8 trillion cubic feet of fuel, one of the world’s largest finds.


The field’s potential gas resources would be enough to supply Spain for more than five years, the company said today in an e-mailed statement. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Repsol Chief Executive Officer Antonio Brufau discussed the find in Madrid today, the company said.


ExxonMobil has trouble hawking fields

US supermajor ExxonMobil has been unable to sell four Canadian fields as low natural-gas prices discourage potential buyers.


The properties, which include ExxonMobil’s stake in the Yukon Territory’s only producing gas field, have not attracted any suitors since they were put up for sale on 4 May, Bruce Rauch, an ExxonMobil asset-enhancement manager based in Calgary, said.


Shell’s Renumeration Chief, Attacked Over Pay Awards, to Retire

(Bloomberg) — Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe’s biggest oil company, said the chairman of its renumeration committee, who came under attack from shareholders over executive pay awards earlier this year, is standing down.


Oil-Rich Caspian Neighbors Say They Didn’t Mean to Snub Iran

(Bloomberg) — Iran’s northern neighbors agreed to discuss the boundaries of the energy-rich Caspian Sea with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad after his government protested its exclusion from a regional meeting.


Storm little threat to Gulf flows

US oil producers and refiners said operations were normal on Friday morning as they monitored a storm system in the western Gulf of Mexico that has a low chance of becoming a tropical cyclone.


Environmental Groups Wait to See Definitive Action From Obama

The White House’s main effort has been to undo several Bush-era policies on climate control, air pollution and the regulation of roadless forests. Those actions, combined with court decisions that have struck down other rules, have given President Obama a relatively blank canvas on which to redraw U.S. environmental policy. But the administration has been cautious, leaving key issues in limbo and questions unanswered about the way it would balance environmentalism and the economy.


The electric-fuel-trade acid test

IN 1995 Joseph Bower and Clayton Christensen, two researchers at the Harvard Business School, invented a new term: “disruptive technology”. This is an innovation that fulfils the requirements of some, but not most, consumers better than the incumbent does. That gives it a toehold, which allows room for improvement and, eventually, dominance. The risk for incumbent firms is that of the proverbial boiling frog. They may not know when to switch from old to new until it is too late.


The Problem With ‘Eat Local’

HOUSTON — With the world population headed toward 9 billion by 2050, Texas author James McWilliams wants more genetically modified organisms and more subsidies to feed people, not cattle.


His new book, Just Food: Where Locavores Get it Wrong and How We Can Truly Eat Responsibly, is sure to irritate organic food fundamentalists. He recently talked to Forbes.


Michael Pollan: Big Food vs. Big Insurance

No one disputes that the .3 trillion we devote to the health care industry is often spent unwisely, but the fact that the United States spends twice as much per person as most European countries on health care can be substantially explained, as a study released last month says, by our being fatter. Even the most efficient health care system that the administration could hope to devise would still confront a rising tide of chronic disease linked to diet.


That’s why our success in bringing health care costs under control ultimately depends on whether Washington can summon the political will to take on and reform a second, even more powerful industry: the food industry.


Climate Bill Will Save Each US Household ,600 Due to Reduced Oil Imports: EIA

According to the EIA, oil imports would drop by 590,000 barrels per day by 2020 under ACES. Currently the US imports about 9.8 million barrels of crude oil per day.


So in terms of actually reducing US dependence on foreign oil that’s not really that much, but it does add up in terms of money saved. Cumulatively though 2030 the US would save 8 billion — or ,600 per household. Or, using the same cumulative math, 6 per household per year through 2030 just from reduced oil imports. That’s in constant 2007 dollars, by the way


8 signs you’re an energy-hogging jerk

Following the advice may not make you any less of a jerk, but at least it will make you a more energy-efficient jerk, noted John Rogers, a senior energy analyst with the Union of Concerned Scientists in Cambridge, Mass., who helped compile the list.


Obama Administration: US Has Overinvested In Oil, Gas

The Obama administration opened a new front in its effort to impose .5 billion in taxes on oil and gas companies, saying that the nation puts too much emphasis on oil and gas at the expense of other industries.


The chief economist in the Obama administration’s Treasury Department testified before a Senate panel that current subsidies “lead to overinvestment” in the oil and gas industry. That went beyond previous statements about the need to protect taxpayers and was the clearest signal yet that the federal government hopes to end its role in nurturing domestic oil and gas production.


“To the extent that current subsidies for the oil and gas industry encourage the overproduction of oil and natural gas, they divert resources from other, potentially more efficient investments, and they are inconsistent with the Obama administration’s goals to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and build a new, clean energy economy,” Alan Krueger, the Treasury’s chief economist, told the panel.


Import prices spike as oil rises

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — U.S. import prices spiked 2% in August as the cost of oil rose, the Labor Department said on Friday.


The increase, twice what analysts polled by Reuters had expected, was the fifth rise in the last six months. It followed a July drop of 0.7%.


Excluding petroleum, import prices increased a much milder 0.4% in August after falling 0.3% in July. Petroleum prices were up 10.5% and fuel import costs were up 9.8% — both the sixth increases in the past seven months.


The Biggest Threat to the U.S. Oil Supply

My colleague David Lee Smith detailed the matter of Cantarell’s dangerous decline curve in a seminal piece back in 2007. At that time, production had slipped by 20% in a little more than one year, from 2 million to 1.6 million barrels per day. The declines have only gotten more dramatic.


Last summer, Cantarell dropped below the 1 million barrels a day. This July, output registered a 40% year-on-year decline, to a little more than half a million barrels per day. That’s a 72% decline from peak production rates in 2005.


Pemex Sells .5 Billion of 5.5-Year Bonds in Overseas Markets

(Bloomberg) — Petroleos Mexicanos, the largest oil producer in Latin America, sold .5 billion of 5.5-year bonds to help finance a record investment plan, according to a person familiar with the transaction.


Pemex, as the Mexico City-based company is known, sold the bonds to yield 2.75 percentage points above U.S. Treasuries, said the person, who declined to be identified because he’s not allowed to speak publicly.


Mexico’s Fading Oil Output Squeezes Exports, Spending

Mexico’s oil output is falling faster than expected, increasing the chance that the country will lose its status as a major oil exporter in coming years and face a worsening budget shortfall.


Output at state-owned oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos’s offshore field Cantarell, once the world’s second-largest oil field, has plunged to 500,000 barrels a day from its peak of 2.1 million in 2005.


“I don’t recall seeing anything in the industry as dramatic as Cantarell,” says Mark Thurber, assistant director for research at the Program on Energy and Sustainable Development at Stanford University.


Pemex Sees “Doubts” About Chicontepec Profitability

(Bloomberg) — Petroleos Mexicanos, the state- owned oil company, needs to find a profitable way to develop its Chicontepec field, Chief Executive Officer Juan Jose Suarez Coppel said.


There are “certainly doubts” about the field’s profitability and the technology that should be used, said Suarez Coppel, who took the helm of Latin America’s largest oil producer on Sept. 8. “Chicontepec has a great potential, and we have to keep investing to find a way to exploit it in a profitable manner,” he said today in a Radio Formula interview.


Sinopec to double oil refining size

CHINA Petroleum and Chemical Corp, commonly known as Sinopec, plans to spend 24 billion yuan (US.5 billion) to double capacity of a refining project in Fujian Province.


Asia’s biggest oil refiner will expand the refinery – part of China’s first Sino-foreign integrated refining and petrochemical project – in the southeast China’s province to 24 million tons a year, or about 480,000 barrels per day, according to a newsletter issued by its parent company yesterday.


Crude Reality – A Closer Look at the Almost Perfect Crime

Interestingly, the U.S. government chose not to publicly disclose that they were involved in crude oil swaps – because their intention was to stall manically rising prices, creating a temporary “physical glut” in the market place – and to DRIVE CRUDE OIL PRICES DOWN. Their actions were only recorded “buried” in foot notes of the Department of Energy’s Annual Report where, I’m certain, they assumed no one would ever look.


Did S.C.’s gouging law worsen gas shortage?

The S.C. law that prevents price rip-offs might have prevented something else during the monthlong statewide gas shortage that started a year ago today.


Some gas stations refused refills because of skyrocketing prices, an industry official said.


“That law and threat from the (state) attorney general kept plastic bags on the pumps,” said Michael Fields, executive director of the S.C. Petroleum Marketers Association. “If they knew their next load would cost .50 (a gallon), they knew they would be accused of gouging. … They knew no one would believe, ‘I gotta charge this because this is what it costs.’”


ExxonMobil, Qatar Gas put more downward pressure on LNG prices

Last week, the Henry Hub spot price for natural gas touched .83/million btu. On August 28, the Purvin & Gertz LNG netback at the Isle of Grain was .13/million btu for Algerian LNG. At Lake Charles the netback price touched {content}.44 for Nigerian LNG and close study of all sources reveals that the potential for prices to go lower is real. While ExxonMobil is in a leadership position, they are joined by many others including Royal Dutch Shell, Total GDF-Suez, BG, Chevron plus national oil companies that include Saudi Aramco, Sonatrach, Sonangol and Gazprom among others. Even with a strong growth in demand for all categories of natural gas, it is now reaching the point where LNG has a commanding lead by virtue of its low and falling extraction cost. One possible consequence of this in Europe is that Gazprom’s North Stream and South Stream pipelines no longer make economic sense.


Split on the atom

When Vladimir Putin visited Ankara last month, one of the Russian prime minister’s main objectives was to breathe new life into Turkey’s long-held dream of developing civil nuclear power. The planned reactor at Akkuyu on Turkey’s south-east coast, conceived in the 1970s and now being developed by a Russian-Turkish consortium, is still delayed by haggling over the price. But Turkey has made clear it is firmly committed to acquiring nuclear generation capacity.


Shelving the project back in 2000, Bulent Ecevit, then the country’s prime minister, said the world had turned against nuclear power. Now, as Tony Blair, the former UK prime minister, once said, it is back “with a vengeance”. If the world is to meet its demand for energy and address the threat of climate change, then plenty of other countries will, like Turkey, have to acquire civil nuclear technology for the first time.


San Francisco gets smart with green technology

San Francisco is using advanced technology – and the strong arm of government – to turn the city into one of America’s greenest.


Darpa Seeks to Tap Water’s Power Potential

The quest for limitless energy has preoccupied military researchers for years, and Darpa, the Pentagon’s far-out science arm, has often led the way. Now the agency is looking for yet another method to harness cheap and environmentally friendly energy that would be as simple as turning on the tap.


Well, sort of. Darpa is soliciting proposals for using seawater to create liquid fuel. Their hope is to harvest the abundance of carbon and hydrogen in ocean water, and somehow convert the molecules, via chemical reaction, into usable energy. Since fuel is mostly made up of hydrocarbons, the right interplay between water molecules and the carbon dioxide lurking among them would — in theory — yield fuel compounds.


350 and counting

For a growing number of people in the world, 350 is no longer just a number. In the past year several nations have waged a campaign to reduce the presence of carbon dioxide in the earth’s atmosphere to 350 parts per million. Scientists say this level is the safe limit for humanity due to the effects of this greenhouse gas.


Journalist Bill McKibben took this apocalyptic piece of scientific data and used it to launch a worldwide campaign to fight global warming. The founder and director of 350.org, McKibben visited Israel this week as a guest of a coalition of local environmental organizations.


People, Let’s Get Our Carbon Down

But this environmentalism can’t just be about the dangers we’ll face if we don’t take action–Green the Block means embracing the changes we must make as a way to build inclusive, thriving local economies. We need to put people to work swinging hammers–not building luxury condos for people with easy credit but installing insulation in old homes and solar hot-water heaters on roofs. We need urban farming and strong local businesses standing up to the big boxes that suck the life and money from communities.


Russia tells OPEC: We never promised you anything

Russia will make no apologies to OPEC for boosting oil CL-FT production to record monthly highs and can invest in new fields while crude trades at current levels around (U.S.) per barrel, the country’s energy minister said.


Sergei Shmatko told reporters the world’s No. 2 oil exporter would apply zero export duties for East Siberian oilfields from the end of September, although it would step in to regulate the oil sector should world prices plunge again.


“We never had any obligations (to OPEC). When we were communicating, we never promised anything,” Mr. Shmatko said late on Thursday, after OPEC members decided to retain output cuts.


Shtokman timing ‘down to demand’

Gazprom may delay the launch of the giant Shtokman gas field beyond 2013 should demand in Europe not recover fast enough, the Russian company’s export chief said today.


Deputy chief executive Alexander Medvedev also told Reuters Gazprom was considering partnering with South Korean state-owned company Koren Gas Corporation (Kogas) at a liquefied natural gas project in Russia’s Far East.


U.S. Energy Department Inventory Data Signals Good News for Oil Producers

The price of crude oil wasn’t exactly surging on Thursday – but apart from that, there was no end to the good news for oil producers.


The U.S. Energy Department noted in its weekly inventory data that crude oil stockpiles fell 5.9 million barrels, well above estimates for a decline of just 1.6 million barrels. This suggests, for the time being at least, that energy consumption is on the rise.


Halliburton betting on deepwater projects

Halliburton Co., the world’s second-largest oil field-services provider, is betting on deepwater oil and gas drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, Brazil and West Africa to bolster earnings.


Explorers have contracted 16 new deepwater rigs, which are expected to arrive in the second half, Tim Probert, president of Halliburton’s drilling division, said in an interview. Some 30 more rigs will be delivered in 2010 and early 2011, he estimated.


ArcelorMittal to Complete Saudi Arabia Oil Pipe Mill in 2011

(Bloomberg) — ArcelorMittal, the world’s largest steelmaker, said it will complete a mill in Saudi Arabia to make pipes for the oil industry in 2011, at least two years later than scheduled, to tap a revival in demand.


Analyst: Shell could be first to liquefy gas offshore

Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe’s largest oil company, may be the first company to develop a floating liquefied natural gas project with the location likely to be off northern Australia, an energy consultant said.


“The pioneering floating LNG project is likely to occur somewhere where you have got benign sea conditions and where you have got a stable fiscal and political environment,” Daryl Houghton, senior LNG consultant at Poten & Partners, said at a conference in Darwin today. “That sort of sounds like northern Australia to me.”


Energy Information Administration Alludes to Speculative Money Affecting Oil Prices

In response to Congressional pressure for greater energy market transparency, new EIA director Richard Newell said his agency will now harvest more information about the energy markets and conduct deeper assessments of price factors.


Shell’s Hamburg Refinery in No Danger of Closure, Minister Says

(Bloomberg) — Hamburg’s economy minister said he’s “less worried” that the city’s refinery could be closed down following its proposed sale by Royal Dutch Shell Plc after holding talks with the oil producer.


Shell, which is reviewing the future of its refineries worldwide, offered reassurance that the sale of the plant won’t lead to production moving elsewhere, Axel Gedaschko, State Minister of Economic and Labour Affairs, said by phone from Hamburg.


Breakup shows credit markets are back

EnCana wants to break up.


That is as clear a signal as you’ll ever get that credit markets are back.


EnCana’s strategically sound but poorly-timed decision to split its U.S. natural gas division away from its Canadian oil sands, gas and refining assets last year was delayed for one reason: Cenovus Energy, the new company which would be home to the heavy oil properties, was having trouble borrowing at competitive interest rates.


Valero’s Klesse Bets All on Beating Waxman-Markey Climate Bill

(Bloomberg) — Valero Energy Corp. Chief Executive Officer Bill Klesse is so sure the Waxman-Markey climate bill will fail to become law that he’s making no strategic adjustments to cope with the legislation.


“We are not altering our business model based on this legislation because we think the legislation is so poor for all the constituents, the consumers, everybody,” Klesse, 63, said in an interview at the company’s headquarters in San Antonio.


As head of the biggest U.S. refiner, Klesse may have little choice but to bet on failure of the bill, which passed the U.S. House in June. Valero said it stands to lose more than any other company and can’t turn on a dime to blunt the impact.


UK climate scepticism more common

The British public has become more sceptical about climate change over the last five years, according to a survey.


Twice as many people now agree that “claims that human activities are changing the climate are exaggerated”.


Four in 10 believe that many leading experts still question the evidence. One in five are “hard-line sceptics”.


The survey, by Cardiff University, shows there is still some way to go before the public’s perception matches that of their elected leaders.


Australia overtakes US as biggest polluter: report

SYDNEY (AFP) – Australians have overtaken Americans as the world’s biggest individual producers of carbon dioxide, which is blamed for global warming, a risk consultancy says.


British firm Maplecroft placed Australia’s per capita output at 20.58 tons a year, some four percent higher than the United States and top of a list of 185 countries.


Warming turns global poor’s staple into poison

SYDNEY: Cassava – the staple of 750 million impoverished people in Africa, Asia and Latin America – is turning more toxic with much smaller yields, thanks to global warming and carbon levels.


World must help China shift to clean growth: Stern

BEIJING (Reuters) – China will have to retool its engines of economic growth to help the world avoid increasingly dangerous levels of greenhouse gas emissions in coming decades, a leading expert on the economic impact of climate change said.


Nicholas Stern, formerly a British Treasury official and World Bank chief economist, told a meeting in Beijing on Friday that transformation would rest on rich countries leading the way by cutting their own emissions and helping poor nations, including China, now the world’s biggest emitter.


Total CEO Expects Higher Crude Prices, Supply Squeeze in 2014

(Bloomberg) — Total SA Chief Executive Officer Christophe de Margerie said oil will probably rise to more than 5 a barrel on concern supplies may fall short as soon as 2014.


“We are running the risk of another oil crisis when demand outstrips supply around 2014 or 2015,” de Margerie told Le Parisien newspaper, according to spokesman Paul Floren. “There won’t be enough oil and gas by the middle of the next decade.”


Crude futures peaked at 7.27 a barrel in New York in July 2008 and tumbled almost 70 percent in the second half of the year as the global recession eroded demand. Prices have since climbed 62 percent.


Oil producers must invest in new capacity to avoid a jump in prices, de Margerie said. The slump in crude futures and tightening credit markets have forced explorers to scale back spending plans and scrap expansion projects.


“It is worrying and we must take this into account now and not wait for 2014,” the CEO said.


Crude Oil May Decline as Fuel Supplies Rise, Survey Shows

(Bloomberg) — Crude oil futures may fall as fuel stockpiles increase and refineries prepare to idle units for seasonal maintenance.


Fourteen of 31 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News, or 45 percent, said futures will drop through Sept. 18. Ten respondents, or 32 percent, forecast that the market will rise and seven said prices will be little changed. Last week, 50 percent of analysts said oil would fall.


Natural Gas Poised for Biggest Weekly Gain Since May on Economy

(Bloomberg) — Natural gas futures in New York are poised for their biggest weekly gain since May on speculation a recovery in the U.S. economy is gaining momentum, spurring demand for industrial fuels.


Natural gas soared 15 percent yesterday, the biggest one- day gain in almost five years, sparked by Energy Department data that showed a smaller-than-forecast increase in U.S. stockpiles. Confidence among U.S. consumers probably increased in September for the first time in three months as the pace of job losses slowed and the economy showed signs of pulling out of the recession, according to survey of analysts by Bloomberg News.


Commodity Inflows Reach August Record, Barclays Says

(Bloomberg) — Investments in commodity products advanced to .63 billion last month, at least double the amount recorded for any August, with investors favoring Europe over the U.S., Barclays Capital said.


Exchange-traded products got .74 billion and commodity- linked mutual funds took in 2 million, the bank said in a report late yesterday. The monthly figure includes structured products. European ETPs got more than their U.S. equivalents, the second time that’s ever happened, Barclays said.


Exxon Mobil Says Landowner Protests Won’t Stall PNG LNG Project

(Bloomberg) — Exxon Mobil Corp., operator of a proposed .5 billion liquefied natural gas project in Papua New Guinea, says landowner protests won’t jeopardize a development decision for the venture.


“It’s not causing us delays,” Decie Autin, upstream project manager for Exxon in Papua New Guinea, told reporters at the South East Asia Australia Offshore Conference in Darwin today. A final investment decision is on schedule for the end of the year, she said during a presentation.


Oil majors propping up Myanmar regime: rights group

BANGKOK (AFP) – Energy giants Total and Chevron are propping up Myanmar’s junta with a gas project that has allowed the regime to stash nearly five billion dollars in Singaporean banks, a rights group said Thursday.


France’s Total and US-based Chevron have also tried to whitewash alleged rights abuses by Myanmar troops guarding the pipeline, including forced labour and killings, two reports by US-based EarthRights International said.


Norway Election Loss May Spark Arctic Victory for Shell, Exxon

(Bloomberg) — A defeat for Norway’s Labor-led coalition in next week’s election may pave the way for oil companies such as Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Exxon Mobil Corp. and StatoilHydro ASA to explore more of the country’s Arctic waters.


The Labor Party, split between promoting jobs and protecting the environment, is undecided on opening more areas, while its partners oppose new drilling. The coalition trails in polls, suggesting the next government may be a more exploration- friendly, center-right group or a Labor minority administration.


Norway Aug oil output falls to 1.91 mln bpd

OSLO (Reuters) – Norway’s oil production fell to a preliminary 1.91 million barrels per day on average in August from 2.07 million in July, the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate said on Friday.


China’s August Power Generation Rises to a Record

(Bloomberg) — China’s power generation rose to a record in August after the domestic economic recovery spurred demand from businesses and factories.


Power output increased for a third month, gaining 9.3 percent to 344.3 million megawatt-hours, the National Bureau of Statistics said in Beijing today. Power generation had climbed 4.8 percent in July and 5 percent in June after contracting for three straight months.


Hugo Chávez deepens petroleum and military ties with Russia

Moscow – Eight visits in eight years. Venezuelan leader Hugo Chávez has been here so often that the Moscow media calls him “Russia’s comrade-in-arms-and-oil,” a phrase that neatly summarizes the growing politicization of a relationship whose profitable core is trade in weapons and energy.


Hugo Chavez wraps up 9-country tour in Spain

MADRID – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez will focus on energy and oil agreements during a visit Friday to Madrid, the last stop of a nine-country tour.


Chavez will hold brief talks with Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and King Juan Carlos during his half-day stopover.


“We come here to continue working with the Spanish government, to revise agreements, energy, oil and cultural projects,” Chavez said in comments broadcast by Venezuelan state television.


Australia in bln Japan, S.Korea gas deals

CANBERRA (AFP) – Australia on Thursday announced liquefied natural gas (LNG) deals worth up to 60 billion US dollars with Japan and South Korea, raising its status as a major energy supplier.


Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said Chevron Australia would supply three firms from the planned Gorgon field off the country’s west, just weeks after joint venture partner ExxonMobil’s record 41 billion US dollar deal with PetroChina.


Mexico’s rapid decline in oil production is proving peak oil proponents right

The proponents of peak oil—the theory that the world is no longer finding enough new oil from conventional sources to keep up with increases in oil consumption—can rightfully point to Cantarell as confirmation for one part of their theory. Once a field goes into decline, peak oil proponents have argued, the decline in production is shockingly rapid.


Cantarell is now Exhibit #1.


UK ‘could face blackouts by 2016′

The government’s new energy adviser says the UK could face blackouts by 2016 because green energy is not coming on stream fast enough.


Ministers have previously denied that the UK is heading for an energy gap.


But David MacKay, who takes up his post at the Department of Energy on 1 October, says that the public keep objecting to energy projects.


This, he says, is creating a huge problem, which could turn out the lights.


How Wishful Thinkers Are Forced To Reconnect With Energy Reality

One day Energy Secretary Ed Milliband sets out his proposed expansion of the U.K.’s wind power-led alternative energy revolution; the next day, Vestas, the U.K.’s largest wind turbine manufacturer, shuts down a big part of its British operations citing “low demand” and public opposition to onshore wind farms.


Just bad luck or bad PR? Not quite. Simply another blatant example of the ongoing “disconnect” over energy between those suffering from WTS (Wishful Thinker Syndrome) and the hydrocarbon-fueled present and future energy realities.


Peak Moment Television: The Waking-up Syndrome (video)

Ecopsychologist Sarah Edwards, PhD, explains stages people often go through when facing the implications of climate change and resource depletion. She outlines various aspects of Denial, Anxiety, Awakening, Despair, Powerlessness and eventual Acceptance. Differentiating these from the normal grief process, Sarah emphasizes how we can face inevitable feelings of grief and free our energy for positive, practical action in our personal and community lives. (http://eco-anxiety.blogspot.com)


Q&A: Examining the No-Impact Life

New York City–based writer Colin Beavan was casting around for a new book idea a few years ago – and fretting over the state of the planet – when he had an epiphany. He and his family – wife Michelle and baby daughter Isabella – would live for an entire year while making as little impact on the environment as possible. That meant no motorized transportation, no elevators, no nonlocal food, no caffeine and (eventually) no electricity. TIME talked to Colin and Michelle about the new book and documentary on their green year, No Impact Man, and why pulling the plug on modern life was the best thing that ever happened to their family.


Calif. lawmakers weigh rules on renewable energy

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Increasing California’s use of renewable energy would seem like a relatively simple goal, but it has become one of the hottest legislative debates as lawmakers rush to finish their business for the year.


Car dealers appeal ruling on California emissions

WASHINGTON – Auto dealers and business leaders on Thursday appealed a decision by the Environmental Protection Agency that allowed California to establish the nation’s first greenhouse gas standards for cars and trucks, setting the stage for a potential attempt to block the global warming rules.


Mountaintop Coal Mines Face New Scrutiny Under Obama

(Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama is starting to dismantle Bush-era environmental rules that have let mining companies like Massey Energy Co. dig coal more cheaply by removing mountain tops and dumping the debris in nearby streams.


Government agencies are reviewing regulations by former President George W. Bush to ensure they haven’t jeopardized water quality around mines, Michael Shapiro, the Environmental Protection Agency’s deputy administrator, said in an interview.


GM rolls past 1 million miles in fuel cell demo

BUFFALO, N.Y. – General Motors Co. is now 1 million miles into its fuel cell experiment and company officials say having everyday people drive a test fleet of pollution-free cars has convinced them they are on the right track.


The automaker on Friday said it passed the 1 million-miles-driven mark in its fuel cell Chevrolet Equinox vehicles, with about 5,000 people rotating in and out of more than 100 cars over the past 25 months.


Regenerative Agriculture: The Transition.

In the face of peak oil and in order to curb carbon emissions, methods of farming that depend less on oil and natural gas, respectively to run machinery and to make synthetic fertilizers, must be sought. Such options are to be found within the framework of regenerative agriculture, but the transition from current industrialised agriculture to these alternative strategies will prove testing.


Can he fix it? Sarkozy’s carbon-tax plan derided by environmentalists

A “carbon” tax on transport, homes and factories, intended to make France a “green” model for other large economies, was unveiled yesterday by President Nicolas Sarkozy.


But the convoluted proposals, including mechanisms to refund most of the new energy levies through tax breaks and “green cheques”, were condemned by critics as half-hearted and a bureaucratic nightmare.


UN climate chief: Big greenhouse gas cuts needed

DALIAN, China – Rich countries must commit to deeper cuts in greenhouse gas emissions if they want China and India to sign onto an accord to curb global warming, the top U.N. climate official said Friday.


“We need to see that leadership from rich countries,” said Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, at the World Economic Forum. “Without rich country leadership, we will not get developing country engagement.”


Climate clean-up not up to developing states only: OPEC

VIENNA (AFP) – Oil-producing and developing countries should not bear the brunt of efforts to clean up the environment, the OPEC crude producers’ cartel insisted on Thursday, ahead of a major climate conference in December.


Developed countries “cannot shift the responsibility of cleaning the world or cleaning the environment on developing countries,” OPEC secretary-general Abdullah El-Badri told a press conference following a late-night meeting of the cartel at its Vienna headquarters.


S.Africa must lead efforts to avert climate change: EU

KLEINMOND, South Africa (AFP) – The EU on Friday urged South Africa to lead emerging powers such as China and India to commit to cutting carbon emissions, as world leaders grapple ambitious targets on global warming.


As Hill Debate on Climate Flounders, EPA Plows Ahead on Emission Rules

The Obama administration is finalizing rules to control industrial greenhouse gas emissions amid growing skepticism about the prospects of Congress passing a comprehensive climate change bill this year.


Effects of Arctic warming seen as widespread

WASHINGTON – Arctic warming is affecting plants, birds, animals and insects as ice melts and the growing season changes, scientists report in a new review of the many impacts climate change is having on the far north.


Greenland’s melt mystery unfolds, at glacial pace

The dynamics of the ice sheet on Greenland — and the much larger ones on Antarctica — were not included in sea level rise projections by the U.N. expert panel on climate change in 2007 because the phenomenon was poorly mapped at the time.


The picture of what happened in Greenland is just starting to come together, and scientists are still in the dark about how the underlying causes were set in motion, how much was owed to natural variances and how much to man’s tinkering with the global climate system.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 11, 2009

"We Will Build It" Says Europe’s Offshore Wind Industry

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

Read Article: "We Will Build It" Says Europe’s Offshore Wind Industry Still in its youth, Europe’s offshore wind industry has to face sceptics who doubt that manufacturing limitations, plus the still-small number of available installation vessels, mean that the offshore sector will be able to deliver high-volume growth. Yet with over 100 gigawatts of new offshore wind power in the planning pipeline for European waters, high-volume growth is essential.

Drumbeat: September 11, 2009

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009


Analysis: Pemex Strives to Increase Production through Offshore Drilling

The petroleum industry in Mexico is in a race to catch up. Although a major non-OPEC country and the seventh-largest oil producer in the world, production in the Latin American country is on the decline.


In fact, the EIA reports that the country’s production has fallen from 3.5 million barrels of oil a day in 2007 to 3.19 million barrels of oil a day in 2008. Furthermore, according to the agency’s Short-Term Energy Report published in March 2009, production is expected to slip even further. In 2009, production in Mexico is expected to average 2.9 million barrels of oil a day, and then in 2010, production is predicted to fall to 2.7 million barrels of oil a day.


Mexico’s PRI May Favor Raising Oil Price Estimate in Budget

(Bloomberg) — Mexico’s largest party in the lower house of congress might seek to raise the estimate for the price of Mexico’s oil exports in next year’s budget, lawmaker Oscar Levin said.


U.S., Canada to conclude joint survey of extended continental shelf in Arctic

SAN FRANCISCO (Xinhua) The United States and Canada will conclude a joint 41-day exploration of the continental shelf and ocean basins in the Arctic, which may find evidence to support the two countries’ claims to the rich oil resources sleeping under the sea floor.


According to the U.S. State Department, two ice breakers, the U.S. coast Guard Cutter Healy and the Canadian Coast Guard Ship Louis S. St-Laurent launched the joint mission on Aug. 7. The two ships were scheduled to cross the icy areas from the north of Alaska to Alpha-Mendeleev Ridge and eastwards toward the Canada Archipelago. The mission will conclude next Wednesday.


Shell CEO says price hike

CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) – Another round of significant oil price increases could come within four to five years because oil companies slashed investments to cope with last year’s plunge in oil prices, Peter Voser, Royal Dutch Shell Plc’s (RDSa.L) chief executive, said on Friday.


Shell Sees Time, Not Technology, as Renewable-Energy Challenge

(Bloomberg) — Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe’s biggest oil company, said large-scale deployment is a bigger challenge than technological advances in replacing fossil fuels with renewable energy sources.


It typically takes 25 years for new energy sources to build their share of global energy supplies to 1 percent, Shell Chief Executive Officer Peter Voser said today at a conference in Calgary. The Swiss-born Voser, 51, succeeded Jeroen van der Veer as CEO at Shell, based in The Hague, in July.


Repsol Says It Makes Venezuela’s Biggest Gas Find

(Bloomberg) — Repsol YPF SA, Spain’s biggest oil company, discovered a Venezuelan gas field containing as much as 8 trillion cubic feet of fuel, one of the world’s largest finds.


The field’s potential gas resources would be enough to supply Spain for more than five years, the company said today in an e-mailed statement. Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez and Repsol Chief Executive Officer Antonio Brufau discussed the find in Madrid today, the company said.


ExxonMobil has trouble hawking fields

US supermajor ExxonMobil has been unable to sell four Canadian fields as low natural-gas prices discourage potential buyers.


The properties, which include ExxonMobil’s stake in the Yukon Territory’s only producing gas field, have not attracted any suitors since they were put up for sale on 4 May, Bruce Rauch, an ExxonMobil asset-enhancement manager based in Calgary, said.


Shell’s Renumeration Chief, Attacked Over Pay Awards, to Retire

(Bloomberg) — Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe’s biggest oil company, said the chairman of its renumeration committee, who came under attack from shareholders over executive pay awards earlier this year, is standing down.


Oil-Rich Caspian Neighbors Say They Didn’t Mean to Snub Iran

(Bloomberg) — Iran’s northern neighbors agreed to discuss the boundaries of the energy-rich Caspian Sea with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad after his government protested its exclusion from a regional meeting.


Storm little threat to Gulf flows

US oil producers and refiners said operations were normal on Friday morning as they monitored a storm system in the western Gulf of Mexico that has a low chance of becoming a tropical cyclone.


Environmental Groups Wait to See Definitive Action From Obama

The White House’s main effort has been to undo several Bush-era policies on climate control, air pollution and the regulation of roadless forests. Those actions, combined with court decisions that have struck down other rules, have given President Obama a relatively blank canvas on which to redraw U.S. environmental policy. But the administration has been cautious, leaving key issues in limbo and questions unanswered about the way it would balance environmentalism and the economy.


The electric-fuel-trade acid test

IN 1995 Joseph Bower and Clayton Christensen, two researchers at the Harvard Business School, invented a new term: “disruptive technology”. This is an innovation that fulfils the requirements of some, but not most, consumers better than the incumbent does. That gives it a toehold, which allows room for improvement and, eventually, dominance. The risk for incumbent firms is that of the proverbial boiling frog. They may not know when to switch from old to new until it is too late.


The Problem With ‘Eat Local’

HOUSTON — With the world population headed toward 9 billion by 2050, Texas author James McWilliams wants more genetically modified organisms and more subsidies to feed people, not cattle.


His new book, Just Food: Where Locavores Get it Wrong and How We Can Truly Eat Responsibly, is sure to irritate organic food fundamentalists. He recently talked to Forbes.


Michael Pollan: Big Food vs. Big Insurance

No one disputes that the .3 trillion we devote to the health care industry is often spent unwisely, but the fact that the United States spends twice as much per person as most European countries on health care can be substantially explained, as a study released last month says, by our being fatter. Even the most efficient health care system that the administration could hope to devise would still confront a rising tide of chronic disease linked to diet.


That’s why our success in bringing health care costs under control ultimately depends on whether Washington can summon the political will to take on and reform a second, even more powerful industry: the food industry.


Climate Bill Will Save Each US Household ,600 Due to Reduced Oil Imports: EIA

According to the EIA, oil imports would drop by 590,000 barrels per day by 2020 under ACES. Currently the US imports about 9.8 million barrels of crude oil per day.


So in terms of actually reducing US dependence on foreign oil that’s not really that much, but it does add up in terms of money saved. Cumulatively though 2030 the US would save 8 billion — or ,600 per household. Or, using the same cumulative math, 6 per household per year through 2030 just from reduced oil imports. That’s in constant 2007 dollars, by the way


8 signs you’re an energy-hogging jerk

Following the advice may not make you any less of a jerk, but at least it will make you a more energy-efficient jerk, noted John Rogers, a senior energy analyst with the Union of Concerned Scientists in Cambridge, Mass., who helped compile the list.


Obama Administration: US Has Overinvested In Oil, Gas

The Obama administration opened a new front in its effort to impose .5 billion in taxes on oil and gas companies, saying that the nation puts too much emphasis on oil and gas at the expense of other industries.


The chief economist in the Obama administration’s Treasury Department testified before a Senate panel that current subsidies “lead to overinvestment” in the oil and gas industry. That went beyond previous statements about the need to protect taxpayers and was the clearest signal yet that the federal government hopes to end its role in nurturing domestic oil and gas production.


“To the extent that current subsidies for the oil and gas industry encourage the overproduction of oil and natural gas, they divert resources from other, potentially more efficient investments, and they are inconsistent with the Obama administration’s goals to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions and build a new, clean energy economy,” Alan Krueger, the Treasury’s chief economist, told the panel.


Import prices spike as oil rises

WASHINGTON (Reuters) — U.S. import prices spiked 2% in August as the cost of oil rose, the Labor Department said on Friday.


The increase, twice what analysts polled by Reuters had expected, was the fifth rise in the last six months. It followed a July drop of 0.7%.


Excluding petroleum, import prices increased a much milder 0.4% in August after falling 0.3% in July. Petroleum prices were up 10.5% and fuel import costs were up 9.8% — both the sixth increases in the past seven months.


The Biggest Threat to the U.S. Oil Supply

My colleague David Lee Smith detailed the matter of Cantarell’s dangerous decline curve in a seminal piece back in 2007. At that time, production had slipped by 20% in a little more than one year, from 2 million to 1.6 million barrels per day. The declines have only gotten more dramatic.


Last summer, Cantarell dropped below the 1 million barrels a day. This July, output registered a 40% year-on-year decline, to a little more than half a million barrels per day. That’s a 72% decline from peak production rates in 2005.


Pemex Sells .5 Billion of 5.5-Year Bonds in Overseas Markets

(Bloomberg) — Petroleos Mexicanos, the largest oil producer in Latin America, sold .5 billion of 5.5-year bonds to help finance a record investment plan, according to a person familiar with the transaction.


Pemex, as the Mexico City-based company is known, sold the bonds to yield 2.75 percentage points above U.S. Treasuries, said the person, who declined to be identified because he’s not allowed to speak publicly.


Mexico’s Fading Oil Output Squeezes Exports, Spending

Mexico’s oil output is falling faster than expected, increasing the chance that the country will lose its status as a major oil exporter in coming years and face a worsening budget shortfall.


Output at state-owned oil monopoly Petroleos Mexicanos’s offshore field Cantarell, once the world’s second-largest oil field, has plunged to 500,000 barrels a day from its peak of 2.1 million in 2005.


“I don’t recall seeing anything in the industry as dramatic as Cantarell,” says Mark Thurber, assistant director for research at the Program on Energy and Sustainable Development at Stanford University.


Pemex Sees “Doubts” About Chicontepec Profitability

(Bloomberg) — Petroleos Mexicanos, the state- owned oil company, needs to find a profitable way to develop its Chicontepec field, Chief Executive Officer Juan Jose Suarez Coppel said.


There are “certainly doubts” about the field’s profitability and the technology that should be used, said Suarez Coppel, who took the helm of Latin America’s largest oil producer on Sept. 8. “Chicontepec has a great potential, and we have to keep investing to find a way to exploit it in a profitable manner,” he said today in a Radio Formula interview.


Sinopec to double oil refining size

CHINA Petroleum and Chemical Corp, commonly known as Sinopec, plans to spend 24 billion yuan (US.5 billion) to double capacity of a refining project in Fujian Province.


Asia’s biggest oil refiner will expand the refinery – part of China’s first Sino-foreign integrated refining and petrochemical project – in the southeast China’s province to 24 million tons a year, or about 480,000 barrels per day, according to a newsletter issued by its parent company yesterday.


Crude Reality – A Closer Look at the Almost Perfect Crime

Interestingly, the U.S. government chose not to publicly disclose that they were involved in crude oil swaps – because their intention was to stall manically rising prices, creating a temporary “physical glut” in the market place – and to DRIVE CRUDE OIL PRICES DOWN. Their actions were only recorded “buried” in foot notes of the Department of Energy’s Annual Report where, I’m certain, they assumed no one would ever look.


Did S.C.’s gouging law worsen gas shortage?

The S.C. law that prevents price rip-offs might have prevented something else during the monthlong statewide gas shortage that started a year ago today.


Some gas stations refused refills because of skyrocketing prices, an industry official said.


“That law and threat from the (state) attorney general kept plastic bags on the pumps,” said Michael Fields, executive director of the S.C. Petroleum Marketers Association. “If they knew their next load would cost .50 (a gallon), they knew they would be accused of gouging. … They knew no one would believe, ‘I gotta charge this because this is what it costs.’”


ExxonMobil, Qatar Gas put more downward pressure on LNG prices

Last week, the Henry Hub spot price for natural gas touched .83/million btu. On August 28, the Purvin & Gertz LNG netback at the Isle of Grain was .13/million btu for Algerian LNG. At Lake Charles the netback price touched {content}.44 for Nigerian LNG and close study of all sources reveals that the potential for prices to go lower is real. While ExxonMobil is in a leadership position, they are joined by many others including Royal Dutch Shell, Total GDF-Suez, BG, Chevron plus national oil companies that include Saudi Aramco, Sonatrach, Sonangol and Gazprom among others. Even with a strong growth in demand for all categories of natural gas, it is now reaching the point where LNG has a commanding lead by virtue of its low and falling extraction cost. One possible consequence of this in Europe is that Gazprom’s North Stream and South Stream pipelines no longer make economic sense.


Split on the atom

When Vladimir Putin visited Ankara last month, one of the Russian prime minister’s main objectives was to breathe new life into Turkey’s long-held dream of developing civil nuclear power. The planned reactor at Akkuyu on Turkey’s south-east coast, conceived in the 1970s and now being developed by a Russian-Turkish consortium, is still delayed by haggling over the price. But Turkey has made clear it is firmly committed to acquiring nuclear generation capacity.


Shelving the project back in 2000, Bulent Ecevit, then the country’s prime minister, said the world had turned against nuclear power. Now, as Tony Blair, the former UK prime minister, once said, it is back “with a vengeance”. If the world is to meet its demand for energy and address the threat of climate change, then plenty of other countries will, like Turkey, have to acquire civil nuclear technology for the first time.


San Francisco gets smart with green technology

San Francisco is using advanced technology – and the strong arm of government – to turn the city into one of America’s greenest.


Darpa Seeks to Tap Water’s Power Potential

The quest for limitless energy has preoccupied military researchers for years, and Darpa, the Pentagon’s far-out science arm, has often led the way. Now the agency is looking for yet another method to harness cheap and environmentally friendly energy that would be as simple as turning on the tap.


Well, sort of. Darpa is soliciting proposals for using seawater to create liquid fuel. Their hope is to harvest the abundance of carbon and hydrogen in ocean water, and somehow convert the molecules, via chemical reaction, into usable energy. Since fuel is mostly made up of hydrocarbons, the right interplay between water molecules and the carbon dioxide lurking among them would — in theory — yield fuel compounds.


350 and counting

For a growing number of people in the world, 350 is no longer just a number. In the past year several nations have waged a campaign to reduce the presence of carbon dioxide in the earth’s atmosphere to 350 parts per million. Scientists say this level is the safe limit for humanity due to the effects of this greenhouse gas.


Journalist Bill McKibben took this apocalyptic piece of scientific data and used it to launch a worldwide campaign to fight global warming. The founder and director of 350.org, McKibben visited Israel this week as a guest of a coalition of local environmental organizations.


People, Let’s Get Our Carbon Down

But this environmentalism can’t just be about the dangers we’ll face if we don’t take action–Green the Block means embracing the changes we must make as a way to build inclusive, thriving local economies. We need to put people to work swinging hammers–not building luxury condos for people with easy credit but installing insulation in old homes and solar hot-water heaters on roofs. We need urban farming and strong local businesses standing up to the big boxes that suck the life and money from communities.


Russia tells OPEC: We never promised you anything

Russia will make no apologies to OPEC for boosting oil CL-FT production to record monthly highs and can invest in new fields while crude trades at current levels around (U.S.) per barrel, the country’s energy minister said.


Sergei Shmatko told reporters the world’s No. 2 oil exporter would apply zero export duties for East Siberian oilfields from the end of September, although it would step in to regulate the oil sector should world prices plunge again.


“We never had any obligations (to OPEC). When we were communicating, we never promised anything,” Mr. Shmatko said late on Thursday, after OPEC members decided to retain output cuts.


Shtokman timing ‘down to demand’

Gazprom may delay the launch of the giant Shtokman gas field beyond 2013 should demand in Europe not recover fast enough, the Russian company’s export chief said today.


Deputy chief executive Alexander Medvedev also told Reuters Gazprom was considering partnering with South Korean state-owned company Koren Gas Corporation (Kogas) at a liquefied natural gas project in Russia’s Far East.


U.S. Energy Department Inventory Data Signals Good News for Oil Producers

The price of crude oil wasn’t exactly surging on Thursday – but apart from that, there was no end to the good news for oil producers.


The U.S. Energy Department noted in its weekly inventory data that crude oil stockpiles fell 5.9 million barrels, well above estimates for a decline of just 1.6 million barrels. This suggests, for the time being at least, that energy consumption is on the rise.


Halliburton betting on deepwater projects

Halliburton Co., the world’s second-largest oil field-services provider, is betting on deepwater oil and gas drilling in the Gulf of Mexico, Brazil and West Africa to bolster earnings.


Explorers have contracted 16 new deepwater rigs, which are expected to arrive in the second half, Tim Probert, president of Halliburton’s drilling division, said in an interview. Some 30 more rigs will be delivered in 2010 and early 2011, he estimated.


ArcelorMittal to Complete Saudi Arabia Oil Pipe Mill in 2011

(Bloomberg) — ArcelorMittal, the world’s largest steelmaker, said it will complete a mill in Saudi Arabia to make pipes for the oil industry in 2011, at least two years later than scheduled, to tap a revival in demand.


Analyst: Shell could be first to liquefy gas offshore

Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Europe’s largest oil company, may be the first company to develop a floating liquefied natural gas project with the location likely to be off northern Australia, an energy consultant said.


“The pioneering floating LNG project is likely to occur somewhere where you have got benign sea conditions and where you have got a stable fiscal and political environment,” Daryl Houghton, senior LNG consultant at Poten & Partners, said at a conference in Darwin today. “That sort of sounds like northern Australia to me.”


Energy Information Administration Alludes to Speculative Money Affecting Oil Prices

In response to Congressional pressure for greater energy market transparency, new EIA director Richard Newell said his agency will now harvest more information about the energy markets and conduct deeper assessments of price factors.


Shell’s Hamburg Refinery in No Danger of Closure, Minister Says

(Bloomberg) — Hamburg’s economy minister said he’s “less worried” that the city’s refinery could be closed down following its proposed sale by Royal Dutch Shell Plc after holding talks with the oil producer.


Shell, which is reviewing the future of its refineries worldwide, offered reassurance that the sale of the plant won’t lead to production moving elsewhere, Axel Gedaschko, State Minister of Economic and Labour Affairs, said by phone from Hamburg.


Breakup shows credit markets are back

EnCana wants to break up.


That is as clear a signal as you’ll ever get that credit markets are back.


EnCana’s strategically sound but poorly-timed decision to split its U.S. natural gas division away from its Canadian oil sands, gas and refining assets last year was delayed for one reason: Cenovus Energy, the new company which would be home to the heavy oil properties, was having trouble borrowing at competitive interest rates.


Valero’s Klesse Bets All on Beating Waxman-Markey Climate Bill

(Bloomberg) — Valero Energy Corp. Chief Executive Officer Bill Klesse is so sure the Waxman-Markey climate bill will fail to become law that he’s making no strategic adjustments to cope with the legislation.


“We are not altering our business model based on this legislation because we think the legislation is so poor for all the constituents, the consumers, everybody,” Klesse, 63, said in an interview at the company’s headquarters in San Antonio.


As head of the biggest U.S. refiner, Klesse may have little choice but to bet on failure of the bill, which passed the U.S. House in June. Valero said it stands to lose more than any other company and can’t turn on a dime to blunt the impact.


UK climate scepticism more common

The British public has become more sceptical about climate change over the last five years, according to a survey.


Twice as many people now agree that “claims that human activities are changing the climate are exaggerated”.


Four in 10 believe that many leading experts still question the evidence. One in five are “hard-line sceptics”.


The survey, by Cardiff University, shows there is still some way to go before the public’s perception matches that of their elected leaders.


Australia overtakes US as biggest polluter: report

SYDNEY (AFP) – Australians have overtaken Americans as the world’s biggest individual producers of carbon dioxide, which is blamed for global warming, a risk consultancy says.


British firm Maplecroft placed Australia’s per capita output at 20.58 tons a year, some four percent higher than the United States and top of a list of 185 countries.


Warming turns global poor’s staple into poison

SYDNEY: Cassava – the staple of 750 million impoverished people in Africa, Asia and Latin America – is turning more toxic with much smaller yields, thanks to global warming and carbon levels.


World must help China shift to clean growth: Stern

BEIJING (Reuters) – China will have to retool its engines of economic growth to help the world avoid increasingly dangerous levels of greenhouse gas emissions in coming decades, a leading expert on the economic impact of climate change said.


Nicholas Stern, formerly a British Treasury official and World Bank chief economist, told a meeting in Beijing on Friday that transformation would rest on rich countries leading the way by cutting their own emissions and helping poor nations, including China, now the world’s biggest emitter.


Total CEO Expects Higher Crude Prices, Supply Squeeze in 2014

(Bloomberg) — Total SA Chief Executive Officer Christophe de Margerie said oil will probably rise to more than 5 a barrel on concern supplies may fall short as soon as 2014.


“We are running the risk of another oil crisis when demand outstrips supply around 2014 or 2015,” de Margerie told Le Parisien newspaper, according to spokesman Paul Floren. “There won’t be enough oil and gas by the middle of the next decade.”


Crude futures peaked at 7.27 a barrel in New York in July 2008 and tumbled almost 70 percent in the second half of the year as the global recession eroded demand. Prices have since climbed 62 percent.


Oil producers must invest in new capacity to avoid a jump in prices, de Margerie said. The slump in crude futures and tightening credit markets have forced explorers to scale back spending plans and scrap expansion projects.


“It is worrying and we must take this into account now and not wait for 2014,” the CEO said.


Crude Oil May Decline as Fuel Supplies Rise, Survey Shows

(Bloomberg) — Crude oil futures may fall as fuel stockpiles increase and refineries prepare to idle units for seasonal maintenance.


Fourteen of 31 analysts surveyed by Bloomberg News, or 45 percent, said futures will drop through Sept. 18. Ten respondents, or 32 percent, forecast that the market will rise and seven said prices will be little changed. Last week, 50 percent of analysts said oil would fall.


Natural Gas Poised for Biggest Weekly Gain Since May on Economy

(Bloomberg) — Natural gas futures in New York are poised for their biggest weekly gain since May on speculation a recovery in the U.S. economy is gaining momentum, spurring demand for industrial fuels.


Natural gas soared 15 percent yesterday, the biggest one- day gain in almost five years, sparked by Energy Department data that showed a smaller-than-forecast increase in U.S. stockpiles. Confidence among U.S. consumers probably increased in September for the first time in three months as the pace of job losses slowed and the economy showed signs of pulling out of the recession, according to survey of analysts by Bloomberg News.


Commodity Inflows Reach August Record, Barclays Says

(Bloomberg) — Investments in commodity products advanced to .63 billion last month, at least double the amount recorded for any August, with investors favoring Europe over the U.S., Barclays Capital said.


Exchange-traded products got .74 billion and commodity- linked mutual funds took in 2 million, the bank said in a report late yesterday. The monthly figure includes structured products. European ETPs got more than their U.S. equivalents, the second time that’s ever happened, Barclays said.


Exxon Mobil Says Landowner Protests Won’t Stall PNG LNG Project

(Bloomberg) — Exxon Mobil Corp., operator of a proposed .5 billion liquefied natural gas project in Papua New Guinea, says landowner protests won’t jeopardize a development decision for the venture.


“It’s not causing us delays,” Decie Autin, upstream project manager for Exxon in Papua New Guinea, told reporters at the South East Asia Australia Offshore Conference in Darwin today. A final investment decision is on schedule for the end of the year, she said during a presentation.


Oil majors propping up Myanmar regime: rights group

BANGKOK (AFP) – Energy giants Total and Chevron are propping up Myanmar’s junta with a gas project that has allowed the regime to stash nearly five billion dollars in Singaporean banks, a rights group said Thursday.


France’s Total and US-based Chevron have also tried to whitewash alleged rights abuses by Myanmar troops guarding the pipeline, including forced labour and killings, two reports by US-based EarthRights International said.


Norway Election Loss May Spark Arctic Victory for Shell, Exxon

(Bloomberg) — A defeat for Norway’s Labor-led coalition in next week’s election may pave the way for oil companies such as Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Exxon Mobil Corp. and StatoilHydro ASA to explore more of the country’s Arctic waters.


The Labor Party, split between promoting jobs and protecting the environment, is undecided on opening more areas, while its partners oppose new drilling. The coalition trails in polls, suggesting the next government may be a more exploration- friendly, center-right group or a Labor minority administration.


Norway Aug oil output falls to 1.91 mln bpd

OSLO (Reuters) – Norway’s oil production fell to a preliminary 1.91 million barrels per day on average in August from 2.07 million in July, the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate said on Friday.


China’s August Power Generation Rises to a Record

(Bloomberg) — China’s power generation rose to a record in August after the domestic economic recovery spurred demand from businesses and factories.


Power output increased for a third month, gaining 9.3 percent to 344.3 million megawatt-hours, the National Bureau of Statistics said in Beijing today. Power generation had climbed 4.8 percent in July and 5 percent in June after contracting for three straight months.


Hugo Chávez deepens petroleum and military ties with Russia

Moscow – Eight visits in eight years. Venezuelan leader Hugo Chávez has been here so often that the Moscow media calls him “Russia’s comrade-in-arms-and-oil,” a phrase that neatly summarizes the growing politicization of a relationship whose profitable core is trade in weapons and energy.


Hugo Chavez wraps up 9-country tour in Spain

MADRID – Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez will focus on energy and oil agreements during a visit Friday to Madrid, the last stop of a nine-country tour.


Chavez will hold brief talks with Prime Minister Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero and King Juan Carlos during his half-day stopover.


“We come here to continue working with the Spanish government, to revise agreements, energy, oil and cultural projects,” Chavez said in comments broadcast by Venezuelan state television.


Australia in bln Japan, S.Korea gas deals

CANBERRA (AFP) – Australia on Thursday announced liquefied natural gas (LNG) deals worth up to 60 billion US dollars with Japan and South Korea, raising its status as a major energy supplier.


Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said Chevron Australia would supply three firms from the planned Gorgon field off the country’s west, just weeks after joint venture partner ExxonMobil’s record 41 billion US dollar deal with PetroChina.


Mexico’s rapid decline in oil production is proving peak oil proponents right

The proponents of peak oil—the theory that the world is no longer finding enough new oil from conventional sources to keep up with increases in oil consumption—can rightfully point to Cantarell as confirmation for one part of their theory. Once a field goes into decline, peak oil proponents have argued, the decline in production is shockingly rapid.


Cantarell is now Exhibit #1.


UK ‘could face blackouts by 2016′

The government’s new energy adviser says the UK could face blackouts by 2016 because green energy is not coming on stream fast enough.


Ministers have previously denied that the UK is heading for an energy gap.


But David MacKay, who takes up his post at the Department of Energy on 1 October, says that the public keep objecting to energy projects.


This, he says, is creating a huge problem, which could turn out the lights.


How Wishful Thinkers Are Forced To Reconnect With Energy Reality

One day Energy Secretary Ed Milliband sets out his proposed expansion of the U.K.’s wind power-led alternative energy revolution; the next day, Vestas, the U.K.’s largest wind turbine manufacturer, shuts down a big part of its British operations citing “low demand” and public opposition to onshore wind farms.


Just bad luck or bad PR? Not quite. Simply another blatant example of the ongoing “disconnect” over energy between those suffering from WTS (Wishful Thinker Syndrome) and the hydrocarbon-fueled present and future energy realities.


Peak Moment Television: The Waking-up Syndrome (video)

Ecopsychologist Sarah Edwards, PhD, explains stages people often go through when facing the implications of climate change and resource depletion. She outlines various aspects of Denial, Anxiety, Awakening, Despair, Powerlessness and eventual Acceptance. Differentiating these from the normal grief process, Sarah emphasizes how we can face inevitable feelings of grief and free our energy for positive, practical action in our personal and community lives. (http://eco-anxiety.blogspot.com)


Q&A: Examining the No-Impact Life

New York City–based writer Colin Beavan was casting around for a new book idea a few years ago – and fretting over the state of the planet – when he had an epiphany. He and his family – wife Michelle and baby daughter Isabella – would live for an entire year while making as little impact on the environment as possible. That meant no motorized transportation, no elevators, no nonlocal food, no caffeine and (eventually) no electricity. TIME talked to Colin and Michelle about the new book and documentary on their green year, No Impact Man, and why pulling the plug on modern life was the best thing that ever happened to their family.


Calif. lawmakers weigh rules on renewable energy

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Increasing California’s use of renewable energy would seem like a relatively simple goal, but it has become one of the hottest legislative debates as lawmakers rush to finish their business for the year.


Car dealers appeal ruling on California emissions

WASHINGTON – Auto dealers and business leaders on Thursday appealed a decision by the Environmental Protection Agency that allowed California to establish the nation’s first greenhouse gas standards for cars and trucks, setting the stage for a potential attempt to block the global warming rules.


Mountaintop Coal Mines Face New Scrutiny Under Obama

(Bloomberg) — President Barack Obama is starting to dismantle Bush-era environmental rules that have let mining companies like Massey Energy Co. dig coal more cheaply by removing mountain tops and dumping the debris in nearby streams.


Government agencies are reviewing regulations by former President George W. Bush to ensure they haven’t jeopardized water quality around mines, Michael Shapiro, the Environmental Protection Agency’s deputy administrator, said in an interview.


GM rolls past 1 million miles in fuel cell demo

BUFFALO, N.Y. – General Motors Co. is now 1 million miles into its fuel cell experiment and company officials say having everyday people drive a test fleet of pollution-free cars has convinced them they are on the right track.


The automaker on Friday said it passed the 1 million-miles-driven mark in its fuel cell Chevrolet Equinox vehicles, with about 5,000 people rotating in and out of more than 100 cars over the past 25 months.


Regenerative Agriculture: The Transition.

In the face of peak oil and in order to curb carbon emissions, methods of farming that depend less on oil and natural gas, respectively to run machinery and to make synthetic fertilizers, must be sought. Such options are to be found within the framework of regenerative agriculture, but the transition from current industrialised agriculture to these alternative strategies will prove testing.


Can he fix it? Sarkozy’s carbon-tax plan derided by environmentalists

A “carbon” tax on transport, homes and factories, intended to make France a “green” model for other large economies, was unveiled yesterday by President Nicolas Sarkozy.


But the convoluted proposals, including mechanisms to refund most of the new energy levies through tax breaks and “green cheques”, were condemned by critics as half-hearted and a bureaucratic nightmare.


UN climate chief: Big greenhouse gas cuts needed

DALIAN, China – Rich countries must commit to deeper cuts in greenhouse gas emissions if they want China and India to sign onto an accord to curb global warming, the top U.N. climate official said Friday.


“We need to see that leadership from rich countries,” said Yvo de Boer, executive secretary of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, at the World Economic Forum. “Without rich country leadership, we will not get developing country engagement.”


Climate clean-up not up to developing states only: OPEC

VIENNA (AFP) – Oil-producing and developing countries should not bear the brunt of efforts to clean up the environment, the OPEC crude producers’ cartel insisted on Thursday, ahead of a major climate conference in December.


Developed countries “cannot shift the responsibility of cleaning the world or cleaning the environment on developing countries,” OPEC secretary-general Abdullah El-Badri told a press conference following a late-night meeting of the cartel at its Vienna headquarters.


S.Africa must lead efforts to avert climate change: EU

KLEINMOND, South Africa (AFP) – The EU on Friday urged South Africa to lead emerging powers such as China and India to commit to cutting carbon emissions, as world leaders grapple ambitious targets on global warming.


As Hill Debate on Climate Flounders, EPA Plows Ahead on Emission Rules

The Obama administration is finalizing rules to control industrial greenhouse gas emissions amid growing skepticism about the prospects of Congress passing a comprehensive climate change bill this year.


Effects of Arctic warming seen as widespread

WASHINGTON – Arctic warming is affecting plants, birds, animals and insects as ice melts and the growing season changes, scientists report in a new review of the many impacts climate change is having on the far north.


Greenland’s melt mystery unfolds, at glacial pace

The dynamics of the ice sheet on Greenland — and the much larger ones on Antarctica — were not included in sea level rise projections by the U.N. expert panel on climate change in 2007 because the phenomenon was poorly mapped at the time.


The picture of what happened in Greenland is just starting to come together, and scientists are still in the dark about how the underlying causes were set in motion, how much was owed to natural variances and how much to man’s tinkering with the global climate system.

Read Article: Drumbeat: September 11, 2009

The Bridge of Mostar: The Jewel that Divides Two Cultures

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

As the USSR crumbled, a similar but far bloodier process was taking place in a troubled part of Eastern Europe. For hundreds of years a melting pot of nationalities, and today the last bastion of Islam in Europe, nowhere was the fighting fiercer or more terrible than in the beautiful Herzegovinan…



This is just a brief summary, please visit Environmental Graffiti to see the full, formatted version of the article

Read Article: The Bridge of Mostar: The Jewel that Divides Two Cultures

Mitsubishi Electric’s high-output solar panels reduce installation cost

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

In a bid to lower the cost of solar energy, Mitsubishi Electric
has come up with ten new models of high-output solar panels, five of
which will be marketed in Europe and the rest in North America and
Asia. The new range includes panels with outputs ranging from 210W to
235W.

The high output of the panels means that a
lesser number of panels are used to complete a system, which helps in
reducing the installation and labor costs. The panels have…



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

Read Article: Mitsubishi Electric’s high-output solar panels reduce installation cost

Offshore WindCould Supply 10% of Europe, EWEA Says

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

New research findings revealed by the European Wind Energy Association (EWEA) show that existing and planned European offshore wind projects would, if implemented, supply 10% of Europe’s electricity.

Where are New Green Cities and How Can They Curb Asian Greenhouse Gas Emissions?

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

by Warren Karlenzig

Masdar-HQ1.jpg
Masdar Headquarters, Masdar City, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates

In my previous post, I highlighted how growing Asian urbanization is expected to contribute more than half of the world’s growth in greenhouse gases over the next 20 years. Now I will review what’s being attempted in Asian cities and elsewhere in order to positively alter that disturbing forecast.

The US and other Western nations are by no means immune from culpability in global climate change, since the US and Europe have contributed most of the existing excess greenhouse gases (GHGs) in our global climate over the last 100 years.

co2_us_vs_china-400.jpg 

Because of that history, the onus is upon more developed parts of world, including North America, Europe and parts of Asia, to help plan and develop models for new cities in Asia. These models need to take into account climate change, local culture, the latest IT and communications technologies, and more.

New cities or districts must not be only be low- or zero-carbon, they must also address climate change adaptation, which in practical terms means designing for water and food security and natural disaster risk management.

What are the best global models that Asia should draw upon? Masdar, in the United Arab Emirates (Abu Dhabi), is one good model, though its small expected total population (50,000) and unique design can’t scale up to Asian-sized growth requirements.     

Masdar is piloting scores of new designs and technologies that reduce energy use, particularly in passive energy reduction (cooling and solar) and PV solar. Masdar also reduces water use with information system-linked leak-detecting sensors and by recycling dew. This desert-located site even recycles ambient moisture in the indoor air, which includes evaporated human sweat. 

Besides the techno-wizardry, Masdar offers economic sustainability, through a viable financing “eco-system”: it has created a tax free-foreign enterprise zone that has drawn in support from General Electric, Credit Suisse and the United Nations’ Clean Development Mechanism.

South Korea’s Songdo International Business District is planned to reduce energy use 30 percent in every building through the use of double building skins combined with sophisticated information technology and communications control systems. Songdo is on a scale to which China can relate, with 60,000 residents and 300,000 workers expected by completion in 2015.

songdo2.jpg
Songdo rises in South Korea (New York Times photo)

Some Chinese green new city false starts (so far) have included Dongtan and Qingdao Eco-Blocks, both of which were approved or studied by the national and local governments but have so far failed to be greenlighted.

While Dongtan was to be on a scale of 20,000 inhabitants to begin and was mainly to be powered by renewable energy, it had plans of increasing to 500,000 by 2030. That still wasn’t necessarily big enough for the needs of China, which may add 800 million or more people to its cities over the next 30-40 years, many of them in new cities or new city zones of 500,000 to 5 million. Because of local corruption, ground for Dongtan was never broken despite ambitious plans and international project participation from ARUP Engineering.

Qingdao Eco-Blocks, with 2,000 to 100,000 housing units and mixed-use, transit-oriented development, meanwhile, did have modular applicability to Chinese new city development. The Eco-Blocks project, though, did not get slated into Phase 1 of the city’s development pipeline, according to Harrison Fraker, retired professor from UC Berkeley’s Institute of the Environment. While at Berkeley, Fraker and the Institute helped devise the plan for the resource (water, waste, energy) “self-sufficient” city.

It seems the Eco-Blocks were too complex at their present stage of planning to fit into China’s massive national new city construction mechanism, which is constrained by the need for speed. The Eco-Blocks are now being considered as a prototype for NASA Ames research, Fraker said.

qingdao.jpg  

The immediate fate of Tianjin Eco-City has greater potential in China. A Chinese and Singaporean cooperative has been holding design competitions for a large section of Tianjin, the third largest municipality in China, which has an overall population of more than 8 million.     
Besides cultivating financing, the Tianjin Eco-City is attempting to develop sophisticated software that can model the use of materials, energy, water, land, transportation and other resources, in addition to carbon and waste outputs.

Other noteworthy green community models beyond Asia include the Kalundborg (Denmark) Eco-Industrial Park; Hammarby, Sweden; and Kronsberg, Germany.

hammarby.JPG 
Hammarby, Sweden

Kronsberg, a community of 6,600 near Hanover, addresses the critical element of local food with greenhouses using renewable energy, which can offer a large-supply of nutrition requiring less carbon than the transport-heavy global food model.

Combined with the myriad waste re-use and energy generation
opportunities that can come with sustainable organic agriculture and
food processing, the food element has been a significant missing
element in most “eco-cities.”

Kronsberg reduced its greenhouse gases by 45 percent compared to average new construction.This was accomplished through the use of advanced building insulation in concert with district heating systems, which use waste heat from municipal processes to warm water that is piped throughout the community for everyone’s use. The suburban area cut overall per capita CO2 by an estimated 60 percent through
transit oriented development including major bicycle infrastructure.

Reducing the life-cycle impacts of construction and infrastructure materials is another area not being well addressed by current eco-city planning and design–no large-scale pilot projects exist that precisely measure and manage life-cycle material impacts.

If new cities can combine integrated planning for better carbon management, regional food systems, life cycle material impacts, water scarcity and biological/ cultural diversity, they will be much better prepared to host the world’s new majority that is headed their way. 

This piece originally appeared on the Common Current blog, Green Flow

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(Posted by WorldChanging Team in Cities at 5:15 PM)

Offshore WindCould Supply 10% of Europe, EWEA Says

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

New research findings revealed by the European Wind Energy Association (EWEA) show that existing and planned European offshore wind projects would, if implemented, supply 10% of Europe’s electricity.

Europe Bans Incandescents: Fallout Begins

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

banned light bulbEurope has officially begun it’s ban on incandescent light bulbs, a ban that promises to save some Billion a year in energy costs. Stores are allowed to continue selling their current stock, but they can no longer buy any more bulbs to sell. And while the EcoGeeks rejoice, others have flung up their arms in despair and cannot imagine a world where we don’t light our world with tiny little space heaters. So, with a ban looming in 2012 for the U.S., it’s worth taking a look at how Europe is handing the switch.

Among the reasons that people are upset include:

  • It will be very expensive to change the lighting system on fair rides, so expensive that those beautiful spectacles may never again light up the night sky.
  • Lighting systems for galleries are very precisely tuned and artists and curators alike have very specific needs that (apparently) sometimes require incandescent lights.
  • People who suffer from “anxiety” believe that the bulbs harm them or their children.

None of these issues seem particularly difficult to deal with. If you’re really worried about your bulbs, I’m sure there will be ways to get them in a somewhat legally-gray way. But for those people who just want to replace a lightbulb and head to the nearest store (99% of people) the gains in efficiency will likely not be affected measureably by this.

I say, let the market provide incandescents for those who are angry enough to go to russian websites and order the bulbs with a shipping charge on top. And sure, folks will stockpile, but the change is being made and the energy will be saved. That’s what matters, and I’m excited to see what the boom in the markets for LED and CFL bulbs will do for the technologies.

Barsotti Juice Company Squeezes Solar Power out of New Premier Power Installation

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009

EL DORADO HILLS, Calif.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Premier Power Renewable Energy (OTCBB: PPRW), a global leader in the development, design, engineering and construction of solar power systems for commercial, government and utility markets in the U.S. and Europe, today announced that it has completed installation of a solar system for Barsotti Juice Company.

The project utilized dual axis trackers, which have a life span of 30 to 40 years, to reduce Barsotti’s annual electricity bill by at least 50%. Utilizing Premier Power’s expertise in the design, engineering and construction of commercial and utility scale solar systems the overall production of the system to date has surpassed estimated production by 10%.

For more than 30 years Barsotti has managed 67 acres in Northern California’s famous “Apple Hill” region, located in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Concerned about the environment as well as the company’s rising electricity costs, the Barsottis were looking for answers. What they found was a solution from Premier Power that addressed both issues using clean, renewable solar electric power.

“Barsotti Juice Company can now harvest more than just apples,” said Dean Marks, chief executive officer of Premier Power. “With our dual axis trackers Barsotti is now able to harvest solar electricity by following the sun throughout the day. This installation is a perfect example of how solar electricity can provide a significant cost savings and ROI to the customer, while at the same time addressing its client’s environmental initiatives and requirements. We are beginning to see more of this concept of supply chain demand where large corporations are requiring that their suppliers meet a certain ‘green’ standard in order to do business with them.”

Read Article: Barsotti Juice Company Squeezes Solar Power out of New Premier Power Installation





Drumbeat: September 2, 2009

Thursday, September 3rd, 2009


Time for a quick reality check

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — BP’s announcement Wednesday of a “giant” oil field deep beneath the Gulf of Mexico is the kind of story that raises all sorts of breathless expectations and dire predictions.


Time to take a deep breath and look at what we’ve got.


First of all, BP’s discovery, dubbed the Tiber prospect, does not prove or disprove the “peak oil” theory. For all those out there who still believe the center of the earth is full of crude oil, they should revisit a basic textbook on geology.


Oil reserves and fossil fuel consumption

Oil has been the world’s fossil fuel of choice since the late 1960s and our taste for it doesn’t seem likely to diminish in the short term. Oil companies are still keen to secure any undiscovered reserves while continuing to be a powerful lobbying presence.


You may think that with pressing concerns over peak oil and global warming, the world would be slowly weaning itself off the energy-rich liquid. But in the 28-year span covered by the BP data below, worldwide reserves fell only twice – in 1998, and a decade later in 2008.


Fear fuels the new global oil rush

New technology, higher oil prices and a renewed sense of urgency due to expected rising demand after the recession have all fed the new oil rush that has triggered a glut of discoveries.


Warnings from peak oil theorists may have encouraged many countries and companies to redouble their efforts, which could lead to the tipping point on oil supplies being put back.


Giant oil find by BP reopens debate about oil supplies

BP has reopened the debate on when the “peak oil” supply will be reached by announcing a big new discovery in the Gulf of Mexico which some believe could be as large as the Forties, the biggest field ever found in the North Sea.


The strike comes days after Iran unveiled an even larger find of 8.8bn barrels of crude oil, and the moves have encouraged sceptics of theories which say that peak production has been reached, or soon will be, to hail a new golden age of exploration and supply.


‘Peak oil’ theory takes another hit

We haven’t run out of oil yet. Huge, recent offshore discoveries for Brazil have boosted that country’s reserves to 12 billion barrels. That was already a blow against ‘peak oil’ theorists, who say the world is running out of petroleum.


Gazprom looks offshore for reserves

Russian gas monopoly Gazprom aims to add 5.6 trillion cubic metres of offshore reserves by 2020, more than doubling its resources and helping it expand into the liquefied natural gas market.


The company’s offshore reserves total 4.7 trillion cubic metres now, “a significant rise” from 2.5 trillion cubic meters in 2005, Gazprom executive Valery Golubev told reporters in Moscow today.


Development of offshore fields will help Gazprom develop exports of LNG and, potentially, compressed natural gas, in addition to traditional pipeline delivery, he said.


Russian oil trade king buys more gas assets

MOSCOW (Reuters) – One of Russia’s most secretive businessmen, Gennady Timchenko, revealed on Wednesday he has built up an 18 percent stake in gas firm Novatek as he seeks to diversify his oil wealth into other industries.


‘Hot’ jobs? Health care, energy, many not requiring bachelor’s

The hottest job areas from now to 2016 will be in health care, education, information technology and clean energy, a new report says.


And though some require bachelor’s degrees or higher, many call for an associate’s degree and sometimes additional vocational training.


Russia Increased Oil Output and Exports in August on New Fields

(Bloomberg) — Russian August oil production rose 1.3 percent and exports 5.9 percent against the same period the previous year after Russia’s two largest oil producers introduced new fields.


Russian oil production rose year-on-year for the sixth straight month to 9.97 million barrels, after Russia’s largest oil producer OAO Rosneft produced 4.7 percent more crude in Russia and its second largest OAO Lukoil produced 1.3 percent more, the Energy Ministry’s CDU-TEK unit said in an e-mailed statement today.


Exports of oil from Russia rose to 5.42 million barrels a day in August as Russia produced more crude and Urals blend prices rose faster than Russia’s export duty.


What BP’s New Oil Strike Means

BP has struggled recently, the result of highly publicized battles with its Russian partners and a series of accidents in the U.S. at its Texas refinery and on Alaska’s North Slope. Now it is getting a huge shot in the arm from its gulf finds, which are just coming onstream with highly profitable oil. Tiber provides further confirmation of BP’s vanguard status among companies probing the ancient geological zones far below the seabed of the gulf in water a mile deep.


The London company’s two-decade commitment to the gulf has helped resurrect a region that was being dismissed as “the Dead Sea” in the 1990s, after companies hit a series of dry holes. “With respect to the Gulf of Mexico, BP has done very, very well,” says Richard Gordon, president of Gordon Energy Solutions, an Overland Park (Kan.) oil and gas consultancy.


BP Makes “Giant” Oil Find in Gulf of Mexico

Iain Armstrong, analyst at Brewin Dolphin, said the discovery may have implications for long-term oil prices.


“It will ease concerns about peak oil because it shows there is life left in these mature areas,” he said, adding that it could be the second half of the next decade before the find is producing.


BP’s Tiber Find Underscores Challenges of Deepwater Exploration

(Bloomberg) — BP Plc’s announcement of a “giant” discovery in the Gulf of Mexico underscores the technical challenges of deepwater exploration after Europe’s second- biggest oil company drilled to a depth that’s greater in height than Mount Everest.


Saudi Arabia Cuts October Crude Export Prices to U.S.

(Bloomberg) — Saudi Arabia cut the official selling prices for all grades of crude oil exported to the U.S. in October, according to state-run oil company Saudi Aramco.


Turkmenistan plans military base in gas and oil hotspot

Debates over the inland Caspian Sea’s lucrative hydrocarbon resources may be intensified after the president of Turkmenistan announced the country will build a naval base there.


President Gurbanguli Berdymukhamedov made televised remarks to top security officials in which he said the base will be established to help “effectively fight smugglers, terrorists and any other forces”.


Elsevier Publishes Jiang Zemin’s Book on China’s Energy Policy in English

China’s rapid economic expansion raises many questions about how it will acquire the energy it needs to sustain growth. In this unique collection of articles, Jiang asserts a pressing need for China to invest in science, technology, research and development to ensure the steady supply of energy crucial for driving development. In this book Research on Energy Issues in China Jiang outlines this energy strategy for China, “We need to steadfastly conserve energy, use it efficiently, diversify development, keep the environment clean, be technology driven and cooperate internationally in order to establish a system of energy production, distribution and consumption that is highly efficient, uses advanced technology, produces few pollutant, has minimal impact on the ecosystem, and provides a steady and secure energy supply.”


Satellites and submarines give the skinny on sea ice thickness

While satellites provide accurate and expansive coverage of ice in the Arctic Ocean, the records are relatively new. Satellites have only monitored sea ice extent since 1973. NASA’s Ice, Cloud, and land Elevation Satellite (ICESat) has been on the task since 2003, allowing researchers to estimate ice thickness as well.


To extend the record, Kwok and Drew Rothrock of the University of Washington, Seattle, recently combined the high spatial coverage from satellites with a longer record from Cold War submarines to piece together a history of ice thickness that spans close to 50 years.


Analysis of the new record shows that since a peak in 1980, sea ice thickness has declined 53 percent. “It’s an astonishing number,” Kwok said. The study, published online August 6 in Geophysical Research Letters, shows that the current thinning of Arctic sea ice has actually been going on for quite some time.


Humans causing erosion comparable to world’s largest rivers and glaciers

A new study finds that large-scale farming projects can erode the Earth’s surface at rates comparable to those of the world’s largest rivers and glaciers.


Published online in the journal Nature Geoscience, the research offers stark evidence of how humans are reshaping the planet. It also finds that – contrary to previous scholarship – rivers are as powerful as glaciers at eroding landscapes.


Sustainable fertilizer: Urine and wood ash produce large harvest

Results of the first study evaluating the use of human urine mixed with wood ash as a fertilizer for food crops has found that the combination can be substituted for costly synthetic fertilizers to produce bumper crops of tomatoes without introducing any risk of disease for consumers. The study appears in the current issue of ACS’ Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, a bi-weekly publication.


A cordless future for electricity?

“The biggest effect of wireless power is attacking that huge energy wasting that goes on where people buy disposable batteries,” he said.


It also will make electric cars more attractive to consumers, he said, because they will be able to power up their vehicles simply by driving into a garage that’s fitted with a wireless power mat.


Electric cars are “absolutely gorgeous,” he added, “but does anyone really want to plug them in?”


Oil speculators on the run

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) — Last year Andrew Hall, the head of Citigroup’s energy trading unit, made over 0 million, making him one of the highest paid people on Wall Street.


That same year Alabama resident Corey Carter spent over a quarter of his 0 weekly income on gas. Carter lived in the county where residents spent a greater chunk of their income on gas than anyone else in the country.


Some people think Wall Street’s increased interest in energy trading and the steadily rising price of gas is no coincidence.


Even the government is reassessing its opinion of speculation’s impact on oil prices. In what could be a significant reversal, the U.S. may tighten the rules on energy trading.


Choking on Natural Gas, But Is It About to End?

The problem for the natural gas market has been that gas production continues to remain strong due to the continued development of new producing wells from the highly prolific gasshale plays sprouting up around the country. The increase in gas production volumes was thought to have been arrested by now as a result of the nearly 50% cutback in gas-oriented drilling since last fall. Unfortunately, E&P companies continue to drill highly prolific wells in the gas-shale basins due to their estimated lower finding and development cost allowing them to generate profits in a lowprice environment and in order to retain expensive mineral leases signed in recent years. The impact of these new prolific wells, coupled with the decline in domestic gas demand due to the weak economy, has been greater than expected weekly gas storage injections.


Expect Oil Prices to Rise: Three Major Oil Exporters Warn About Production

In the last two weeks alone, three of the world top oil exporters have warned that their oil production will decline faster than expected in the next one to three years.


Pump up the economy: Sealing off vast resources imperils recovery

Last year, amid worries of escalating energy costs, Congress and the president announced an end to the decades-long ban on offshore drilling on the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf (OCS). This bipartisan announcement opened the door to new American oil and gas production and the creation of new American jobs.


Unfortunately, shortly after the door was opened, the Obama administration slammed it shut again in February by imposing a six-month delay on the leasing plan needed to open and develop those new offshore areas.


Why Do Oil Prices Swing So Wildly?

One reason prices have been rising so strongly this year, for example, is that futures traders are doing what they are supposed to do — anticipating. Just as stock prices anticipate future returns, so do commodity prices. Specifically, traders are betting that the global economy will recover later this year, and that the supplies will therefore tighten. There is good reason to believe this is correct; world oil production last year was barely above 2004 levels, and there is little chance it is going to shoot up. Rather the opposite: Daniel Yergin, author of The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power, and head of IHS/CERA, an energy consultancy, told Newsweek in early July that “of the 15 million barrels of new net capacity that was supposed to come online between 2008 and 2014, over half of it is at risk of not happening.” Investment in new fields has not been robust; when the current overcapacity is sucked up, the gap between supply and consumption will narrow again, forcing prices up.


Asia Fuel Oil-Prices fall; cracks, timespreads firm

SINGAPORE (Reuters) – Asia fuel oil prices eased for
the third straight session on Wednesday, but cracks and
timespreads jumped, buoyed by robust bunker demand in Asia and
the Middle East, and expectations of shrinking supplies ahead.


Fundamentals are well supported by tighter supplies for the
rest of the year due to global refinery run cuts, and healthy
demand from the Singapore bunkers market, fuel oil’s largest
outlet in Asia.


Is Venezuela’s stagflation the beginning of the end for Hugo Chavez Frias?

It wasn’t long ago that Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez’ decision to nationalize state oil company Petroleos de Venezuela (PDVSA) resulted in a failed coup that very nearly cost him his post.


Now, Chavez’ aggressive economic policies are again being called into question, this time as the country slides into what could be a protracted period of stagflation, which is defined by the exasperating mixture of torpid economic growth and high inflation.


Nigeria: Fuel crisis looms as marketers are held down on account of debts

Another spectre of fuel scarcity is looming in the country owing to ongoing banking crisis which has made it difficult for banks to give loan facilities to oil companies.
The suspension of credit facilities means that the burden of importation would fall on the Pipeline Product Marketing Company (PPMC), a subsidiary of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (NNPC) to finance majority of the fuel importation.


The problem, according to industry analysts, is that the organisation supplies more than 60 percent of the premium motor spirit needs of the nation while the major marketers and independent marketers provide the remaining 40 percent.


Britain faces a blackout and politicians are to blame

A “shortage” can only occur if prices are not permitted to rise sufficiently to price some users out of the market. In the case of electricity, a product considered essential to everyday living, no such price rise would be politically tolerable – or at least politicians and regulators would so conclude. So the power to allocate scarce supplies would pass from the market to – you got it – them.


North Korea: Squabble Leads to Murder Due to Firewood

The death of an elderly man in his 60s and the arrest of a man in his 40s involved in a fight over firewood has been reported in Hoiryeong, North Hamkyung Province.


Kim Chung Wan (67) in Wonsan-ri, Hoiryeong collected canes of corn from a freshly harvested field, and spread them out on his yard on the 21st of last month. In North Korea, corn is a key “winter item” used as fodder for cows on collective farms or as a source of heating by farmers during the winter season.


The field from which Kim had gathered the canes of corn was a “private patch” owned by Jang Kyung Il (43) in a neighboring People’s Unit. Jang, after discovering that canes of corn had disappeared from his field, went to other People’s Units looking for the culprit and ultimately found his corn canes in the front yard of Kim’s house.


Jang, who needed corn canes to use as firewood during the winter season, got into a quarrel with Kim, who is old enough to be his father.


‘Reduce the asphalt,’ Gehl says

When it snows in Copenhagen, the bike lanes are first to be cleared. Then the sidewalks. If there is money left over, the roads are next.


While it may be a radical concept for a winter city such as Saskatoon, Danish architect Jan Gehl is in favour of transforming Saskatoon into a pedestrian-oriented, bike-friendly city.


“Reduce the asphalt in Saskatoon,” he said to strong audience applause at his presentation Monday night.