peak energy in the news:
Staff, Energy Bulletin
From the 1st of January 2013 we have moved to our new site Resilience.org. Find new Energy posts at Resilience.org. The full Energy Bulletin archive is also available at the new site. Come join us!
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archived January 2, 2013
Rob Hopkins, Transition Culture
archived October 13, 2010
Gene Logsdon, OrganicToBe.org
Prairie Public Radio interviewed me recently about my latest book, Holy Shit. The interviewer was kind about my writing. He knew a lot about farming which is rarely the case but always a relief when discussing agriculture before an urban audience. The only problem was that he did not mention the title of the book during the entire interview! He said that he would get fired if he did. Regulations forbid the utterance of that awful word, shit, even when it is in the title of a book.
archived September 27, 2010
Olga Bonfiglio, Energy Bulletin
Richard Heinberg came to Kalamazoo recently and his talk was the first peak oil discussion I've heard that didn't discourage and depress me. Actually, I felt both inspired and energized to help create the next major era in our world’s history.
archived September 27, 2010
Me, Energy Bulletin
If there's going to be sufficient water to meet everyone's needs--and those of rivers and fish and birds and mussels, too--we're going to need to shrink our footprints and share Earth's finite water more equitably.
archived August 18, 2010
Staff, Energy Bulletin
Don't have time to read it all? Here are some suggestions from EBs editors.
archived August 4, 2010
Helen Power, The Times
BP believes it can keep fines for the Gulf of Mexico oil spill down by billions of pounds because its behaviour was not “grossly negligent”.
The energy giant said this morning it will write off $32.2 billion (£20.8 billion) in litigation and clean-up costs.
archived July 26, 2010
Basic user, Tgraph
BP petrol stations have come under siege from Greenpeace activists who shut down fuel supplies in protest against the company's “reckless” pursuit of oil.
archived July 26, 2010
Dave Cohen, Decline of the Empire
An amazing thing has happened. According to the International Energy Agency (IEA), China has now surpassed the United States as the world's biggest energy consumer.
archived July 21, 2010
Staff, Energy Bulletin
-The Impending Peak and Decline of Petroleum Production: an Underestimated Challenge for Conservation of Ecological Integrity -How Much Does a Gallon of Gas Cost? -Offshore Oil Drilling and Hurricane Risks -BP's Tony Hayward 'set to step down'
archived July 21, 2010
Walden Bello, Yes! Magazine
Cafés are full in Athens, and droves of tourists still visit the Parthenon and go island-hopping in the fabled Aegean. But beneath the summery surface, there is confusion, anger, and despair as this country plunges into its worst economic crisis in decades.
archived July 21, 2010
Arthur Berman, ASPO-USA
Art Berman is a geological consultant whose specialties are subsurface petroleum geology, seismic interpretation, and database design and management. He is currently consulting with a wide range of industry clients such as PetroChina, Total, and Schlumberger. Mr. Berman has an MS in geology from the Colorado School of Mines and is active with the American Assoc. of Petroleum Geologists. Art spoke with us last Thursday after a presentation in Canada at the CIBC Technical Conference.
archived July 21, 2010
Kjell Aleklett, President of ASPO International, Aleklett's Energy Mix
Export of natural gas from Russia to the EU is decisive for the EU’s energy security and a decisive link for the future is the gas pipeline North Stream that will be laid along the bed of the Baltic Sea from a landfall in Vyborg outside St Petersburg to Lybmin in Germany. The pipeline is 1,200,000 meters long and its diameter is 1.2 meters. Using that information I estimate that every pipe segment is 10 meters long. That means that they will weld together 120,000 segments.
archived July 20, 2010
Rick Munroe, Energy Bulletin
This pair of items will illustrate BP’s extraordinary confidence during its planning for the Macondo well. The first item consists of selected quotes from BP’s Initial Exploration Plan (Feb. 2009). The second item is a review of the recent presentation by two veteran drilling specialists from Shell. The primary purpose of their presentation was to contrast the differences between the way Shell designs its deepwater wells and the way BP designed the Macondo well. An underlying theme of both items is the fact that the various aspects of the BP plan were conducted under the oversight of senior industry administration and federal regulators.
archived July 20, 2010
Staff, Energy Bulletin
-Andrew Nikiforuk Is Tyee's First Writer in Residence -Unist’ot’en leadership takes to the streets to assert their rights and stop the Enbridge pipeline -Powering up Canadian prosperity
archived July 20, 2010
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