World Facing Energy Crisis Say Oil Producers
The world is about to face an energy crisis because the demand for oil keeps growing even though production is already at its maximum, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said yesterday.
The world is about to face an energy crisis because the demand for oil keeps growing even though production is already at its maximum, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez said yesterday.
Famous botanist David Bellamy recently made some claims in New Scientist denying that climate change was affecting glaciers. Monbiot traces these claims back to the sources to find ‘pure hocus pocus’. A very good read.
Nuclear can’t replace oil imports / ‘Last chance for civilisation’ / Brewing biofuels in the kitchen / Saudi oil infrastructure boobytrapped? / Rural gas stations feel the squeeze / Subsidised oil products hurt Indian oil Co’s / Philipinnes inflation driven up by oil / Australia plans ‘terror shield’ for oil platforms
Release of draft report examining global demand and supply balance, Saudi reserves, current production capacity and planned investments, infrastructure security, and Saudi government revenue constraints on infrastructure spending.
The anticipated power crisis in Auckland can be circumvented by careful, innovative planning and the deployment of tidal-current turbines, claims retired Professor Dr Anthony Bellve.
Current and former elected officials will debate a proposed international agreement to avoid global conflict over the world’s depleting oil supplies during a conference at the Gulbenkian Foundation in Lisbon on 19 May 2005.
From farm to plate, the modern food system relies heavily on cheap oil. Threats to our oil supply are also threats to our food supply. As food undergoes more processing and travels farther, the food system consumes ever more energy each year.
OPEC, the source of about 40 percent of the world’s oil, is letting inventories accumulate by ignoring its own output quotas, which are “now obsolete,” the group’s President, Sheikh Ahmad Fahd al-Sabah, said yesterday.
The Arab-South America summit in Brasilia may herald the start of a new diplomatic circle. Central to that could be a new geo-political axis, an axis of non-aligned oil interests. Some of the countries attending the summit are leading players in the world of oil and energy.
Depletion key to investment outlook / Confiscation of gold? / US Rep.Bartlett continues warnings / Doubts about 4Q supply / Oil exploration & development costs ‘increased considerably’ 2003-04 / Costs of traffic congestion in US worsen
The third Special Order speech on Peak Oil to the US Congress by Rep. Roscoe Bartlett. This time Bartlett opens with a quote by Matt Savinar of the popular website LifeAfterTheOilCrash.net. [updated 10 May with graphics]
The EU has banned the import of US corn feed. The new embargo has further strained a trade relationship already tense over genetically modified food, Airbus subsidies, and the weapons embargo against China.