Skip to content
resilience

Insight and inspiration in turbulent times.

resilience

SUBSCRIBE
Resilience is a program of the nonprofit organization Post Carbon Institute.
resilience
  • Topics
    • All Latest Articles
    • Energy
    • Economy
    • Environment
    • Food & Water
    • Society
    • Featured Topics
    • Editor’s Picks
  • Podcasts
    • Human Nature Odyssey
    • Crazy Town
    • Holding the Fire
    • What Could Possibly Go Right?
    • Power
  • About
    • About Resilience
    • Resilience Fundamentals
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Contact
    • Donate
  • Resilience+
    • Log in / Sign Up
    • Events & Videos
    • Online Course
    • Think Resilience
resilience
Donate SUBSCRIBE
  • Latest
  • Energy
  • Economy
  • Environment
  • Food & Water
  • Society
  • More ▼
  • Topics
    • All Latest Articles
    • Energy
    • Economy
    • Environment
    • Food & Water
    • Society
    • Featured Topics
    • Editor’s Picks
  • Podcasts
    • Human Nature Odyssey
    • Crazy Town
    • Holding the Fire
    • What Could Possibly Go Right?
    • Power
  • About
    • About Resilience
    • Resilience Fundamentals
    • Submission Guidelines
    • Contact
    • Donate
  • Resilience+
    • Log in / Sign Up
    • Events & Videos
    • Online Course
    • Think Resilience

Latin America: Renewable Energy Not Always Sustainable

Gustavo González, IPS
July 1, 2004

Ten percent renewable sources of energy, established as a worldwide goal for 2010, is already a reality in Latin America, but that has been achieved mostly through big hydroelectric dams, which environmentalists argue are not sustainable.

Not much cheer in energy liberalisation

Brian Groom, The Financial Times
July 1, 2004

The European Union opened more of its energy market to full competition yesterday but there was little to celebrate. Power prices are high, big utilities dominate, and only two of 25 EU states met a deadline to transpose rules into national law.

Oil prices raising costs of offshoots

AP, The Daily News
July 1, 2004

What do carpet, tires and paint have in common? They are just a few of the household items getting more expensive due to the high cost of oil and natural gas.

US: Cost likely to rise for Hanford waste plant construction

Shannon Dininny, Seattle P.I.
July 1, 2004

A U.S. Army Corps of Engineers report concludes there is a significant risk of construction cost increases for the Hanford nuclear site’s waste treatment plant, the government’s largest construction project.

Russia: BP and Rosneft Ready to Drill Sakhalin-5

Reuters, The Moscow Times
July 1, 2004

The project is situated off Russia’s eastern coast and estimated to have a maximum oil and oil-condensate output of 700,000 barrels per day — similar to that of OPEC member Qatar.

Philippines: Bataan nuclear plant costs $155,000 a day but no power

Karl Wilson, INQ7
June 30, 2004

NEARLY 30 years after work began on the Bataan nuclear power plant just north of Manila, Filipino taxpayers are still paying 155,000 dollars a day in interest on a structure that has never produced one watt of power.

July 2004 ASPO newsletter is online

ASPO, peakoil.net
June 30, 2004

The Association for the Study of Peak Oil & Gas newsletter is, once again, essential reading.

Competing for Energy Resources – Part 1

F. Mack Shelor, Energy Pulse
June 30, 2004

If China’s economy moved forward to a level that was approximately on par with Mexico’s current economy, the world demand for oil would double.

Michael Moore’s Fahrenheit 9/11 Doesn’t Go Far Enough

Joseph Cannon, Counterbias.com
June 30, 2004

Moore implies — correctly — that the primary motive for the war was to seize the oil fields. He does not discuss “peak oil” theory, which — if valid — does much to explain why Bush viewed this seizure as a necessity.

Iran Reacts to U.S. Power Loss

Erich Marquardt, Power and Interest
June 30, 2004

Tehran finds itself located in a very volatile region of the world, one in which powerful outside interests have as their major foreign policy objective the desire to prevent a Middle Eastern state from gaining too much power.

Global oil capacity growth hinges on mega-projects

Jonathan Leff, Reuters UK
June 30, 2004

The smooth, prompt start-up of about a dozen big-ticket oil projects over the next 18 months is more important than ever to meeting global oil demand growth and keeping prices under control, analysts say.

Global solar panel shortage

John Gartner, Wired News
June 30, 2004

Solar panels are in short supply because many manufacturers are sending their available product to Germany and Japan, where they can be sold for more.

Older posts
Newer posts
← Previous Page1 … Page3,184 Page3,185 Page3,186 … Page3,227 Next →

Resilience is a program of Post Carbon Institute, a nonprofit organization dedicated to helping the world transition away from fossil fuels and build sustainable, resilient communities.

Reposting Policy | Privacy Policy

  • About us
  • Contact
  • Donate
  • Subscribe
  • RSS