Climate Policy – Nov 16

Hydropower not so low-carbon

IEA’s Mandil – No magic bullet for carbon pollution

French promise revenge for not signing protocol

PM’s windy rhetoric denounced as a scare tactic

Solutions & sustainability – Nov 16

The Potential of Electrified Urban Rail and/or Electric Vehicles

Is CHP the future of home energy?

Making Mercedes in Ghana

UK shoppers dropping pounds from their waste

A bigger economy doesn’t buy happiness

Computer server farms increase efficiency

A green future for colleges

Association for the Debunking of Peak Oil, part 2

A good many of the things that Mr. Esser [from CERA] said to the subcommittee of the U.S. Congress are technically correct… They are also part of the very intelligent discussion that occurs whenever a group of Peak Oil aficionados gets together. It is not as if CERA has some monopoly on the magic elixir of understanding oil depletion issues, or the secret-decoder ring without which all others are flailing about in the dark.

Peak oil is simple

Perhaps in a perfect Platonic world of policy, a “peak oil is today” strategy would look different from [CERA’s] “peak oil in 2040” strategy. But back down here on earth, we’re stuck with the blunt instrument of representative democracy. Our choice is far closer to binary than most oil geeks are willing to acknowledge. The choice before us is: mobilize and start pushing, or don’t.