Not So Vast As Our Failure
“Our ignorance is not so vast as our failure to use what we know.” — Marion King Hubbert
“Our ignorance is not so vast as our failure to use what we know.” — Marion King Hubbert
Six European countries, including Austria, Italy and Romania, approved a plan for a pipeline to ship oil from the Caspian Sea region to western Europe, officials said Friday.
Liquefied natural gas imports will play “a pivotal role” in supplying the United States with energy in the coming years, the head of the Texas Railroad Commission says.
SPAIN wants to take advantage of its sunshine by making solar panels compulsory in new and renovated buildings — to save fuel costs and to improve the environment.
Long-time GNN contributor Adam Porter is the oil and economics correspondent for Al Jazeera’s English language web site. Recently, he talked with GNN editor Anthony Lappé about the phenomenon known as “peak oil”
A group of Canadian and U.S. scientists reported Tuesday that computer simulations show that a large-scale use of wind farms to generate electrical power could create a significant temperature change over Earth’s land masses.
America’s appetite for imported food is creating problems for the
U.S. economy. Agriculture, one of the few big sectors of the economy that could be
counted on to produce trade surpluses, has recently generated
monthly deficits — a development that could worsen the nation’s
already significant trade imbalance.
Europe could be about to win the race to host Iter, the world’s biggest nuclear fusion reactor.
The similarities between the Vietnam and Iraq wars become more marked
with each passing week. We are now told that the U.S. forces have
surrounded Fallujah and are about to unleash a full-scale attack to
recover it from the insurgents.
North Carolina researchers are heading a national study to find the best ways to redesign communities so that Americans get out of their cars and travel by foot or bicycle.
An advisor to President George W Bush has reportedly claimed that global warming is a fallacy created to disrupt the American economy, in an interview on Radio 4. Myron Ebell, from the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI), claimed that the notion of climate change through man-made emissions was “ridiculous and unrealistic”.
As China’s economy expands, so does its thirst for oil, gas, coal, and electricity. Today, China accounts for 12.1% of the world’s energy consumption.