Renewables & efficiency Dec 11
Climate change experts ‘lose faith’ in renewable technology
Solar’s future doesn’t look quite so sunny
Floating Offshore Wind Power
Indonesia: New energy scheme not a load of bull
Sweet Answer to a Fuel Problem
Climate change experts ‘lose faith’ in renewable technology
Solar’s future doesn’t look quite so sunny
Floating Offshore Wind Power
Indonesia: New energy scheme not a load of bull
Sweet Answer to a Fuel Problem
Energy, Climate Change, and Complexity in Healthcare
A Resilient Suburbia 4: Accounting for the Value of Decentralization
The Final Garnaut Report; A Radical Critique of its Energy Assumptions
Why are gasoline (and oil) prices so low — and where are they headed?
Saudi Aramco on 60 Minutes
Russian oil output to fall after 2020: national energy ministry
Brazil’s new oil reserves still buried in doubts
Contango Pays Most in Decade as Shell Stores Crude
Infrastructure Spending, Peak Oil and the Green New Deal
Strahan: Why is the oil price plunging?
EU energy consensus – trending in the right direction
A Gift to Planet Earth and Humanity
Robert Hirsch and Kyle Saunders (Prof Goose) talks
China’s Water and Soil Too Far Gone to Support a Growing Economy?
In China’s Mining Region, Villagers Stand Up To Pollution
Sewers to Sinks
Greenwash: Are Coke’s green claims the real thing?
A weekly review including:
– Prices and production
– OPEC and Russia are hurting
– Investment continues to fall
– Detroit in the balance
– Briefs
Peak population and Generation X
Not just peak oil, but “peak hierarchy,” too?
Chris Martenson on the current financial crisis
A weekly digest from a UK perspective.
Our continued national dependence on fossil fuels is creating a crippling vulnerability to both long-term fuel scarcity and catastrophic climate change.
The current economic crisis requires substantial national policy shifts and enormous new government injections of capital into the economy. This provides an opportunity for a project whose scope would otherwise be inconceivable: a large-scale, coordinated energy transition away from fossil fuels and toward renewable energy.
Sainsbury’s Britishness test
Revealed: the cruelty of UK’s pork suppliers
No. Just no.
Why Credit Cards Matter So Much
Deflation: Bargains abound, which could be a problem
In this recession, we want comfort culture to go with our comfort food
Although I admire the Voluntary Simplicity movement, when I was asked to write about simplicity and the economy, I was at first stumped. I can certainly see the grace and benefits of living a simpler life. We already grow much of our food, buy most of our consumer goods used, “Use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without,” try and keep our energy use down to below 1/5 of the average American’s, and depend heavily on community, barter and sharing. At first glance, although we’re Jewish, not ”Plain” our life evokes a simpler past with the wood cookstove that heats our house, the jars of home canned food, the milk goats and our carefully managed budget.