Nuclear – Sept 25
– Fukushima disaster: it’s not over yet
– Nature and malice: Confronting multiple hazards to nuclear power infrastructure
– “Knocking on the Devil’s Door: Our Deadly Nuclear Legacy” – a documentary of the greatest urgency
– Fukushima disaster: it’s not over yet
– Nature and malice: Confronting multiple hazards to nuclear power infrastructure
– “Knocking on the Devil’s Door: Our Deadly Nuclear Legacy” – a documentary of the greatest urgency
– Peak oil per capita
– Kunstler: The US is well and truly fracked
– Wall Street Journal embraces peak oil denialism
– America’s New Production and the Farce of Peak Oil
– The great energy debate
– Daniel Yergin on The Colbert Report
– Yergin in 2005: “It’s Not the End Of the Oil Age”
– Yergin and Hubbert on the same side US Govt video 1979
– Book reviews from American Prospect, LA Times, CS Monitor, Scientific American, MIT Technology Review
The Fukushima story is one that will emerge for months and years to come; the worst is behind us, but there are long-term problems that still must be addressed. In our Fukushima Issue, six authors provide a snapshot of where Japan and the international community stand six months on. (Special issue of the noted “Journal of the Atomic Scientists; most of the contents are available free)
2. To make your voice heard in Washington about this issue – because we don’t have much time to begin to act, and every person here who says ‘I care deeply about this’ helps reinforce our message of the centrality of this issue.
3, To hear Wes Jackson talk about what we’re going to eat in the coming decades.
4. To get the latest in the emerging story on Shale Gas reality.
5. Because where else can you hear Nicole Foss and Jeff Rubin arguing deflation vs. inflation in the hallways?
6. Because our future depends on getting the word out and we need your help.
7. Because if you want to do with your retirement funds in this economy there are more experts here per square foot than anywhere else.
– New Fields May Propel Americas to Top of Oil Companies’ Lists (NY Times cornucopia)
– Peak Oil and Faith Based Energy Debates
– Chevron loses latest stage of Amazon pollution battle
– The coming German energy turnaround
Reviews of Daniel Yergin’s new book on energy, “The Quest,”
– New York Times
– Oil Price
– Wall Street Journal
– NPR
– USA Today.
– McClatchy Newspaper
In some areas, Yergin is not that far apart from the peak oil community.
Energy storage becomes more important as we transition away from fossil fuels—already its own energy storage medium—to more intermittent sources. But besides batteries—which offer a limited number of cycles and for some types require monthly maintenance—what other non-fossil in-home energy storage alternatives might we consider, and how much energy might we expect to store in each case? We will look at gravitational storage, flywheels, compressed air, and hydrogen fuel cells as possible options. Some might even cost less than $100,000 to implement in your home.
In “There Will Be Oil” (September 17, WSJ, Page C1), Daniel Yergin concludes that a peak in global oil production is “nowhere in sight.” By focusing on the timing of such a peak, however, he dangerously distracts attention from the monumental challenges facing the oil and gas industry today, and the new energy and economic reality the world has entered. With demand for oil and all forms of energy continuing to rise exponentially—including rapid growth in China, India, and other developing countries—and huge uncertainty whether fossil fuels can keep pace—the most foolish course of action would be business as usual.
– Oil Springs Eternal
– Yergin on Energy 2.0 (video)
– Book review: Daniel Yergin’s “The Quest”
– Yergin is half-right about oil, but other half is what matters
– Daniel Yergin’s letter to the peak oil community, and a rebuttal
– Hubbert’s Peak or Yergin’s Plateau? (RedState)
“The Quest” lacks the magisterial quality of Yergin’s earlier book,”The Prize,”, a meticulously researched, groundbreaking history that chronicled how the major events of the 20th century — both world wars, for instance — pivoted on oil, and delivered deeply etched personality portraits of those who counted. “The Quest” by comparison is a primer, based largely on other people’s books and articles, and does not attempt to tackle history on a similar scale, nor to introduce the actors in three dimensions.
The 1,700-mile Keystone XL pipeline would carry heavy crude oil from Alberta to America’s Gulf Coast refineries. In this Climate One debate, a panel of experts argues for and against the controversial pipeline.