Shale gas prospects and safety – Sep 15
-EPA to Widen Drilling Study
-Cheap gas coming?
-Land of Gas
-New study underscores dangers of hydraulic fracturing
-EPA to Widen Drilling Study
-Cheap gas coming?
-Land of Gas
-New study underscores dangers of hydraulic fracturing
Ecuador’s Yasuni National Park is one of the most biodiverse places on Earth and is home to remote Indian tribes. It also sits atop a billion barrels of oil. Now, Ecuador and the United Nations are forging an ambitious plan to walk away from drilling in the park in exchange for payments from the international community.
-NYT: German Military Braces for Scarcity After ‘Peak Oil’
-Defense Energy Resilience: Lessons from Ecology
-Deepwater Horizon Oil Remains Below Surface, Will Come Ashore in Pulses, Expert Says
Wednesday saw the release of BP’s Deepwater Horizon Accident Investigation report – the company’s version of the events that led to the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig. BP admits responsibility for some of the list of technical and human failures which it says led to the disaster, but also heaps blame on both the rig owners Transocean and contractors Halliburton…
Ms. Pelosi and other politicians may pay lip service to the obvious environmental constraints [of tar sands] but the US really doesn’t have many alternatives as long as it is addicted to oil.
Europe is in the midst of a wind energy boom, with the continent now installing more wind power capacity than any other form of energy. In an interview with Yale Environment 360, the European Wind Energy Association’s Christian Kjaer describes his vision of how wind can lead the way in making Europe’s electricity generation 100 percent renewable by 2050.
-Toxic dispersants in Gulf oil spill creating hidden marine crisis
-Gulf Doctors Advised to Learn to Treat Oil-Related Illnesses
-Oxygen drops near BP spill but no “dead zone”-US
In this seven part KrisCan interview with energy analyst Chris Nelder, they cover topics ranging from the consequences of the moratorium from the Macondo well blowout in the Gulf of Mexico to the legitimacy of Cap and Trade; how U.S. offshore oil drilling will affect domestic oil supply in the coming decade and how policy in America curtails the incentivizing of an energy transition to more renewable sources.
The April 2010 oil leak in the Mexican Gulf illustrates the risks being taken to extract oil from inaccessible fields, and in June a Lloyd’s 360° risk insight report said, “we have entered a period of deep uncertainty in how we will source energy for power, heat and mobility and how much we will pay for it.” The reason why such damaging extraction methods are pursued, and why Lloyd’s are telling us we face a “new energy paradigm” rather than normal market volatility, is that oil discoveries peaked 40 years ago, and oil supply is probably at its maximum, with decline soon to follow. This has substantial implications for transport, food, jobs, health, and health care.
A weekly roundup of peak oil news, including:
-Oil and the global economy
-Food
-The moratorium
-The Bundeswehr on peak oil
– Kurt Cobb: Fossil Fuels vs. The Public Interest
– Is Fracking Even Worse Than Drilling?
– Canada tar sands industry ignoring toxic river pollution
– The Republican Who Dared Tell the Truth About Oil
– Happy Days Are Not Here Again: Obama, China and the Coming Great Contraction
– The billionaire brothers who are waging a war against Obama
– Wind Turbine Projects Run Into Resistance