United States – Dec 6
Lost: 1.9 million jobs
Can Obama keep energy promises?
CNN cuts entire science, tech team
Lost: 1.9 million jobs
Can Obama keep energy promises?
CNN cuts entire science, tech team
A weekly digest from a UK perspective.
Energy Department, change is coming
Obama quietly drops windfall tax proposal
A sad day for Canada
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.
The War on Carbon Heats Up Globally, but Strategies for Change Remain Local
James L. Jones’ energy views worry some environmentalists
Youth Embarrassed By U.S. Delegation at Climate Conference
Iraq: The Thirteenth Hour
‘2025’ Report: A World of Resource Strife
Syria hit by double blow on oil prices and falling supplies
A lot of readers are twanging on me for refraining to castigate President-elect Obama for deeds yet undone. They’re discouraged by the advisors and cabinet sectetaries he’s picked, ostensibly because the crew coming in are Washington “insiders,” meaning they can’t possibly see or do things differently.
My own starting point for this is the belief that in the years just ahead any sociopolitical entity organized at the giant scale will flounder — this includes everything from the federal government to global corporations to factory farms to centralized high schools to national retail chains. So even expecting Mr. Obama’s government to act effectively may be asking too much in a situation that will require mostly local action…
General Jones and the Chamber of Commerce energy plan
Michael Klare: The fall of triumphalism
Unusual merger of union bosses and environmentalists
This is a very important report about an issue that will have severe impacts on our state when it ultimately hits. This is not a question of if but when, and the when could be within just a few years.
Gail Tverberg: Impact of credit crisis on the energy industry
How our ecomomy went kaput on the $100 barrel
Seattle’s recycling program runs into plunging prices
Democrats brace for ‘midnight rules’ from Bush
Bad economy threatens Obama’s climate fix
White House prods allies to oppose limits on greenhouse gases
Left out of the bailout: the poor
A weekly digest from a UK perspective.