Book review: “The Tyranny of Oil” by Antonia Juhasz

Before we can hope to prepare the US for climate change and peak oil, Antonia Juhasz says citizens can and must break the power of Big Oil in Washington. Until we dislodge America’s “oiligarchy,” any plan to ramp up clean energy and conservation is doomed to fail. Oil may be the most powerful industry on Earth, but Juhasz thinks that if we break up Exxon, Chevron and the other oil majors in the style of Standard Oil, AT&T or Enron, we take bring Big Oil back down to a manageable size and take back America’s energy future.

Review: Localisation and Resilience by Rob Hopkins

The dissertation is a case study of the first official Transition Town, the English market town of Totnes, long a popular tourist destination known for its alternative culture. Using interviews, focus groups, questionnaire surveys and other social science research methods, the study examines the degree to which the Transition ideals of localization and resilience have become a reality in Totnes. (Transitioners endorse a number of upbeat definitions of a resilient community, a popular one being “[a] culture based on its ability to function indefinitely and to live within its own limits, and able to thrive for having done so.”*)

Egypt and the thirst for oil – Feb 7

– “Walk like an Egyptian” – the Egyptian Revolution: Jan 25, 2011 (video)
– Oil falls on unfounded Egypt report, profit-taking
– Civil unrest in Middle East, concern among investors
– We All Helped Suppress the Egyptians. So How Do We Change?
– Clinton rings alarm bells about Middle East – oil reserves running out
– Egypt and the Global Oil Market: Geopolitics Is Back
– Jan Lundberg: Arab World’s Turmoil May Spell Sudden Petrocollapse

Climate – Feb 7

– NASA climate chief: Labor’s targets a ‘recipe for disaster’ (Australia)
– David Spratt: A carbon tax … and then?
– Mass Tree Deaths Prompt Fears of Amazon ‘Climate Tipping Point’
– Republicans Vote To Repeal Obama-Backed Bill That Would Destroy Asteroid Headed For Earth
– Climate Communications and Behavior Change
– Reckless practices in the banking and oil industries

Brave new world fuelled by clean economical energy possible and imperative by 2050

All of the world’s energy needs could be provided cleanly, renewably and economically by 2050, according to a major new study by WWF. Two years in preparation, The Energy Report breaks new ground with its global scope and its consideration of total energy needs including transport, and making adequate and safe energy available to all.

Fantasies of hyper-globalism: the WWF’s Energy Report

In a report meant to be both inspiring and reassuring, the WWF ambitiously declares that the world can switch to 95% renewable energy sources by 2050. The Scenario depends largely on increased efficiency and regulated flows of energy through a great system of interconnection. People are remarkably absent. The ostensible reason is that the report is focused on what is “technically possible,” which is more about joules and btus than about human behavior.

The energy report: 100% Renewable Energy by 2050

Our new Energy Report confirms that all the world’s energy needs could be provided cleanly, sustainably and economically by the year 2050. Renewable energy is the way ahead. Fossil fuels like oil and coal could become relics of the past. And the sooner we start planning for that cleaner, greener world, the sooner it can be a reality. The new Energy Report we’ve launched today shows that turning the world’s energy supplies green is not only possible, it’s absolutely essential.

Naomi Klein: Addicted to risk

Days before this talk, journalist Naomi Klein was on a boat in the Gulf of Mexico, looking at the catastrophic results of BP’s risky pursuit of oil. Our societies have become addicted to extreme risk in finding new energy, new financial instruments and more … and too often, we’re left to clean up a mess afterward. Klein’s question: What’s the backup plan?

Eyes on Egypt – Feb 1

– Analyst sees little Egypt oil and gas impact
– Q&A: Suez Canal
– U.S. envoy tells Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak to step aside
– Egypt’s Unrest May Have Roots in Food Prices, US Fed Policy
– Soccer clubs central to ending Egypt’s ‘Dictatorship of Fear’
– The Egyptian people tend to the streets that are now their own (video)