Peak Oil Review – Sept 7
A weekly roundup of peak oil news, including:
-Production and prices
-New discoveries
-Nationalism
-Briefs
A weekly roundup of peak oil news, including:
-Production and prices
-New discoveries
-Nationalism
-Briefs
Robert L. Hirsch is the lead author of a seminal report–Peaking of World Oil Production: Impacts, Mitigation & Risk Management—written for the US Dept. of Energy’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (DOE, NETL) and released in early 2005. He has remained very active with respect to his concerns about peak oil. ASPO-USA’s Steve Andrews tracked him down last week and posed some questions about the report, then and now. Bob will be a presenter at the ASPO-USA conference in Denver next month (October 11-13).
Former oil and gas analyst Jan Lundberg says declining energy and climate ends globalization. It’s time to launch the lifeboats of localization and sustainable energy. Why big government can’t fix it — and why do we need big government at all? Lundberg sees an inevitable rebuild from his website culturechange.org.
A weekly update from a UK perspective.
-World faces hi-tech crunch as China eyes ban on rare metal exports
-Ukraine, Russia PMs resolve gas dispute: Tymoshenko
-As hybrid cars gobble rare metals, shortage looms
-Iranian Media: Iran Ready to Negotiate
-Slow Boat to Rare Earth
-Peak Water
-Iowa’s future shouldn’t depend on fossil fuels
-Tickle your fancy
-Re-Appointed Fed Chief Ben Bernanke Didn’t Get Us Out of the Economic Crisis, He Helped Cause It
-Growing Poverty And Despair In America
-Peak Oil, Peak Credit and Investments – “So What the Hell Does One Do”?
Last week Michael Lynch and Daniel Yergin pummeled the concept of peak oil in two mainstream media outlets. Lynch’s feisty but nearly fact-free op-ed for the New York Times and Yergin’s more scholarly reflection in Foreign Policy whipped up further discussion in the blogosphere. Although the majority of on-line responses to Lynch’s piece were negative, peak oil advocates were put on the defensive.
Unless the world’s economy continues to deteriorate and the worldwide demand for oil falls more rapidly than depletion, large price spikes somewhere ahead are almost inevitable.
-BP hails ‘giant’ oil find
-Giant Indian oil field comes on stream
-Canada’s Oil Sands – Part 2
-Brazil moves to boost control over new oil wealth
-Millions more Russians shunted into poverty
-Oil find sparks new hope for Uganda’s people
Burning natural gas to extract and process oil from the Canadian tar sands has been likened by one industry insider to burning Picassos for heat. But the bidding at the “Picassos for heat” auction may go even higher as those involved in tar sands and oil shale development push for nuclear power to fuel their projects.
A weekly review including:
– Production and prices
– Droughts in Asia
– Quote of the Week
– Energy Stat of the Week
– Briefs