Peak oil review – November 7
A weekly roundup of peak oil events, including:
-Oil and the global economy
-The EU debt crisis
-Iran’s nuclear program
-China
-Quote of the week
-Briefs
A weekly roundup of peak oil events, including:
-Oil and the global economy
-The EU debt crisis
-Iran’s nuclear program
-China
-Quote of the week
-Briefs
Did the nuclear power industry ever learn and act upon the “lessons” of Three Mile Island? While it’s true that much has changed in the nuclear field since 1979, it’s also true that the more things have changed, the more they have remained the same…
Thus this 30th anniversary edition is inspired by yet another nuclear catastrophe, the partial meltdown of three reactors at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi plant in March of 2011—the third great nuclear plant accident, following Three Mile Island and the far-worse meltdown at Chernobyl in 1986. This new edition contains the entire text of the 1982 edition of Nukespeak, along with four chapters of fresh material written by two of the three original authors.
A midweekly roundup of peak oil news, including:
-Developments this week
-Nuclear troubles
There is a fascinating drama taking place over in Bologna, Italy involving an engineer by the name of Andrea Rossi and a physicist, Sergio Focardi, who say they have developed an entirely new source of cheap, clean, energy. This energy is said to be produced by fusing nickel and hydrogen inside a low-cost, table-top-sized reactor. Moreover, the inventors say this device is already in limited commercial production and is being sold to customers with the first delivery being made to an unknown American buyer this week. … If this development is for real, and we will not know for a while, parts of our understanding of nuclear physics will have to be rethought for it seems there is much more in nature to learn about
A weekly roundup of peak oil news, including:
-Oil and the global economy
-The EU debt crisis
-Shortages in China
-Cold fusion test
-Quote of the week
-Briefs
A new report from Greenpeace calls for the complete closure of all Japanese nuclear power plants by 2012. The report was released at the same time as the new Prime Minister, Yoshihiko Noda, was making his first policy speech to parliament calling for the restart of all reactors that are currently offline due to routine safety checks and maintenance.
Both the IEA and OPEC cut their oil demand forecasts this week for 2011 and 2012 on the worsening economic outlook…
– N. American oil output could top 40-year-old peak
– The End of Cheap Uranium
– Peak Phosphorus (video from ABC Australia’s “Catalyst”)
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)
– 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 nuclear disaster: PM at the time feared Japan would collapse
-Fukushima disaster: it’s not over yet
-Switch from nuclear power would cost Japan $280 bln-Greenpeace
-UK joins laser nuclear fusion project
-Thorium advocates launch pressure group
-Blast at French Nuclear Site Is Said to Kill 1 Person
If you are an energy policymaker (or layperson interested in energy) and you are NOT perplexed by the last decade, read no further. You have little to gain from what I write below. However, if you are a perplexed energy policymaker (or perplexed layperson interested in energy), please continue and learn why poor quality data, lack of transparency, broad uncertainty and flawed thinking about risk have made it difficult for many experts and the public alike to think sensibly about our energy future.