Peak oil review – Jan 19
A weekly review including:
– Contango
– OPEC’s progress
– Forecasts
– Briefs
A weekly review including:
– Contango
– OPEC’s progress
– Forecasts
– Briefs
Krugman’s letter to Obama
Wind, ethanol cloud our difficult energy choices
Reelin’ in the Green
Bill Would Allow Bicyclists to Legally Roll Through Stop Signs
Students, communities pay when schools cut busing
Expensive oil means end of roads – why include them in stimulus?
To live with as little petroleum and other non-renewable resources as possible right now is to embrace a new world of localized economics and a lower-tech set of practices and processes formerly termed Appropriate Technology. But if we instead hope for as little change as possible in the near future, we will probably bring on the worst consequences of recent decades’ energy gluttony.
Preparing for a liquid fuels emergency does not appear to be on the radar screens of most government officials and emergency planners. This is a very worrying situation in light of emerging energy supply realities (accelerating oil-field depletion rates, plummeting exploration and development, rusting infrastructure, and greying workforce). All of these factors put together mean there is an increasing potential for fuel supply emergencies in the years ahead.
The prices we are seeing for fossil fuels are creating an illusion of plenty that masks the central issue of our time: How do we move from our nonrenewable energy economy to a renewable one and do it quickly enough to avoid a catastrophic and rapid decline in the total energy available to human society?
Mergers in pipeline as oil industry’s fairytale era ends
Gulf states run risk of losing investors
The case against dirty oil (Canadian tar sands)
Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right (Ukraine gas dispute)
Oil demand set for 2-year drop on recession, IEA says
Rigzone: Why we’ll see $200 oil soon
Chávez lets West make oil bids as prices plunge
The ten most coal-reliant countries
A weekly update from a UK perspective
Where Is Oil Going Next?
More Evidence That Peak Oil Is A Reality Just Around the Corner
A sticky ending for the tar sands
Transport can help propel world to greener future: UN
Oregon envisions gas tax based on miles, not gallons
S.F.’s half-baked congestion pricing plan
SoupCycle delivers sustenance, sustainably
Oil will peak. I get it…I am convinced that this thing we call civilization is ludicrously based on profit and is a madman’s interpretation of the pursuit of happiness. I recognize the insanity. The illusion that participating in the race for stainless steel appliances and ride-on lawn mowers as a worthy endeavor is squashed forever.
So now what?