Peak oil notes – Jan 08
A weekly update including:
– Market volatility continues
– Russia and the EU
A weekly update including:
– Market volatility continues
– Russia and the EU
Nate Hagens on the financial meltdown and fossil fuels
Peak Oil – Politics, Geopolitics, and Choke Points
Radical Retrenchment — A reference model
Russia flexes its military muscle
Arab News: Why should we bail out US automobile industry
New Year, New Outlook For Oil
1. The Global Recession
2. Price Volatility: Who Knew?
3. Falling Investment = Building the Big Boomerang
4. The IEA Changes its Stance (will U.S. EIA, CERA and Exxon-Mobil follow?)
5. The Campaign and the Elections
6. OPEC Cuts Production
7. The Large Exporters: from Boom to Busted
8. Shale Gas: Game Changer or Rope-a-Dope? [or “a mixed blessing”]
9. Food vs. Fuel Hit Pocketbooks Worldwide
10. Global Production Peaks, on the Production Plateau
For several months I have been meaning to write a review of Rob Hopkins’ The Transition Handbook: From Oil Dependency to Local Resilience, but other things got in the way-like a planetary economic meltdown and out of control climate change that exceeds some of the most dire predictions by climate scientists. I should have spoken out earlier in support of this movement, but I didn’t. Now, as we commence this new year, I am.
I will begin this book “review” by telling you that I find nothing-absolutely nothing wrong with The Transition Handbook. If that then makes this article into a commercial for the book instead of a review, so be it.
WSJ: Russian professor predicts end of U.S.
The upside of downward mobility
Obama for America 2.0? (Net Movement)
Drillers eye oil reserves off California coast
Alex Steffen: What if climate change is not an energy problem?
Tim O’Reilly: Thinking about Wendell Berry
Greed is not good, says God
Sharon Astyk: The pleasures of the obsolete
The ugly truth behind the markets: Not even the experts have a clue (Homer-Dixon)
Worldwatch: ‘On the verge of an energy revolution’
A road to revolution? (Greek demonstrations)
The big theme for 2009 economically will be contraction. The end of the cheap energy era will announce itself as the end of conventional “growth” and the shrinking back of activity, wealth, and populations. … My hope for the year, at least for my own society, is that we will transition away from being a nation of complacent, distracted, over-fed clowns, to become a purposeful and responsible people willing to put their shoulders to the wheel to get some things done. My motto for the new year: “no more crybabies!”
A food agenda for Obama
It was a gas (Haber-Bosch process for fertilizers)
Fresh eggs, finances and fun: families flock to keep hens
‘Green’ jobs compete for stimulus aid
Krugman: Barack be good
A green stimulus for the people
The coming capitalist consensus: “Global Social Democracy”
Vancouver mayor promises action on peak oil
The year 2008 in photographs
Sarkozy fears spectre of 1968 haunting Europe
New York Times beefs up environment coverage
Scientists find increased methane levels in Arctic Ocean