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17 Dec 09

'Secret' Climate Conspiracy Revealed... : TreeHugger

  • climate-conspiracy.jpg
    • In his excellent piece on the truth behind the climate change conspiracy, Adam pulls out some statistics on exactly who is lobbying law makers on climate legislation. The numbers are pretty stark:



      • 65.6% of climate change lobbyists are working for energy producers and consumers. This includes manufacturers, utilities, power companies, oil and gas companies, the transportation industry, mining and coal companies, and alternative energy producers. (Those dastardly solar companies out to ruin the world have about half the lobbying muscle of oil and gas companies, and a quarter of those employed by the power utilities.)
      • 13.5% represent advocacy groups, a catch-all for environmental organizations, unions, and the mysterious "other." (Presumably including climate 'skeptic' organizations.)
      • 21% is a mix of waste management , universities, building contractors, etc.
      • 4.4% is the figure given for Wall Street and the financial industry. That is, as Adam tells us, "just below the alternative energy crowd and just ahead of city, county and public agencies."


      Of course numbers don't always equal influence, but please don't tell me that oil, coal and gas lobbyists are a weak lobbying group.

09 Dec 09

Burst Oil Pipeline Leaks 46,000 Gallons in One of Alaska's 'Worst Ever' Spills : TreeHugger

  • On November 29th, a 24-inch jagged rupture in an oil pipeline in Alaska's North Slope led to one of the worst spills in the region's history. The pipeline was shut off, and the source was discovered on December 3rd. But so far at least 46,000 gallons of crude oil and contaminated water have poured out into the surrounding Alaskan wilderness.
  • 50,000 gallons of crude oil and produced water expected to be released from the spill will still have the potential to be very destructive. Here's how the spill occurred, according to ADN:

    Officials say massive ice plugs had formed inside the pipe, which caused BP Exploration (Alaska) Inc. to stop operating it a few weeks ago. Pressure then built up until the pipeline ruptured, according to BP. "It looks like it was caused by overpressure in the pipe, which we think was linked to ice forming -- the plugs that have formed on either side of the release site," BP spokesman Steve Rinehart said.
30 Nov 09

The Oil Drum: Australia/New Zealand | International Energy Agency calls 'Peak' on OECD Oil Demand

  • In their main 'reference scenario', the IEA forecasts that OECD demand has already peaked - it never recovers the levels seen before the oil price spikes and financial crisis unfolded.
  • Oil demand is projected to grow by 1% per year on average, from 85 million barrels per day in 2008 to 105 mb/d in 2030. All the growth comes from non-OECD countries; OECD demand falls.


    Unfortunately the IEA does not present this oil situation in a figure, however the one below for total primary energy demand gives us a good impression. China, India and the rest of the non-OECD world keep growing their consumption (IEA forecast, not mine!), while OECD is all but flatlining.

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21 Nov 09

Finally Truth In Oil Company Advertising! Enough Energy to Melt That Glacier : TreeHugger

  • humble oil company ad 1962 glacier image
  • The giant glacier has remained unmelted for centuries. Yet the petroleum energy Humble [which merged with Standard Oil, later Exxon...] supplies -- if converted into heat -- could melt it at the rate of 80 tons each second. ... ...
11 Nov 09

Harvard Business Review: SuperFreakonomics Ignores the Business Case for Sustainability « Climate Progress

  • Product image of Green Recovery: Get Lean, Get Smart, and Emerge from the Downturn on Top
  • Instead, let’s just think about the business benefits of changing our products and processes to reduce carbon emissions, regardless of the atmospheric benefits. How will changing to a lower-carbon economy help companies? Well, there’s real money involved here — energy and other resources are getting fundamentally more expensive over time as demand around the world rises and supply gets harder to find. Oddly, the SuperFreakonomics authors acknowledge this Econ 101 supply problem in passing with the statement: “In just a few centuries, we will have burned up most of the fossil fuel that took 300 million years…to make.” So why wouldn’t we want to move away from a declining resource?


    Put really simply, it saves money to reduce greenhouse emissions. It makes businesses more competitive to use less energy and to help customers do the same. It also creates jobs in a wide range of industries that help build a low-carbon economy — from the obvious solar panel builders and installers to the less sexy home weatherizers, electric vehicle manufacturers and mechanics, and building efficiency consultants and experts.

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The Oil Drum | Geologists Vote that Peak Oil is a Concern

  • The debate took place in the plenary session, with a change in speakers from the original announcement. BP chief geologist David Jenkins argued for the motion that peak oil is "no longer a concern," and Jeremy Leggett argued against, incorporating the UK Industry Taskforce on Peak Oil and Energy Security conclusions into his case. At the end of the debate, approximately five hundred oil-industry geologists voted. Only about a third voted in favor of the motion "Peak oil is no longer a concern." The debate has been written up in November's issue of Petroleum Review.

Peak oil could hit soon, report says | Environment | guardian.co.uk

Key oil figures were distorted by US pressure, says whistleblower | Environment | The Guardian

  • OilProduction
  • The world is much closer to running out of oil than official estimates admit, according to a whistleblower at the International Energy Agency who claims it has been deliberately underplaying a looming shortage for fear of triggering panic buying.
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FT.com | FT Energy Source | IEA warns non-Opec oil supply will peak next year

  • Non-Opec oil production will peak next year, the International Energy Agency says in its World Energy Outlook.
  • The IEA also says that post-peak gas fields are declining at a rate of 7.5 per cent, but there appears to be enough recoverable gas reserves to satisfy world demand until at least 2030.
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Five Hundred Oil-Industry Geologists Vote on Peak Oil : TreeHugger

  • At the Petroleum Geology Conference in London, 500 geologists took a vote on wether "Peak oil is no longer a concern" (something that was argued by some of the speakers). The results were interesting.
  • peak-oil-photo1.png
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06 Nov 09

10 Week Old Oil Spill's Rig is Now On Fire : TreeHugger

  • West Atlas Timor Sea Oil Spill photo
  • You might recall back, in mid August 2009, when Matthew noted that an oil rig of the NW coast of Australia had sprung a leak. A rather bad leak that was expected to take some time to plug. Well, it's now November 2009, more than 70 days and four failed attempts later, the oil continues to gush into the Timor Sea, at an estimated rate of somewhere between 400 and 2,000 barrels per day. (A barrel contains 159 litres or 42 US gallons.)
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28 Oct 09

Quick Hits: Baby Steps, Refineries, And Hidden Costs | The New Republic

  • A new study in the Proceedings of the National Academies finds that tiny, perfectly doable steps to reduce energy waste at home—from weatherproofing to power strips that prevent televisions from pigging out on electricity while on "standby" mode—could rapidly reduce annual U.S. carbon emissions by 7.4 percent.
  • On the less-fuzzy side, however, a recent report from Wood Mackenzie, a consulting firm, warns that the House and Senate climate bills under consideration could cause a number of U.S. refiners to shut down, leading to more imported gasoline from overseas (thanks to a loophole in the bills), all while doing relatively little to curb demand for oil products. That's not good, and seems worth addressing in the Senate.
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24 Oct 09

Think Progress » T. Boone Pickens: U.S. ‘entitled’ to Iraqi oil.

  • Yet in remarks to Congress yesterday, Pickens revealed that he is just as interested as ever in tying our national security to oil interests in the Middle East, suggesting that American oil companies are “entitled” to Iraq’s oil because we spent blood and treasure invading the Arab country
  • the U.S. is a signatory to the Hague Conventions, which specifically bar the confiscation of private property by occupying powers.
23 Oct 09

NRC: Burning fossil fuels costs the U.S. $120 billion a year — not counting mercury or climate impacts! « Climate Progress

  • Coal wall
  • The report estimates dollar values for several major components of these costs.  The damages the committee was able to quantify were an estimated $120 billion in the U.S. in 2005, a number that reflects primarily health damages from air pollution associated with electricity generation and motor vehicle transportation.  The figure does not include damages from climate change, harm to ecosystems, effects of some air pollutants such as mercury, and risks to national security, which the report examines but does not monetize.
20 Oct 09

Bioneers 2009: Michael Pollan Drinks Oil : TreeHugger

  • A key element of Pollan's work is pointing out how much fossil fuel we consume for every calorie of edible food we consume. If you haven't heard the figure before, it's eye-opening.
  • We have shifted from a food economy that yielded two calories of food for every one calorie of fossil fuel we burned to grow, harvest, process and distribute the food, to a food economy that yields one calorie of food for every ten calories of fossil fuel we put into obtaining it.
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