Energy Headlines - May 31, 2005
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage Peak Oil About 200 news organizations run Peak Oil article Matt Crenson, Associated Press [About 200 news sites published this summary of Peak Oil this weekend. The list includes Forbes, Newsday (NY), NY Times, SF Chronicle, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, LA Times, ABC News, CBS News -- all the biggies. This is a major development in getting the Peak Oil story out.] (31 May 2005)
Sure, information is getting out there...and that IS a good thing. But, it's been out there for a while for those who want to hear about it or are open to the ideas therein. So, it seems to me that, if anything, this should awaken this generation of the peak oil community to the fact that now, we have to start thinking about the inevitable next phase: policymaking and political involvement.
"I feel sorry for the customers," said Balistrieri, 79, who has been selling gas in San Diego for 50 years. "I don't know how some of them cope with these price rises, especially when they have to buy food and rent. This has been the worst I've seen in a long time." But there have been worse years. In the 1970s, gasoline was rationed so tightly that drivers had to queue up in long lines, and stations had only enough fuel to stay open a few hours a day. Energy-related News Japanese dressing down to battle warming Short sleeves, no ties urged as air conditioners turned up Associated Press via MSNBC TOKYO - Japan’s bureaucratic rank and file march in dark jackets and ties to government offices every day, sweating their way through the country’s sticky, sweltering summers. Starting Wednesday, they’ll be sweating a little less. In a nationwide campaign to save energy by cutting down on air-conditioning, the government has asked public workers to leave their ties and jackets home for the summer.
Airline fuel bills may rise 31 percent to $83 billion in 2005, based on an average price of $47 a barrel for Brent crude oil, IATA Director-General Giovanni Bisignani told a conference today in Tokyo.Losses would be 25 percent more than last year.
The supply problem is further aggravated by the fact that most governments around the world are tightening sulphur specifications on diesel. Therefore, costly desulphurization equipment is required to produce the lower sulphur products. The only other way to increase gasoline supplies and supplies of lower sulphur products, absent investment in upgrading and desulphurization, is for refiners to use lighter and sweeter crude. However, the increases in crude oil production from OPEC seen over the last year are of heavy, sour crudes. Therefore, the price of light, sweet crudes, when compared with sour crudes, has risen due to shortages in upgrading capacity.
President Lula da Silva officials told newspaper O Estado de Sao Paulo that the government considers the new nuclear plants essential to expanding Brazil's role as a player on the world stage and bolstering its bid for a permanent seat on the United Nations Security Council.
Bolanos said he hoped to ensure that Nicaragua "does not return to the dark night," a barbed reference to the frequent power outages of the 1980s, when the left-wing Sandinista government was in power. Bolanos took the unusually dramatic move in response to energy producers who have been calling for rate increases to offset their rising costs. His government had been unable to meet those demands because the official commission that sets the prices has no director and therefore cannot act officially.
The film is a slim 40 minutes long, and it attempts to cover a great deal of territory. It indicts the oil industry for the damage done elsewhere in Alaska, particularly the Exxon-Valdez spill; it visits indigenous Alaskan communities and illustrates their fragile relationship to wildlife migratory and spawning patterns that could be warped by new oil development; it celebrates the variety of wildlife that exists year-round in the Refuge, and in particular the dazzling explosion of life that descends on the North Shore during the four-month warm season; and it investigates the politics of oil, showing how powerful oil service companies and Alaskan politicians are driving the debate, obscuring the fact that changes in auto technology could preserve far more oil than could be pulled from the Refuge Solutions and Sustainability Postcards from the Global Food System #1 Zaid, Worldchanging ... The story of the modern global food system is the story of unintended consequences. It’s the story of a causal logic run amok. It’s the familiar story of how we’re all intimately connected without quite grasping just how intimately. It’s the deeply disturbing story of a system characterized by historic injustice that continues to produce injustice today. It’s a story that goes to the throbbing, bleeding heart of sustainability. Finally, it’s the worldchanging story of what we do when faced with the reality of such a narrative. It can, without being hyperbolic, be called the mother of all systemic problems. In the coming weeks I'll be sending worldchanging a number of "postcards" from my on-going journey through the global food system. Postcards from the Global Food System #2
It was Eid-ul-Adha, a Muslim festival where an animal is ritually slaughtered to mark the Prophet Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son. In London you simply paid the butcher to do the job for you, nice and clean. In Bombay it seemed a little different. You go and buy the animal and tether it in your yard (in our case of our nice modern Bombay beach house). On Eid the butcher comes to your house to sort it all out right there and then. I watched the slaughter from a safe distance, more than a little revolted at the visceral mess, not to mention the loss of my pet goat. After it had all been cleaned up I was passing by the butcher, with what was probably a dark look on my face. He looked up at me, grinned, threw something and yelled “catch!”. I caught the proffered object, and opened my fist…to discover…an eyeball.
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