Deep water oil

Energy and presidential politics

Lindsay Curren, Transition Voice

Va. Governor Bob. McDonnell is on a GOP VP short list and recently threw his endorsement to candidate Mitt "corporations are people, my friend" Romney. But in an era of energy decline it's worth learning how heavily Big Coal funds McDonnell, who calls himself a "friend of coal," and how uncommitted he is to clean energy.

archived February 7, 2012

Deepwater Horizon: Lessons from Petroleum Engineering and the Roman EmpireAudio

Carl Etnier, interviewing Tad Patzek and Joe Tainter, Equal Time Radio

Why did the Deepwater Horizon blow up last year, kill 11 workers, and cause the massive oil eruption into the Gulf of Mexico? You're likely to get different answers if you talk separately to a petroleum engineer or an anthropologist. When they team up, it gets really interesting. Anthropologist Joseph Tainter (author of The Collapse of Complex Societies) and petroleum engineer Tad Patzek talk about the new book they've co-authored: Drilling Down: The Gulf oil debacle and our energy dilemma.

archived December 13, 2011

Peak oil gets pepper sprayed

Erik Curren, Transition Voice

Big Oil's campaign for energy complacency is picking up steam. They say tar sands and fracking are bringing a new era of plenty. But whatever happened to peak oil?

archived November 22, 2011

Review: Songs of Petroleum by Jan Lundberg and Diamonds in my Pocket by Amanda Kovattana

Frank Kaminski, Mud City Press

At first glance, Jan Lundberg and Amanda Kovattana seem like unlikely kindred spirits. He’s a former oil analyst turned whistleblower and rock musician, while she’s a British-educated Thai émigré who makes her living helping people become organized. Yet their similarities run deep, beginning with a profound concern for the planet and a flair for writing. Indeed, both are indispensable contributors to one of the top news sites on energy and the environment, Energy Bulletin. Both also happen to be accomplished memoirists, and their memoirs offer rare insights into family relationships, the vicissitudes of wealth and the quandary of being an environmentalist in an environmentally apathetic age.

archived October 31, 2011

Preparing to drill in Arctic waters - Oct 23

Staff, Energy Bulletin

- New York Times: The Arctic and the Lessons of the Gulf
- Sen. Murkowski: U.S. Must be a Leader in Offshore Oil Production
- Putin’s Russia will lead a ‘new era of Arctic industrialisation’

archived October 23, 2011

The ecocide trial

Andrea Gear, Wild Law UK

The UK Supreme Court hears appeal cases of huge constitutional significance, the outcomes of which often ricochet through the political arena, challenging the status quo, and shifting societal perceptions. It is fitting then, that on 30th September 2011 this grand building in Parliament Square provided a stage for the hearing of Regina v Bannerman & Tench. In this mock trial, two CEO’s stood accused of aiding and abetting the crime of ‘ecocide’. Currently just a conceptual crime, ecocide has been submitted to the UN for consideration as the fifth crime against peace (alongside genocide, war crimes, crimes of aggression and crimes against humanity).

archived October 6, 2011

"Drilling Down": Tainter and Patzek tell the energy-complexity story

Gail Tverberg, Our Finite World

Joseph Tainter and Tadeusz Patzek are authors of a soon-to-be-released book called"Drilling Down: The Gulf Oil Debacle and Our Energy Dilemma." This book is not simply the story of the Gulf oil spill (although it does tell this story, quite well). Tainter and Patzek use the story of Gulf oil spill as the background for discussing the energy-complexity spiral, and its relationship to this accident.

archived October 3, 2011

Review: The End of Growth by Richard Heinberg

Frank Kaminski, Mud City Press

In the several years or so since peak oil began generating significant literature and debate, it has attracted a diverse array of thinkers. To name a few, there are insiders like Colin Campbell and Ken Deffeyes who sounded the first warnings; a clinical psychologist in the field of “peak oil blues,” Kathy McMahon; an archdruid practiced in nature’s less readily perceptible energies, John Michael Greer; and a couple of highly engaging social critics, Jim Kunstler and Dmitry Orlov. Richard Heinberg’s distinction is that he’s hands-down the most prolific peak oil author, now having written half a dozen books on the subject and a few others touching on it tangentially. His latest, The End of Growth, is yet another grand performance.

archived July 23, 2011

One year later: Assessing the lasting impact of the Gulf spill

Carl Safina, Yale Environment 360

The worst environmental disaster in history isn’t the oil that gets away. It’s the oil we burn, the coal we burn, the gas we burn. The real catastrophic spill is the carbon dioxide billowing from our tailpipes and smokestacks every second, year upon decade. That spill is destabilizing the planet’s life-supporting systems, killing polar wildlife, shrinking tropical reefs, dissolving shellfish, raising the sea level along densely populated coasts, jeopardizing agriculture, and threatening food security for hundreds of millions of people.

archived April 20, 2011

The itsy-bitsy problem that doomed BP's well

Steve LeVine, The Oil and the Glory

In a war zone, you have your vanguard. Then you have your tanks, your main body of troops, and your artillery. If all that fails, and you are being overrun, there is your rear guard. If they fail, and you cannot retreat, all is lost.

archived March 28, 2011

Review: Disaster on the Horizon by Bob Cavnar

Frank Kaminski, Mud City Press

It’s been nearly six months since BP Plc.’s runaway oil well in the Gulf of Mexico, which caused the largest unintentional offshore spill on record, was finally deemed “effectively dead.” And those six months have brought almost as many books on the disaster. Cavnar’s book has a particular ring of authenticity, and I suspect that’s because he’s the only one of the above authors to have spent a career in the oil and gas drilling business.

archived March 11, 2011

Naomi Klein: Addicted to riskVideo

TEDWomen, TED

Days before this talk, journalist Naomi Klein was on a boat in the Gulf of Mexico, looking at the catastrophic results of BP's risky pursuit of oil. Our societies have become addicted to extreme risk in finding new energy, new financial instruments and more ... and too often, we're left to clean up a mess afterward. Klein's question: What's the backup plan?

archived February 2, 2011

9th International ASPO Conference, April 27-29, 2011: Agenda now available

Rembrandt Koppelaar, ASPO Netherlands & ASPO Belgium

Program information about the 9th International ASPO Conference about Peakoil & Gas, 27-29 April 2011, Brussels, Belgium

archived January 27, 2011

A dramatic shift in the peak oil discussion: "You don't have to take my word for it"

Kurt Cobb, Resource Insights

If you write about, speak about, or talk with your family, friends and co-workers about peak oil, you've almost certainly been asked: "Well, who else is saying what you're saying?"

archived January 16, 2011

The Deepwater Horizon spill report - Jan 12

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Oil spill report: Initial analysis
-Disregard for safety led to Deepwater Horizon spill
-Panel Faults Oil Firms, Calls for Better Oversight
-National Oil Spill Commission Finds Right Problems, Issues Wrong Solutions
-Missed Opportunity: Spill Commission Rejected by Drillers

archived January 12, 2011