Solar

Energy - Jan 30

Staff, Energy Bulletin

- Solar Panels in China: An Emerging U.S.-China Trade Dispute?
- 'Bicycle pump' to turn wave power into clean energy
- El panorama energético actual (Argentina)

archived January 30, 2012

Indian villagers’ lives transformed by new energy delivery system

Anna da Costa, Our World 2.0

It’s late December and an icy fog cloaks the northeastern state of Uttar Pradesh. Here, far from the cities, smoke rises in dense, choking spirals from meagre wood fires and scantily-clad children shiver against the cold. These are largely farming families, and their mud huts fortified by the occasional brick wall are for the most part devoid of light, heat or clean water. But it is here in Uttar Pradesh, one of India’s largest and poorest states, far away from the country’s straining power grid, that US-born entrepreneurs Nikhil Jaisinghani and Brian Shaad have started to pioneer a wholly different energy system, designed to meet some of the most basic needs of the poorest.

archived January 23, 2012

Energy - Jan 7

Staff, Energy Bulletin

- The end of the U.S. ethanol tariff
- Building a better suntrap
- Storehouses for Solar Energy Can Step In When the Sun Goes Down

archived January 7, 2012

Solar power off the grid: Energy access for world’s poor

Carl Pope, Yale Environment 360

More than a billion people worldwide lack access to electricity. The best way to bring it to them — while reducing greenhouse gas emissions — is to launch a global initiative to provide solar panels and other forms of distributed renewable power to poor villages and neighborhoods.

archived January 4, 2012

In with the new: part III of "As economic growth fails, how do we live?"

Craig A. Severance, Energy Economy Online

In this third and final article in this series, we will discuss seven new ways of living which we can adopt as economic growth fails. They are not revolutionary (revolutions never achieve their utopian visions because of something called "human nature"). Rather, they may allow us to "muddle through" the best we can right now with what we already know how to do. We will do these things because they will work -- and we certainly need to stop doing things that don't work, and find new ways that will work.

archived December 30, 2011

Energy - Dec 23

Staff, Energy Bulletin

- Former oil expert from the IEA: decline of 'all liquids' soon after 2015 (in French)
- Nigeria on alert as Shell announces worst oil spill in a decade
- Shelling out the Oil in Waters off Nigeria: Radar Satellite Image December 21, 2011
- Oil Workers Rise Up in Kazakhstan, Face Brutal Crackdown
- MIT: The Chinese Solar Machine

archived December 23, 2011

Henry Red Cloud: Solar Warrior for Native America

Talli Nauman, Yes! Magazine

Henry Red Cloud’s address is 1001 Solar Warrior Road on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. But the road sign hasn’t arrived. A windmill towering over the cottonwoods in the draw of White Clay Creek marks the location of Red Cloud Renewable Energy Center and his “Solar Warrior Community.”

archived December 20, 2011

ODAC Newsletter - Dec 16

Staff, Energy Bulletin

The big oil news this week was that OPEC came to an agreement – albeit a bit of a fudge– showing something of a recovery from June’s "worst meeting ever". Last time around the group failed to agree new quotas and was upstaged two weeks later by the IEA releasing strategic reserves to offset loss of production from Libya.

archived December 16, 2011

Wind fights solar; Triangle wins

Tom Murphy, Do the Math

For me, the most delightful turn of events in the ultimate nerd-song"Particle Man" by They Might Be Giants, is that after introducing (in order of complexity) particle-man, triangle-man, universe-man, and person-man—and learning that triangle-man naturally beats particle-man in a match up—we pit person-man against triangle-man to discover that triangle wins—again. In this post, we'll pit solar against wind and see who wins.

archived December 7, 2011

Review: The Wealth of Nature by John Michael Greer

Frank Kaminski, Mud City Press

Having written extensively on occultism and the esoteric, and himself an adept in ritual magic, John Michael Greer is an eager student of the unexplained. Yet he's also a sharp observer of the unexamined assumptions that people make about the physical world around them, and how these assumptions have helped land the world in its present crisis. One common presupposition is that nature is independent of the world of human economics, and thus can be treated as a disposable resource. An environmentalist and a devout follower of the druid path, Greer knows better, and he’s written several books seeking to dispel this mistaken dismissal of nature.

archived December 7, 2011

A Solar-Powered Car?

Tom Murphy, Do the Math

If you like the sun, and you like cars, then I’m guessing you’d love to have a solar-powered car, right? This trick works well for chocolate and peanut butter, but not so well for garlic bread and strawberries. So how compatible are cars with solar energy? Do we relish the combination or spit it out? Let’s throw the two together, mix with math, and see what happens.

archived November 23, 2011

ODAC Newsletter - Nov 18

Staff, Oil Depletion Analysis Centre

US oil prices rose this week on news that the glut of crude stocks at Cushing Oklahoma, which has depressed the benchmark WTI contract for months, may soon be drained. Enbridge is to buy the Seaway pipeline which runs from the Houston area to Cushing, and plans to reverse its flow.

archived November 18, 2011

Energy - Nov 9

Staff, Energy Bulletin

- Paul Krugman on solar innovation: Here Comes the Sun
- Solar Power and its Discontents
- Five challenges facing the energy sector in 2012
- 'Tipping Point': A primer on the Alberta tar sands

archived November 9, 2011

ODAC Newsletter - Nov 4

Staff, Oil Depletion Analysis Centre

In a year when chaos is beginning to feel like the norm, Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou’s out of the blue announcement calling a referendum on the latest Euro bailout plan caught even the most jaded observers by surprise. Although it looks as if the idea has now been abandoned, the likelihood of a still more serious financial crisis has surely moved a step closer...

archived November 4, 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