Ralph Nader on Energy and Policy
Ralph Nader: Thank you very much Jim and ASPO for this invitation and my condolences Continue Reading
Ralph Nader: Thank you very much Jim and ASPO for this invitation and my condolences Continue Reading
Everyone in the Peak Oil Community knows the danger of making predictions. Trying to call the future is a challenging project. But ASPO-USA and Peak Oil Review have combined to pull together predictions about what we can expect in 2011 from a wide range of thinkers, writers, scholars and experts, who graciously agreed to risk being wrong so that you can have the inside scoop!
Download Full PDF Peak Oil Review 1. Oil and the Global Economy During a holiday-shortened Continue Reading
“Fuel demand continues to strengthen, a positive sign for the economy.”
Download Full PDF 1. Oil and the Global Economy There has been very little movement Continue Reading
We all remember the oil price run-up (and run back down) of 2008. Now, with prices similar to where they were in the fall of 2007, the question quite naturally arises as to whether we are headed for another similar scenario.
Of course, we know that the scenario cannot really be the same. World economies are now much weaker than in late 2007. Several countries are having problems with debt, even with oil at its current price. If the oil price rises by $20 or $30 or $40 barrel, we can be pretty sure that those countries will be in much worse financial condition. And while governments have learned to deal with collapsing banks, citizens have a “been there, done that” attitude. They may not be as willing to bail out banks that seem to be contributing to the problems of the day.
“The mistake is to read the market from London or New York; where there is Continue Reading
Download Full PDF 1. Oil and the Global Economy Oil traded between $88-89 a barrel Continue Reading
“Oil seems to have everything going for it.”
Political prognostication is a dangerous game, but one of the certainties of the latest election was that the US will not be enacting any significant federal climate legislation. One could be forgiven for wondering what the election has to do with anything. In the two years previously during which the Democrats controlled Presidency, House and Senate, the US had failed also to enact any climate legislation, but we have moved from the faintest possible hope to none at all.
If inaction is certain on climate change, it may be that all is not entirely hopeless if we reframe the terms to addressing our carbon problem. Peak-oil activism could accomplish many of the goals of climate activists. Unlike climate change, peak oil doesn’t carry the ideological associations with the left that climate change does. Could peak oil provide a framing narrative for political action to address both climate change and peak oil? Certainly, a great deal would have to happen in order to accomplish this. But peak oil is a sufficiently powerful and pressing issue that its profile could be raised, particularly if current climate activists were willing to change their focus from the means of achieving consensus on climate change to the end of achieving emissions reductions.
Download Full PDF 1. Oil and the Global Economy Oil prices have had a spectacular Continue Reading
http://aspo.tv/2010-peak-oil-conference/dr-james-schlesinger-keynote-address/ Dr. Schlesinger “Thank you very much. Between us, I cannot emulate the erudition that Continue Reading