Tackling Both In One Hit
Global Warming And Security Of Supply
Using Less Fossil Fuel
It's Easy When You Know How
www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/EnergyJuly2006.htm
Tell The People Who Run Your Town
Energy Update - July 2006
"Solar Development has completed the installation of one of the largest photovoltaic solar system on a commercial business in California. The system, a one Megawatt AC solar array, covers an area the size of three football fields on the roof and grounds of Tony's Fine Foods in West Sacramento. The solar system generates electricity to power Tony's extensive frozen and refrigerated food storage warehouse. When the solar array generates more electricity than Tony's needs it exports the electricity back to the electrical grid."
Solar Development introduces new solar energy project
Construction and Maintenance, 30 June 2006Transiting To A Solar Society
"Royal Dutch Shell [forecasts] that only around a third of the world's energy needs will be provided by traditional fossil fuels in 2060. Shell thinks the biggest single energy source then will be the most abundant of all - the sun."
The oil giants are beating a path to Downham Market as Norfolk enters the alternative fuels rush
Daily Telegraph, 28 June 2006
"As the informed public becomes aware
of the impact of greenhouse gases, nuclear power is being promoted again, this time as a
carbon-free energy source. But the popular notion that nuclear is carbon-neutral is
faulty. High-grade uranium ores have already been exploited, and the mining and refining
of lower-grade uranium ores are increasingly fossil-fuel intensive.... Humanitys
'primary energy production,' including all fossil fuels, nuclear power, hydroelectric and
renewables, is 13 terawatts (equivalent to 13,000 large power plants), less than 1/100 of
1 percent of the 170,000 terawatts continuously delivered to the earth as sunlight. With
600 terawatts of terrestrial potential, solar energy far exceeds all other possible forms
of substitution....an electric vehicle is at least twice as efficient as a gasoline
vehicle. We are ready for a good reason to get rid of the internal combustion engine in
dense urban areas, where it is about as practical as a campfire in the kitchen. Efficiency
in the face of oil depletion is that compelling reason. Solar technologies continue to
improve, and so do electric vehicles. A battery with three times the energy density of
lead-acid and a charging time under two minutes is scheduled for introduction in 2007 or
2008. Shanghai has an electromagnetic propulsion maglev train that travels at 270 miles
per hour."
Dawn of the Solar Era - A Wake-Up Call
Solar Today, March/April
2006
"Solar electric panels will be
installed on 20 municipal buildings across the oil-producing province of Alberta, city and
federal government officials announced on Thursday.... In the past, renewable energy has
not been needed or wanted in oil-rich Alberta, where the conventional oil sector has been
a driver of the provincial economy for more than 50 years. In addition to conventional oil
production, Alberta has vast oil sands, or tar sands...."
Oil-Rich Alberta Embraces Solar Power
Environment News
Service, 30 June 2006
"Peter Hain has broken rank with the
Cabinet to express doubts about building new nuclear power stations. Tony Blair is thought
to favour nuclear after he said the issue was 'back on the agenda with a vengeance'. Mr
Blair was accused of pre-empting the government's own energy review - a charge he denied.
Mr Hain said if there had to be nuclear power it must work without huge public subsidy,
which should be spent on renewable energy instead."
Hain sceptical on nuclear power
BBC Online, 30 June 2006
| In This Bulletin |
| Transiting To A
Solar Society Step 1 - Using Less Fossil Fuel |
| The Energy
Challenge We All Face How They Do It In Downtown Woking |
| Spelling It Out
For Policy Makers A Transitional Phase For National Energy Policy |
| 'Peak Gas' Why We Need To Use Less Gas |
| Carbon Capture V
Energy Conservation/Renewables Carbon Capture Ain't Gonna Happen In Time |
| Daily Telegraph 'Our Only Hope Lies In Forging A New Energy World Order' |
| Why Nuclear
Power Does Not Offer A Secure Alternative |
| 'End Game' From Washington To Delhi Pressure For Renewables Grows |
Transiting To A
Solar Society
Step 1 - Using Less Fossil Fuel
Woking's Town Centre Combined Heat And Power Plant
"The so-called energy review [in the
UK] is in fact a review only of electricity generation, and does not address the two
thirds of our energy needs that go towards heating and transport. We cant run our
cars or heat our houses with nuclear energy. So if we want to cut our carbon emissions
significantly, building new nuclear power stations wont help much. The Sustainable
Development Commission has calculated that building ten new nuclear reactors would cut CO2
emissions by only 4 per cent. Other innovations could
do far more than that. Our huge power stations
whether fuelled by coal, gas or nuclear are grossly inefficient: they waste two thirds of the energy that they produce. Most of it rises into the air in the form of heat from the cooling
towers. If Britain were to adopt a decentralised form of electricity generation, with much
smaller combined heat and power (CHP) stations located in the communities they serve, then
the heat produced by the stations could be channelled straight into factories and homes
through hot water pipes. These CHP stations waste only 5-10 per cent of their energy. It
can be done. The whole of Rotterdam runs on decentralised energy. So does more than half
of Denmark. Closer to home, Woking has set up a local
network that, together with energy efficiency measures, has cut emissions by a whopping 77
per cent. That
puts nuclear savings in the shade. Decentralised energy is much cleaner than the current system and
it improves energy security, because we dont need to import so much gas.... Labour will certainly be alone
in making a strong case for new nuclear stations. And the irony is that, while Mr Blair
and Mr Brown think that this is the modern thing to do, they are in fact facing opposition
parties with much more forward-thinking policies."
Tories: we don't want power
London Times, 23 June
2006
Using Less Fossil Fuel Energy
Because Global Warming Demands It
"In the war on global warming, the
southern English town of Woking is tilting at the establishment, but unlike Don Quixote,
it is using windmills instead of charging at them. The town of 90,000 has slashed emissions of carbon dioxide (CO2)
from civic buildings by 77 percent and its success is proving a model for giants like
nearby London and other cities from Australia and Canada..... Wokings green plan was driven initially by the need to save
money, but the town found it was also cutting CO2 emissions. As
well as the power plant, a large hydrogen fuel cell -- the first of its kind in Britain --
provides heat and power to the local recreation center and rooftop solar panels power
sheltered accommodation for pensioners. Fuel bills in the
buildings supplied are lower than in the past, and Woking even sells power back to the
national grid.... Last year, officials from cities around the world met in London to
discuss conserving energy. A core group from around 20 cities are now working to push the
agenda forward, looking at building standards, energy efficiency, sustainability and
security of power supply. New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has volunteered his city to
host a follow-up meeting."
Town taps technology to curb carbon emissions
Reuters, 21 March 2006
And Because There's Going To Be
A Lot Less Available To The West
"Leaders of
the six-member Shanghai Cooperation Organization, which includes China, Russia,
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan, embraced a Chinese-led plan during the
summit to increase military cooperation and discussed a Russian proposal to create a
regional 'energy club' that would exclude the United States. The SCO also indicated it
would soon invite Iran, India, Pakistan, and Mongolia - nations that have observer status
in the organization - to become full members. That the SCO provided Iran with a diplomatic
embrace at a time when the United States is trying to isolate Tehran over its nuclear
program is yet another instance of how the grouping is thumbing its nose at Washington,
analysts say.... Last July, as soon as Iran, India, and Pakistan were inducted into the
SCO as observers, the organization also formally asked the United States to withdraw its
troops from member states. Since then, Uzbekistan has asked the United States to vacate an
air base it set up after the Sept. 11 attacks. Both Russia and India have also established
military bases in Tajikistan, not far from the US base in that country. The economic endgame in all this is to
dilute Washington's hold over the Caspian Sea's energy reserves, said Robert Karniol, Asia-Pacific
editor for Jane's Defense Weekly. China and India, the world's fastest-growing energy
consumers, want to divert Central Asia's energy resources toward their own economies, and
Iran and Russia, the region's largest energy suppliers, are keen to reduce their
dependence on sales to the West, Karniol said.....Over the last year, China, India,
Russia, and Iran have signed energy deals valued at about $500 billion with one another
and also have begun to talk of about creating a Central Asian 'energy club' that would
have its own pipeline network and energy market. India and China have raised Washington's
ire with a proposal to convert the prized Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipeline, which has been designed to bring gas to Europe, into a
feeder for Asia. India wants to extend the
pipeline to Syria, from where oil would be loaded onto tankers and shipped to Asia through
the Red Sea."
Summit forges military ties in Central Asia
Boston
Globe, 18 June 2006
"The shifting pattern of energy
consumption is rattling Washington and aggravating an already intense rivalry with
neighboring Japan over access to oil and gas supplies, adding to tensions in an already
volatile region. 'The global demand for oil has been rising faster than supply because
there's new economies that are beginning to gin up, new economies growing, like China and
India,' President Bush said recently. 'Oil the dependence upon oil is a national
security problem, and an economic security problem,' Bush said. China is acutely aware of
the security implications of its growing dependence on imported oil. For more than a
decade, its three large state-owned companies have been scouring the globe, from Iran to
Angola, to secure supplies. In the past six months alone, China has signed deals totaling
more than $7 billion for stakes in oil and gas fields in Kazakhstan, Nigeria and Syria. A
state-controlled company is reportedly considering a $2 billion bid for yet another Kazakh
property. The worldwide buying spree helped net at least 3.5 million barrels per day of
imported oil last year enough to make China the world's third-leading consumer of
foreign oil.Chinese demand is forecast to more than double by 2025, to 14.2 million
barrels a day from the current 7 million a day, according to the U.S. government's Energy Information Agency.....
Earlier this year, the Bush administration published a revised National Security Strategy
that accused Chinese leaders of 'acting as if they can somehow 'lock up' energy supplies
around the world or seek to direct markets rather than opening them up.'... Surging oil
consumption by China, India and other emerging economies on top of what is already
being consumed by wealthy nations like the United States has added urgency to the
debate over future supplies. Some experts believe production will soon peak, and that
looming shortages require a fast shift to alternatives.... In late April, Chinese
President Hu Jintao flew to the kingdom for talks with Saudi Aramco, the world's largest
oil producer the latest episode in a continuing Chinese effort to ensure access to
Saudi Arabia's 9.5 million barrels per day of oil production. That visit, coming just
after meetings between Hu and Bush in the United States, was closely monitored in
Washington.... China is studying alternative routes for African and Middle Eastern oil,
including a pipeline through Myanmar, a port project in Pakistan and possibly even
building a shipping channel through Thailand. It is also laying pipelines to former Soviet
countries. China recently opened a 625-mile link carrying 190,000 barrels a day of Kazakh
oil, providing its first direct access to potentially rich central Asian fields.
Construction has begun on an even bigger pipeline project that when completed in 2010 will
move up to 1.6 million barrels per day of crude from Russia's Irkutsk region to its
Pacific coast, with a branch line running into northeastern China.... Given the risks,
Washington should step up energy cooperation with China, says Sen. Joseph Lieberman (news,
bio, voting record) of Connecticut a Democrat regarded as a close security ally of
President Bush. 'These are two nations following similar international oil acquisition
policies,' he said. 'If we let it go, this could end up in real military conflict, not
just economic conflict.'"
China's Thirst for Oil Rattles Old Order
Associated
Press, 11 June 2006
"China is moving into Africa on a
grand scale. Still a developing nation itself, it has nonetheless now overtaken Britain to
be the continents third-biggest trading partner after the United States and France.
Its inroads into the worlds poorest continent are the the most striking sign of the
biggest shake-up in patterns of world trade in a generation....For the worlds
fastest growing economy, Africa is first and foremost a supplier of oil. In Sudan,
state-owned oil companies have been investing since Western companies left in the
mid-1990s. In 1996 China bought a 40 per cent stake in two oilfields and since 1998 it has
helped to build a 930-mile pipeline from the fields to the Red Sea. Last year it bought 50
per cent of Sudans oil exports, accounting for 5 per cent of its needs. China has
stakes in extraction in Nigeria, Angola and Algeria, among others. Its biggest deal so far
came in January when CNOOC, the state-owned energy company, announced it would buy a 45
per cent stake in an offshore oilfield in Nigeria for $2.3 billion."
Thirst for oil fuels China's grand safari in Africa
London Times,
1 July 2006
"China's growing thirst for energy is
set to be partially quenched after the opening today of a giant terminal to receive
liquefied natural gas from Australia under a record $19bn (£10.4bn) deal between the
countries. The Dapeng gas terminal in Shenzhen, the manufacturing heartland of southern
China, is the first of more than a dozen similar facilities planned or under construction
along the Chinese coast as the world's fastest-growing economy races to secure overseas
power supplies.... It is part of a transformation in the global economy as resource-rich
nations compete to do business with Beijing. For Australia, the 25-year contract to supply
the Dapeng terminal, which was signed in 2004, is the country's largest-ever trade deal
and both sides expect more to follow."
Thirsty China opens huge LNG terminal
Guardian, 28 June 2006
Russia And Iran Between Them
Hold Over 40% Of The Globe's Gas Reserves
"The Iranians may possess less oil
than the Saudis and less gas than the Russians, but no other country controls so much of
both of these vital resources. Many states, including China, India, Japan and the European
Union countries, already depend on Iran for significant shares of their petroleum
supplies; and China and the others have been busy
negotiating deals to develop, and then draw on, its mammoth natural-gas reserves."
New moves on the tripolar chessboard
Asia Times, 17 June 2006
The Energy Challenge We All
Face
How They Do It In Downtown Woking
"An energy review, due next month, is
expected to call for additional nuclear power stations to be built as replacements for
older plants. The Sustainable Development Commission said the nuclear option 'won't get us
anywhere near tackling the UK's energy and climate change crisis'. Its chairman called for
more efficient homes and less wasted power. The commission recommended the country's
'wasteful electricity network' be upgraded, with a greater emphasis on local power grids
to reduce the proportion of supplies which were lost before reaching households."
Ministers warned on nuclear power
BBC Online, 29 June 2006
![]() |
Efforts in Woking, England, to curb carbon emissions include the
street lights above,
powered by solar panels and small
wind turbines atop each pole
| ".....The town of Woking,
located in the midst of Surreys London commuter belt, may not be widely perceived as
a leader in energy innovation but that is what it has become. It already has the largest
concentration of solar energy photovoltaics in the UK. Along with the use of other technologies, the Borough Council has led the way in dramatically improving energy efficiency in its own properties. By 2004, energy consumption had been reduced by 49% and CO2 generation by an astonishing 77%. Energy and water cost savings now stand at £1 million per annum. The Council has built the first hydrogen driven fuel-cell combined heat and power system (CHP) in the UK, from which pure water is also a by-product, in addition to the local generation of heat and power. This system is still reliant on natural gas as a hydrogen source, although CHP plants could be run on renewable fuel sources in the future such as biomass from farm crops and waste. However, by deploying CHP technology, much less fuel is required. Efficiencies as high as 90% can be achieved, compared with as little as 21% for energy delivered through the national grid. The Council is now focused on expanding green energy usage into the private sector, principally via the creation of a council-owned Energy and Environmental Services company called Thamesway, to provide integrated green energy services to the local community. The approach includes the use of CHP, thermal storage, absorption cooling for air conditioning and refrigeration, renewables, and private wire (i.e. heating, hot water, and electricity, supplied outside the national grid). The associated green energy production enjoys exemption from the Climate Change Levy and much of the town centre is now connected to a local CHP system, from which surplus energy is also exported to sheltered housing and other local authority buildings. In addition to the substantial climate change mitigation benefits, users are supplied with sustainable energy services at less cost than from their previous energy supplier. As a result of these achievements Woking Borough Council is the only local authority ever to have won the Queens Award for Enterprise......" From Farm to Factory: The
Energy Challenge We All Face |
For More Information On What's Going On In Woking
And How It Can Be Done In Your Town Too
Click
Here
Spelling It Out For Policy
Makers
A Transitional Phase For National Energy Policy
"You may have noticed we haven't mentioned renewable energy sources so far.
This is because the UK can close the 'Energy Gap', cut CO2 emissions and reduce gas consumption just by using fossil fuels more efficiently. However, to move beyond fossil fuels, to create a fully sustainable and secure energy system, renewables must be an essential part of any solution. "
The
following full page advert appeared in the London Times on 20 June 2006
published by Greenpeace
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'Peak Gas'
Why We Need To Use Less Gas

Simmons and Company, Investment Bankers to the Energy Industry
Presentation to the Chartered Financial Analyst Society of St. Louis, 24 May 2006

Click Here For Full Presentation
"European energy consumers face
further big rises in gas prices in the coming years because of acute shortages of Russian
supplies.... Eric Berglöf, chief economist at the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development, told MEPs and senior EU officials that Gazprom, the Russian gas group
majority-owned by the state, would struggle to offset declines in output, but demand from
Europe and ex-Soviet Union countries would grow at 2-3% a year... He told the European Enterprise Institute that 70% of production
at Gazprom, the world's third-largest energy group, came from fields whose gas was running
out... Mr Berglöf, founder of a Moscow economic thinktank, warned that without serious
reforms of both Gazprom and Russia's energy sector, prices for domestic use and export
could double by 2010. Christian Cleutinx, head of
EU-Russian energy dialogue at the European commission, said the EU would be 80% dependent
on gas imports by 2030 as demand rose by 60%. But, he said, Russia planned to export only
an extra 50m tonnes of gas to all countries, not just the EU, by 2020, leaving Europe 150m tonnes short and forcing it to use other countries.... Mr Berglöf added: 'We won't
see progress at the G8 and, after that, further deterioration coming from fundamental
trends in Russia and its economic and political system. But there is pressure for greater
energy efficiency, investment in renewables and reform of the power market there.'"
Europe warned of steep rise in gas price as Russia runs out
Guardian, 11 May 2006
"Gazprom may not have enough gas to
supply Europe over the next decade, the head of the International Energy Agency (IEA) said
yesterday... Concern over Gazproms output has been mounting in recent years as
evidence emerged of the companys flat indigenous production profile. While Russia
has the worlds largest gas reserves, the giant utility relies on a small number of
giant gasfields and has not yet invested in developing new resources in the Arctic....
Gazprom is the monopoly buyer of gas for export from Turkmenistan, which is used to supply
the utilitys domestic customers in Siberia, while the Siberian gas is shipped to
Europe. Gazproms monopoly over Central Asian gas exports is a deterrent to new
investment by those countries, Mr Mandil said."
Gazprom risks serious shortfall of gas for export
London Times,
23 May 2006
Carbon Capture V Energy
Conservation/Renewables
Carbon Capture Ain't Gonna Happen In Time
"Cutting edge technology to cut
greenhouse gas emissions, such as carbon capture and off-shore wind, needs government
support to make it competitive, said Head of Shell International Renewables Graeme Sweeney
on Tuesday.... Carbon capture needs special sweeteners to get it off the ground, Sweeney
said, as there is no particular financial incentive for power producers to add the
technology to their continued burning of fossil fuels. Carbon capture involves burying
heat-trapping gases such as carbon dioxide (CO2) underground. 'It would require
substantial public incentives to get this up and running,' he said of carbon capture and
storage (CCS), speaking at a climate change conference in London. 'There's plenty of
hydrocarbons (left) and people are going to use it. There are large amounts of coal, oil,
oil sands and oil shales.' 'If you want to capture 10 percent of carbon emitted from
current fossil fuel activity the infrastructure (required) would be the same size as the
oil and gas industry, to deal with the volume. So you better get started soon....
Government will need to favour particular technologies, rather than leaving the energy mix
to the market, Sweeney said. 'There is a problem to get stuff taken off the shelf and
deployed. I believe off-shore wind can go... but you need to give it a differential
position.... Shell International Renewables is a part of Royal Dutch Shell Plc (RDSa.L: Quote,
Profile,
Research).
Shell would announce shortly a 100 megawatt plant in Germany for second generation solar
activity, Sweeney added."
Green technology needs more public funding-Shell
Reuters,
27 June 2006
The Large Amounts Of Money Needed To Invest In Carbon
Capture
Could Instead Be Going Into More Cost Effective Energy Conservation Incentives And
Energy Technologies
Which Don't Generate CO2 In The First Place
"... climate disaster is still only in
its very early stages: this is not a linear but a dynamic process of intensification.
Indeed, at certain 'tipping points', emissions of greenhouse gases could leap
unpredictably. The impact of this on human civilisation is at this stage unknowable. So is
all this irreversible? Some is, but far the greater part is still to come and can be
slowed and, over time, halted. But it requires more urgent and radical change in our
transportation, economic systems and lifestyles than governments or industries anywhere
have yet seriously contemplated. What then is to be done? If climate change is driven
primarily by the burning of fossil fuels, the world must diversify quickly into renewable
sources of energy wind power, biomass, wave and tidal power and solar energy. Carbon capture and storage may be an option, but no clean
coal-technology prototype has yet been built."
Michael Meacher, Former UK Environment Minister
Ten years to prevent catastrophe
London Times, 10
February 2006
'Our
Only Hope Lies In Forging
A New Energy World Order'
"Peak
oil is the point at which oil production rises to its highest point before declining.
Almost all expert opinion agrees that it is fast approaching, possibly within five years,
almost certainly within 15, according to the former Saudi oil chief, Dr Sadad
al-Husseini.... Global oil production is 84m barrels a day. As the president of Exxon
Mobil Exploration, John Thompson, said in 2003: 'By 2015 we will need to find, develop and
produce a volume of new oil and gas that is equal to eight out of every 10 barrels being
produced today.' That is not just a problem of better technology. Additional oil on that
scale is not available. There are three options to
escape this dilemma. One, which the US is ruthlessly
pursuing, is to grab by force of arms the lion's share of what remains. A second is to
shift into unconventional sources of oil - tar sands, extra heavy oils and gas to liquids
processing. A third is to accelerate the switch out of oil altogether into renewable
sources of energy, especially wind power, biomass, tidal power and solar. What is so disturbing is that long-term global policymaking on
this, perhaps the biggest decision this century, is virtually non-existent and driven
instead by self-destructive short-termism."
Michael Meacher, Former UK Environment Minister
Our only hope lies in forging a new energy world order
Daily
Telegraph, 26 June 2006
"President Vladimir Putin's top
political adviser Wednesday accused the United States of seeking international energy
domination under the guise of promoting democracy and insisted that Russia is committed to
building its own style of political pluralism without outside interference. 'When our
partners interpret energy security as full control over our energy resources, I think we
have a right to understand it differently,' said Vladislav Surkov, deputy head of the
presidential administration and the architect of some of Putin's most controversial steps
to reassert the power of the state in Russia. 'People talk to us about democracy, but
they're really thinking about our energy resources,' Surkov said. He noted that during
Vice President Dick Cheney's recent visit to Kazakhstan, an oil-rich state whose
human-rights record is often criticized, the American 'harshly criticized Russia's
democracy and then praised Kazakhstan's. Kazakhstan is our brother and neighbor, but I'll
never believe they've advanced further in the cause of democracy than Russia has,' he
said. 'We know our flaws. But we don't get involved in things that are not our business,
and we'd like to be treated in the same way.' The politely combative tone came shortly
before the arrival of U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and other foreign ministers
of the Group of 8 industrialized nations for annual meetings chaired by Russia this year.
Energy security is a top theme for the talks, as is Russia's re-emergence as a global oil
and gas superpower able to use its energy supplies as a lever in dealing with the new
Western-backed democracies emerging along its borders. Wednesday's meeting with reporters
was a rare look at the secretive, 41-year-old adviser widely known as the 'gray cardinal'
of the Kremlin. Surkov has quietly played a significant role in steering Russia toward a
return to state control over strategic sectors of the economy, from oil and gas, and
managing the development of civil society."
Russia chastises U.S. over energy
Los
Angeles Times, 29 June 2006
"The first option was
the real reason behind the first Gulf War in 1991, to deter Saddam gaining control of the
Saudi oilfields. It was also a major reason for the orchestrated revolutions in Ukraine,
Georgia and Kyrgyzstan, as well as the military interventions in Afghanistan and
Yugoslavia, all of which offer key oil transit routes from the Caspian Sea Basin, which
holds the world's biggest untapped fossil fuel resources, worth up to $5 trillion. Equally
it is also one major reason for Russian intervention in Chechnya, part of the northerly
transit route between the Caspian and Black Sea under current Russian control. It is
certainly another reason for US concern about Iran, holding only slightly lower oil
reserves than Iraq. But, above all, option one was the main trigger for the Iraq war. Of
more than 80 oilfields discovered in Iraq, only about 21 have been at least partly
developed. Despite this, Iraq's proven oil reserves exceed 110bn barrels but its total
reserves are likely to be far more, perhaps even 200bn barrels more. This explains US
determination to control this fulcrum but it has involved an escalating political,
military and economic price that must make this option unsupportable even for the US. An
alternative strategy is to take advantage of the rising oil price to develop
unconventional oil sources, notably the Athabascan tar sands in Canada and the Venezuelan
Orinoco heavy oils. However, the downsides in terms of cost, manpower, water shortages
and, above all, CO2, are prohibitive. Cost-wise, the International Energy Agency reckons
that investment needed in oil and gas over the next 25 years to meet an expected 50pc
increase in global demand, will be $5 trillion, equivalent to more than four times the
entire GNP of the UK. The biggest constraint, however, is environmental. It takes almost
as much energy to mine, process, refine and upgrade the oil extracted from tar sand as the
energy contained in the light oil produced. Worse still, the processing releases five to
10 times more greenhouse gases than a barrel of conventional oil. This is the exact
opposite to the scientists' requirement for the world to cut greenhouse gas emissions by
at least 60pc by 2050. The third option is clearly the right way forward - a new energy world order.
The potential for powering the world economy via renewables is almost infinite.
Governments should now be switching to this option, far faster and on a far greater
scale."
Michael Meacher, Former UK Environment Minister
Our only hope lies in forging a new energy world order
Daily
Telegraph, 26 June 2006
"There are many reasons to doubt that
Saudi Arabia, the world`s biggest oil producer, can feed the globe`s ever-growing hunger
for oil for as long as it claims, experts say..... Saudi estimates are much more
optimistic than the reality, Zagar said, adding that his best estimate for proven reserves
was significantly lower -- at 165 billion barrels. On loan from Exxon Mobil, Zagar worked
on some giant Saudi Arabian oil fields in the late 1970s, and has researched their
capabilities ever since. 'My contacts at Saudi Aramco tell me that they are under pressure
to replace reserves depleted by production,' he said. The new, optimistic estimates are
likely because of remapping old fields, he added. At the current production rate of 10
million barrels a day, according to Zagar`s estimates, reserves will decline by 2025, 17
years earlier than with Saudi figures, he said. 'That has drastic implications for the
world`s economy,' he said. Saudi Aramco Chief Executive Officer Abdallah Jum`ah, however,
says that due to new projects, the maximum sustained production capability could be
increased to 12 million barrels per day by 2009, a plan backed by Ali Naimi, Saudi oil
minister. That would push the decline date even closer, to 2020, he said."
Ananlysis: How much oil do Saudis have?
United
Press International, 30 June 2006
"Former U.S. president Bill Clinton has urged newspaper editors to focus more attention
on the depletion of the worlds oil reserves.
In a June 17 speech to the Association of Alternative Newsweeklies convention in Little
Rock, Arkansas, Clinton said a 'significant number of petroleum geologists' have warned
that the world could be nearing the peak in oil
production. .. At the AAN convention, Clinton
delivered a detailed scientific explanation of some of the problems with the Ghawar oil
reservoir [the largest field in the world in Saudi Arabia].
Clinton echoed Simmonss claim that massive amounts of water have been injected into
Ghawar to maintain oil pressure. 'It implies less oil than we previously thought,' Clinton
said."
Clinton raises alarm about oil depletion
Georgia Straight (Canada), 22 June 2006
"We almost certainly are at or near
what they call peak oil..."
Al Gore, former US Vice President
CNN, 14 June 2006
"The sun is the only energy source
that can meet the oil depletion challenge. But solar energy ramp-up must be large-scale
and immediate.... Peak oil is an emerging reality. With production already declining in
all but a few major oil regions, an energy shortfall is inevitable. ... One place where
the peak oil message is being heard is at the margins of the oil, gas and coal industries.
As energy prices rise exponentially, researchers are attempting to exploit
carbon-intensive, non-conventional fossil fuels to replace transportation fuels. Massive
investments have been made to extract tar sands in Alberta; research is ramping up to find
a way to convert oil shale in Wyoming and Colorado; and improved technologies are being
developed to convert coal to liquids, using the same process that fueled Hitlers
desperate army. But such attempts have produced inadequate amounts of net energy. For heat
to extract oil from tar sands, natural gas equivalent to one-third of a barrel is used per
barrel. This natural gas is in addition to the liquid fuels and electricity needed for
mining, refining and environmental remediation. Recognizing rising natural gas prices,
advocates are even suggesting nuclear power to replace natural gas for heat in the
extraction process. Nuclear power is also being examined for the extraction of oil shale.
This misnamed substance (neither shale nor oil but marlstone and kerogen, an immature
hydrocarbon) must be heated under pressure to convert it to oil. One proponent in Colorado
envisions a nuclear facility generating more power to heat oil shale in situ than all electricity now consumed statewide. Water
requirements and environmental impacts could be huge. As the informed public becomes aware
of the impact of greenhouse gases, nuclear power is being promoted again, this time as a
carbon-free energy source. But the popular notion that nuclear is carbon-neutral is
faulty. High-grade uranium ores have already been exploited, and the mining and refining
of lower-grade uranium ores are increasingly fossil-fuel intensive. If all bets are placed
on marginal fossil fuels and nuclear power, the consequences for society will be dire.
Perpetuating the automotive fleet, for example, may seem laudable. But propping up the
fleet with low-grade fuels could be more dangerous than doing nothing because, as U.S.
Rep. Roscoe G. Bartlett suggests in his article (page 27), these marginal sources too will
run out, and humanity will be left high and dry."
Dawn of the Solar Era - A Wake-Up Call
Solar Today, March/April
2006
Why Nuclear Power
Does Not Offer A Secure Alternative
"Peter Hain has broken rank with
the Cabinet to express doubts about building new nuclear power stations. Tony Blair is
thought to favour nuclear after he said the issue was 'back on the agenda with a
vengeance'. Mr Blair was accused of pre-empting the government's own energy review - a
charge he denied. Mr Hain said if there had to be nuclear power it must work without huge
public subsidy, which should be spent on renewable energy instead."
Hain sceptical on nuclear power
BBC Online, 30 June 2006
"...every £1 invested
in energy efficiency produces seven times as much CO2 abated as the same £1 invested in
nuclear energy..."
Jonathon Porritt, chairman of the UK Sustainable Development
Commission
Blair's nuclear error
Guardian,
30 June 2006
"Australia and China signed a nuclear safeguards deal on Monday that set the stage for huge uranium exports to Beijing for its power industry.... [Resources Minister] Macfarlane said China's predicted uranium consumption was estimated at 20,000 tonnes a year, while Australia currently produced only about 10,000 tonnes a year ... "
Australia and China sign deal on uranium trade
Reuters, 3 April 2006
"Cameco is the world's largest low-cost uranium producer accounting for
20% of the world's uranium production... Existing uranium supply is expected to fall short
of demand over the next decade demonstrating a need for new primary mine production which
will require higher sustained prices. Cameco is positioned to benefit from this shortfall
through our control of more than 60% of known new uranium production." "Utilities are scrambling to buy
uranium now because they are worried they might not be able to find enough uranium to keep
their plants running." |
| As
'Peak Oil' Debate Heats Up What Are The Energy Alternatives, And Is Nuclear Power A Dead-End Mirage? What Use Are More Nuclear Power Stations? Will They Be Cost Effective, Is There Enough Uranium To Go Round, And Will They Really Reduce Carbon Emissions? Click Here |
'End Game'
From Washington To Delhi
Pressure For Renewables Grows
"You may have noticed we haven't mentioned renewable energy sources so far.
This is because the UK can close the 'Energy Gap', cut CO2 emissions and reduce gas
consumption just by using fossil fuels more efficiently. However,
to move beyond fossil fuels, to create a fully sustainable and secure energy system,
renewables must be an essential part of any solution."
Greenpeace Advert
London Times, 20 June
2006
"Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman called
upon 'the best scientists and engineers in India' to pool their talent and collaborate
with their American counterparts to expand research in finding alternative sources of
energy. Referring to President Bush's Advanced Energy Initiative, 'an achievable program'
to bring to market energy produced from cellulosic ethanol, hydrogen, solar and wind
technologies, Mr Bodman said 'This will require the best scientists and the best
engineers. Many of these individuals are to be found, not in the United States, but in
India.' He expressed hope that the 'two countries can cooperate on these projects as well,
as we are on the ITER and on FutureGen, to bring them to fruition that much sooner. ' Mr
Bodman was addressing a symposium here yesterday on 'India's Changing Innovation System:
Ahievements, Challenges, and Opportunities for Cooperation.'"
Find Alternative Energy Sources, Bodman Urges India
UNI,
17 June 2006
"Major oil corporations, most of whom
have achieved record profits on the back of rocketing oil prices, have been told to
reinvest in renewable energy. Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said oil
corporations must be willing to reinvest a large portion of their profits for the
research, development and commercialisation of renewable energy resources. 'Only by
working together will we be able to resolve some of the long-term concerns weighing down
the oil and gas industry. 'It is my vision to see that this process of cooperation between
the public and private sectors begins at the soonest possible time,' he said. He was
speaking at the opening of the 11th Annual Asia Oil and Gas Conference, themed 'Balancing
The Interest Of Consumers and Producers' at the Kuala Lumpur Convention Centre."
Reinvest in renewable energy, Malaysian PM tells oil majors
Business
Times, 12 June 2006
"Scientists have invented a plastic
solar cell that can turn the sun's power into electrical energy, even on a cloudy day. The
plastic material uses nanotechnology and contains the first solar cells able to harness
the sun's invisible, infrared rays. The breakthrough has led theorists to predict that
plastic solar cells could one day become five times more efficient than current solar cell
technology.... The researchers envision that one day 'solar farms' consisting of the
plastic material could be rolled across deserts to generate enough clean energy to supply
the entire planet's power needs. 'The sun that reaches the Earth's surface delivers 10,000
times more energy than we consume,' said Ted Sargent, an electrical and computer
engineering professor at the University of Toronto. Sargent is one of the inventors of the
new plastic material. 'If we could cover 0.1 percent of the Earth's surface with [very
efficient] large-area solar cells,' he said, 'we could in principle replace all of our
energy habits with a source of power which is clean and renewable.'... The researchers
combined specially designed nano particles called quantum dots with a polymer to make the
plastic that can detect energy in the infrared. With further advances, the new plastic
'could allow up to 30 percent of the sun's radiant energy to be harnessed, compared to 6
percent in today's best plastic solar cells,' said Peter Peumans, a Stanford University
electrical engineering professor, who studied the work."
Spray-On Solar-Power Cells Are True Breakthrough
National
Geographic, 14 January 2005
"For the past half century, the limit
of one electron per solar photon seemed a regrettable fact of semiconductor physics.
However, in recent tests of semiconductor bits only a few nanometers in
diameterentities known as nanocrystals or quantum dotsresearchers have been
surprised to find that photons at solar energies commonly unleash multiple electrons. The
number set loose depends on the dot's composition andas a quirk of quantum
mechanicsits size. Recent experiments on 8-nanometer-diameter lead selenide quantum
dots have given the best results so far: Ultraviolet-light photonsalbeit at a
wavelength found sparingly in sunlightreleased seven electrons apiece. That leap in
producing electrons could lead to major improvements in solar cell efficiencies....
Efficiency could become a hallmark of many quantum-dot technologies. As oil prices soar to
record levels, thrifty quantum dots promise to give solar energy in particular an even
more powerful appeal."
Quantum-Dot Leap - Tapping tiny crystals' inexplicable light-harvesting talent
Science News, 3
June 2006
"Humanitys 'primary energy
production,' including all fossil fuels, nuclear power, hydroelectric and renewables, is
13 terawatts (equivalent to 13,000 large power plants), less than 1/100 of 1 percent of
the 170,000 terawatts continuously delivered to the earth as sunlight. With 600 terawatts
of terrestrial potential, solar energy far exceeds all other possible forms of
substitution. Transportation in a post-cheap-oil world poses special challenges. If
non-conventional fossil fuels are untenable and transportation is powered almost
exclusively by liquid fuels, it is tempting to propose biomass as a substitute for oil. In
the United States, 1 billion tons of biomass are managed each year. To meet all our energy
needs, 7 billion tons more would be required. Obviously, electric airplanes or cargo ships
are impractical, so biomass will play an important role in our energy future. But liquid
fuels exclusively from plant material will be possible for transport at only about
one-tenth the present level worldwide. Something has to give. Considering societys
huge investment in the vehicle fleet and these limitations of biofuels, it is difficult to
imagine the transformation of transportation to renewable energy sources. To make the
shift, the premise that solar energy must be converted into fuel has to be challenged. A
direct path from sunlight to electricity can be 10 times as efficient as photosynthesis.
Solar energy cant be touched or put into a bottle. Solar is
radiant energy, not a solid, liquid or gas. Electricity from renewables is ideally
suited for urban transportation. It is nonpolluting and well-suited for fixed guide rail
and automated routing of traffic, and an electric vehicle is at least twice as efficient
as a gasoline vehicle. We are ready for a good reason to get rid of the internal
combustion engine in dense urban areas, where it is about as practical as a campfire in
the kitchen. Efficiency in the face of oil depletion is that compelling reason. Solar
technologies continue to improve, and so do electric vehicles. A battery with three times
the energy density of lead-acid and a charging time under two minutes is scheduled for
introduction in 2007 or 2008. Shanghai has an electromagnetic propulsion maglev train that
travels at 270 miles per hour."
Dawn of the Solar Era - A Wake-Up Call
Solar Today, March/April
2006
"... in large parts of
emerging markets, solar power does not compete with mains electricity, because there is no
grid. In Bangladesh, where more than two out of three households cannot get electricity
out of a socket, some 80,000 homes now own a basic solar panel that generates about 50
watts of power. The energy is stored in a small battery and can light up three bright,
energy-saving lamps for four hours, Sazzad Hossain, manager of Rahimafrooz told a solar
industry conference in this southern German town at the end of last week.... 'The majority
of rural households can afford solar lighting. They have no idea how much they spend on
candles and kerosene,' said Andy Schroeter, managing director of Sunlabob. Researchers
from the German Fraunhofer's Institute for Solar Energy's (ISE) rural electrification
South East Asia programme agree that even in the world's poorest regions citizens can
afford to pay for basic energy needs."
Asia Shows Solar Power Is Not Just for the Rich
Reuters, 27 June 2006
| No Solution In Sight? The Biggest Challenge Of All Is Changing The Way People Think Transforming Global Consciousness - Before It's Too Late |
'PEAK
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