Sunday, April 30, 2006

Car blast near Nigeria oil port

here has been a car bomb attack near an oil refinery in Nigeria's Delta region, reports say.

State officials told the AFP news agency there were no casualties when the car blew up near the port town of Warri, but several cars were damaged.

The car was parked at a truck stop used by oil tankers which service the town's refinery, a military official said.

The Mend militant group said it carried out the blast, as a warning against Chinese expansion in the region.

Earlier this week, Chinese President Hu Jintao secured four oil drilling licenses for China in return for $4bn (£2.25bn) of investment in Nigeria during a two-day visit.

'Steer clear'

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (Mend) group had also e-mailed journalists before the explosion announcing the attack was going to take place.

Mend said the blast was "the last warning to oil industry workers" and warned China against further involvement in the region.

"We wish to warn the Chinese government and its oil companies to steer well clear of the Niger Delta," the statement said.

"The Chinese government by investing in stolen crude places its citizens in our line of fire," it said.


The militants, who carried out a car bomb attack on 20 April in the nearby city of Port Harcourt which killed two people, are demanding more local control of the region's oil wealth.

In recent months, the group has kidnapped foreign oil workers and warned them to leave the Delta.

The upsurge of attacks on foreign oil interests has cut the country's oil production by 20%.

This has cost Nigeria millions of dollars of lost revenue and helped to drive up world oil prices.


Nigeria militants say explode car bomb in oil delta

WARRI, Nigeria (Reuters) - Nigerian militants said on Saturday they had detonated a car bomb near a refinery in Warri in the southern oil-producing Niger Delta, extending a campaign of attacks that has cut Nigerian exports by a quarter.

No information was immediately available on whether there were any casualties or damage.

A Reuters reporter in Warri who was 4 km (2.5 miles) away from the refinery heard an explosion at the time when the militants said they detonated the bomb. A spokesman for Delta state said there had been a blast but had no further details.

The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta (MEND), which demands more local control over the region's oil wealth, said the bombing was a warning to all people working in OPEC member Nigeria's oil industry, and particularly to China.

"We wish to warn the Chinese government and its oil companies to steer well clear of the Niger Delta ... The Chinese government by investing in stolen crude (oil) places its citizens in our line of fire," said MEND.

Earlier this week, Chinese President Hu Jintao visited Nigeria and signed deals to explore Nigerian oilfields in return for a commitment to invest $4 billion in infrastructure to help develop Africa's most populous country.

MEND has staged a series of kidnappings and attacks against the oil industry in the world's eighth-biggest exporter that has forced companies to cut production by 550,000 barrels per day.

This has contributed to recent spikes in world oil prices, including last week's record high at over $75 per barrel.

The militants, who have abducted a total of 13 foreign oil workers this year and held some of them for several weeks, have warned all oil workers to leave the delta and vowed to halt exports completely. They have now freed all the hostages.

30 KG OF DYNAMITE

MEND said it used a mobile phone to detonate 30 kg (66 lb) of dynamite in the bombing. The use of car bombs is unusual in Nigeria, but it was MEND's second such attack in nine days. Continued ...

© Reuters 2006. All Rights Reserved.
Chinese president ends oil safari, to mixed reactions - Yahoo! News
NAIROBI (AFP) - Chinese President President
Hu Jintao wrapped up his trip to Africa after clinching oil deals that highlight Beijing's search for fresh energy sources to power its booming economy.
ADVERTISEMENT

As Hu headed home after a five-nation tour that ended in Kenya, analysts and critics argued that China's demand for energy and other resources is helping unsavoury African governments heavily criticised by the international community.

Under one of the deals, the state-owned China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) will explore six blocks off the coast of Kenya, a country grappling with graft, and will buy a 45 percent share in an oilfield in Nigeria, where oil-related clashes have intensified in recent months.

In addition, Hu proposed a strategic petroleum reserve with Riyadh, and the Chinese company Sinochem agreed to buy a large but undisclosed amount of phosphates from Morocco in 2007.

Earlier in the day, the Chinese leader and his wife Liu Yongqing visited the Lari viewpoint, about 55 kilometres (34 kilometres) outside the capital, to view the Great Rift Valley, a popular site for tourists.

Kenyan officials said his visit would boost the number of tourists visiting Kenya, which is increasingly reliant on the Asian nation for tourism revenue in light of travel advisories issued by the west.

During Hu's energy-shopping spree, China inked deals to improve his host countries' floundering economies and shoddy infrastructure, prompting a cautious welcome from the Kenyan Standard newspaper.

"This might be an answer for the parsimony and intrasigence shown in the recent years by our traditional development partners who have often used aid as a form of blackmail," the paper said.

"Our interests are best served in a multipolar world such as the Chinese are making it possible," the English-language newspaper said.

"These agreements (between China and Morocco) will certainly benefit the relationship between the two countries that are determined to defy the laws of nature," a Moroccan news agency said, referring to the geographical distance between the two nations.

But angry critics have accused Beijing of doing business with undemocratic regimes, notably Sudan, an oil-rich nation that has for several decades used oil revenues to wage deadly successive wars on dissent.

"When Western governments try to use economic pressure to secure human rights improvements, China's no-strings rule gives dictators the means to resist," Human Rights Watch's executive director Richard Roth said recently.

"Chinese investment and aid can still sometimes help fight poverty, and it is not as if Western governments always have human rights foremost in mind. But as China's quest for new markets and natural resources spreads around the world, its de facto support for repression has become increasingly common," Roth added.

While in Kenya, Hu mantained that China would respect the independence of partner states and that this policy "serves the fundamental interest of China and African countries and contributes to peace, stability and development in the world at large."

"In our dealings with African countries, we have always followed the principle and we need to respect the development and political model chosen by African countries and people," he told reporters in Nairobi on Friday.

China pursues "a policy of non-interference in others' internal affairs," he added.

Chinese oil consumption is expected to rise from 6.59 million barrels per day in 2005 to 6.95 million this year as its once largely agrarian economy continues its rapid industrialisation.

Last year China bought 38.47 million tonnes of African oil, representing about 30 percent of the country's total imports, and nine percent more than in 2004.

* Email St
New oil shock ahead as $100 spike looms


The growing international crisis over Iran's nuclear programme could trigger a catastrophic oil price spike, sending crude prices over $100 a barrel, senior Wall Street analysts are warning.

With prices already at around $72 a barrel, such an increase could mean drivers facing prices of 110p a litre on forecourts, according the the Petrol Retailers Association. Last week Lord Browne, chief executive of BP, warned that prices could rise to £1 as he unveiled bumper $5.27bn profits for the first quarter.

Shell is also expected to announce close to record numbers next week, with analysts expecting profits around $5.57bn, driven largely by the oil price.

A single political shock could be enough to send oil markets into panic, said Adam Sieminski, senior energy economist at Deutsche Bank in New York. 'If we have one more big problem we are going to have triple-digit oil prices.' Sieminski points to confrontation with Iran, a worsening of the situation in Iraq or a recurrence of devastating hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico as potential catalysts for a major rise.

Prices rose by as much as $1.20 in late trading on Friday after the United Nations inspector Mohamed El Baradei said Iran had not complied with demands to disclose the extent of its uranium enrichment programme. Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad later said he 'did not give a damn' about the UN's opinion.

In a report, Sieminski argues that with the world consuming some 85 million barrels of oil a day, a supply disruption of 2 million barrels a day (60 per cent of Iran's exports) 'can only be rebalanced through an extraordinary rise in prices.'

But he believes any breaching of the $100 level would be short-lived, and that prices would fall to between $30 and $60 as increased investment brings new production and refining capacity on stream in oil-producing nations.

Mary Novak, managing director of energy services at consultants Global Insight, said Iran would not need to turn off the taps completely - even if it shut off just a 10th of its 3 million barrels a day of exports, the impact would be dramatic. 'With the situation we have, 300,000 barrels a day would drive prices up significantly,' she said, adding that with the global economy growing more quickly than expected this year 'demand is still expanding and supply is having trouble catching up'.

High crude prices have pushed gasoline prices up to $3 a gallon in the US, where President George Bush has described the rise as a tax on motorists, and Republican senators have promised measures to abate prices, including an investigation of oil company tax payments. The approach of the US driving season has combined with the hangover effect of last year's hurricanes on US refining capacity to underpin current price levels. Refineries in the US have increased their spring maintenance shut-downs for several weeks, to deal with damage from the autumn.

At the same time, more stringent environmental controls on gasolene content led to some US petrol stations running dry on Friday. New rules, which come into force this year, have mandated higher ethanol content in vehicle fuel; but since ethanol cannot be pumped through pipelines, a shortage of infrastructure meant that in some states, including Texas, fuel was not getting to the pumps.

Manouchehr Takin, oil analyst at the Centre for Global Energy Studies in London said 'Every year, approaching the summer driving season in the US, the market gets hyped, and the prices go higher, because of the fear of a shortage.'

Ray Holloway, of the Petrol Retailers' Association, said that 'such a hike would be critical in the second quarter of this year, if we went to $100 a barrel in that period, you could see unleaded petrol at 110p a litre.' Average prices this weekend were 95p a litre.

The stand-off with Iran is one of several factors that could cause a significant supply disruption. Ethnic and tribal disputes in Nigeria have resulted in the loss of 500,000 barrels a day. Output in Iraq, potentially the world's second-largest exporter, is still well below pre-war levels. There are also concerns among traders about supplies from Venezuela and Russia because of internal politics.

High prices have advanced rapidly up the political agenda in the US, where Republicans are trailing in the polls ahead of mid-term elections. Republican senators led by majority leader Bill Frist, have proposed a series of measures including the repeal of tax incentives to oil companies intended to make them invest in the Gulf of Mexico and measures to increase refinery capacity.

The issue has also prompted a return to the debate over opening up the unspoilt Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska to drilling by oil companies.

President Bush also called for an investigation into possible price manipulation, and for new deposits into the US strategic petroleum reserve to cease.
Now drivers have to pass green test

Britain follows the Dutch with fuel-saving exam for new motorists to cut pollution emissions

Juliette Jowit, transport editor
Sunday April 30, 2006
The Observer

After surviving an emergency stop and three-point turn, driving test candidates will in future have to show they can save fuel as well. Fuel efficiency - or eco-driving - is to be made part of the driving test from 2008 in a move ministers hope will cut polluting emissions, save money on bills and make driving safer.

Learner drivers will be taught tips such as accelerating and braking less strongly and changing gears sooner and be assessed on their abilities as part of the practical exam.

Transport Secretary Alistair Darling, said candidates would not pass or fail on eco-driving, but wanted it 'to become as much a part of learning to drive as the three-point turn or checking your mirrors. Small changes like this can make a big difference to the effect drivers have on the environment.'

The government move follows similar initiatives in other countries, including the Netherlands, where the 'New Driving' programme estimates that drivers can cut fuel use by nearly a third. The development comes after ministers faced criticism for failing to meet carbon reduction targets, especially from road transport, because traffic is growing and modern family vehicles are as powerful as the 1960s Monte Carlo rally cars. New car efficiency ratings are also based on model driving, which most people do not practise, claim the Dutch scheme experts.

The British plan, which comes as petrol and diesel prices are predicted to hit £1 a litre, was welcomed by motoring and environmental groups. The RAC Foundation, the policy wing of the motoring group, said it supported eco-driving, but it would be more successful if money-saving benefits were promoted over environmental gains. This was the approach in the Netherlands, where researchers found the environment 'gives people a good feeling, but it's not an incentive for them to change their behaviour'.

Critics are likely to dismiss eco-driving as much less effective than more radical but unpopular policies such as higher fuel taxes, especially because about 700,000 people passed their test in 2004, compared with more than 30 million existing licence holders, who will not be affected by the new test.

The government has already launched schemes to train truck and van drivers to use less fuel and the Energy Saving Trust, a government agency, would like to promote eco-driving more widely.

'All these things you could do tomorrow, and they are not only good for your pocket, they are good for the environment and good for your safety, so everyone is a winner, ' said Nigel Underdown, the EST's head of transport advice.

Another question is whether drivers will bother to change their habits when the average saving will be about £2 a week - less than the price of a large cup of coffee in many cities.

Professor Stephen Glaister, a transport economist at Imperial College London, said research showed that motorists needed much higher petrol prices before they would cut fuel use. 'Broadly speaking, if people find ways to reduce the cost of fuel they'll take advantage by travelling more miles,' he said.

However, the EST said that smoother drivers also save on wear and tear, and less regular services for their vehicles.

In the Netherlands, the target was to cut carbon dioxide emissions from road vehicles by 1.5 million tonnes a year by 2010, but it was important not to exaggerate the results, said Sonja Munnix, the programme adviser. 'You can't save the environment by eco-driving, you can only help a little bit,' she said.

· The Lib Dems will push to raise the top car tax rate from £210 to £2,000 for the most polluting vehicles, including many 4x4s and BMW 7 series models this week. The move, which would apply only to vehicles being registered for the first time, will be launched as an amendment to the finance bill, which puts the Budget into law. It will be seen as a bid to embarrass Labour and the Tories into backing them or having to defend their opposition while vying for the green vote.

My day as an eco-driver in Holland

Having Herman Kobes in the car with me is like having three of the four worst back seat drivers in the world. He is an ex-policeman, a former driving instructor, and now an eco-driving teacher. To make it worse, the car is bright 'look at me' orange, I'm on the 'wrong' side of the road, and cyclists are zinging out of every turn. This is the Netherlands, after all.

I have travelled to Utrecht, to the Dutch government's national eco-driving centre, to try 'New Driving', as they call it. The challenge was to drive around the city in my usual style, return to HQ for tips on how to improve, then drive the same circuit again to see how much I changed.

I will later discover I made a mistake in the first few seconds. Blissfully unaware for now, I navigate our 23km route successfully - at least without hitting a cyclist, jumping a light or breaking the speed limit.

Afterwards, kindly Herman, who once helped to train Moscow police, is encouraging - at least to start with. I'm a 'very good driver', he says. Clearly a man of impeccable judgment. Go on... 'The basic elements of eco-driving you already use, so it's hard for me, for the next trip, to make some savings.' I like this man more and more, though I fear he's mistaking nerves for judgment.

But he's about to get tougher. To start with, I don't need to press the accelerator when I start the car. Since I learnt to drive with a choke, it turns out that cars have been redesigned to start with just a turn of the key. To his colleagues' great amusement, Herman then points out that my foot was on the clutch the entire time we were driving, which restricts the controls from working efficiently.

I could also do better at anticipating when to slow down. 'The most difficult tip, but also the one that can earn the most fuel, is get off the throttle. Every time you brake for the traffic light you have made a mistake,' adds Herman.

Feeling chastened, we set off again. Initially, constant instructions to speed up, slow down, foot off the accelerator/clutch and the omnipresent bikes, are a confusing blur. Then we settle into a rhythm and 23km slips past again.

Herman compares my statistics and, adjusting for a wrong turn (not my fault!), I have driven at a slightly higher average speed with seven per cent less fuel. 'But it's very important to say the first time was a very nice trip,' adds Herman. I must tell my husband, who's the fourth-worst backseat driver.

How to get more out of your car

· Drive more smoothly: harsh accelerating and braking use up much more fuel

· Avoid excessive speed, especially on motorways

· Watch ahead to anticipate when to slow down or stop well in advance

· Change gear as soon as possible, ideally around 1,500-2,500 revs

· Once the engine is warm, turn it off if you are going to stop for longer than a minute

· Keep tyre pressure at right level

· Take any excess baggage out of the car, and racks and boxes off the roof

· Switch off or turn down air conditioning and heating

· Avoid unnecessary trips

· Buy a more efficient car

Are you a green driver? Find out with our quiz.
observer.guardian.co.uk/quiz/questions



Special report
Waste and pollution
Costello warns of higher petrol prices. 30/04/2006. ABC News Online

Federal Treasurer Peter Costello has warned motorists there is a chance that petrol prices could climb much higher if the situation in Iran worsens.

Iran, which is a major oil exporter, has angered much of the international community by ignoring a deadline to cease work on its nuclear program.

The price of petrol in Australia is already around $1.40 a litre in many areas.

Mr Costello has told Channel 10 that the Government cannot have a countervailing action for major international trends.

"Petrol price rises will come and they will go," he said.

"Let me make this point: let's suppose the situation deteriorates in Iran, then you would expect the petrol price to go up.

"It could go up very, very substantially.

"Now the Australian Government of course has to bear in mind assistance to families and we do."
Print-friendy versionPrint Send to a friendEmail

Saturday, April 29, 2006

Chevron profit up 49 percent as oil industry draws more ire - Yahoo! News

NEW YORK (AFP) - Chevron said its first-quarter profit surged 49 percent from a year ago to four billion dollars, the latest of the big oil companies to show strong gains from surging energy prices.
ADVERTISEMENT

The number-two US oil firm said the profit amounted to 1.80 dollars a share, beating the Wall Street estimate of 1.78 dollars.

Revenues leapt 32 percent from a year ago to 54.6 billion dollars, the company said, "mainly as a result of higher prices for crude oil, natural gas and refined products and the inclusion of revenues related to the former Unocal operations acquired in August 2005."

This week the top-three US oil producers, ExxonMobil, Chevron and ConocoPhillips, reported more than 15 billion dollars of profit in the first quarter of 2006, adding fuel to a debate over skyrocketing energy costs.

Some lawmakers have been pushing for a windfall profits tax, and on Thursday a group of Democratic senators urged an end to certain tax breaks for oil companies estimated at 5.4 billion dollars over 10 years.

"At the same time that American consumers are suffering under these high gasoline prices, oil companies are reporting record-breaking profits and their executives are receiving multi-million dollar retirement packages," the senators said in a statement.

"There is no reason to continue tax policies that provide further tax windfalls to these companies."

The Foundation for Taxpayer and Consumer Rights, a consumer advocacy group, said Chevron's report showed a 260 percent increase in its US refining and sales profits, "further proof that retail gasoline prices are rising far faster than the cost of production, despite oil company excuses about the price of crude oil."

Chevron, in its statement, indicated that profits were driven by higher energy prices.

"Higher earnings in the first quarter were primarily driven by the performance of our upstream business," said chairman and chief executive Dave O'Reilly.

"Prices for crude oil and natural gas were strong during the period, and oil-equivalent production increased nearly 10 percent from a year ago as a result of the Unocal acquisition last August."

Upstream profits, which are related to its exploration and production operations, reached 3.46 billion dollars in the period, up from 2.38 billion a year ago.

Global downstream earnings, covering refining, marketing and transportation activities, reached 580 million dollars, up from 409 million last year.

O'Reilly added that the results were helped by the acquisition of Unocal, an exploration firm also sought by a Chinese state-owned firm.

"The former Unocal businesses have been efficiently integrated," he said. "We are on target to capture the savings we anticipated from operational synergies, and the economics of the acquisition as currently assessed are even more favorable than initially estimated."

On Thursday, market leader ExxonMobil announced a first-quarter profit of 8.4 billion dollars, up seven percent from last year but below the fourth quarter's record of 10.7 billion. ConocoPhillips reported Wednesday first-quarter profit rose 13 percent from a year ago to 3.29 billion dollars with revenues surging on high oil prices.

Analyst Kimberly DuBord at Briefing.com said the industry remains attractive to investors.

"It has been a big week for big oil," she said. "There have been some disappointments and some surprises, but for our part, we continue to recommend investors stay long on energy as the upside potential continues to outweigh the downside risk."

Chevron shares rose 1.7 percent Friday to close at 61.02 dollars.

* Email Story
* IM Story
* Discuss
* Printable View

RECOMMEND THIS STOR
Chinese President Finalizes Kenya Oil Deal - Yahoo! News

NAIROBI, Kenya - Chinese President
Hu Jintao signed an oil exploration contract with Kenya on Friday, the latest in a series of deals designed to keep Africa's natural resources flowing to China's booming economy.
ADVERTISEMENT

But critics said China, in pursuit of energy, is enriching corrupt and abusive regimes.

The deal allows for China's state-controlled offshore oil and gas company, CNOOC Ltd., to prospect for oil in Kenya, which is just beginning to drill its first exploratory wells on the borders of Sudan and Somalia and in coastal waters. No oil has been produced yet, and there has been no formal estimate of the possible reserves.

China has a keen interest in Africa's oil and minerals as its economy heads into a fourth year of 10 percent growth: Earlier this week, Hu signed a series of major business deals with Nigeria, Africa's biggest oil producer.

China's hunt for African oil has generated criticism. Unlike Western countries also interested in Africa's markets and resources, China steers away from pressuring nations on their human and political rights records. Critics say China is abetting pariah nations by doing business with countries like Sudan and Zimbabwe.

Human Rights Watch executive director Kenneth Roth wrote in an International Herald Tribune opinion piece on the eve of Hu's trip, which also took him to Washington and Saudi Arabia, that "as China's quest for new markets and natural resources spreads around the world, its de facto support for repression has become increasingly common."

"When Western governments try to use economic pressure to secure human rights improvements, China's no-strings rule gives dictators the means to resist," Roth wrote.

Jian-Chao Liu, a spokesman for the Chinese delegation in Kenya, said Friday that his nation's dealings in Africa are aimed at "improving the livelihoods of people in these countries."

"We don't think (they are) aimed at providing any kind of excuse for human rights abuses in these countries," he said.

Roth singled out China's investment in Sudan, whose government is accused of urging militias from nomadic Arab tribes to attack ethnic African farming villages in the Darfur region — a charge it denies. The conflict has caused about 180,000 deaths — most from disease and hunger — and displaced 2 million people.

A veto-wielding
U.N. Security Council member, China — itself the object of much human rights criticism — has offered key diplomatic support to Sudan and other countries shunned by the West.

"In our dealings with African countries we have all along followed the principle that we have to respect ... the political model followed by African countries," Hu said Friday, appearing with Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki on the lawn of the State House.

Hu said his government follows a policy of "non-interference" in other countries' affairs.

Kibaki, who faces mounting pressure to respond to allegations of high-level corruption in his own administration, said he was satisfied with China's approach.

"Africa will do trade with China and there is no problem whatsoever," Kibaki said.

China's oil firms began investing abroad in the late 1990s, after double-digit economic growth outstripped supplies from domestic fields. In the last five years, the communist nation's trade with Africa has grown fourfold, to $40 billion in 2005.

And the continent has become a new market for Chinese exporters.

The boom has caused some problems in areas besides human rights: Africans complain about being flooded with cheap Chinese goods that kill livelihoods here.

* Email Story
* IM
NPR : South Africa Invests in Nuclear Power

South Africa has suffered crippling electricity blackouts and is looking to nuclear energy to solve its power problems. Currently South Africa has the only nuclear power plant on the continent of Africa. It is planning to build a second plant.
NPR : Russia Plans Nuclear Power Expansion

Morning Edition, April 28, 2006 · Russia says it will double its nuclear energy capabilities in the next 25 years. The Kremlin promises the country's nuclear industry is safe. But experts argue that it is alarmingly dangerous and on the verge of collapse.
Spacecraft seek climate clarity

Some of the gaping holes that exist in our understanding of the Earth's atmosphere will be answered by two new satellites launched on Friday.

The Cloudsat and Calipso missions will study how clouds and aerosols (fine particles) form, evolve and affect our climate, the weather and air quality.

Scientists say knowledge gaps in such areas severely hamper their ability to forecast future climate change.

Different types of cloud, for example, can help cool or warm the planet.

"We will be making the key observations that address this problem," said Dr Graeme Stephens, the Cloudsat principal investigator from Colorado State University, US.

The US space agency (Nasa) satellites were launched from the Vandenberg Air Force Base in California at 1002 GMT, after a week of delays due to technical problems and unfavourable wind conditions.

They have been put in a 705km (438 miles) circular, sun-synchronous polar orbit, where they will fly in formation just 15 seconds apart. The spacecraft are part of an Earth-observation constellation Nasa calls the "A-Train".

Click here to see the A-Train constellation

The Cloudsat spacecraft carries an extremely sensitive radar.


A tiny, tiny fraction of the water on our planet is in clouds and yet that tiny, tiny fraction is what provides the fresh water on which humans depend
Graeme Stephens, Colorado State University
It sends short pulses of microwave energy down into the atmosphere, and by recording the way these pulses are scattered back to the satellite obtains a picture of the structure and water content of clouds.

"The strength of the return from the radar is actually directly related to the amount of water that's in clouds. Effectively, it allows us to weigh the clouds," explained Dr Stephens.

"The time delay of the pulses means we can look at different levels and that gives us the profile of clouds."

Many sources

Calipso stands for Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite.

It uses lidar, which fires pulses of shorter wave energy - in the infrared and visible part of the spectrum - down into the atmosphere to obtain a different, but complementary, set of data from Cloudsat's.

In particular, Calipso is concerned with aerosols. These very fine particles are thrown up into the atmosphere by natural processes, such as volcanic eruptions, dust and sand storms, and even sea spray.

Human activities, also, produce aerosols: through burning of forests; and industrial and vehicle emissions.

Artist's impression of Cloudsat (Nasa)
Cloudsat can weigh clouds
Aerosols take very complex forms, and contain a range of chemical compounds. They can be solid or liquid, or even solid material inside a drop of liquid.

And their longevity is highly varied, with some aerosols lasting a few days and others hanging in the air for months.

"The bottom line here is that to measure aerosols is very difficult; you need a variety of instruments," explains Dr Charles Trepte, Calipso project scientist from the US space agency's Langley Research Center.

"Nasa and other agencies have been making measurements of aerosols from space for many years, but the problem is that they haven't been able to measure all the properties; and one thing they are missing is the vertical distribution of aerosols in thin clouds."

Different ways

Aerosols have a fundamental relationship with clouds by providing the nuclei on which cloud droplets can form.

Clouds that form in clean air are made up of droplets that tend to get bigger because they form on fewer nuclei; and these clouds tend to rain more, too.

Clouds that develop in dirty air form many more, but smaller, droplets. These clouds also look brighter.

Artist's impression of Calipso (Nasa)
Calipso looks at how aerosols interact with clouds
By picking apart these details, Calipso will help scientists understand the direct and indirect effects of aerosols on climate.

"Directly, they can scatter sunlight back to space and have a cooling effect just by reducing the amount of solar radiation reaching the Earth system," said Dr Trepte.

"They can also absorb solar radiation and warm the atmosphere, possibly alter circulations, change the thermal stability of the atmosphere and perhaps inhibit convection.

"And then they have the indirect effects of changing cloud properties, allowing them to last longer, changing the amount of precipitation - either increase it or decrease it - and perhaps even dim or brighten clouds so that they have better or worse reflecting properties."

The Cloudsat and Calipso missions have a number of objectives:

* Together, the satellites will provide the first statistics on the vertical structure of clouds. Scientists will be able to see clouds from their tops to their bottoms - like getting a CT scan of clouds from space
* Cloudsat and Calipso will give researchers the first indirect but validated estimate of how much clouds and aerosols contribute to the vertical distribution of atmospheric warming
* Cloudsat will provide the first global estimates of the percentage of Earth's clouds that produce rain
* Cloudsat will afford scientists the first vertically sliced picture of how much water and ice are in Earth's clouds
* Cloudsat will provide the first ability to detect snowfall from space
* Cloudsat will offer the first estimates of how efficiently the atmosphere produces rain from condensates
* Calipso will provide the first statistics on the global vertical distribution of aerosols and aerosol types
* Calipso will reveal for the first time how often "sub-visible" cirrus clouds - very thin clouds invisible to the naked eye - occur, and whether they change with the seasons

The new understanding obtained through the spacecraft will be fed into computer models, to improve their predictions. This should lead not just to better weather and air quality forecasts, but to reduced uncertainties in our expectations of future climate change.

"A tiny, tiny fraction of the water on our planet is in clouds and yet that tiny, tiny fraction is what provides the fresh water on which humans depend," Dr Stephens said.

"Clouds replenish our fresh water resources and yet we can't really tell you today how clouds will change under the pressures of global climate change."

Cloudsat and Calipso join a fleet of other satellites - known as the A-Train - which are aiming to give a rounded picture of Earth's atmospheric and water systems.

The spacecraft circle the planet on a path that takes them over broadly the same observation point in quick succession.

The platforms carry different instrumentation to address specific questions.

The "A-Train"
1. Oco will launch in 2008 and head the train. It will measure the concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the atmosphere
2. Aqua will lag Oco by 15 minutes. It is collecting information about the Earth's water cycle - water in the oceans, the air and on the land
3. Cloudsat will allow for the most detailed study of clouds to date. It should better characterise their role in regulating the climate
4. Calipso views clouds just moments after Cloudsat has looked at them. Its primary interest is the way aerosols interact with clouds
5. Parasol is a French satellite that can distinguish natural from human-produced aerosols. It makes polarised light measurements
6. Aura also has a big European investment. It looks at atmospheric chemistry, and is producing remarkable global pollution maps

Click here to return

Jonathan.Amos-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk

Friday, April 28, 2006

EVEN FOR OWNERS OF HUMVEEEES?


CNN.com - Senators to push for�$100 gas rebate checks - Apr 27, 2006

Under proposal, most U.S. taxpayers would get one
From Dana BashCNN


Friday, April 28, 2006 Posted: 0111 GMT (0911 HKT)
Business is brisk at an Arco station in Los Angeles on Wednesday, where regular went for $3.159/gallon.


Oil and Gas
Senate
GOP
or Create Your Own
Manage Alerts What Is This?
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- Most American taxpayers would get $100 rebate checks to offset the pain of higher pump prices for gasoline, under an amendment Senate Republicans hope to bring to a vote soon.
However, the GOP energy package may face tough sledding because it also includes a controversial proposal to open part of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska to oil exploration, which most Democrats and some moderate Republicans oppose.
Democrats are also expected to offer their own competing proposal, as members of both parties jockey for political position on the gas price issue. (CNN.com readers offer solutions to the gas problem)
"Our plan would give taxpayers a hundred dollar gas tax holiday rebate check to help ease the pain that they're feeling at the pump," Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist announced Thursday.
"It also includes strong federal anti-price gouging protection to protect consumers against anti-competitive behavior by oil companies or other suppliers of gasoline. Our free market system works, but it works best when there's full accountability and full transparency."
Frist said the rebates would go to single taxpayers making less than $125,000 per year, and couples making less than $150,000.
Republican senators said they hoped soaring gas prices would inspire Democrats to support their proposals.
"A lot of these other things we're talking about today, supply, like ANWR, have had Democrats oppose them in the past, when gas was $1.25, $1.50. Gas is now $3," said John Thune, R-South Dakota. "I would expect that there would be a lot more bipartisan support for proposals that would increase supply in this country."
"We have been trying for years to do something about supply without their help. I hope now that we'll have their help," he added.
But Democrats seemed unimpressed.
"It's designed to protect Big Oil while mistakenly believing that drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge will solve America's energy problems," Jim Manley, a spokesman for Democratic leader Harry Reid of Nevada, told The Associated Press.
The energy package, sponsored by Sens. Charles Grassley of Iowa, Ted Stevens of Alaska, Pete Domenici of New Mexico and Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, will be offered as an amendment to an emergency spending measure now before the Senate funding the Iraq war and hurricane relief, according to a senior GOP leadership aide.
Under Senate rules, either the GOP amendment or the Democratic alternative would probably need 60 votes to pass, which is considered unlikely. However, the amendments would give senators a change to cast votes on measures designed to help constituents being hit by high gas prices.
As outlined by Frist and other GOP senators, the energy package would give taxpayers a $100 rebate, repeal tax incentives for oil companies and allow the Federal Trade Commission to prosecute retailers unlawfully inflating the price of gasoline.
The measure would also give the Transportation Department authority to issue fuel efficiency standards for passenger vehicles, expand tax incentives for the use of hybrid vehicles and push for more research into alternative fuels and expansion of existing oil refineries.
The GOP senators are also calling on the Bush administration to suspend deposits into the Strategic Petroleum Reserve for six months to increase the nation's oil supply. President Bush announced Tuesday that he would halt new deposits into the reserve until after the summer driving season. (Full story)
On the other side of the aisle, Democrats on Wednesday called for a new energy bill and federal legislation to punish price gougers.
"There's no reason why we can't put forth a real energy policy that addresses the needs of this nation," said Rep. Bart Stupak, a member of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, "from gouging to market manipulation to biofuels. We can do it." (Full story)
And leaders of the Senate Finance Committee on Wednesday asked the Internal Revenue Service to let them examine the tax returns of the nation's 15 largest oil and gas companies, as part of a "comprehensive review" of oil industry profits.
"I want to make sure the oil companies aren't taking a speed pass by the tax man," said Grassley, the committee's chairman, in a written statement. (Full story)
Nuclear waste should be buried (April 2006) - News - PhysicsWeb


Nuclear waste should be buried
27 April 2006
After three years of deliberation, a government-commissioned inquiry has concluded that the UK should bury its nuclear waste deep underground. The Committee on Radioactive Waste Management (CoRWM) laid out its solution to the decades-old waste problem in a press conference held today. But it told reporters that because it will take many years to dispose of the waste in this way, the construction of a permanent repository must be complemented by a robust system of interim storage.
CoRWM was appointed in 2003 to recommend what to do with the roughly 470,000 cubic metres of waste in the UK for which there is no agreed long-term disposal strategy. This includes both existing waste and waste that will be generated over the next few decades.
The 11-strong committee, which is made up of both scientists and non scientists, is chaired by economist Gordon MacKerron. Last year, after discarding more exotic solutions such as sending the waste into space or putting it at the bottom of the sea, the panel drew up a shortlist of four options. These included two types of "geological disposal" in which the waste is buried several hundred metres underground -- in either a sealed repository or one from which the waste can be retrieved for up to several hundred years after it is put in the ground. The other two options were continuous temporary storage just above or below the Earth's surface and the burial of waste just below the surface.
The committee has now discounted the last two options, preferring instead geological disposal. But it says that this approach must be complemented by secure interim storage, pointing out that a repository might not be ready for perhaps 50 years if there are technical difficulties in developing the repository or objections from the local community.
However, CoRWM has not stated which type of geological disposal should be used. In fact, it has yet to decide whether or not it will state a preference in its final report, which it is due to release in July. It has also not said where the geological repository should be located -- this was not part of its remit -- but it believes that no matter where the dump is located it must have the blessing of the local residents. "The key decisions must involve potential host communities and they should have an equal footing in all relevant decision making," says MacKerron.
The committee says that in reaching its decisions it has examined the technical, scientific, ethical and social aspects of all the potential options, having consulted over 200 technical experts and listened to thousands of members of the public and other people with an interest in the plans. But the panel has not had a smooth ride. Last year, one of its members, Keith Baverstock, was dismissed from the group and another, David Ball, walked out. Ball reportedly became disenchanted with what he saw as the panel's emphasis of public consultation over expert advice.
Iraqi oil gangs syphon off billions

A new class of grand mafiosi sucking billions of pounds out of Iraq's vital oil sector is crippling efforts to rebuild the nation, according to an official report published in Baghdad.
The findings of the Oil Ministry's independent inspector-general painted a sordid picture of massive abuses pervading every corner of the industry, from the well-head to the petrol pump. It said that since Saddam Hussein's overthrow in 2003, the spread of smuggling had turned Iraq from a major exporter of petrol products into an importer.

Smuggling and other rackets cost Iraq more than £10bn a year
"These problems have led to the loss of billions of dollars, both in direct actual losses and in lost opportunities," the report concludes.
"This is robbing Iraq of historic opportunities for revival and reconstruction and of basic necessities for a ruined nation and heavily-burdened people." It calls for "radical and urgent action" to stop the abuses and punish those involved, including new legislation and penalties to make oil smuggling a crime of "grand economic sabotage".
Walid Khadduri, economics editor of the pan-Arab al-Hayat newspaper, estimates that smuggling and other rackets in Iraq are costing the country more than £10 billion a year in direct losses and missed opportunities.
"There is no accountability, no punishment, and it goes all the way to the top - the smuggling gangs are in cahoots with local authorities and politicians because they need protection," he said. "There was corruption under Saddam but nowhere near this."
The ministry report says smuggling has created a "new class of grand mafiosi" and a corrosive environment of corruption that is affecting everybody in the oil business and destroying public faith in politicians. The report documents abuses ranging from direct theft from oil consignments and pipelines, to frauds involving false documentation for imported petrol.
Even roadside supplies of black-market petrol sold locally were worth an estimated £500 million a year to the illegal profiteers, the report says.



It estimates that 10 to 20 per cent of the refined products Iraq is now obliged to import from neighbouring Turkey, Syria and Jordan are being smuggled back to their countries of origin after receiving Iraqi government subsidies to bring the price down for local consumption.
This could be netting crooks up to £500 million a year.
Part of the problem is that product prices in those countries are significantly higher than Iraqi levels, which are government-subsidised to the tune of nearly £4 billion a year to keep them within reach of the distressed Iraqi consumer.
Latest Technology Transfer Could Reduce Chinese Coal Mining Deaths

More than 15 Chinese coal miners die every day, mainly from methane gas explosions released when new coal tunnels are opened. A revolutionary new drilling technology from Australia may help save Chinese coal miners' lives and also help reduce air pollution by capturing the methane before it spreads into the atmosphere.

Print article

Refer to a friend
SARASOTA, Fla., April 27, 2006 (PR-Inside) 'Executives from fifty mines showed interest in the proprietary Dymaxion drilling technology to improve mining safety,- Tunaye Sai, director of China Operations for Pacific Asia China Energy (TSX: PCE; Other OTC: PCEEF) told StockInterview.com. He was referring to the overwhelming interest Chinese coal mining executives showed in a revolutionary drilling technology, developed by

Australia's largest privately owned drilling company, which made its debut in China at the Coal Degasification Symposium held earlier this month in Guizhou, China. More than 15 coal miners die every day in China, mainly from gas explosions released when new coal tunnels are opened. Methane gas is released as coal is mined, increasing China's burden of air pollution and killing coal miners. Coal companies are trying to reduce both problems by turning to foreign technology transfers, such as the one offered by Pacific Asia China Energy and its Australian partner, Mitchell Drilling Company.The Dymaxion technology obviously turned heads at the recent Degasification Symposium. 'One of the companies is a big company, mining 10 million tons of coal per year,- Tunaye Sai told StockInterview.com 'Last December, 12 people died in one of the coal mining company's tunnels.- He explained that when coal miners are opening a tunnel, the gas comes out - sometimes explosively. 'By using the Dymaxion technique, they can let the gas out before they begin mining a tunnel,- he added. Capturing the gas as it comes prevents venting a coal mine's methane gas into the atmosphere and reportedly reduces air pollution. Tunaye Sai said he was in discussions with ten Chinese coal companies about implementing this new technology.ABOUT STOCKINTERVIEW.COMThe entire feature, entitled 'Latest Technology Transfer Could Reduce Chinese Coal Mining Deaths- can be found at the Internet news website StockInterview.com. Visit this webpage for the complete story: http://www.stockinterview.com/journal.htmlContact:Julie IckesEditor, StockInterview.comTelephone: (941) 929-1640Email: editor@stockinterview.comhttp://www.stockinterview.com
ONGC eyes more oil assets, deals with ShellApril 27, 2006By Himangshu WattsNEW DELHI (Reuters) - India's Oil and Natural Gas Corp. is planning new investments with Royal Dutch Shell Plc and hopes to acquire further oil assets in Brazil and Nigeria, company officials said on Thursday.ONGC, leading energy-hungry India's drive to buy stakes in foreign fields, will also offer Brazil's Petrobras, equity in new refineries in India, they said. "With Shell we plan to do a number of specific investments," ONGC Chairman Subir Raha told reporters after signing a deal to acquire a 15 percent stake in the Shell-operated BC-10 offshore block in Brazil, in which Petrobras is also a shareholder. Raha said the deal would help ONGC bid for more oil and gas projects in the Latin American country.The Indian firm's overseas subsidiary, ONGC Videsh Ltd., hopes to boost output from its foreign assets to 8.5 or 9 million tonnes of oil and oil equivalent gas by 2010, from 6.6 million tonnes in 2006/07.In January, Shell, eyeing the growing Indian market, and ONGC, seeking oil reserves for Asia's third-largest economy, signed an agreement to cooperate in the hydrocarbon sector.Several oil majors have signed such agreements with state firms in India and China, hoping to access two of the fastest growing energy markets.The head of Shell's Indian operations, Vikram Singh Mehta, said ONGC's participation in the Brazilian venture was the first tangible step the two companies had taken together.DRY WELLSGlobal oil majors have been cautious about investing in India, where state controls on fuel prices have made retailing unprofitable, while enthusiasm generated by oil and gas discoveries in India by Cairn Energy and Reliance Industries has been offset by a series of dry wells drilled by others.This month, a senior executive from Chevron Corp., said his company was in talks with Reliance to jointly bid for the latest blocks being offered to explore oil and gas in India.Chevron also agreed to spend $300 million to buy a 5 percent stake in a new 580,000-barrels per day (bpd) refinery being built by Reliance.But BP Plc quit a joint venture to build a $3 billion refinery in India with state-run Hindustan Petroleum Corp. Ltd..HPCL officials said BP did not find India's refining and retailing sector attractive enough.ONGC has stakes in oil and gas projects in more than a dozen countries including Sudan, Vietnam, Australia, Libya and Russia.It holds a 20 percent share in Russia's Sakhalin-1 project, which is operated by oil major Exxon Mobil Corp..The head of ONGC Videsh, R.S. Butola, said Sakhalin was producing 40,000-50,000 bpd of crude oil, which was being consumed locally.Exports from Sakhalin would start in the second half of 2006 and crude oil would be shipped to India next year, he said.
Pipelines may trip AGL link to Alinta Business Breaking News 24/7 - NEWS.com.au (28-04-2006)


AGL and Alinta may yet be forced into horse-trading of assets in key markets because of possible regulatory concerns over their planned $6.8 billion peace deal, it has emerged.The asset swap may also run into problems in Western Australia because of the tight legal control over the domicile of Alinta board members and the company's chief executive.
The deal as it stands may come unstuck because Alinta would emerge with control of both major gas pipelines supplying Sydney.
The commissioner of the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission, Ed Willett, would not comment yesterday on the proposed merger, but pointed out he was on the record as saying the ownership of both pipelines was an issue. "Just how this is worked through is not clear and we have yet to receive the formal proposal," he said.
One of AGL's advisers said yesterday that both issues had been well flagged during the merger discussions earlier this week, and Alinta was particularly keen to protect its obligations under WA legislation.
The merger agreement announcement contained a proviso that "if regulatory approvals require the divestiture by Alinta of any of AGL's infrastructure assets, a call option for AGL exists".
Advertisement:
');
document.write('');
// End Hide -->
= 6) {
ShockMode = 1;
} else if (navigator.userAgent && navigator.userAgent.indexOf("MSIE")>=0 && (navigator.userAgent.indexOf("Windows 95")>=0 navigator.userAgent.indexOf("Windows 98")>=0 navigator.userAgent.indexOf("Windows NT")>=0)) {
document.writeln('');
document.writeln('on error resume next');
document.writeln('ShockMode = ( IsObject(CreateObject("ShockwaveFlash.ShockwaveFlash.6")))');
document.writeln('if ( ShockMode ');
}
if ( ShockMode ) {
document.writeln('');
document.writeln(' ');
document.writeln(' ');
document.writeln(' ');
document.writeln(' ');
document.writeln('');
}
else {
document.writeln('');
}
//-->
on error resume next
ShockMode = ( IsObject(CreateObject("ShockwaveFlash.ShockwaveFlash.6")))
if ( ShockMode




This refers particularly to the Moomba-Sydney gas pipeline, which is the major asset of the AGL spin-off, Australian Pipeline Trust. AGL is a 30 per cent shareholder in APT. AGL bought the pipeline, which supplies most of Sydney's gas, from the federal Government.
The ACCC has criticised an arrangement under which gas that AGL buys from the Cooper Basin is charged for travelling the APT-owned pipeline. The arrangement is expected to end next year.
Alinta bought the Eastern Gas Pipeline, which supplies gas from the Gippsland Basin, from its builder, Duke Energy International, which developed the $270 million transmission system in 2000 before leaving Australia to concentrate on its US operations.
Each of the pipelines is independent of the regulatory regime established under the National Gas Access Code, partly because they compete against each other in the Sydney market.
Alinta had suggested previously, when it was proposing to merge its businesses with those of AGL, that it had a good relationship with the ACCC and would offer "behavioural" undertakings along similar lines to those the watchdog demanded when the Dampier-to-Bunbury pipeline was acquired by an Alinta-led consortium.
But AGL argued against behavioural undertakings when criticising Alinta's plans.
Separately, the West Australian Opposition yesterday expressed concern that effective ownership and control of Alinta would pass out of the state if the merger proceeded in its current form.
Frontbencher Colin Barnett, who was energy minister when former government gas utility Alinta was privatised, said the legislation was specifically structured to protect WA's gas consumers and Alinta's retail shareholders from being sold out.
The legislation requires Alinta to be headquartered in WA, for a majority of its board members to be resident in the state and for the CEO to also be a resident.
"I don't think the parliament will support any moves to have these provisions changed," Mr Barnett said.
But Alinta argued there would be no change resulting from the merger plan. "There is nothing in the act which constrains Alinta from disposing of assets," an Alinta spokesman said.
Vainshtok: Europe 'Overfed' on Russia Oil

MOSCOW (AP) - The head of Russia's pipeline monopoly said in an interview published Monday that Europe was "overfed" on Russian oil and that a new oil pipeline to Asia would see a portion of supplies diverted from Europe.
By diversifying its markets, Russia could raise the price of its Urals blend of crude for the ferociously competitive European market, Semyon Vainshtok of OAO Transneft said. Analysts say the blend now is sold as much as US$7 (euro6) cheaper than other similar-quality blends.

"We have overfed Europe with oil," Vainshtok told the Nezavisimaya Gazeta daily. "Any economics textbook will tell you that when you have an excess of supply, the price will fall."
But he said the company is currently unable to redirect oil exports to Asia due to the lack of infrastructure. "There is no way to decrease supply -- all of our export is oriented toward Europe," he said.
However he added: "As soon as we turn toward China, South Korea, Australia and Japan, that will take some oil from our European colleagues."
The comments come a week after Russia's natural gas monopoly, OAO Gazprom, spooked Europe -- which depends on Russia for half its gas imports -- by saying it could favor Asian markets for its gas in the future if the company is not allowed to expand in Europe.
However, Gazprom has insisted it will honor all its contracts in full, and denies that the statement was meant as an ultimatum.
Igor Shuvalov, President Vladimir Putin's aide in charge of relations with the G-8 nations, also downplayed the issue Monday, explaining that Russia was seeking new markets as a logical step to diversify its customer base.
"It isn't good for Gazprom to depend on (the EU) for 90 percent of its revenue," Shuvalov was quoted as saying in London by Dow Jones Newswires, adding that the company needed to "avoid the dictatorship of the single consumer."
Shuvalov explained that, from Russia's perspective, energy security must mean security of demand as well as of supply.
Construction on a 1.6 million-barrel-a-day pipeline that is to run in the first stage from Siberia's Irkutsk region to a town in the Amur region on the Chinese border -- and eventually onto Russia's Pacific coast, opposite Japan -- is due to begin in April, Vainshtok told the newspaper.
Russia is the world's second largest crude exporter, after Saudi Arabia.
© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Back to News Home
Russia Warns Europe It Could Divert Energy Supplies to Asia Instead -- 04/27/2006

Moscow (CNSNews.com) - Russia begins construction of a major oil pipeline from eastern Siberia to the Pacific on Friday, a project that signals a shift toward Asia and away from Europe.The planned 1,400 mile-long pipeline, estimated to cost $11.5 billion, will stream oil to Pacific Rim markets, including China and Japan, when it is completed by the end of 2008.The project has been controversial, given its planned route near the shores of Lake Baikal, the world's largest body of fresh water.President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday unexpectedly gave in to environmentalists' demands and ordered a change in the route.He also accused the West of unfair practices in global energy transactions.Russia should look to the East for energy partnerships, he said, because Russian companies were facing discrimination and unfair competition elsewhere."Despite a huge demand for energy, we face limitations under all kinds of pretexts, in the north, south and the west," Putin said, adding that Russia would now prioritize the Asia-Pacific region.In China last month, Putin pledged to increase both oil and natural gas exports. Large-scale gas exports will also require new carriers, and two gas pipelines to China are being planned by 2011.Russia's eastward focus is seen here as designed to send a message to European consumers that if they do not like Russia's sales terms, Russia can simply redirect exports to China.Last January, giant gas monopoly Gazprom briefly cut natural gas supplies to Ukraine, in what was widely seen as an attempt by Moscow to apply political pressure on the former Russian ally. At the time, European Union leaders questioned Russia's reliability as a supplier of energy.Semyon Vainshtok, head of Russia's oil pipeline monopoly Transneft, said this week that once Russia had reoriented its export focus to China, South Korea, Japan and Australia, it could reduce crude exports to Europe.The E.U. is taking note. A spokesman for E.U. Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs said last week that recent statements from Russia underlined "our need to diversify both the origin of our supplies and our supply routes."Russian officials are eager to convince potential Asian importers that Siberia has sufficient reserves to cater to the region's fast-growing energy needs.According to official Russian estimates, eastern Siberia has up to 10 billion tons of recoverable oil reserves (about 15 percent of Russia's total oil reserves), and 40 trillion cubic meters of gas (nearly 20 percent of the country's total).However, tapping these resources will require substantial investment, and Russia has yet to secure any firm investment pledges from potential Asian importers.The Asian energy "game" also has drawn in Central Asia's resource-rich republics.Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev is looking to send crude from his country's oilfields westward, via Russia to Europe, as well as eastward, to China.Another former Soviet state in Central Asia, Turkmenistan, is also selling gas to Russia while lining up to sell gas to China once a pipeline eastwards is commissioned in 2009.In pursuit of Turkmenistan gas riches, China and Russia have both tended to ignore the repressive nature of President Saparmurat Niyazov's regime.Subscribe to the free CNSNews.com daily E-Brief.Send a Letter to the Editor about this article.
Sieves put a lid on greenhouse gas: "Scientists are about to test microscopic sieves that trap environmentally destructive greenhouse gases before they escape coal-fired power stations and refineries.

New & Used Cars For Sale - Search over 90,000 auto ads online. More great finds every day!
Pressurized Electrolyzers - Advanced high efficiency, up to 200 bar without compressor, 0-1000Nm3/h
Hydrogen Generation plant - Mahler AGS – world leader in hydrogen generation plants.
Sponsored Links (Ads by Google)

The new gas separation technology can be fitted to existing power stations and petrochemical plants to produce hydrogen, a clean energy carrier, and capture carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas that worsens global warming.

Brisbane and German scientists have teamed up in a $4.2 million project to build and test this technology.

The Queensland Government today announced it would contribute $1.05 million to the project under its Smart State National and International Research Alliances program.

The scientists working on the technology are from the Australian Research Council's (ARC) Centre for Functional Nanomaterials at The University of Queensland and a German industrial research institute, Forschungszentrum J�lich (FZJ).

Professor Max Lu, the Director of the ARC Centre for Functional Nanomaterials, said the technology involved pumping synthesis gas from coal through a metal-supported molecular sieve in a pressurised chamber.

Professor Lu said the nano sieve was coated with thin film of zirconium and titanium oxides which separated hydrogen from the greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide.

�The film we coat it in behaves like the sieve which has tiny nano-holes, one billionth of a metre, that allow the smaller hydrogen molecules to go through,� Professor Lu "
UW Economist High Prices at the Pump to Last for Months

As President Bush Tuesday called for temporarily halting deposits to the nation’s strategic petroleum reserve to make more oil available for consumer need and has ordered investigations into whether the price of gasoline has been illegally manipulated, a University of Wyoming economist says fuel prices traditionally do not fall until at least Labor Day.

China Growth Report - Invest in China's growth industries & their leading stocks. Free Report

Fuel Prices - Quality new and used items. Find fuel prices now!

Discount New Cars - Save with discount prices up to 25% off brand new cars. Save Thousands!

Sponsored Links (Ads by Google)


“Right now, we are seeing about a 20-30 cent increase over last year’s prices. This increase reflects unease over the situation in the Middle East. Assuming that situation does not change markedly, I think prices this summer will run somewhere between 25-50 cents higher than last summer,” says Charles Mason, professor in the UW Department of Economics and Finance. “But the ‘feds’ releasing significant quantities from the emergency reserve will mean that near-term prices would be reduced somewhat.”

As of Tuesday nationally, the price of unleaded fuel was $2.91 per gallon, according to the American Automobile Association (AAA) daily fuel gage report. Mid-grade fuel prices averaged $3.09 per gallon and premium $3.21, according to AAA figures.

The talk of gas prices climbing to $3.50-$4 per gallon this summer may have Wyoming residents bracing for the worst-case scenario, but Cowboy State residents are enjoying the lowest gas prices among the 50 states. As of Tuesday morning, unleaded averaged $2.54 per gallon, according to AAA figures, while mid-grade was at $2.65 and premium $2.82. Five states are reporting regular unleaded gas at more than $3 per gallon, with Hawaii the highest at $3.23.

Mason says the market for crude oil is dominated by a small number of state-run enterprises collectively know as OPEC, accounting for a large chunk of the supply. He adds that two factors control the recent spike in prices at the pump -- uneasiness in the Middle East and the demand for fuel in summer months.

“There is considerable nervousness about the situation in the Middle East. It seems that the money men in the oil business think there is a decent chance of some sort of conflict in that region, principally related to Iran,” he says. “Going back to the two Gulf Wars, in each case we saw large price increases just before the start of hostilities, which persisted throughout the hostilities. Some sort of conflict involving Iran would likely have a similar effect here. So, anticipation of potential conflict is an important contributing factor.”

High Fuel Prices Continue
Refinery Capacity Investment Not Keeping Pace with Global Oil Demand


fuel prices
With Thousands Of New & Used Cars, carsguide.com.au is Too Big to Miss


Articles About Gas Prices
One Easy Place For Current/Archived Articles From Leading Publishers!




(Ads by Google)Mason says the second issue is the traditional increase in demand that takes place during summer months -- higher fuel demand generally translates into higher prices at the pump.

“This happens every year, with prices starting to rise in late spring. But it cannot explain large wedges in price between this year and last at or about the same time -- those changes would have to come from somewhere else, such as fears of armed conflict in the Middle East,” he says.

“There are other minor contributing factors such as fears of hurricanes and possible constraints related to refining capacity, but I doubt these play much of a role. As with anticipated increases in summer driving, they do not strike me as new effects, so I don’t see how they can explain recent price surges,” Mason adds.

Unless the volatile situation in the Middle East eases and no disaster strikes in the United States, such as Hurricane Katrina a year ago, Mason doesn’t expect gas prices to drastically fall until the end of summer.

“The things that might lead to lower prices would be a political resolution of the tension involving Iran, or rather large increases in OPEC’s production,” he says. “But as a general rule, prices peak in middle August and prices traditionally fall after Labor Day.”

Source: University of Wyoming
Stop the Fossil Foolishness

Gas prices are on the rise again and news analysts are kicking it around, wondering who is being ripped off this time. But geologists, scientists and even some economists suspect that unlike other gas shortages, this one is the real thing, or at least the beginning of the real thing: production has peaked and the era of cheap oil is about to end.

The consequences of the end of oil are monumental beyond any overstatement. Without leadership at this moment, our chances of avoiding future chaos are slim. But who will provide the leadership?

President Bush showed up in California last week for Earth Day. In Sacramento, he met with representatives of the California Fuel Cell Partnership, a consortium of companies and government agencies that promotes hydrogen-powered fuel cell vehicles. Bush happily hyped the "hydrogen economy" as the ultimate solution to our oil addiction. Meanwhile, to deal with the short term gas price rise, he instructed the EPA to start dropping environmental requirements for warm weather fuel additives. We'll save a few pennies at the pump but our lungs will pay for it.

The hydrogen economy is an interesting concept. Hydrogen, the lightest element, consisting of one proton and one electron, can be dissociated from water (H2O) by applying an electrical current. The idea is to use electricity generated by nuclear plants or potentially solar and wind generators, to produce hydrogen from water. Hydrogen is most efficiently burned in fuel cells, which are basically a battery that recharges with a fuel like hydrogen or natural gas.

There are major challenges to overcome before this idea could even approach implementation. One is the complexity and cost of fuel cells which are not at all a mature technology for widespread use. Another is the problem of hydrogen storage. It takes a tremendous amount of energy to compress and cool hydrogen to a liquid state for storage in a tank. Finally there's the source of electricity for generating hydrogen: a phenomenal ramp-up of nuclear and/or renewable power generation will be required because hydrogen is not the actual source of energy. It is merely an energy carrier, a way to store energy and pack it along to keep us moving down the road.

ADVERTISEMENT
Nearly everyone agrees that in his January SOTA, Bush did something positive by admitting that America is addicted to oil. Admitting one's addiction is the first step on the familiar 12-step addiction recovery program. But it is only half of the first step. The other half is recognizing that we are powerless to change without turning ourselves over to a higher power, be it religious or secular. Without completing even the first step, there is no progress on the road to recovery and the addict has only freed himself to get more creative about finding the next fix while deluding himself that something has been accomplished. And so the Bush solutions to our energy addiction boil down to three expensive pipe dreams, as embodied in the 2005 Energy Bill.

The first pipe dream is that billions more in subsidies (the 2005 Energy Bill provides $5 billion in new tax breaks and government spending programs) to the giant US oil companies will increase domestic oil and gas production enough to free us from imported oil. One problem with this dream is that sucking more oil out of the ground will only dig us deeper into the global warming hole while it pollutes sensitive arctic and coastal ecosystems. Another problem is that all that money does nothing to build a permanent or even a transitional energy solution. Oil companies are reaping windfall profits with no obligation to invest them in renewable solutions. Oil industry subsidies turn us into the equivalent of the crack whore who gives it away for free to her pimp.

The second pipe dream is the hydrogen/nuclear economy. In the Bush scheme of things, hydrogen is joined at the hip with nuclear-generated electricity. Without going into all the pitfalls of nuclear power - the safety problem, the waste storage problem, the nuclear weapons proliferation problem - just consider the scale of nuclear build-up required to replace gasoline with hydrogen.

US gasoline consumption as of March 2005 was some 320,500,000 gallons per day. Researchers at the Idaho National Engineering and Environmental Laboratory claim that a single Next Generation nuclear plant will be able to produce the hydrogen equivalent of 200,000 gallons of gasoline each day. At that rate, it would require more than 1,600 of these new 1.7 gigawatt nuclear plants to meet our current gasoline needs alone (replacing diesel and jet fuel would require additional capacity). The US today has 104 commercial nuclear power plants, many of which will reach the end of their safe working lives in the next few decades. A final point to consider is that uranium too, is a limited resource, deposited in relatively rare rock formations by fluvial processes over eons of geologic time. Even if we could build 1,600 new nuclear power plants, we would have a hard time finding the uranium to operate them.

The third Bush pipe dream is one shared by many well-meaning people - replacing gasoline with corn-derived ethanol. But it takes a lot of fossil fuel to grow corn and process it into ethanol: fertilizer manufactured from natural gas, diesel to run farm machinery and transport grain, electricity to run irrigation pumps, and coal to run the fermentation process are just a few of the inputs used. As a result, the energy returned on energy invested (EROI) is either negative or just barely in the positive, depending on which study you read. In a recent interview, agrarian philosopher Wendell Berry put it this way: "... ethanol is just a way to get rid of surplus corn ... to start raising a burnable fuel from your cropland at the present cost in erosion and soil degradation and toxicity is a fool's bargain."

The answer to our oil addiction is not the desperate, chaotic search for the next fix. We do need energy, it's true, but just as alcohol and drug addictions are symptoms of an unmet spiritual need, so our oil addiction is the symptom of a society out of balance, and it is that imbalance we must address first.

One of the 12 steps to recovery from addiction is to take a personal, moral inventory of oneself. If we took such an inventory of America, what would we find? I believe we would find a deep-seated moral failure going back to the frontier days when European immigrants poured into a vast continent that seemed free for the taking. Beginning with the genocide of the native people, the American dream was not only about freedom and independence, it was also about the rush and the boom and the getting rich quick, applied with such furious dynamism over the past two centuries that the getting and spending is never ending and the shopping only stops when we drop from exhaustion.

America today consumes one out of every four barrels of oil that the planet produces. We are already at war over Iraq's oil and may soon go to war over Iran's.

But again, we have to move on from admitting we have a problem to admitting that we can't solve it on our own. And we can't afford to wait out Bush's last 1,000 days, nor can we wait till the next congress, hoping the Dems emerge with some strength from the fall elections. We need leadership now.

Democrats have been throwing themselves on the gas price bandwagon in recent days, calling for price gouging legislation and better regulation of oil markets to control price manipulation. A windfall profits tax and revoking oil company subsidies are also on the table. These are important measures, but the Dems risk going too far down the quick fix path without addressing the real problem.

The Toronto Globe and Mail reported on a memo from the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee to candidates that instructed them to: "Demonstrate your dedication to fighting for middle-class families by clearly explaining how you will work to keep down the price of gas if elected to Congress."

And so, Senator Bob Menendez, D-NJ, for example, has proposed rolling back the federal gas tax for two months - exactly the wrong strategy. Keeping down the price of gas this summer cannot be the Democrats' primary goal if they want to lead the country away from oil addiction. We have to admit we have a problem and we have to ask a higher power to help us, not pander to our immediate appetites.

A gas tax is one of the higher powers we should be appealing to. A tax levied by a democratically elected government in the people's interest is truly a higher power, a sacred trust. While American drivers are consuming some of the cheapest gas on the planet, Europeans are paying $6 to $7 a gallon, mainly because of higher taxes. Higher gas prices have encouraged more efficient vehicles and mass transit alternatives, putting Europe far ahead of us on the path to sustainability.

Jerome a Paris at Daily Kos titled an entry last week: "Gas prices - what's the right strategy for the Dems?" He said: "I'd like to argue that Dems must, today, argue for a gas tax, and own it." Paris listed four critical benefits of higher gas taxes:


they increase gas prices, thus encouraging Americans to use less gas. By reducing demand, that will lower oil prices and thus both the volume and the cost of oil imports;

they raise funds that can be used to help those Americans that will suffer from higher prices;

they raise funds that can be used to invest in the R&D in technologies that will help find substitutes to oil;

they can be used to make the process of increasing oil prices more predictable, which will allow to smoothen the transition.
Paris is spearheading a group effort on Daily Kos to draft a new energy plan called "Energize America." Bill McKibben wrote that he found it "far more comprehensive and thoughtful than anything the think tanks have produced," and called on the Democrats to use it as a model.

Just as anti-war activists and bloggers have forced the Democrats to take a more critical stance on the Iraq war, so the grassroots and the netroots must pressure the Democrats to stop fossil foolishness and take the bold action that is needed to conquer our oil addiction.

In the 1980s, the 12-step program originally developed by Alcoholics Anonymous went through an explosion of popularity as a tool for healing all sorts of addictions and illnesses of the spirit. The12-step movement created both an organizing paradigm and a network of fellowships all over the planet in a short period of time. It is curious that this occurred just prior to the development of the World Wide Web. If yoked together, what might these two movements accomplish for the urgent goal of healing the spiritual crisis that lies at the root of our oil addiction?


*************
Kelpie Wilson is the t r u t h o u t environment editor. A veteran forest protection activist and mechanical engineer, she is the author of Primal Tears, an eco-thriller novel published by North Atlantic Books.
The Ethanol-Powered Bandwagon


After years of stubbornly dishing out gas-guzzling SUVs in the face of ever-rising oil prices, American car companies are slowly shifting gears to produce cars that aren't entirely dependent on gasoline.
The latest to get on the bandwagon is Chrysler, putting "flex-fuel" engines in some of its models, with the ethanol-capable Jeep Cherokees and Dodge Dakota pickups rolling onto the market in September. (For some background on how American companies fell behind foreign car manufacturers like Toyota when it comes to this sort of innovation, check out this story by the Post's Anthony Faiola.)
The Hybrid Car blog looked at GM's move toward hybrids back in June, using the rest of the post to discuss the idea that "cheap gas is a fiction" and our dependence on foreign oil needs to end.
There's vast agreement on that -- but much disagreement over the solution. When it comes to getting from Point A to Point B, are ethanol-powered cars the answer? Hybrids? Hydrogen fuel cells? More focus on mass transit?
By Emily Messner April 26, 2006; 06:28 PM ET Category: Misc. Previous: Should Gasoline Really Cost $5 a Gallon -- Or More? Main Index Next: Use Less Oil vs. Find More Oil (Part I)
Comments
Please email us to report offensive comments.
I feel like I'm just repeating myself ad nauseum, but I believe what I say.
Oil independence can only be reasonably expected if Americans decrease their consumption which is facilitated by a higher price at the pump. Once this price hits a certain point, investors will recognize "alternatives" as economically viable. Until such time, expect American consumers to complain with little results.
If you care to wait it out then so be it. I think there should be a gasoline tax to accomodate our ever-increasing government spending deficit and to speed up American oil independence and development to alternative solutions. At the very least it will hasten the debate on what direction America should take.
Posted by: Will Apr 26, 2006 6:42:31 PM Permalink
Emily, you are quite the little research fiend! Thread after thread..What do your mean bosses do? Lock you in a new journalist dungeon to toil on WP databases to show your chops that you can one day serve as a "setting the table" journalist to one of their rock star reporters? What happened to the interview stuff about being free to walk through the cherryblossoms on a beautiful DC day with a high-ranking politician giving you background on a Senate Democrats luncheon agenda ---Before you head up to Dupont Circle for a 80 buck a plate lunch hosted by a leading defense contractor eager for you and 9 other journalists to understand why their new "evildoer terrahist" detection system is a bargain at 9.17 million dollars per machine?
Where's the glamour, babe??
******************
Will, I agree with you on taxes as a theoretical. They are the best way to force Americans to cut down on oil, especially if they target private transportation only and do not hit diesel or home heating oil (until nat gas infastructure is developed for states lacking that for home use) The problem is that for years the state and federal governments have pilfered those taxes away from road, bridge maintenance and construction into "general fund spending" to fund critical things like Laotian welfare recipient translators, pork like bridges to nowhere, and the mass transit boondoggle du jour.
********************
With more and more cities choked by the immigrant-driven population explosion, a kill two birds with one stone solution is to have non-union bus or train lines set up to transport more people from suburb carparks. Its been going on. It needs to be pushed far harder. At the same time, less cars in cities makes for less congestion.
Ethanol faces the twin problems that we can't make enough to replace gas, and what we can make costs 6-7 dollars per equivalent gallon of gas without subsidies. Otherwise, excellent stuff to drive with or drink. Hydrogen is fine but you have to make it from the 4 real energy sources: Coal. Oil. Nuclear. Gas. Cracking natural gas is by far the most efficient to make hydrogen. But using that to replace oil means replacing tight natural gas supply with coal or nuclear for nat gas allocated to power gen and dwelling usages - and you have sunk investment (all the new nat gas fueled power plants the enviromentalists deigned to keep their lawyers from blocking, nat gas heating and cooling in industrial facilities) and switching costs (buying new coal, nuclear facilities). And adding more LNG import capacity if we use more net nat gas to lower oil use(something the evironmentalists and Ruling Elites detest - yachters and enviroweenies are out in force to block offshore LNG terminals).
Hydrogen is also very tricky stuff. Its the second most "leaky substance" for it's tendency to slip past seals and microscopic defects in materials that would stop larger molecules. Under pressure, it actually slowly oozes through some solid metals and ends up hydriding (embritling alloying) others. It is not easily treated with odorants like can be used with nat gas and which would foul up fuel cells inner workings anyways. Any vehicle would need a H2 explosive detector, and the stuff is a bit scary in that it burns without a visible flame. The safety issues are significant. Kinda killed off the Zepplin industry and firefighters I know say it is one sort of fire they get puckered up about from seeing training films on hydrogen fires...
Posted by: Chris Ford Apr 26, 2006 7:26:27 PM Permalink
We use 30% less oil per capita than we did in 1970..we did the easy stuff...stopped most electric generation from oil burning, lightened cars, put electronic controls on them. Yet we use 35% more oil as a nation than in 1970. Reason? We added 90 million new Americans, most from unchecked immigration, 3rd World village reunification programs, and their attendent spawn..
Posted by: Chris Ford Apr 26, 2006 3:33:39 PM Permalink
Let's take a moment and do some calculations based STRICTLY on Mr. Ford numbers and see if they compute.
US population added 90 million since 1970 per Mr. Ford. Current population is around 300 million (298,605,411 today per US census). That gives us a population of 210 million in 1970. Check.
We use 30% less oil per capita today than we did in 1970. But as a nation we use 35% more oil. Also per Mr. Ford. For the sake of our computations assume we used 100 barrels of oil per capita in 1970. With a 30% drop we each use 70 barrels today. Check.
Our oil consumption as a nation goes up 35% more per Mr. Ford.
Now the calculations:
For 1970:
Total US consumption = 100 X 210 = 21,000 million barrels.
For 2006:
Total US consumption = 70 X 300 = 21,000 million barrels.
Where's the 35% increase due to population growth Mr. Ford?
As usual numbers don't lie so who's fibbing here?
Posted by: Chrisoroid Fordoloid Apr 26, 2006 8:00:00 PM Permalink
One says that reducing demand will raise the price. Another says raising the price will reduce the demand. I say that the last time radical change occurred in the price of energy - to wit, oil pricing in the late 1970s - the country hit a recession two years later that lasted nearly 4 years. What seems to be forgotten is that for a good many people, gas is not a discretionary purchase. There are more than half the population for whom the deeper bite of petrolium product costs is already creating hardship. These are the same people for whom the decision to purchase a more fuel efficient hybrid or some such is not an option.
Speculation is forcing the price up, not the cost of production, refining, or delivery. We have the means to regulate speculation. Until the unknowns have been sorted out, that would be the decent thing to do. But the "free market" gang has sway; don't do anything that hurts the precious free market! No, just let people starve, or freeze, or lose jobs because they can no longer afford to show up. That's the American way!
Posted by: Jazzman Apr 26, 2006 11:15:05 PM Permalink
Chris Fordloid" - as expected, your math is off - and at your expected grade school level - because you are talking apples and oranges.
This is what, the 2nd or 3rd thread you have reposted this on? Why repost? Are you proud of the math you superficially can do on usage factors you don't understand?
Your answer is back on the 5 dollar a gallon thread.
Posted by: Chris Ford Apr 27, 2006 2:19:54 AM Permalink
FOR UNCENSORED NEWS PLEASE BOOKMARK:
WWW.ONLINEJOURNAL.COMWWW.TAKINGAIM.INFOWWW.WSWS.ORGWWW.GREGPALAST.COMOTHERSIDE123.BLOGSPOT.COM
http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/
April 26, 2006 -- LATE EDITION Recently reassigned Deputy White House chief of staff Karl Rove volunteered to testify this afternoon before a grand jury investigating the leaking of the name of covert CIA officer Valerie Plame Wilson to the media in an effort to discredit Ambassador Joseph Wilson and his conclusions that the Niger-Iraq uranium claims by the Bush administration were false. Rove was before the grand jury, without his lawyer in attendance, from 12:30 to at least 4:00 pm. Informed sources speculate that Rove only agreed to testify because he and his attorney Robert Luskin have received a "target letter" from Fitzgerald, an indication that at least one indictment is forthcoming. Rove's lawyers and political friends are spinning the story that Rove is being cooperative with special prosecutor Patrick Fitzgerald and has not received a target letter. Anytime major media reporters refer to "legal sources," they are talking about Rove's attorneys and GOP friends. The prosecution side has been noted for a total lack of leaks to the media. Last week, in court filings by Fitzgerald, Rove was named as a "subject" of the investigation for the first time. After securing a conviction against former GOP Governor George Ryan in Illinois last week, Fitzgerald's renewed efforts in the Leakgate case resulted in the current flurry of activity related to Rove.
Rove: Legal trouble looming in CIA Leakgate case
Rove's appearance before the grand jury meeting at the E. Barrett Prettyman Federal Courthouse, the scene of the indictments in Watergate and the Iran-Contra scandals, was his fifth. Rove's last appearance before the grand jury was in October 2005. That was a few just prior to the garnd jury indicting Vice President Dick Cheney's Chief of Staff I. "Scooter" Libby on five counts of criminal activity. Today, Rove prepared for his grand jury testimony by meeting with his attorneys while President Bush was announcing the appointment of Fox News' Tony Snow as the new White House Press Secretary. Snow's appointment is an indication that the White House, anticipating major legal problems on the CIA Leakgate front, felt it necessary to fire Scott McClellan, viewed as a disingenuous amateur, by an experienced Fox-trained spinmeister and propagandist like Snow.
U.S. intelligence community insiders also speculate that CIA Inspector General official Mary O. McCarthy was fired on orders of a White House already aware that Rove would soon be indicted in an effort to demonstrate that even the CIA leaks classified information about itself. McCarthy, who denies she was the source for the Washington Post's story on secret CIA torture prisons in Eastern Europe, was, nevertheless, fired a week before she was eligible for retirement. However, the White House and right-wing media spin machine beat the drum that McCarthy admitted leaking the information following a polygraph.
An indictment of Rove will largely remove him from engaging in dirty political tricks in an attempt to keep the Congress from going to the Democrats in November election. Rove's recent reassignment by new White House Chief of Staff Joshua Bolten was seen as an attempt to reduce Rove's visibility but keep him engaged in the GOP election strategy. An indictment of Rove would effectively remove him from both the White House and the GOP political campaign.
Posted by: che Apr 27, 2006 5:38:34 AM Permalink
My math is correct as can be verified by all. You on the other hand present and manipulate these numbers to appear authoritative in order to back up a racist xenophobic agenda. From now on all your numbers should be suspect. Your logic flawed. And your motive questioned.
Five dollar a gallon gas will be here sooner than you can dig up more phoney statistics. All it will take is a hurricane threatening Houston or New Orleans this summer or some shooting "incident" on the Iraq/Iran border.
Fortunately all it takes is grade school math to prove your numbers don't compute!
Posted by: Chrisoroid Fordoloid Apr 27, 2006 7:23:58 AM Permalink
Solve three problems at once (cultivation costs, little land, low-skilled immigration): Grow sugar cane for ethanol in Mexico. But we might need to pump some water down there.
Traditional trade economists call it comparative advantage.
Posted by: On the plantation Apr 27, 2006 7:33:11 AM Permalink
"As far as the vehicle goes, fuel cells are significantly more energy efficient than combustion-based power generation technologies. A conventional combustion-based power plant typically generates electricity at efficiencies of 33 to 35%, while fuel cell plants can generate electricity at efficiencies of up to 60%. When fuel cells are used to generate electricity and heat (co-generation), they can reach efficiencies of up to 85%.
Internal-combustion engines in today's automobiles convert less than 30 percent of the energy in gasoline into power that moves the vehicle. Vehicles using electric motors powered by hydrogen fuel cells are much more energy efficient, utilizing 40-60% of the fuel's energy. Even Fuel Cell Vehicles that reform hydrogen from gasoline can use about 40 percent of the energy in the fuel."
--- Shell Oil Company
New Process Could Help Make Hydrogen Fuel Affordable
Stephanie Peatling in Sydneyfor National Geographic NewsAugust 27, 2004
Scientists in Australia say they have have made a breakthrough in the efficiency of using sunlight to generate hydrogen from water. It may be a step toward an affordable source of clean energy. A renewable source of energy to replace the world's declining fossil fuel reserves is perhaps the scientific community's holy grail. Hydrogen is all around us. It is seen by many as the cleanest and most efficient fuel for powering everything from vehicles to furnaces and air-conditioning—if only we can find an affordable way to harness it.
Now two researchers in Australia say they have made substantial progress.
Scientists have known for a long time how to split water into its two elements, oxygen and hydrogen. But the problem is that the process requires electricity—typically derived from fossil fuels—which makes the process counterproductive and expensive.
Janusz Nowotny and Charles Sorrell are researchers from the Centre for Materials Research in Energy Conversion at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia. They have been looking for an economical way to use titanium dioxide to act as a catalyst to split water into oxygen and hydrogen—using solar energy.
The Stuff of Toothpaste
Titanium dioxide (TiO2) is widely used as a white pigment in paint, paper, cosmetics, sunscreens, and toothpastes. It is found in its purest form in rutile, a beach sand but is also extracted from certain ores. Rio Tinto, a mining company that produces titanium oxide, helps fund Nowotny's and Sorrell's research.
Nowotny and Sorrell announced their breakthrough today at the International Conference on Materials for Hydrogen Energy, hosted by the University of New South Wales in Sydney. They believe they have found a way to considerably improve the productivity of the solar hydrogen process (using sunlight to extract hydrogen from water) using a device made out of titanium dioxide.
"This is potentially huge, with a market the size of all the existing markets for coal, oil, and gas combined,'' Nowotny said in a news statement released ahead of the conference. "Based on our research results, we know we are on the right track."
Although Australia's sunny climate makes it an ideal place to generate solar energy, Sorrell said the technology could be used anywhere in the world.
"It's been the dream of many people for a long time to develop it, and it's exciting to know it's within such close reach," Sorrell said.
Honda-Fujishima Effect
The Australians' research has not been tested yet by other scientists, although the findings were applauded by the pioneers of the solar hydrogen process, Akira Fujishima and Kenichi Honda.
In 1967 the Japanese scientists discovered that titanium dioxide could be used to extract hydrogen from water in a process that has become known as the Honda-Fujishima effect. The finding was reported in the journal Nature and led to numerous awards, including the 2004 Japan Prize in the category Chemical Technology for the Environment.
Hydrogen is "very simple but very efficient,'' said Fujishima, who is also in Sydney for today's conference. "We must keep working hard on it.''
Since the 1967 discovery much research has focused on the materials that might be used to split water with sunlight.
Fujishima, chairman of the Kanagawa Academy of Science and Technology, says using titanium dioxide as a catalyst means energy production will result in "cleaner air, cleaner water, and a cleaner atmosphere."
Many Years to Hydrogen Power
The world is still a long way off from large-scale conversion from fossil fuels to hydrogen for its energy needs. For one thing, the Honda-Fujishima effect, even if it is greatly enhanced by the research breakthrough announced today, still has to be adapted into devices that can be used on a commercially viable scale. Engineers will have to design fuel cells that collect sunlight from rooftops and elsewhere.
The world's energy infrastructure is primarily based on fossil fuels and nuclear energy. Transitioning from gasoline-powered vehicles and gas stations to hydrogen-fuel replacements would require a huge investment and many years. Storage and safety issues still need to be resolved.
But the vision of a world powered by hydrogen is gaining momentum and science and technology is catching up.
T. Nejat Veziroglu is the director of the Clean Energy Research Institute at the University of Miami and the president of the International Association for Hydrogen Energy. He was called a "hydrogen romantic'" when he first started talking about a world powered by hydrogen in the 1960s.
Veziroglu recently appeared before a U.S. Congressional hearing. Afterward, he said, he was stopped by a committee member who told him hydrogen would never be as cheap as existing forms of energy. "I said, make the companies responsible for environmental damage and no one will use anything but hydrogen. That way the whole world will benefit.''
Posted by: Bob-C Apr 27, 2006 8:22:00 AM Permalink
What Jazzman Apr 26, 2006 11:15:05 PM said.
The quickest way to drop oil and thus gasoline prices is to get out of Iraq. Here is a nice chart showing how mideast conflicts affect the price of gas:http://zfacts.com/p/35.htmlPull our troops out now and gas next year should go down to about half its current price.
Corn is not a very good source of ethanol since it takes almost as much energy to make it as it produces. Sugar cane is much better but does not grow well in the US. If we are to have a viable ethanol industry, we'll need to import a sugar source or develop (GM) crops that produce lots of sugar. This is not going to happen without hands-on government involvement. Right now the government involvement is mostly in tax breaks and subsidies. I see nothing on the government's end working out the problems with producing ethanol as a fuel source from aquiring the source to filling the tank at a reasonable cost. Until this government takes this problem on in a serious way, ethanol will never become more than a 10% additive to gasoline.
On thing the government could do today is require all engines produced in gasoline vehicles be of a hybrid design by 2010 with a rise in required fuel economy twice what it is today. The car makers will scream, but better them in Detroit than us at the pumps. They can do it, the only thing stopping them from wanting to do it is the profit motive. This is not an issue of what we pay for gas. Its an issue of national security. If you doubt that, ask yourself where America is at war today and will likely be at war tomorrow.
Posted by: Sully Apr 27, 2006 9:22:38 AM Permalink
www.onlinejournal.comwww.wsws.orgwww.takingaim.info
House passes draconian intelligence bill
By Bev ConoverApr 27, 2006, 00:37
The cretins in Congress better start using their gray matter, if they have any, because the repressive legislation they pass that bites the people today will also bite them tomorrow.
No one is immune from the horrors of a police state. No one. None. Fall out of favor with the ruling clique, for whatever reason, and your goose is cooked.
And a police state is what they are creating, all under the guise of "national security" and keeping us "safe" from "terrorists."
The latest nightmare is buried in the HR 5020, the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2007, which the House of Representatives passed, 327-96, yesterday. Among its provisions are giving National Security Director John Negroponte authority to devise a plan for revoking the pensions of retired intelligence agency employees "who commit unauthorized disclosures of classified information." That takes care of any retired whistleblowers.
If that weren't bad enough, the Baltimore Sun is reporting "It also would permit security forces at the National Security Agency and the CIA to make warrantless arrests outside the gates of their top-secret campuses."
Plus, according to the Sun, "The measure also directs Congress to conduct a study of possible new sanctions against those who receive leaks of classified information, including journalists."
In effect, a total shutdown of any knowledge of the crimes your government has committed or is committing in your name.
Is this a sign that we are reaching the tipping point and the real terrorists in the executive branch and their fellow travelers in Congress are fearful of a rebellion? Is this a preemptive attempt to thwart an uprising?
It's better to put all the control mechanisms in place while most Americans are still preoccupied with the daily dose of lies and omissions dished out by their handmaidens in the corporate media. After all, how long can the Busheviks continue to trot out phony Osama tapes and Zarqawi videos, threatening mayhem, when things are going badly for the administration?
With Hitler, it was the Jews, homosexuals, gypsies and anyone else who opposed him. With Bush, it's darker complexioned people ("terrorists," possible "terrorists," and aiders and abettors or sympathizers of "terrorists") and anyone else who opposes him.
Fascism doesn't descend all at once. It comes creeping in, in seemingly benign ways at first. A little chip off your liberties here and a little chip there -- all for your safety and welfare, you're told -- and one day you wake up to find all your liberties are gone. We are nearly to that point.
The USAPATRIOT Act, which too many persist in calling the Patriot Act, has nothing to do with patriots or patriotism. The full title alone should have horrified people: Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act. As slickly as it was rammed through both houses, without being read or debated, in the wake of 9-11 and reauthorized this year, its provisions weren't harsh enough to keep us in line. So now the Congress critters have come up with HR 520 to punish anyone who discloses things the Busheviks want kept secret. The question is will the Senate also vote for this abomination?The irony is that the chippers in Congress, in the state legislatures, in the city halls, fail to realize that one day they, too, make become victims of their chipping. Absolute power may corrupt absolutely, as Lord Acton noted, but power of the smallest degree is a siren song that tends to blind.
Posted by: che Apr 27, 2006 9:28:53 AM Permalink
This may be just tangential to the "national security and energy" theme, but what happened to the big Pentagon Solar Energy Farm display? For years, it reminded drivers passing by on 395 that there are alternative ways of generating power(at least when it worked). Now there's a tiny sign that's so illegible that it's not only non-informative, it creates a road hazard of people trying to read what it says!
Posted by: cpwdc Apr 27, 2006 10:15:58 AM Permalink
Jazzman-
"One says that reducing demand will raise the price. Another says raising the price will reduce the demand. I say that the last time radical change occurred in the price of energy - to wit, oil pricing in the late 1970s - the country hit a recession two years later that lasted nearly 4 years. What seems to be forgotten is that for a good many people, gas is not a discretionary purchase. There are more than half the population for whom the deeper bite of petrolium product costs is already creating hardship. These are the same people for whom the decision to purchase a more fuel efficient hybrid or some such is not an option."
No, the last time a "radical change" occurred was September of last year... and we survived. A 50 cent tax on gasoline would not be drastically more radical than the 3.20-3.40 people were paying after Katrina.
What you seem to be suggesting is that this would be wrong because some people could not afford. I appreciate this point. However, if you are serious about reducing consumption you must reduce price. Lower gasoline prices will encourage fuel inefficient cars because they are cheaper, and all the more so as oil prices decrease. If you want to be oil independent, some people are going to have to make tough, damaging decisions. Some people's quality of life is going to decrease. That's an unfortunate reality.
I do not ride the bus to work. It would be cheaper, but not cheap enough for me to bypass the convenience of driving.
If you want to drive down oil prices than expect much of the status quo. Truck and SUV sales will continue unabated and fuel efficiency will become a non-starter as always. *ANY* solution you have to increase oil efficiency will come with some direct cost on consumers. If you "force" Detroit to make them more efficient (which means more expensive) than Detroit will pass this cost on to consumers. And in the 2nd or 3rd generation of used car sales these costs will eventually be passed on to poor Americans.
If you want consumption to decrease, price must go up.
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 11:03:37 AM Permalink
Correction: In third paragraph "However, if you are serious about reducing consumption you must reduce price" should read INCREASE price.
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 11:04:40 AM Permalink
Remember, Remember the 5th of November, the Gunpowder, Treason, and Plot...
I see no reason the Gunpowder Treason should EVER BE FORGOT.
Thank you Emily Messner for your thought provoking article... solving the energy crisis has nothing to do with increasing cost or taxing gasoline or otherwise punishing the American Working class who have no choice but to buy gasoline at whatever cost the fat cat oil companies decide we can pay.
It has to do with waking up to the evils our government has done to us by sleeping with the corporations and the lobbyists that live to suck the life out of us. We need to take back our government.
We need some Common Sense!
It is about educating ourselves and taking on the hard work that needs to be done and not letting our government spoon feed us the crap they have been feeding us so that we will be "safe".
If energy is a National Security Crisis then we need another Manhatten Project and solve the problem. If Brazil can do it I amd quite certain we can do it too.
We don't need to be protected from terrorist. We need to be protected from our own government and power hungry fools.
Let's quit spending our treasure and spilling our blood in foreign lands for the fat cats and making ourselves look like fools in the eyes of the world and Let's git 'er done!
Posted by: donnerboy Apr 27, 2006 11:57:19 AM Permalink
Will, I've heard you say this before but maybe I'm not getting the picture. Why do we need to reduce consumption? It will not make us oil independent. It will only affect the price of oil slightly. Why is consumption an issue? Do we not have enough oil, enough capacity to turn it into gasoline? I do not seen where adjusting consumption gets us anything except less CO2 and smog, angry former drivers riding smelly busses, and maybe a few more dollars in my pocket but that is not a national issue.
Posted by: Sully Apr 27, 2006 11:57:23 AM Permalink
Just in case some missed this, here is a link showing the price of gas and how it is affected by middle east conflict. http://zfacts.com/p/35.htmlTo drop gas back to normal prices this suggests pulling out of Iraq and stop talking about nuking Iran. Bush talks about ethanol, no wonder...
Posted by: Sully Apr 27, 2006 12:01:51 PM Permalink
Hydrogen Fuel Cells, Ethanol and Mass Transit are ALL part of the long term solution. BMW and others have been driving around Hydrogen Fuel Cell cars and buses for a couple of years now and the problem is the amount that can be stored, not safety.
Ethanol comes from a renewable source that can also help our farmers.
Mass transit, INTEGRATED, with all other public transit is really one of the best answers. Combine it with a safe and reliable nuclear strategy to produce electricity and you have something that can really serve the people.
PRIORITY NUMBER ONE: Get off the black crack! HOWEVER we do it, we just need to do it.
Posted by: AfghanVet Apr 27, 2006 12:20:13 PM Permalink
Sully-
Some people have deemed America "Oil Dependent". It is to those people who I say, the only reasonable means of adjusting American consumer behavior is to adjust the price of oil.
The viability of "alternative" energy sources is tied to the viability of oil. Ethanol, for example, costs about 5.00 per tank of gasoline currently. That means gasoline is preferrable to ethanol up until we reach that 5.00 mark.
If we want to ween ourselves off of oil we have to make alternatives to oil economically viable. Ultimately the price of oil will determine whether or not these alternative sources are legitimate investment opportunities.
And we are running a 500 billion dollar deficit, so I favor a gasoline tax as a good source of revenue.
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 12:37:55 PM Permalink
Sully-
Postscript: If you do not think that shifting from oil to alternatives or from oil to semi-conservation is important then obviously you will find my proposal semi-useless (except for the added revenue). If that's your opinion, just ignore it.
Personally I am in the sooner the better crowd. Eventually oil will necessarily price itself out of the market because it is a non-renewable resource. I'd rather we have the infrastructure in place to deal with this when it comes up.
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 12:40:16 PM Permalink
When the oil supply, foreign and domestic, is no more, a replacement will be introduce into the market. The Gasoline price increase is not the "crisis" that will lead to revolutionary changes. Experienced in customer reactions to high prices in Europe Big Oil knows that people will fuss but will pay the price. This debate may be good for the soul but the cast is set _ We will pay the price having no other consumer choices. End of debate!
Posted by: camus Apr 27, 2006 1:46:07 PM Permalink
Will wrote:"If we want to ween ourselves off of oil we have to make alternatives to oil economically viable. Ultimately the price of oil will determine whether or not these alternative sources are legitimate investment opportunities."
I could just as easily be done by giving tax benefits or other incentives to the ethanol industry, maybe take the oil industries benefits and apply them to ethanol. But I don't see a need to smack consumers in the wallet to achieve your goal. And the ethanol bandwagon is fueled by oil. Using current American resources (mainly corn) it takes almost as much energy to produce a tank of ethanol as to make it and get it to your tank. The best approach is to require, REQUIRE, all gasoline vehicles have hybrid technology, a technology that exists today, and impose high fuel economies on vehicles. You might say that will impose a hardship on those buying cars due to the higher price of hybrid cars. I agree to some extent but I would expect the price of hybrids to come down due to volume manufacturing. I actually prefer PHEV vehicles but I think the market will make them attractive.
Will continues:"Postscript: If you do not think that shifting from oil to alternatives or from oil to semi-conservation is important then obviously you will find my proposal semi-useless..."
Oh I'm all for alternatives, I just don't see any real alternatives ready for market. Corn is a lousy source of ethanol producing 1.2 units of energy for every 1 unit of energy used to make it. Now sugar cane is 8:1. That is how Brazil has almost reached energy independence. There is also the question of how to distribute any alternative fuel. The distribution of gasoline is well established via existing pipelines. So though I feel ethanol is the future, well, its just that, the future. Today the only way we can reduce consumption and not punish drivers, drive up inflation and otherwise ruin the economy and the lives of millions is by pushing hybrid and other fuel efficient vehicles through legislation. America has clean air because of legislating the automobile industry, we can also have fuel efficiency if our leaders only wanted it more than big oil's campaign contributions.
Posted by: Sully Apr 27, 2006 1:49:40 PM Permalink
Ethanol is a solution in the long term at best. Let’s talk about NOW.
Will, you must be either senile or retarded, I must’ve mentioned something to that effect lately, no? Anyway, it's a common knowledge that due to the lack of an alternative, some 70% of American workforce is FORCED TO DRIVE to and from work. Has it occur to you how your, er, unwise, proposal may affect them?.. Will it decrease gas consumption? Nein. The government, on the other hand, will undoubtedly piss the money away on the lame foreign adventures or supporting "energy consultants" such as that a**wipe Chris Ford. So what good is your gas tax? It's a simple question, Will. The fair thing to do is to tax the oil companies, the Wall Street and the super rich, on condition the proceeds chanelled directly to the working motorists. Which is unfeasible due to th apparent lack of will on the part of the govn't.
"We have the means to regulate speculation," types Jazzman.
What exactly are they, Jazzman? And who are “we”?
From the mouth of the poster Camus comes the sad truth. The only realistic option is to pick the tab. One can also commit suicide, n’est pas, Camus?
Posted by: Apr 27, 2006 2:42:37 PM Permalink
Sully-
"I could just as easily be done by giving tax benefits or other incentives to the ethanol industry, maybe take the oil industries benefits and apply them to ethanol."
To the latter (taking of oil industry benefits) who do you think the oil industry is going to make pay for this shift? Probably consumers?
To the former (tax benefits/incentives/subsidies) I think we are well past the point where spending our way out of a problem will work, although your proposal would probably go down well at the current whitehouse.
In my opinion you don't start subsidy programs when your deficit is half a trillion dollars annually --you eliminate subsidies wherever possible. At some point Americans are going to have to realize that funding growth through lower taxes without cutting spending will eventually cost *someone* *something*. If tough decisions are going to be made they should be made by the ones who accrued those costs, namely: us. Forcing the costs of our fiscal irresponsibility on our children is immoral and undemocratic.
That is why I support a gas tax. It is a tough decision that forces Americans to change their consumption habits that also generates much needed government revenue. Deficit spending cannot go on forever unabated.
"But I don't see a need to smack consumers in the wallet to achieve your goal."
Because it is the only reasonable way to change consumer behavior outside of flat out paying them the difference in cost between a hybrid and a cheaper gasoline-only car. By the way, how will you pay for that?
If you don't think consumption needs to be reduced then ignore that proposal. If your solution to the problem is to pay our way out, I respectfully disagree with you.
"The best approach is to require, REQUIRE, all gasoline vehicles have hybrid technology, a technology that exists today, and impose high fuel economies on vehicles."
Which will be expensive for car manufacturers who will turn around and force those costs on customers. The cheapest car available will cost the same as the cheapest hybrid available thus eliminating the only possibility that some poor and middle class americans have at owning a new car (not the end of the world). Further this will not generate any of that much needed government revenue.
Anonymous-
"Will, you must be either senile or retarded"
I'm actually quite young, so it's probably just retarded.
"Anyway, it's a common knowledge that due to the lack of an alternative, some 70% of American workforce is FORCED TO DRIVE to and from work."
Source? I drive to work but I am not forced to drive to work. I sympathize with those workers who absolutely MUST drive to work, but wages will adjust. If employers cannot court workers because the cost of commuting makes the jobs undesirable, than employers will have to raise wages.
"Has it occur to you how your, er, unwise, proposal may affect them?"
Yes, that's the entire point. These people will probably be forced to make some difficult decisions about their current oil consumption. They might even *gasp* be forced to sell their cars for more efficient vehicles or learn to take public transportation and/or carpool. Or ride a bike. Or walk. The horror! The horror!
"So what good is your gas tax? It's a simple question, Will."
Simple answer. It will reduce American oil consumption immediately, it will increase the economic viability of investment in alternative energy sources, and it will generate desperately needed government revenue.
"The fair thing to do is to tax the oil companies, the Wall Street and the super rich, on condition the proceeds chanelled directly to the working motorists."
Who do you think a gasoline tax taxes, exactly, besides people who sell gasoline (oil companies)? If you tax oil companies they will pass the tax onto the consumer, so the effect is the same. I'm suggesting a direct tax at the pump, you are suggesting a what? Windfall tax? And you don't think oil companies will pass this tax on to consumers?
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 3:07:24 PM Permalink
Two problems: Illegal immigration. High Gas prices.
Solution: Rickshaws.
Posted by: D. Apr 27, 2006 3:34:24 PM Permalink
We need to free ourselves from oil and do it NOW! Ethanol in one form or another has been available in ths country for at least 20 years. I used to buy it when stationed in OK in the early 1980's cause it was cheaper than gas. As for distribution, all the stations would have to do is add another couple of pumps and a tank, just as they do when they decide to carry diesel fuel. As for pipelines, they're building new ones all the time. The sad truth is most of America has no choice but to drive since in all but the largest cities public transportation is nonexsistant. Hybrids sound good, but they are expensive, STILL use gas and are only fuel effecient in city driving. Besides, it's unrealistic to expect people run out and buy a brand new car. What the major car makers haven't told the public (but should) is that the majority of cars all ready on the road can be modified to run on E85. Even if it were to cost 5,6,7 hundred dollars it's cheaper than a new car. Aside from reprogramming the computer any decent mechanic can do it. Replace the fuel line, gas tank, and fuel injector, and you don't have to do it all at one time. Ford, GM and Mo-Par have been selling cars in Brazil for years and HAD to come up with conversion kits. I've seen them advertized at Brazilian dealerships.
Posted by: Jackie Apr 27, 2006 3:41:15 PM Permalink
Ethanol is promising but there is a problem. We currently produce about 4 billion gallons of ethanol each year. The ethanol industry consumed some 1.5 billion bushels of corn, equivalent to about 13 percent of the nation’s second largest corn harvest.
Now that sounds like a lot except that American consumes about 350 million gallons of gas each DAY! That's 125 billion gallons of gasoline each year. If we used ALL of our corn to produce ethanol it would produce about 30 billion gallons or about one quarter of the gasoline we consume. Other technologies need to be developed to make enough ethanol such as cellulose derived ethanol (you use corn stalks or other waste plant material).
So, though you may find ethanol at a gas station or two here and there, it is unlikely to replace gasoline and only likely to be the additive (5% - 10%) it currently is for a long time. That's a good thing, but it is not going to replace gasoline or even give us E85 everywhere in the country anytime soon.
Hybrids are here today. They have been proven in small, midsize and large SUV type vehicles. It is time to really promote this proven technology while the research into ethanol and other ideas continues. Even better, PHEV hybrids, which are still being researched but seem to work, can be plugged into your house. Not only could you use house power to power your PHEV vehicle, you could use the PHEV vehicle as a generator during power outages to power appliances in your house. Hybrid technology has a lot to offer and is the only effective short term solution we have to reduce the consumption of gasoline.
Posted by: Sully Apr 27, 2006 4:10:11 PM Permalink
Mass transit will not serve as a practical remedy. Distances too great (versus, say, Europe), too much suburb-to-suburb commuting, etc. to make it economically feasible.
Ditto for 'hoping' the price of gas will drive drivers into becoming bicyclers or such.
Observe that the two greatest short-term technological breakthroughs of the 20th-century - the atomic bomb and a trip to the moon - were results of GOVERNMENT programs in a perceived national emergency.
Energy independence is only plausible in the near-term (10-15 years) with the same type of commitment. Sure, contract the work out to private industry (Exxon Mobil, GM, etc.) if possible, but under strict contract conditions: solution X will be produced by deadline Y at a non-renegotiable total price of Z, or else! If doable, as with the moon shot, fine; otherwise, let Uncle do it himself, as with Fat Man and Little Boy.
To rely on private business to 'somehow get around to it' when it's profitable for THEM ensures the crisis will only get FAR worse long before it gets better. The same applies to people voluntarily buying hybrids, taking fewer trips, or other 'human' solutions.
This is a pure technological problem, ideally suited for a coordinated governmental solution.
How to bring it about? Simply remember all this in November and vote accordingly.
Posted by: Judgito Apr 27, 2006 4:12:28 PM Permalink
Judgito wrote:"This is a pure technological problem, ideally suited for a coordinated governmental solution. How to bring it about? Simply remember all this in November and vote accordingly."
Absolutely right. Remember which party thinks government is the solution and which thinks government is the problem.
Posted by: Sully Apr 27, 2006 4:20:53 PM Permalink
Government is the solution? Bloody fascists....
Posted by: don't make a hill of beans Apr 27, 2006 4:24:47 PM Permalink
Government is a solution when you have people in the government who believe in government's abilities. Conversely, when you have people in government who do not believe in government, who believe the government is a trouble maker that needs to be supressed, you get the kind of government we have today that throws its hands up when a national crisis occurs since it has no idea how to use the wheels of government to solve national problems.
If you want a functional government you have to remove republican control.
Posted by: Sully Apr 27, 2006 4:36:51 PM Permalink
Will,
Anyway, prohibitive prices at the pump may work in Europe. Here, it's a severe blow to the masses, financially speaking. For many (70% in my approximation) bus, metro, scooter or bicycle is not a realistic alternative, even in the metropolitan areas. Now think of the millions "out there" with their trucks, SUVs, ATVs and tractors. What choice do they have?
Regardless, it certainly looks like the gas price is to soar to an extent as to make the talk of any additional tax obscene.The answer to the prohibitive gasoline is efficient public tranportation, difficult indeed change in cultural habits and, call me Pinko, taxation of the scandalously rich. I'll not name names.
Posted by: Emilio Apr 27, 2006 4:40:19 PM Permalink
Judgito-
"Mass transit will not serve as a practical remedy. Distances too great (versus, say, Europe), too much suburb-to-suburb commuting, etc. to make it economically feasible."
What do you think "economic feasibility" is a measure of, exactly? Maybe gasoline prices? As private commutes become more expensive the political and economic viability of developed mass transit increase, no?
"Ditto for 'hoping' the price of gas will drive drivers into becoming bicyclers or such."
We don't have to hope, it is happening right now. After Katrina consumers remedied their behavior and started purchasing more hybrids and fewer SUVs/Trucks because it was cheaper, in the long run, to do so. Ditto on bicycles/taking the bus/walking.
"Sure, contract the work out to private industry (Exxon Mobil, GM, etc.) if possible, but under strict contract conditions: solution X will be produced by deadline Y at a non-renegotiable total price of Z, or else! If doable, as with the moon shot, fine; otherwise, let Uncle do it himself, as with Fat Man and Little Boy."
Or else what? We jail the oil execs? Why would any private company sign such a restrictive contract? And how can the American government pony up the amount of cash to make it worth their time?
And how exactly will "Uncle Sam" pay for it when he is making 200 billion dollar interest payments per year?
"To rely on private business to 'somehow get around to it' when it's profitable for THEM ensures the crisis will only get FAR worse long before it gets better."
There is no one else to rely on. You cannot spend your way out of this problem. At some point gasoline will price itself out of the market by necessity (because oil is non-renewable). That's when private industry will step in and change the world because it will be feasible to do so. People are going to buy 8.00 tanks of "energy" just as they buy 3.00 tanks of gasoline. Private Industry has no incentive to invest in the 8.00 alternatives because... they don't have to!
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 4:43:30 PM Permalink
frankly Sully, I find your naive faith in the government childlike, really. They are vicious.
Posted by: Emilio Apr 27, 2006 4:43:32 PM Permalink
Emilio-
"Anyway, prohibitive prices at the pump may work in Europe. Here, it's a severe blow to the masses, financially speaking. For many (70% in my approximation) bus, metro, scooter or bicycle is not a realistic alternative, even in the metropolitan areas. Now think of the millions "out there" with their trucks, SUVs, ATVs and tractors. What choice do they have?"
I guess they will just lay down and die? Well, not exactly.
When gasoline prices actually do reach 3.50, which they will, you will see the very managable effects of a proposed .50 gasoline tax at 3.00. What will happen? The public will utilize mass transit more, SUV/Truck sales will plummit, and hybrid sales will increase.
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 4:46:28 PM Permalink
Emily, good luck finding any fuel besides standard gas to put into those "flex fuel" vehicles. There are exactly 10 E85 fueling stations in Flordia, Texas, and California COMBINED. And there are 0 in New England.http://afdcmap2.nrel.gov/locator/
Posted by: Miles Apr 27, 2006 5:03:21 PM Permalink
"What will happen? The public will utilize mass transit more, SUV/Truck sales will plummit, and hybrid sales will increase."
Will,
What if there's NO mass transit to speak of? Some Centerville, Burke, Nashvile, TN, or the entire state of Wisconsin, to name afew? Many will suddenly get way less off, that's what'll happen. Unless the govn't help'em the masses finance the hybrid trucks and SUVs, which I doubt.
Posted by: Emilio Apr 27, 2006 5:05:11 PM Permalink
If Chris Ford was any dumber, he'd be a tree, verdad?
Sully, on the other hand, is a supreme example of how one should debate the issues.
Posted by: Emilio Apr 27, 2006 5:18:14 PM Permalink
Jackie - The only time ethanol was cheaper than gas here was when a few Congressional pork-funded pilot programs 100% subsidized by the Fed Gov't churned out a modest amount of farmer subsidized corn-derived ethanol. Even in Brazil, where they are knocking down 100 square miles of rain forest every 3 years (making the OTHER environmentalists not adoring of ethanol over rainforest very unhappy) ethanol is subsidized.
Which puts you in Sully's argument. Is it a better use of taxpayer dollars to give the poor relief at the pump, subsidize the wealthy so they can get the newest high cost hybrid status car, or divert much of our arable land to making heavily subsidized corn to essentially burn and then import most our food?
I side with Will in that we have bad consumer behaviors that the market should correct - not subsidize with taxes to help perpetuate those bad choices when we have 500 billion dollar deficits.
Long term, we need coal and nuclear - plus for the sake of argument those "exciting alternate power sources" that will never be primary energy sources - but are wonderful rhetorical devices activists use to deflect from the core fact that they have blockaded all coastal exploration, Alaskan exploration, walled off half the West from exploration, blocked LNG, blocked nuclear, blocked new coal, and blocked new refineries for the last 35 years.
Besides the gridlock on new energy production by the Lefty activists - we indeed also have a problem with radical conservatives that think Jesus wants us all to drive 10MPG ultimate behemoths on 100 mile commutes every day as the penultimate expression of "God-given American freedoms" and to have a chain of wars to "liberate" those who disagree.
Both sides are nuts.
Just the cancer of Lefty activism has gone on far longer than the stupidity of the gas hog loving Bushies has.
So what are our current best options?
1. Seek out and punish the speculators. Agree with the G-8 that we must have mechanisms to stabilize the spot market and end the manipulation of it by the rich fatcats.
2. Since this pain is global and stems in great part from ME instability, have a reapproachement with Europe, China, Russia. All of us are working at cross purposes, undercutting one another on matters like the Palestinians and Iraq and foster wild oil moves as a result. The Islamic instability and bad experience Russia had with the Oligarchs has delayed development of the vast Caspian deposits.
3. My amigo Presidente Chavez is absolutely right that if OPEC establishes a new benchmark price of 50 dollars a barrel, that would free up use of Venezuela's heavy bituminous crude - which is a reserve bigger than KSA's. This would also power new exploration, production from marginal deposits, and start large scale development of US oil shale and Canadian oil sand deposits - both of which are larger than KSA's oil reserves.
4. The USA has got to move past being captives of fanatic special interest activists, which are a small minority but who have given us massive new gas guzzlers (free market morons, corporate lackey morons), blocked all energy development (Lefty morons), put America on track to have 1 billion people by 2100 (Open Borders morons), further destabilized the ME through organs like the Israel Lobby (zionist morons). Both our Parties have to reach consensus on a National energy strategy - and support a global plan we must formulate with the energy exporting and key industrialized nations.
5. There is enough oil and oil derivative fossil fuel to keep us in business for another 30-40 years PLUS feed Rising China's needs and India's too. But just as we can't tolerate blockage of near term solutions by blind, intolerant ideological opposition by minorty special interest groups any longer, we must start seriously planning for the long-term.
The long term is what realistic, scientifically and economically valid energy sources should we start building the infastructure of for that will serve our children and grandchildren. Many of the nuke, coal, and nat gas plants of today will be running 30 years from now. Many oil, nat gas fields and coal mines will still be providing needed energy 30 years from now. What else will they need that will help maintain a high standard of living? What "exciting alternate power" will they realistically use to provide their needs. This is dollars and cents stuff - not ideological. No different than a bridge we cross today over a gorge that was built 120 years ago and designed to last 600 years and designed, though they didn't know autos would exist, for capacity to serve 10X the traffic they had in 1886. Do we go with renewable, CO2-free next gen fission power for them? Or continue business as usual, not invest in future energy, and count our grandchildren having fusion and "exciting solar energy" - or if not, "their problem, screw 'em"?? Do we design a national and international energy program that has the flexibility to add fusion if it ever proves commercially viable or drop ethanol if it chokes off too much land needed for wildlife and future food needs?
My opinion? Both Democrats and Republicans must get serious and end the feckless dithering that has crippled us since 1970 or so. Get the special interest groups warping domestic and foreign policy under control and serve the collective good, not the few.
Posted by: Chris Ford Apr 27, 2006 5:40:14 PM Permalink
Emilio-
Centerville is one of 4 cities in 50,000 - 200,000 cities in Tennessee that has a public transportation system.
The reality is, some cities in the United States do not have public transit. To compensate, living expenses in these cities, like Burke, Tennessee, are typically lower because it lacks a certain amnenity. The people in Burke, Tennessee will survive with 3.50 gasoline just as they do with 3.00 gasoline... or 2.50... or 2.00. They will adjust their living habits to accomodate. Or, if you'd like, I could update my proposal to only tax those gas stations that are near cities with accomodating Public Transportation systems.
Nashville:http://www.nashvillemta.org/setpage.asp?page=generalinfo.htmlYou can purchase a bus fair online if you'd like.
The State of Wisconsin also has a public transportation system. You can find information about it here: http://www.apta.com/links/state_local/wi.cfm#A5
Yes, a gasoline tax would cause many people to suffer. That's the whole point. If they suffer they will make difficult decisions about how to get from point A to point B.
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 5:41:12 PM Permalink
Correction:
Centerville is one of 4 cities with populations between 50,000 and 200,000 people in the state of Tennessee with public transporation systems.
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 5:45:35 PM Permalink
To Emilio-
You haven't exactly pulled your punches so I am going to take the gloves off.
You are perfectly representative of what I call "Drastic Pussyism" in the United States whereas any decision that "hurts" a particular group of people is prima facie wrong.
The logical result of this is that Politicians only make decisions that have 0 political consequences. So we rack up 500 billion in deficits while simultaneously cutting taxes (in the middle of a war, no less) because the only political group that could possibly complain --our future beleaguered children-- can't voice their frustrations in a ballot box.
So spend on, chief. But don't expect me to lose any tears for the Burke, Nashvillians who might suffer the indignity of having to sell that 1988 Ford Bronco for merely a Ford Ranger effectively doubling their miles per gallon.
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 5:55:28 PM Permalink
Emilio wrote:
"Sully, on the other hand, is a supreme example of how one should debate the issues."_____________
The policy philosophy of Sully can be summed up in one approach. That is, tax as broadly as possible, and make the benefit as specific as possible. This was exactly demonstrated in the proposal to take excess oil profits and assign them to energy R&D.
On the other hand, there is the mentality that says, tax as narrowly as possible (and voluntarily if possible), and make the benefits as broad as possible. The conceptually perfect example is the lottery, which is a voluntary tax on the numerically impaired. Another example, more relevant for this debate, would be putting an explicit price on the extravagancy of fuel hogs, and passing these sums directly to fuel conservers. A simple way to do this is to ration gas equally via transferable vouchers to each licensed driver, enabling pigs to buy the amounts they need in the secondary market for vouchers with a profit to those who conserve.
Respectful of the free market, rewarding for right-acting conservers, and taking government out of the money-grabbing picture except as agents to issue the vouchers. BTW, didn't Jimmy Carter have such a contingency plan in the works? He certainly had millions of gas-ration coupons printed and stockpiled (an easily confirmed historical fact).
Posted by: On the plantation Apr 27, 2006 6:17:15 PM Permalink
An Island Parable:
In a far, far away ocean, sat the prosperous island of Atlantila. For many years, it's wheat crop and native and imported fish from the archipelago of Raging-On were enough to feed its people and it's livestock. But overtime, it's population grew and became a little more wasteful and preferred bigger and bigger bovines as status symbols. Which began to strain it's food supply. Worse, it's population grew unexpectedly as masses of poor people from nearby South Bumholia began landing on it's shores, begging for work and in many ways making certain Atlantinians richer and what they bought cheaper. And then the supply of fish from Raging-On became uncertain as a small island began hosting an incoming people that worshipped a different Idol and kicked some rager's butts - which enraged the already raging residents of Raging-On more than they ordinarily raged and fish trade went as nuts as them. Pacification missions by Atlantilians only made them madder, and many Atlantilians were killed - including some by attacks launched by the fish-rich Raging-On residents in Atlantilia itself.
Over the years, of course, Atlantilia had tried to diversify it's agricultural base away from wheat, but ran into intense ideological opposition from people opposed to beans (they make one pass wind - horrible stuff - and we will never tolerate such a terrible potential pollutant! We will march on and block all beanfields), opposed to potatos (can be poisonous!), and corn (the mills that grind corn can explode!). For decades, they blocked those sources...preferring to speculate how wonderful strawberries, cherry trees, wild rice, and "exciting new alternate crops yet proven to work and maybe making starfish edible would be". And encouraged people to eat less. And not have so many bovines.
The Prime Minister met with worried experts who said Atlantilia was in a food crisis. He tried meeting with the parties.
The fatcats of the island had a cow when he proposed reducing the number of big bovines...claiming that freedom, comfort, and their ability to get laid by having such status symbols tied to them would be jeopardized.
The mindless oppositionists initially tried shutting down debate by chanting "Strawberries! Beautiful pure strawberries!" and responded that while strawberries, wild rice capable of being planted on a few acres of land, and unreliable cherry trees that also killed plenty of birds and bats with their poisonous pits were only able to feed 5% of the people, they were just so aesthetically wonderful and pure that the main focus should be on them...plus exciting alternate crops not yet invented or proven. Meanwhile they shook with anger as they reaffirmed their complete opposition towards potatos, corn, and beans. And said that people should eat less as a solution.
Coincidentally, many of the oppositionists were the biggest defenders of the South Bumholians arriving, saying they had a right to Atlantilia and if we only lived and ate like the Bumholians there wouldn't be such a food crisis. Ignoring of course, why people were leaving Bumholia in the first place.
And the oppositionists said that fish dependency and all the rage in the Raging-On archipelago was Atlantilia's fault and we should be "fish-free" and eat strawberries instead. They proposed research into a magic new exciting crop that had the protein of the imported fish but tasted like wild rice with a hint of strawberry...
The Prime Minister came from the Big Bovine lover's society, so he knew that there would always be wheat and fish for themselves and their high status livestock, but the kids of others on the island may be going hungry soon. Not that he cared that much...and though not too bright, knew more pain and hunger had to come before the oppositionists realized their "strawberry fields forever" fantasies were unscientific and infantile, their "exciting future alternate crops" still a dream.
Knowing that corn, beans, and potatos were coming anyways, he adjourned the meeting. And did a little pandering to the oppositionists saying he too loved cherries and hoped the "starfish edibility" problem could be solved with massive amounts of money going to the Big Bovine lover class to further study the starfish protein source.
And prepared, just like the day before to wave more Bumholians in to serve the Big Bovine lovers needs, and deal with the fish-mongers of the Raging-On Archipelago.
Posted by: Chris Ford Apr 27, 2006 6:59:34 PM Permalink
Thanks, Will, but your point-by-point critique of my earlier post seems to stem from an inherent belief that the marketplace is the only solution. I, too, believe in capitalism - it's the best way to handle the ca. 95% of problems it can routinely handle. Addressing the other 5% or so - and I'm convinced our long-term energy problem has been one of these for decades (not just since last month) - is one of the few real reasons governments are necessary.To respond to two of your points:For mass transit to work to the extent needed to solve this problem quickly in the geographical U.S. would require a network of construction, condemnation and labor contracts that would bankrupt whatever level of government that tried to do it. A 'Manhattan-like' project would be far less taxing - which, incidentally, albeit unfortunately, is one source of the revenue that would pay for it, but I believe would prove to be a valuable long-term investment.No crystal ball here - you may even be right in many respects - but all the indications I see do not point to a satisfactory free-market-only solution.
Posted by: Judgito Apr 27, 2006 7:10:47 PM Permalink
plantation wrote:"The policy philosophy of Sully can be summed up in one approach. That is, tax as broadly as possible, and make the benefit as specific as possible. This was exactly demonstrated in the proposal to take excess oil profits and assign them to energy R&D."
Hmmm, I thought I wrote:"I could just as easily be done by giving tax benefits or other incentives to the ethanol industry, maybe take the oil industries benefits and apply them to ethanol."
Not oil profits, tax benefits. But hey, this is a debate about facts right?
Posted by: Sully Apr 27, 2006 7:55:13 PM Permalink
Judgito-
Maybe we got our signals crossed somewhere but I did not propose a free market solution. I proposed a gasoline tax.
The one proposal above that I take serious issue with is additional subsidization or governemnt "initiative" a-la moon landing which is essentially just a large subsidy. We run half a trillion dollar deficit annually. We do not have any money to spend on fixing this problem. We need revenue coming in, not the other way around.
At some point Americans are going to have to realize that "the good times are over". That's what happens when a short-sighted electorate buys growth with constantly decreasing taxes (even during warfare) and constantly increasing government spending.
The bottom falls out, eventually.
Posted by: Will Apr 27, 2006 11:48:59 PM Permalink
Post a Comment

Name: Email Address:
URL:
Remember personal info?
-->
Comments:
-->