Pages

Sunday, April 20, 2008

The Green Issue

[New York Times By MICHAEL POLLAN] "There are so many stories we can tell ourselves to justify doing nothing, but perhaps the most insidious is that, whatever we do manage to do, it will be too little too late. Climate change is upon us, and it has arrived well ahead of schedule. Scientists’ projections that seemed dire a decade ago turn out to have been unduly optimistic: the warming and the melting is occurring much faster than the models predicted. Now truly terrifying feedback loops threaten to boost the rate of change exponentially, as the shift from white ice to blue water in the Arctic absorbs more sunlight and warming soils everywhere become more biologically active, causing them to release their vast stores of carbon into the air. Have you looked into the eyes of a climate scientist recently? They look really scared."


Why bother? This is very interesting and thoughtful article. The author touches on many of the frustrations that all of us who are concerned about the state of our world grapple with every day. His points are good but I think he still hasn't been able, himself, to let go of the ideas that are driving his "cheap energy mind." I believe that there is a very clear and logical reason to bother. We should let go of the consumptive and manipulative aspects of our lives, made possible by cheap oil, simply because they are not real. We have been living on a one time bequest of cheap energy that is not, and has never been, a part of our real human existance. In the long term there is no oil. A couple of hundred years from now there won't be anybody alive who lives the lifestyle he is pleading for us to abandon. In a thousand years they won't even remember we ever did. So I say why not just get on with it. The best thing we can do for the environment is quit using oil stupidly...now. We can save whats left for a few thousand years worth of critical uses like medical and plastics for solar equipment. To use oil for transportation, electrical energy production, asphalt roads and fertilizer is insane. Then, when we have done that, whatever life we end up living will be closer to real for the first time in a couple of hundred years.

Friday, April 18, 2008

Mideast's own oil consumption helping to drive prices up

McClatchy Washington Bureau | 04/18/2008 | "Middle Eastern oil-producing nations are behind today's record high oil prices, but not for the reason you might think. Taken together, oil-rich nations represent a bloc of fast-growing economies that are now sucking up new energy supplies almost as fast as they're coming to market."


This goes along with what I was saying in the last post. For now the oil producers are just deciding to use their share of the bounty. When the other shoe drops, and they decide they need to also save some for the kids, its over folks.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

The rise of the new energy world order

Asia Times Online :: Asian news and current affairs: "The combination of rising demand, the emergence of powerful new energy consumers, and the contraction of the global energy supply is demolishing the energy-abundant world we are familiar with and creating in its place a new world order. Think of it as rising powers/shrinking planet."

I am waiting for the other shoe to hit the floor. At some point the producers that are left will say, "Hey, I am going to need this stuff in the future. Why should I sell it to anybody?" At that point the U. S., who is only producing one third of it oil requirement, will be in big time trouble.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Fuel Choices, Food Crises and Finger-Pointing

New York Times: "The idea of turning farms into fuel plants seemed, for a time, like one of the answers to high global oil prices and supply worries. That strategy seemed to reach a high point last year when Congress mandated a fivefold increase in the use of biofuels."

Even though we are seeing a lot of these kind of stories in the news lately, it is really just the beginning. Until we find a way to reduce our consumption to a sustainable level we will be playing this zero-sum game.