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How to Wreck a Planet 101: Three Energy Developments That Are Changing Your Life
The Global Energy Crisis Deepens
Here’s the good news about energy: thanks to rising oil prices and deteriorating economic conditions worldwide, the International Energy Agency (IEA) reports that global oil demand will not grow this year as much as once assumed, which may provide some temporary price relief at the gas pump. In its May Oil Market Report, the IEA reduced its 2011 estimate for global oil consumption by 190,000 barrels per day, pegging it at 89.2 million barrels daily. As a result, retail prices may not reach the stratospheric levels predicted earlier this year, though they will undoubtedly remain higher than at any time since the peak months of 2008, just before the global economic meltdown. Keep in mind that this is the good news.
As for the bad news: the world faces an array of intractable energy problems that, if anything, have only worsened in recent weeks. These problems are multiplying on either side of energy’s key geological divide: below ground, once-abundant reserves of easy-to-get “conventional” oil, natural gas, and coal are drying up; above ground, human miscalculation and geopolitics are limiting the production and availability of specific energy supplies. With troubles mounting in both arenas, our energy prospects are only growing dimmer.
Here’s one simple fact without which our deepening energy crisis makes no sense: the world economy is structured in such a way that standing still in energy production is not an option. In order to satisfy the staggering needs of older industrial powers like the United States along with the voracious thirst of rising powers like China, global energy must grow substantially every year. According to the projections of the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE), world energy output, based on 2007 levels, must rise 29% to 640 quadrillion British thermal units by 2025 to meet anticipated demand. Even if usage grows somewhat more slowly than projected, any failure to satisfy the world’s requirements produces a perception of scarcity, which also means rising fuel prices. These are precisely the conditions we see today and should expect for the indefinite future.
It is against this backdrop that three crucial developments of 2011 are changing the way we are likely to live on this planet for the foreseeable future.
Tough-Oil Rebels
The first and still most momentous of the year’s energy shocks was the series of events precipitated by the Tunisian and Egyptian rebellions and the ensuing “Arab Spring” in the greater Middle East. Neither Tunisia nor Egypt was, in fact, a major oil producer, but the political shockwaves these insurrections unleashed has spread to other countries in the region that are, including Libya, Oman, and Saudi Arabia. At this point, the Saudi and Omani leaderships appear to be keeping a tight lid on protests, but Libyan production, normally averaging approximately 1.7 million barrels per day, has fallen to near zero.
When it comes to the future availability of oil, it is impossible to overstate the importance of this spring’s events in the Middle East, which continue to thoroughly rattle the energy markets. According to all projections of global petroleum output, Saudi Arabia and the other Persian Gulf states are slated to supply an ever-increasing share of the world’s total oil supply as production in key regions elsewhere declines. Achieving this production increase is essential, but it will not happen unless the rulers of those countries invest colossal sums in the development of new petroleum reserves -- especially the heavy, “tough oil” variety that requires far more costly infrastructure than existing “easy oil” deposits.
In a front-page story entitled “Facing Up to the End of ‘Easy Oil,’” the Wall Street Journal noted that any hope of meeting future world oil requirements rests on a Saudi willingness to sink hundreds of billions of dollars into their remaining heavy-oil deposits. But right now, faced with a ballooning population and the prospects of an Egyptian-style youth revolt, the Saudi leadership seems intent on using its staggering wealth on employment-generating public-works programs and vast arrays of weaponry, not new tough-oil facilities; the same is largely true of the other monarchical oil states of the Persian Gulf.
Whether such efforts will prove effective is unknown. If a youthful Saudi population faced with promises of jobs and money, as well as the fierce repression of dissidence, has seemed less confrontational than their Tunisian, Egyptian, and Syrian counterparts, that doesn’t mean that the status quo will remain forever. “Saudi Arabia is a time bomb,” commented Jaafar Al Taie, managing director of Manaar Energy Consulting (which advises foreign oil firms operating in the region). “I don’t think that what the King is doing now is sufficient to prevent an uprising,” he added, even though the Saudi royals had just announced a $36-billion plan to raise the minimum wage, increase unemployment benefits, and build affordable housing.
At present, the world can accommodate a prolonged loss of Libyan oil. Saudi Arabia and a few other producers possess sufficient excess capacity to make up the difference. Should Saudi Arabia ever explode, however, all bets are off. “If something happens in Saudi Arabia, [oil] will go to $200 to $300 [per barrel],” said Sheikh Zaki Yamani, the kingdom’s former oil minister, on April 5th. “I don’t expect this for the time being, but who would have expected Tunisia?”
Nuclear Power on the Downward Slope
In terms of the energy markets, the second major development of 2011 occurred on March 11th when an unexpectedly powerful earthquake and tsunami struck Japan. As a start, nature’s two-fisted attack damaged or destroyed a significant proportion of northern Japan’s energy infrastructure, including refineries, port facilities, pipelines, power plants, and transmission lines. In addition, of course, it devastated four nuclear plants at Fukushima, resulting, according to the U.S. Department of Energy, in the permanent loss of 6,800 megawatts of electric generating capacity.
This, in turn, has forced Japan to increase its imports of oil, coal, and natural gas, adding to the pressure on global supplies. With Fukushima and other nuclear plants off line, industry analysts calculate that Japanese oil imports could rise by as much as 238,000 barrels per day, and imports of natural gas by 1.2 billion cubic feet per day (mostly in the form of liquefied natural gas, or LNG).
This is one major short-term effect of the tsunami. What about the longer-term effects? The Japanese government now claims it is scrapping plans to build as many as 14 new nuclear reactors over the next two decades. On May 10th, Prime Minister Naoto Kan announced that the government would have to “start from scratch” in devising a new energy policy for the country. Though he speaks of replacing the cancelled reactors with renewable energy systems like wind and solar, the sad reality is that a significant part of any future energy expansion will inevitably come from more imported oil, coal, and LNG.
The disaster at Fukushima -- and ensuing revelations of design flaws and maintenance failures at the plant -- has had a domino effect, causing energy officials in other countries to cancel plans to build new nuclear plants or extend the life of existing ones. The first to do so was Germany: on March 14th, Chancellor Angela Merkel closed two older plants and suspended plans to extend the life of 15 others. On May 30th, her government made the suspension permanent. In the wake of mass antinuclear rallies and an election setback, she promised to shut all existing nuclear plants by 2022, which, experts believe, will result in an increase in fossil-fuel use.
China also acted swiftly, announcing on March 16th that it would stop awarding permits for the construction of new reactors pending a review of safety procedures, though it did not rule out such investments altogether. Other countries, including India and the United States, similarly undertook reviews of reactor safety procedures, putting ambitious nuclear plans at risk. Then, on May 25th, the Swiss government announced that it would abandon plans to build three new nuclear power plants, phase out nuclear power, and close the last of its plants by 2034, joining the list of countries that appear to have abandoned nuclear power for good.
How Drought Strangles Energy
The third major energy development of 2011, less obviously energy-connected than the other two, has been a series of persistent, often record, droughts gripping many areas of the planet. Typically, the most immediate and dramatic effect of prolonged drought is a reduction in grain production, leading to ever-higher food prices and ever more social turmoil.
Intense drought over the past year in Australia, China, Russia, and parts of the Middle East, South America, the United States, and most recently northern Europe has contributed to the current record-breaking price of food -- and this, in turn, has been a key factor in the political unrest now sweeping North Africa, East Africa, and the Middle East. But drought has an energy effect as well. It can reduce the flow of major river systems, leading to a decline in the output of hydroelectric power plants, as is now happening in several drought-stricken regions.
By far the greatest threat to electricity generation exists in China, which is suffering from one of its worst droughts ever. Rainfall levels from January to April in the drainage basin of the Yangtze, China's longest and most economically important river, have been 40% lower than the average of the past 50 years, according to China Daily. This has resulted in a significant decline in hydropower and severe electricity shortages throughout much of central China.
The Chinese are burning more coal to generate electricity, but domestic mines no longer satisfy the country’s needs and so China has become a major coal importer. Rising demand combined with inadequate supply has led to a spike in coal prices, and with no comparable spurt in electricity rates (set by the government), many Chinese utilities are rationing power rather than buy more expensive coal and operate at a loss. In response, industries are upping their reliance on diesel-powered backup generators, which in turn increases China’s demand for imported oil, putting yet more pressure on global fuel prices.
Wrecking the Planet
So now we enter June with continuing unrest in the Middle East, a grim outlook for nuclear power, and a severe electricity shortage in China (and possibly elsewhere). What else do we see on the global energy horizon?
Despite the IEA’s forecast of diminished future oil consumption, global energy demand continues to outpace increases in supply. From all indications, this imbalance will persist.
Take oil. A growing number of energy analysts now agree that the era of “easy oil” has ended and that the world must increasingly rely on hard-to-get “tough oil.” It is widely assumed, moreover, that the planet harbors a lot of this stuff -- deep underground, far offshore, in problematic geological formations like Canada’s tar sands, and in the melting Arctic. However, extracting and processing tough oil will prove ever more costly and involve great human, and even greater environmental, risk. Think: BP’s Deepwater Horizon disaster of April 2010 in the Gulf of Mexico.
Such is the world’s thirst for oil that a growing amount of this stuff will nonetheless be extracted, even if not, in all likelihood, at a pace and on a scale necessary to replace the disappearance of yesterday’s and today’s easy oil. Along with continued instability in the Middle East, this tough-oil landscape seems to underlie expectations that the price of oil will only rise in the coming years. In a poll of global energy company executives conducted this April by the KPMG Global Energy Institute, 64% of those surveyed predicted that crude oil prices will cross the $120 per barrel barrier before the end of 2011. Approximately one-third of them predicted that the price would go even higher, with 17% believing it would reach $131-$140 per barrel; 9%, $141-$150 per barrel; and 6%, above the $150 mark.
The price of coal, too, has soared in recent months, thanks to mounting worldwide demand as supplies of energy from nuclear power and hydroelectricity have contracted. Many countries have launched significant efforts to spur the development of renewable energy, but these are not advancing fast enough or on a large enough scale to replace older technologies quickly. The only bright spot, experts say, is the growing extraction of natural gas from shale rock in the United States through the use of hydraulic fracturing (“hydro-fracking”).
Proponents of shale gas claim it can provide a large share of America’s energy needs in the years ahead, while actually reducing harm to the environment when compared to coal and oil (as gas emits less carbon dioxide per unit of energy released); however, an expanding chorus of opponents are warning of the threat to municipal water supplies posed by the use of toxic chemicals in the fracking process. These warnings have proven convincing enough to lead lawmakers in a growing number of states to begin placing restrictions on the practice, throwing into doubt the future contribution of shale gas to the nation’s energy supply. Also, on May 12th, the French National Assembly (the powerful lower house of parliament) voted 287 to 146 to ban hydro-fracking in France, becoming the first nation to do so.
The environmental problems of shale gas are hardly unique. The fact is that all of the strategies now being considered to extend the life-spans of oil, coal, and natural gas involve severe economic and environmental risks and costs -- as, of course, does the very use of fossil fuels of any sort at a moment when the first IEA numbers for 2010 indicate that it was an unexpectedly record-breaking year for humanity when it came to dumping greenhouse gases into the atmosphere.
With the easily accessible mammoth oil fields of Texas, Venezuela, and the Middle East either used up or soon to be significantly depleted, the future of oil rests on third-rate stuff like tar sands, shale oil, and extra-heavy crude that require a lot of energy to extract, processes that emit added greenhouse gases, and as with those tar sands, tend to play havoc with the environment.
Shale gas is typical. Though plentiful, it can only be pried loose from underground shale formations through the use of explosives and highly pressurized water mixed with toxic chemicals. In addition, to obtain the necessary quantities of shale oil, many tens of thousands of wells will have to be sunk across the American landscape, any of one of which could prove to be an environmental disaster.
Likewise, the future of coal will rest on increasingly invasive and hazardous techniques, such as the explosive removal of mountaintops and the dispersal of excess rock and toxic wastes in the valleys below. Any increase in the use of coal will also enhance climate change, since coal emits more carbon dioxide than do oil and natural gas.
Here’s the bottom line: Any expectations that ever-increasing supplies of energy will meet demand in the coming years are destined to be disappointed. Instead, recurring shortages, rising prices, and mounting discontent are likely to be the thematic drumbeat of the globe’s energy future.
If we don’t abandon a belief that unrestricted growth is our inalienable birthright and embrace the genuine promise of renewable energy (with the necessary effort and investment that would make such a commitment meaningful), the future is likely to prove grim indeed. Then, the history of energy, as taught in some late twenty-first-century university, will be labeled: How to Wreck the Planet 101.
To listen to Timothy MacBain’s latest TomCast audio interview in which Klare discusses the U.S., Saudi Arabia, and resource conflicts, click here, or download it to your iPod here.
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120 Comments so far
Show AllWe passed the 7 Billion mark in world population a few months back. Without a worldwide crash program to develop and implement alternative energies we are doomed. What are the odds?
Right on -- human overpopulation, especially in the United States is number 1 on "how to wreck a planet".
This guy's 101 is for those with neither foresight nor imagination.
Way to use archaic knowledge to consider the wrecking of the planet.
Well, I agree, actually, but in the past when I've made similar statements I was jumped on by many and accused of being a racist.
Mindless procreation and no family planning have always been subsidized, in fact encouraged. To what end, is a mystery. Perhaps it’s a religious belief, cultural influence, or possibly ignorance. What would make a woman have a baby every 2 years while pumping thousands of pounds of plastic covered poop into the environment? Is she thinking about a college fund? Is she worried about medical expense? Is she worried about feeding, educating and clothing them? Is she worried about depletion of natural resources? Does she feel responsibility or will God simply provide? Is she oblivious to her environment and cost of human consumption? Does she have the imagination of a fly or nothing else to do but pass this great heritage to her offspring?
Mindless procreation, no family planning, no personal responsibility, institutionalized ignorance ....... big problem.
FUSION powered by HE3 is the only viable path. No radioactive waste and huge amounts of electrical energy and hydrogen gas are the by-products.) We need a crash program to obtain the fuel ( mostly on the moon.) Then we need to massively fund the research and leapfrog our present technology. We have NO TIME left. In the mean time we need to also greatly expand every kind of alt. energy program. The use of the carbon fuels is destroying the planet and will only lead to enormous ecological devastation and resource wars as the atmosphere warms further and the seas rise and the glaciers in places like the Himalayas melt. WATER will become the substance that triggers regional conflicts and then food.
One small stumbling block of the whole 'go to the moon to get theoretical He3':
THERE ARE PRESENTLY NO ROCKETS CAPABLE OF A MOON SHOT IN ANY NATION'S INVENTORY!
As a species we no longer have the heavy lift capability for a lunar expedition. The last Saturn V is lying on it's side in Florida as hurricane bait. And the Russians will be using what is left of their rocket inventory as a taxi service to get US astronauts to the International Space Station when the shuttle lands for good later this year.
Everything I have read about the various fusion reactors, D-T reactors and other programs keep saying 'We expect a breakthrough in the next ten years'. But they have been saying that for the past thirty years! At least the grant money is paying the physicists mortgages...
The amounts of He3 to fuel a He3 fusion reactor asre small, but the amounts of lunar soil that needs to be mined and processed to obtain that tiny amount of He3 all done on the moon - is equivalent to all the huge strip mines in Wyoming and Montana. Such operations on the moon are competely impractical.
The problem with D-T, and eventually D-D fusion isn't "breakthroughs". It is pathetic levels of funding for fusion. The entire budget for the ITER demonstration reactor in France through 2030 is equal to the investment an oil company makes in a couple deepwater drill rigs.
The various research programs have been puttering away at fusion for AT LEAST forty years. Spending millions of dollars at each attempt.
To the best of my knowledge, we have only been ably to produce fusion for fractions of a second, usually to turn a desert biome into a radioactive hellhole. SUSTAINED controllable fusion continues to elude researchers.
The only reason we have not seen sustained fusion is not becasue of some unknown aspect of the technology, but simply becasue going beyond the energy break-even point will require a Tokomak reactor of sufficient size. So, research so far only had the funding to build small Tokomaks, which, as fully expected and intended, only produce brief reactions and/or barely exceed the break-even point.
Lots of technology is scale-dependent. For example, blast-furnaces need to be a certain size to sustain a reaction hot enough to make iron. Large power transformers, generators, and electric motors are the most efficent energy conversion devices there are, but small ones (like those ubiquitous wall transformers for computing equipment) are dreadfully inefficient.
The ITER Tokomak Reactor, under construction in France (www,iter.org), will be large enough to run a sustained reaction, with a 500 megawatt output for a 10 megawatt input. There are still major technical challenges - mostly the development of metal alloys for the reactor and boiler that can withstand the high neutron flux the reactor produces without embrittlement problems over a practical power plant lifetime, one of ITER's key research goals. But everything is on the slow-track becasue of an inadequate funding stream.
By the way, "millions of dollars" is absolute chump-change for any R and D project. Intel probably spends that much on new computer processor research every day.
And, as the Apollo Project (and the Soviet space program) shows, "throwing money at a problem" can produce spactacular results in very short times.
Outlaw all recreational use of internal combustion engines. Outlaw all packaging with plastics. Outlaw low mileage commercial vehicles. Rebuild the railroads and trains. Use sail to transport non-perishable goods. Convert all households to solar and wind power, thereby limiting the waste of power usage at home. Outlaw mining and drilling in unstable environments, thereby reinforcing all of the above. Walk. Bike. Get the fat asses off the couch. Kill your television. It is doable. But we won't. We'll strangle in our own shit first.
Who would pass the laws doing all this outlawing? Who would enforce them? How would all households, especially rentals with absentee owners, be converted to solar and and wind? Kill your television -- the computer monitor is a television, should that be included? How about those people who are barely hanging on by keeping jobs that are far enough away from their residences to make biking to work impossible? Should they quit, and support themselves how? Should they move, and how would the moves be paid for? Do you really believe that sneeringly proclaiming your own superiority by calling everyone who isn't doing these impossible things fat assed couch potatoes is the best way to motivate people to embrace change?
Your whole argument is impractical.
Outlaw all recreational use of internal combustion engines. So no fishing boats for non commercial fishermen except in row boats or sail boats, no drives in the park, no driving to yard sales, no cabs to plays or movies, no camping by individuals or groups that have to travel further than they can walk and carry their tents. No guided tours, Even driving to church would be outlawed. You need to think about that.
"Outlaw low mileage commerical vehicles". Please explain. Because they are commercial or that they are low mileage? If it's because they are low mileage that would mean they aren't used much. So why outlaw them?
Convert all household to solar and wind. At whose expense? You have any idea how many individual households there are?
And I am not sure how outlawing mining and drilling in unstable enivornments reinforces any of the other issues.
Walking and biking is fine for those that are capable, what about those that aren't?
The argument is luscious and quite realistic when considering climate change and ocean acidification.
These are the best ideas out there. Energy technology is not going to get us out of this one, and has continually proved to make things worse, less biodiverse, bringing less happiness to fewer people.
It's gonna happen if we want us and the planet to survive.
A little too drastic, but the basic premise of sacrifice is of extreme importance right now. People need to understand that their current lifestyles can not continue, not for long. But these things need to be phased in over the long term. People are far too embedded in their current routines and demands to make radical changes. To make these sacrifices easier and more realistic require supports from our governments in the form of better transit and city engineering, accountability from corporations etc. For example, I ride a bike to work every day, but can I do that for the six winter months? Not a chance, their was snow piled higher than the road signs this year. I still walk about 30% of the time but usually I rely on a beat up old Blazer. Likewise my disabled father depends on his vheicle extensively for recreation and social contact. He can't get around otherwise, even most sidewalks have curbs where I live so his electronic chair can't even be relied on. I don't like it, but that's the way things are right now.
If more people make collective sacrifices, like forgo automobiles when they can and turn off the TV and eat less meat and on and on then eventually it does become easier for the rest, either through public demand or inspiration. As more people become sick because of the toxic lifestyle they live then others will consider their choices more carefully.
Do I think that will happen? Not a chance, the people will strangle on their own shit and bring most of the other species on Earth down with them. I'm idealisitc, but I'm still a realist. Most days my general attitude is do the best you can can for yourself and f@*k the rest, because that's what they're often doing to themselves.
Fabulous and recycling plants. Between compost, glass, plastic, paper and tin, I have one small bag of garbage every 2 weeks. We kicked the Good Old Boys out of our town for 4 years and got a recycling plant which they said would cost too much money. Now residents from other towns are using our plant and it's making money. We just expanded to take toxic waste and electronics.
Wikipedia presents a rather negative view of He3 fusion as a practical source of energy for the world: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helium-3
The fuel is rare, a prototype reactor has not yet been built (it is estimated to cost 6b), and companies are not willing to invest so much money in something as yet unproven.
Let's do wind, tides, waves, hydro, solar before we do more nuclear.
Fusion is certainly more attractive than fission, but after 60 years since the first hopeful experiments, fusion is still nowhere near commercially ready. Current estimates are that it'll be another 40 years. That means fusion probably has no role to play in meeting the energy challenges we're facing on a much shorter time scale.
Clean renewables already generate ca. 15% of our energy. The technology is here now and it's scalable. The only thing stopping us from multiplying that number by 5 or 10 is lack of will. We need to reject the assumption that there is no option other than business as usual, but to do that we Americans need to first reject corporate rule, which has stolen our democracy and crippled our ability to make reasonable policy decisions.
The US ran out of easy oil in 1971. Since then, we've been burning more oil, and bribing dictators, killing peasants and polluting the Earth to get it.
This is insane. We need to decrease our energy use, with energy efficiency, and zoning.
There is no need to have SUV-driving commuters traveling 100 miles/day to work in buildings so air-conditioned that people must wear sweaters, and all the doors open automatically, and groceries have frozen foods stored in open containers, and Las Vegas exists -- and then to announce that the US way of life is non-negotiable.
Exactly! One could easily expand the list of things that could be cut out, forthwith, with no loss in the 'quality of life'. If anything, life should improve by getting rid of wasteful entertainment, amusement and "leisure" activities that demand huge amounts of energy to operate. Ice rinks in areas with no natural ice (ice rinks are giant freezers - that are left open, with great energy spent in maintaining the temperature/humidity in balance), amusement parks, huge air-conditioned arenas, escalators running non-stop in air-conditioned malls and so on. And patio heaters! And the prohibition of using clotheslines in certain neighborhoods... The insanity list is very long, indeed!
I used to refer to only the politicians and corporations who are refusing to take action on climate change as "climate criminals". Increasingly, I am tempted to call ***ALL*** the people who would insist on a wasteful lifestyle without regard to the environmental implications as climate criminals.
Correct. Americans could cut their energy use by 50% without sacrificing much in the way of comfort. Look around at all of the frivolous, mindless and wasteful consumption. How much of a sacrifice is it to turn off a light or ride a bike to the store?
Frivolous indeed, Whenever I travel to surrounding rural counties around my city (usually for hang gliding), I'm always amazed to see how entire families, down to their 3 year old kids, don't do ANYTHING in the outdoors unless it is atop some kind off- road RV - "quads", mini-jeep like things, dirt bikes, etc. No one walks or bicycles anywhere, and indeed walking or bicycling is considered a suspicious subversive activity, as evidenced by the local landowner hostility to a bike and hiking path on an old railroad ROW up the Allegheny Valley.
Right. And I bet these entire families each have a gasoline generator at their campsite that runs all day so that they can have A/C, television and video games.
Yeah, there are the camps along the river and such, but I'm talking about the residents.
You run in different circles than I do. Of course we lived through Enron. The people I know don't turn on their furnaces until mid November, They don't use air conditioning, they dry their clothes on the line., they only drive when they absolutely have to, they turn off lights as they walk through their homes.
Brookings just completed an in-depth 2 year study of 100 US Metro areas and
found that 70% of working age Americans are only 3/4th mile from a transit stop!
http://www.brookings.edu/reports/2011/0512_jobs_and_transit.aspx
The problem is that only 30% can get to a job in less than 90 minutes due to
infrequent service, poor connections, no local/express service, and the last mile
connection with shuttles, bikeways or walking.
This is with the existing Green public transit we already have!
So first off, we need to run especially trains and light rail on a very frequent basis.
Next we need to add shuttles to those Rail points.
Then we need to add local/express service so that people going further will not
have to wait on every local stop.
There is a proposal for $22 Billion for Transit operations in Obama's budget plan
my neighbor told me who is a member of "Keep America Moving",
http://keepamericamoving.org
This would immediately create non-offshorable jobs for people to run the trains, buses
and shuttles.
After that we can revive Rail spurs lying idle all over the USA and get them running again.
There are 233,000 miles of Rail mostly doing little or nothing all over the USA
which should be brought back into service.
I'd be more excited if Obama hadn't promised virtually the same thing the first time around and if he weren't already campaigning 1 1/2 years ahead of the election.
At this point, I'll believe promised Federal spending when I see accompanying changes in the Federal Tax Codes to increase revenue.
A Green Recovery is going to need to be a much larger and more difficult effort than just funding for Transit. If Obama would use his bully pulpit to push this NOW (and begin dismantling the Empire) he'd have my vote in November 2012. Promises to do something real later backed by small steps now (and failure to dismantle Empire) just won't do it for me, I'm afraid.
-matti.
"So first off, we need to run especially trains and light rail on a very frequent basis."
In my city, the few, limited, light-rail lines are the only things that do run frequently.
The affordable solution to expanding public transit in most citys is not expensive new light rail on dedicated tracks, or reviving streetcars. At this stage, it is the ordinary bus. The newer diesel engines are much cleaner than the old ones, especially the hybrid-electric ones. Buses offer the ability to immediately add and change routes. Future improvements include trackless trolleys with auxiliary battery power for routes that go off a street with an overhead catenary - or inductive power sources that do away with the overhead wires.
Of course, we have to get over the aversion of "middle class" (usually white) suburban types to riding the bus, don't we? One of the outstanding things I liked when I moved to Pittsburgh is how this white-middle class aversion to riding the bus was largely absent. What helped this was very frequent service, lots of routes, and a bus stop just a block ot two from most people's homes house. Then again, Pittsburgh consists of older, denser (and yes, quieter) neighborhoods - even much of the suburbs are of the quainter Levittown variety.
But, deep service cuts in service to "austerity" and "no new socialistic taxes" is changing all of this.
I dont think public transit will ever be workable in the vastly more sprawling modern "sunbelt" variant of suburbia - where there aren't even centralized business/employment/shopping hubs to run the transit lines to.
Also, shuttles to a LRT stop is not a good idea, ridership goes way down as soon as poeple have to transfer.
Some suburban areas are going to be forced to get by on carpools, long bike rides, and very long walks, until they are thoroughly rebuilt or die-out because everyone moves away, I'm afraid.
"Austerity" is going to push us into a depression and "third-world-ization", as I'm sure you know.
If the revenue was there, a Sustainable or Green rebuild and retrofit of buildings and infrastructure could provide a steady boost that will allow the coming decline to be smoother and the landing softer, just as the suburban buildout boosted activity during the final energy upswing and peak.
City, County, and transit agency orders for new buses to fill out the network would be a relatively easy, cheap, and high immediate impact response to the current situation. Coupled with in-State and U.S.-domestic design and production of the buses and parts and companion equipment and infrastructure, the boost would be fast enough and profound enough to gain political currency from it.
The austerity-proponents are like Medieval physicians bleeding the patient to death. Some are fools that think bleeding will really lead to a cure. Many are charlatans just trying to collect their pay or curry power. A few are even evil bastards who have studied the Arab doctors and know the bleeding is causing more harm than good, but do it anyway for various nefarious reasons.
I think folks will see the light on this after the first couple of REAL nasty shocks (a la Argentina et al), however. :)
-matti.
The revenue was there before the wars and the gross financial enhancement of the criminal Wall Street thugs.
IMHO, we'd better find it.
Don't forget the tax cuts.
Check out the "bus rapid transit" system pioneered in Curitiba, Brasil":
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2009/03/curitiba-brazil-bus-rapid-transit-video.php
and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bus_rapid_transit
Spot-on with your comments, 'backuninvited'.
In the building where I work, people bring space-heaters to work to warm up their cubicles in the summer when the air conditioning is too cool for their liking. And these are educated people with college degrees and (presumably) an understanding of basic environmental issues and connections.
I shudder to think what the under-educated, Palin-worshiping masses believe, and how they (and their guns) will respond once the fecal matter really hits the rotating oscillator.
As you note, our collective behavior is complete insanity. I really don't understand by what miracle these kind of people think we're gonna achieve energy independence, halt global warming, AND save the environment from further deterioration. The inability to connect the very simply-aligned dots to their consumption habits/expectabions is staggering. I'm not hopeful, nor particularly sympathetic, towards the grim future downhill slide for my narcissistic nation.
I used to think James Howard Kunstler was too pessimistic. Now I'm not so sure.
Space-heaters to counter over-cooling by air-conditioning! That's not just insane, but possibly criminal, under a different set of rational laws! Donny-Don, is there something you can do about it? I mean, make it into an issue, but first by talking to the building maintenance people? I know sometimes it would make us look like the odd man out, but it's worth trying?
In Japan, they are now trying to promote a new dress code that would do away with the ubiquitous dark suit, and instead wearing only shirts, as a way to lower the energy consumption for air-conditioning. It's plain common sense, but it takes a disaster for people to use it! It's repulsive to see people in hot countries in Asia mindlessly adopting the western attire at work and then cranking up the a/c to stay cool. And in the US and Canada, women wearing flimsy outfits to work, including sleeveless, in the middle of winter, because they know that the buildings are overheated. Insanity all around, made possible by cheap energy with high environmental costs!
"Space-heaters to counter over-cooling by air-conditioning! That's not just insane, but possibly criminal, under a different set of rational laws!"
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Pardon me for breaking into a lofty, global "big picture" energy discussion with a petty quality-of-life rant.
But the reference to using space heaters to counteract a/c pushed my buttons. After more than 25 years working in various state office buildings and suites, mostly leased, I long ago concluded that the modern concept of the sealed "climate-controlled" building is a fraud and travesty on its face.
Whether the premises are old buildings with a converted hybrid mix of heating and cooling systems, or relatively new crackerboxes with "state-of-the-art" systems, hapless employees are fated to suffer from uncomfortable temperature extremes in different parts of buildings or "suites", and corresponding ventilation issues including the chemical and biological toxins of "sick building syndrome".
I could write entire chapters on the appalling jury-rigged "fixes" and Kafkaesque lies perpetrated by administrators, landlords, and maintenance engineers in response to persistent complaints.
To be clear, although I made my share of them, I'm not just, er, "venting" about my own complaints. Over the years, especially when I worked on a regional staff servicing fifteen local offices, I was exposed to many variations on this theme.
There are ALWAYS reasons employees are suffocating in one nook while others are freezing in the adjacent cranny, or roasting and freezing because the automated climate controls were out of sync with the weather.
I can't tell you how many times, after MONTHS of agonized complaints from aggrieved parties, some property manager or technician would breezily and dismissively observe that the problem arose because the office space was renovated, but the ducts and vents weren't (or "couldn't be") changed to accommodate the new floor plan.
And so on and so on, ad infinitum and ad nauseam.
And because both tenant and property management know that the shoddy system can't be (affordably) adjusted to be truly comfortable and healthy, they become defensive and inured to complaints.
Thus, management responds with a combination of throwing up its hands in impotent despair, suggesting that afflicted workers simply suck it up and soldier on, or performing half-assed adjustments and repairs that either don't work at all, or afford one person or location relief at the expense of another.
This leads to another daily diabolical dilemma: pitting workers against each other. Do I risk offending my co-worker across the hall by complaining about an office so hot and stuffy that sweat runs down my face, knowing that if they adjust the a/c, my co-worker will be able to see the breath in front of her face?
I don't know whether Professor Klare or any commenters have enlightened views about the relationship of modern office-space torture chambers to the Big Picture, but I know what the "solution" to the abovementioned space-heater problem will be: a memo forbidding the use of space heaters, and suggestions that afflicted employees wear a sweater.
I don't mean to derail the discussion, but I'll bet that anyone reading this who's worked in an office will have similar experiences, and horror stories of wrong after wrong never making things quite right.
We now return to your regular programming.
Obedient Servant, I can absolutely relate to your rant: I have experienced such "load balancing" problems and hand-waving maintenance engineers/technicians, along with a senior management that's more concerned about other things. I have also heard of such stories from close friends.
The bottom-line in each case seems to be some kind of inertia or apathy or unwillingness to treat such problems as important. Sure, there will be some technical challenges when renovations are involved, but I happen to believe where there's a will, there's a way. It might cost a bit to put in "multi-zone climate control", but where such things are installed, things are usually much more comfortable and more energy efficient. Basically it will come down to multiple temperature sensors and fans/blowers for each zone. With variable speed blowers, the control can be more fine-grained.
What would force the installation of such systems? Some kind of laws or codes on energy efficiency: that is, energy consumed for a given volume of building and incentives for the upgrades/retrofits.Right-wingers will whine about an intrusive government, but as far as I'm concerned, they can go to hell, as I have no way to convince them on the need for conservation. But such regulatory pressure and other incentives can only mean more real jobs, while saving real energy and avoiding carbon emissions at the same time.
And what would bring about such regulations and incentives? From a cursory look around, I think an informed and concerned citizenry could be one factor. That is, those who really care for conservation and energy efficiency should outnumber the crazies.
Japan is not a hot country in Aisa.
And IME, people in hot countries in Asia do wear lighter clothing for office work, for example short sleeve shirts as opposed to long sleeve shirts, and yes only shirts, or even if a coat, the coat is only put on for meetings etc, otherwise it is removed.
rfloh, also, Japan is not the only country in Asia, although Japan can be considered hot (and humid) in the summer. Even Korea can be hot (relatively) and humid in summer. Japan is also one of the Asian countries where the suit is more common among office-goers. It is precisely for this reason that they are now promoting a new dress code. Perhaps you have not heard of this news - which is pretty recent, and the stated reason for this promotion is energy conservation.
If you look at the big cities in India (New Delhi, Mumbai, etc.), Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, I think you can see lots of suits and ties in the thick of summer. And the same in the Middle East - in Dubai (and other Emirate countries), Qatar, etc. The "Middle East" is actually called "West Asia" in India. Or it used to be. So these are also in Asia. Walk into any high-rise office building: I think you simply cannot miss the suits and ties and over-cooled interiors lit by artificial lighting when the sun is shining away outside. Yes, the coat is removed while working, but the tie is still on - with the collar buttoned. Not very comfortable without air-conditioning. But the real sad thing is to see the sales representatives going from one potential customer/client to another, sometimes on two-wheelers, but wearing a tie! Same with the medical rep's from pharmaceutical companies. I've seen a lot of these poor guys sweating it out, while wearing a tie!
Yeah, Japan is not the only country in Asia. I have heard the news about Japan. It is a good thing.
"If you look at the big cities in India (New Delhi, Mumbai, etc.), Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore, I think you can see lots of suits and ties in the thick of summe"
I have lived in some of those countries. Typical office wear, even for Brits / Americans / westerners in senior positions (especially those who have been there for some time and have adapted to conditions), is a short sleeved shirt, not a long sleeved one. A coat is generally brought along for meetings etc, but it isn't worn all the time. Generally the suits, or even just bringing along a coat, is only what those in more senior positions are (required) to wear. Not least because there is no air cond when you step out of the office, there is no air cond when you go to lunch (at some open air street hawker type place, which many people do), there is no air cond when you finish work, and only someone utterly deranged, or with absolutely no choice (ie attending a wedding party) would wear a wool suit, ontop of a long sleeved shirt in 90-95F, 90% humidity weather. That is not to say that people in those countries do not (over) use air conditionning. My point is that officewear there isn't exactly a copy of what you would see in the NYC, or London, or Paris, or Frankfurt, or Tokyo. Most people in those countries generally don't dress up western style that much.
Also, the reality is that when the weather is 90-95F 90% humidity, unless you're almost naked, it isn't going to be pleasant. You get used to it, it certainly won't hurt you, but you don't necessarily enjoy it, which is why as those countriese have gotten richer, air conditioning use has increased dramatically.
"And the same in the Middle East - in Dubai (and other Emirate countries), Qatar, etc. The "Middle East" is actually called "West Asia" in India. Or it used to be. So these are also in Asia"
The middle east is something else entirely; I agree. Yes, they treat fuel / energy the way that most Americans / westerners treat water: ie, skating rinks, ski slopes, water intensive crops whereby the water is obtained via energy intensive desalination.
Alcyon -- this is a bit trivial considering the magnitude of our problems but your comment reminded me of one rational dress code in response to the environment. I visited a Commonwealth Bank in Charters Towers, Queensland, Australia a couple of decades ago. It was hot as hell outside and quite humid, too, as they had been inundated by a summer storm.
To my amazement the male bank staff were dressed in shorts. Now these were elegant 'dressy' shorts but it was a unique and sensible adaptation to climate. The practice has probably been banned since then as Australia becomes ever more 'Americanized' but it was a reasonable idea.
Unfortunately, dressing in shorts and turning down the AC is not going to be quite sufficient to solve problems of this magnitude.
Randy G, I think the thread started off by listing the insane ways in which energy is wasted, and everyone added things they've noticed. Yes, none of these by itself is not going to be enough to solve the problem, but they do add to the problem. When some kind of budgeting and rationing becomes necessary, all of these need to be questioned, along with the big steps such as public transportation.
I have stayed in a number of chain-hotels like Hampton Inn, which in winter, the heat for the entire building is turned up to 78F, the windows are un-openable, and the patrons are told to run the air conditioner to get their room to the temperatiure to their liking - even if it is 0F outside.
Don't know the odds - but here is the score....
Cheney 1
Humans 0
Seven billion by approximately end October and still rising.
Agricultural productionis is the next big drop.
Viable non-saline agricultural land with clean water is being destroyed.
Destroyed by the paving of cities, roads and buildings.
Destroyed by trying to get the last coal and hydro-fracked gas.
Destroyed by drought from climate change.
Destroyed by soil loss, from wind and flood erosion.
Destroyed by expense of petro chemical fertilisers.
Destroyed by phosphate and micro-nutrient depletion
The current world population is unsupportable.
Current civilisation is unsupportable.
Multiple limits to growth are being banged hard now.
Business as usual is going to collapse.
Massive re-organisation of energy, food and ecosystems management is required.
When fossil fuels go, and fossil fuel electricity disappears away with it, so does our current way of life. Parts of civilisation that manage a just in time switch to renewable energy may keep on going in some adapted fashion. The rest will collapse.
I'm soooooo happy to see this.
What on earth is "Wrecking the planet" about if not climate change and ocean acidification?
This short-sighted crap revealed evrything: "The only bright spot, experts say, is the growing extraction of natural gas from shale rock in the United States through the use of hydraulic fracturing (“hydro-fracking”)."
I'm thinking the author's invested in putrifying fresh water as payback in the US.
I would add to this overview that while oil is going up in the long run, wind and solar are coming down. The marketplace is relentless.
I expect that algae biodiesel will come down in the long run, but it's not that close yet. We need more small inventors for the next 10 years, and less grandstanding international oil companies who don't give a hoot whether algae works.
The other renewable fuels are wood and corn. Some countries (Haiti, North Korea) are denuded of wood now. If the price of oil rises, there will be tremendous pressure on the world's forests, with negative consequences for climate change.
Using cropland for growing storable fuel has its own hunger issues. American-style corn takes quite a bit of petroleum to grow.
Your comment about other renewables - wood and corn.... Ethanol is the same as moonshine, 200 proof, 100% alcohol.
Have you priced a gallon of hooch lately. It ain't cheap! Plus, it has less energy per unit of volume than petroleum products.
I am a tree-hugging anarchist, but I don't think fueling our cars with moonshine is a good idea.
This all sounds like a commercial to justify ever higher prices, while the market manipulation which actually accounts for much of the inflation in energy costs is not even mentioned.
"Saudi leadership seems intent on using its staggering wealth on employment-generating public-works programs and vast arrays of weaponry, not new tough-oil facilities; the same is largely true of the other monarchical oil states of the Persian Gulf."
I see nothing wrong with a country investing in public-works programs in an effort to offer jobs and support for it's people. When did that become a bad thing?
"When it comes to the future availability of oil, it is impossible to overstate the importance of this spring’s events in the Middle East, which continue to thoroughly rattle the energy markets."
Is it rattling the market, or is it that the market sees an opportunity use this as an excuse to manipulate the market.
"Neither Tunisia nor Egypt was, in fact, a major oil producer"
"At present, the world can accommodate a prolonged loss of Libyan oil."
Yet supposedly they led to higher market prices. And you are intent on spreading a fear that Saudia Arabia is on the brink. I really question the motives of this piece. Everything in it seems to be nothing but a justification for ever rising energy prices even when there is no direct correlation to the output or consumption. In fact the Tsunami in Japan has led to a reduction in consumption. Yet you spin that to mean higher oil and energy prices. The only thing that would make you happy it appears is if every country in the world funnelled all of its wealth into oil exploration and the building of nuclear plants.
I think that, for the most part, Klare is just being as objective as possible about the big picture of unsustainable and sustainable energy resources. And at the same time offering a very rational argument to motivate the transformation now rather than later.
For instance, he is obviously not opposed to the Saudis spending for jobs and minimum wages over tough gas exploration. He's just placing it into the current equation.
Sounded to me like he was moaning about the money being spent by the Saudis on on social programs while not spending on "tough gas exploration". Why bother with the youth when you can spend that money on drilling more? Current equation? If you are a Saudi youth where would you want your nation spending it's wealth? I am thinking the equation only suits the needs of the energy market not the citizens of any country.
"I really question the motives of this piece. Everything in it seems to be nothing but a justification for ever rising energy prices even when there is no direct correlation to the output or consumption. In fact the Tsunami in Japan has led to a reduction in consumption. Yet you spin that to mean higher oil and energy prices."
Somebody needs to justify rising energy prices. How else can you convince people to use less of it?
It's not hard to see why the tsunami in Japan raised oil prices in spite of the fact that overall energy consumption fell. It shut down at least one nuclear plant. Japan was heavily reliant on nuclear power so it had to start importing more. If its energy consumption returns to previous levels it will have to import even more!
If there are speculators who are manipulating prices to raise energy costs that is a good thing - even if for the wrong reasons.
Your motives seem more questionable to me than the author's.