brian mcguigan

Posts Tagged Energy

Posted
21 May 2008 @ 8am

Tagged
Energy

Drilling for oil in the US isn’t that easy

Fred Barnes of The Weekly Standard has a piece out calling for increased domestic oil production. He makes the case on the grounds of national (economic) security saying that producing oil in the US would stop the flow of petrodollars overseas and relieve prices at the pump. The first point is undeniably true. The second [...]


Posted
6 May 2008 @ 2pm

Tagged
Energy

Tar sands reaping reward and havok in Alberta

Mother Jones has a must read article on the wide array of consequences attributed to extracting oil from tar sands in Alberta, Canada. Everything from prostitution and drug use to rare forms of cancer and deformed fish — the place once renowned for its subtle beauty is turning into an industrial wasteland.
The article starts by [...]


Posted
2 May 2008 @ 3pm

Tagged
Energy

Why I support the global warming crusade (and don’t care whether it’s real)

I was reading VF Daily today when I came across David Roberts’ post on global warming. I could have ghost written the piece since it so closely mirrors my opinions on global warming:
The things environmentalists are trying to do in response to global warming make sense to do even if there is, in fact, no [...]


Posted
1 May 2008 @ 4pm

Tagged
Energy

Cheap oil’s dead, Chevron blames developing countries

Chieftain of the Chevron reservation David O’Reilly predicated a few years back that low gas prices were unsustainable. Now that we’ve seen sustained skyrocketing prices at the pump, Wall Street Journal asked O’Reilly to ‘peer into the crystal ball again.’
He repeated his mantra: cheap oil is dead. Thus Americans can expect to be paying at [...]


There’s lots of oil left, just not enough for everyone

Primer: Oil Price Rise Fails to Open Tap
Mother Jones has an interesting read on the future — or lack thereof — of petroleum. The coming crisis isn’t about ‘Peak Oil,’ it’s a simple case of high demand vs. low supply — more people want more oil but less is being found and produced:
Energy of [...]


Posted
27 April 2008 @ 9am

Tagged
Energy

$4 gas vs. suburbs

Peter Viles over at LA Land also comments on the suburbia-oil nexus:
Consider the effect of $4 gas. A 110-mile round-trip commute gets very expensive in a hurry. Consider that fast-growing areas such as the Inland Empire have suddenly lost a major source of economic vitality: home-building and all the economic activity it creates and sustains.
But [...]


Posted
25 April 2008 @ 2pm

Tagged
Energy

Oil prices poised to cripple suburbs?

Aaron Newton of Powering Down sounds off on the suburbia-oil nexus:
There is little doubt that during that last 60 years we here in America have transformed our manmade landscape in a way that is fundamentally different from any form of human habitation ever known. While many have flocked to this new way of organizing the [...]


Posted
31 March 2008 @ 7am

Tagged
Energy

Air Force wants liquified coal to fuel jets

Even though it’s not renewable or clean, the Air Force wants to fuel their planes with liquefied coal:
WASHINGTON — Squeezed by the soaring cost of oil-based jet fuel, the Air Force is converting its gas-guzzling fleet of aircraft to synthetic fuels and encouraging the creation of a liquefied coal industry that could tap the nation’s [...]


Posted
28 March 2008 @ 1pm

Tagged
Energy

Peak oil inbound; watcha gunna do?

Considering oil is not a renewable resource in the human experience, peak oil — the point in which petroleum production peaks and forever declines — is a certainty. The question therefore is not whether it’s true or not but when we will reach it. Joseph Romm over at Salon makes the case that peak oil [...]


Posted
26 March 2008 @ 1pm

Tagged
Energy

Oil prices at ‘threshold’ of civil disturbances

John Hofmeister, president of Shell Oil Company, said on Charlie Rose last night that oil demand cannot be met by current supply — foreshadowing rising petro prices and potential rebellion by consumers. Also, according to his analysis, we’re stuck with oil for at least another 20 years:

When Hofmeister speaks of drilling more in the US, [...]


Cheaper than a latte…for now

Newsweek spoke to John Hess, CEO of Hess Corp., about the economics of petroleum:
Oil prices have quintupled in the past six years, from $20 to $100 a barrel. Why hasn’t that weakened demand?
The reason we’ve withstood the increase is that consumer income has grown faster than energy expenditures have. We spend about 6 percent [...]


It’s about time to tax the petro-car culture

Washington Post ran this article yesterday about the DOT’s effort to levy congestion tolls — tolls that rise with the level of traffic. The concept is intended to discourage drivers from commuting during peak hours. There is also a fringe benefit that is slightly less obvious.
Suppose you commute to and from work daily in LA. [...]


Posted
12 March 2008 @ 9am

Tagged
Energy

Cheap Oil Is Over: Kiss the Gas-Guzzling NASCAR Era Good-Bye

The following is excerpted from an essay by James Howard Kunstler published in the book Thrillcraft: The Environmental Consequences of Motorized Recreation (Chelsea Green, 2007). It’s really well written and thought provoking, read it all.
It’s compelling to see how NASCAR auto racing has risen to the level of a mania in early 21st century America, [...]


Posted
10 March 2008 @ 7pm

Tagged
Energy

Cheap oil Died Hard

PANDAGON digs out this screen shot from Die Hard (1988).


Oil set to shock US economy

“An oil crisis is coming, and sooner than most people think. We need to act now. Unfortunately, we are behaving in ways that suggest we do not know there is a serious problem.” – [...]


The Problem With ‘New’ Oil

From the The Economist:
Nowadays, new oil tends to be found in relatively inaccessible spots or in more unwieldy forms. That adds to the cost of extracting oil, because more engineers and more complex machinery are needed to exploit it—but the end of easy oil is a far remove from the jeremiads of peak-oilers. The gooey [...]


Gazprom: Last Major Gas Field Goes On Line

Indicates oil will be harder to extract and more expensive from now on.


Time for fuel standards

Washington is just waking up to our real problem in the Middle East.