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Transport

How to Set Up and Run a Bicycle Repair Company

Robin Lovelace, The Oil Drum: Campfire

Many of the articles that discuss the causes and effects of humanity's unprecedented energy use are entirely theoretical, offering little practical guidance for the everyday reader. This essay offers respite to all the people who confront our collective energy problems with a furrowed brow and an expression that is puzzled by the continuous stream of theoretical insights that explain our current circumstances.

archived November 19, 2009
	

Train, train!! - Nov 5

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-The age of the train: myth or reality?
-Buffett gambles £27bn on rail to get back on track
-Buffett’s Bet on Trains
-Is Warren Buffett's Railway Buy a Billion Dollar Bet on Big Coal?
-It's Time to Rebuild Our Passenger Railroad System
-India jumps on gold bandwagon but Warren Buffett rides the growth train

archived November 5, 2009
	

The Future of European Transport: iTREN-2030

Rembrandt, The Oil Drum: Europe

On 21 October the final workshop was held in Brussels (Belgium) of the integrated transport and energy baseline until 2030 (iTREN-2030) modeling project. At the workshop a final scenario was presented that incorporated likely transport and energy policies, and the effects on European transport of a continued global plateau in oil production up to 2030. The integrated scenario was generated by four energy and transport models that have been linked in iTREN-2030 to increase the forecasting power of the transport policies of the European Commission.

archived October 30, 2009
	

Solutions & sustainability - Oct 29

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Gardener: Urban pioneer Greensgrow Farm leads by example
-Quick and Not So Dirty: No-Sweat Composters
-How High Speed Rail Can Spread Across the U.S.
-"Agriburbia" sprouts on Colorado's Front Range

archived October 29, 2009
	

Housing & urban design - Oct 29

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Odense: Masterplan for sustainable mobility
-Empty homes: Properties with potential
-Metropolitan Glory
-Greenest Place in the U.S.? It’s Not Where You Think

archived October 29, 2009
	

Sustainable Agriculture at Fleming College/The Local Grain Revolution XI
Audio

Jon Steinman, Deconstructing Dinner

Deconstructing Dinner is excited to share with our listeners an amazing new agriculture program for new farmers being offered at Fleming College in Lindsay, Ontario...The Sustainable Agriculture program appears like an ideal way for any unexperienced and interested new farmers to be introduced to many of the critical pieces necessary to launch a profitable and sustainable farm business...Between October 15-18, 2009, a fleet of 11 sailboats made their way from the city of Nelson to the Creston Valley of British Columbia to once again pick up a cargo of locally grown grains and transport it back to Nelson.

archived October 27, 2009
	

Transport - Oct 20

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Bus Powered by French-fry Fat Reaches Asia
-Video Guide to New Bike Lanes in New York City
-Off the Rails

archived October 20, 2009
	

Housing & urban design - Oct 9

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Boom Towns
-Bloomberg’s “PlaNYC” Continues Forward Moves
-Review: My Kind of Transit: Rethinking Public Transportation in America

archived October 9, 2009
	

ODAC Newsletter - Oct 9

Staff, Oil Depletion Analysis Centre

"A peak of conventional oil production before 2030 appears likely" and "there is a significant risk of a peak in conventional oil production before 2020..."

archived October 9, 2009
	

Sustainable, local, and urban ag just keeps on growing - Oct 8

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-The First Review of ‘Local Food’
-Eat Locally Grown Food All Year
-Rethinking the Front Yard: Cities Make Room For Urban Farms
-Growing a Revolution
-Smaller cities seen leading the way in urban agriculture
-Planting The Seeds For Sustainability

archived October 8, 2009
	

Linking the past with the present: resources, land use, and the collapse of civilizations

Guy R. McPherson, Nature Bats Last

The human role in extinction of species and degradation of ecosystems is well documented. Since European settlement in North America, and especially after the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, we have witnessed a substantial decline in biological diversity of native taxa and profound changes in assemblages of the remaining species...We have, to the maximum possible extent allowed by our intellect and never-ending desire, consumed the planet.

archived October 5, 2009
	

Renewables and Efficiency - Oct 5

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Oil and Solar Do Mix
-Plugged-In Age Feeds a Hunger for Electricity
-Americans Are Still Buying Gas-Guzzlers, But Here Are 7 Signs That the Market for Green Transport Is Exploding
-Passive Solar Design Overview - Part 5: Distribution, Ventilation, and Cooling
-Google working on "smart" plug-in hybrid charging
-10p to create a solar power sector in UK
-Saving BIG on electricity costs: chest refrigerators

archived October 5, 2009
	

Pedal powered groceries/Tom Stearns on Hardwick, VT
Audio

Jon Steinman, Deconstructing Dinner

This episode features Martin Gunst is an active cyclist in Vancouver...who went on to launch Grocer Gunst - a bicycle delivery service for freshly harvested biodynamic produce from three Demeter certified farms in the Lower Mainland and the Okanagan...and Tom Stearns, of Hardwick Vermont's, High Mowing Organic Seeds who joined Deconstructing Dinner's Jon Steinman and shared the history of Hardwick and the future of food security work both there and throughout North American communities.

archived October 5, 2009
	

ODAC Newsletter - Sept 18

Staff, Oil Depletion Analysis Centre

This week saw further oil discoveries in the Santos Basin and off the coast of Ghana, extending a run of sizeable finds in recent weeks. Following much breathless reporting of such discoveries, it was good to them put into context by solid analysis from Morgan Stanley and Bank Macquarie...

archived September 18, 2009
	

An Open Letter to Amtrak

Brian Kaller, Restoring Mayberry

When I visited my native USA this summer, I needed to take my daughter from Minnesota to Missouri, a thousand-mile trek across the Heartland. I decided to use Amtrak, and wanted to share with you my perceptions of the journey.

archived September 10, 2009