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Privatisation & globalisation

How Relocalization Worked

John Michael Greer, The Archdruid Report

One of the most rarely used resources for relocalization projects is the fact that our species has been this way before -- the twilight years of many other civilizations featured the breakup of centralized economic arrangements and the rise of a new localism. Can insights from past examples offer us guidance in the present case?

archived November 18, 2009
	

China and the world - Nov 18

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Obama and Hu aim to agree greenhouse gas targets
-China's empty city
-China's Blunt Talk for Obama
-Market cornered for rare minerals
-Chinese credit card debt mounts

archived November 18, 2009
	

A Gesture from the Invisible Hand

John Michael Greer, The Archdruid Report

The claim that market forces will inevitably take care of energy shortfalls due to peak oil is common enough these days. Unfortunately for such optimistic notions, there's reason to think that in an environment of economic contraction caused by geological limits to energy, market forces may well push money away from any investments that could help the situation.

archived November 12, 2009
	

The recession is dead ... long live the recession!

Guy R. McPherson, Nature Bats Last

The world’s first peak-oil recession has come to a close, according to third-quarter numbers invented by the federal government. Apparently dumping trillions of dollars onto big banks, insurance companies, and automobile manufacturers interrupted the plummeting descent of American Empire. The stock markets skyrocketed expectedly. Predictably, so did the commodities markets.

archived October 29, 2009
	

Economic dominoes continue to fall

Guy R. McPherson, Nature Bats Last

Passing the world oil peak has had, and doubtless will continue to have, relatively little impact on the long-term price of gasoline. The economic implications of getting through the first half of the Oil Age have been much more significant, a trend that seems likely to continue until the collapse is complete.

archived October 27, 2009
	

The Himalayan Gas Tango

Rahul Goswami, Energy Bulletin

Through September 2009, the government of India has issued a variety of statements designed to quell India's long-lived China bogey. It has done so to contain what it calls panic and scare-mongering about alleged incursions over the India-China border by units of the People's Liberation Army. The 'incidents' (as the Indian media like to call the events) have all occurred over India's north-western border with China, in the mountainous Jammu and Kashmir state.

archived September 25, 2009
	

Economics - Sept 14

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-China Moves to Retaliate Against U.S. Tire Tariff
-Priceless: How The Federal Reserve Bought The Economics Profession
-Revealed: The ghost fleet of the recession
-Keynes: the return of the Master

archived September 14, 2009
	

it's the end of the world as we know it (...and I feel fine) (1)

Reid Horne, Living Green

it's the end of the world as we know it (...and I feel fine) (1)

Probably few saw this meltdown coming. We have come to view human progress as a given, and an ever growing economy and living standard as an entitlement.

archived July 29, 2009
	

Nations & resources - June 30

Staff, Energy Bulletin

Iraq: Warily Moving Ahead on Oil Contracts
The Dirty War Against Clean Coal
A Flower Grows in West Africa

archived June 30, 2009
	

Whither America without China?

Sharon Astyk, Casaubon’s Book

Someday, someone is going to ask me what happened to the United States - wasn’t it once one of the biggest economies in the world? I’ve already got my answer ready - we sold ourselves to other countries for flat-screened tvs and other plastic toys. And weirdest of all, for a long time, we actually thought we got the better of the deal.

archived June 17, 2009
	

Economics - June 11

Staff, Energy Bulletin

A tale of two depressions
The new economy of tomorrow (Jeff Rubin)
Nobelist Daniel Kahneman on Behavioral Economics
Money worries: town prints its own

archived June 11, 2009
	

Economics - March 30

Staff, Energy Bulletin

Obama’s Nobel headache: Paul Krugman
Peak oil and peak capitalism
It would be easier for Americans to get a handle on the financial crisis if they knew what it was about
In Levi factory town in Hungary, promise of globalization fades
Monbiot: Green oil may buy us new deal for environment — but at what price?

archived March 30, 2009
	

Fireside chat with Julian Darley
Video

Julian Darley, Energy Bulletin

In this Sustainable Business Alliance speaker series, Julian Darley talks with Bay Area business owners about the impact Peak Oil is having on their business and community.

archived January 29, 2009
	

Food & agriculture - Dec 1

Staff, Energy Bulletin

Sahel Africans Face Hunger Despite Bumper Harvest
food production or distribution...
In a land of plenty, why do they still go hungry?

archived December 1, 2008
	

ODAC Newsletter - Nov 27

Staff, Oil Depletion Analysis Centre

A weekly digest from a UK perspective.

archived November 27, 2008