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Media & persuasion

Slow Money: Bringing Money Down to Earth

Brooke Jarvis, Yes! Magazine

Woody Tasch has thought a lot about money: what it does, how it moves, and how to connect people who have it with people who need it...But he found that even socially responsible investing couldn't do much to fix an economy that focused too much on extraction and consumption and too little on preservation and restoration.

archived November 20, 2009
	

Small animals and urban ag - Nov 20

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Female farmers find goats a good, but busy choice
-Chickens come home to roost in backyards around the USA
-Bite-Sized: Small cattle make big impression
-Saving The Bed-Stuy Farm: Choose Better Nutrition, Not Demolition

archived November 20, 2009
	

ODAC Newsletter - Nov 20

Staff, Oil Depletion Analysis Centre

Oil prices fluctuated in the high $70’s this week reflecting the ups and downs of the dollar. Higher oil prices are loosening the discipline around the implementation of OPEC oil quotas as producers cash in...

archived November 20, 2009
	

Staking Out the Middle Ground

Dave Cohen, ASPO-USA

In my view, the Uppsala study is unduly pessimistic, implying an immediate crisis (in 2010 and thereafter) which is not in accord with reasonable expectations about future production levels both within OPEC and outside the cartel. In alerting the public to the peak oil issue, the Guardian is doing good work. But not knowing any bettter, they picked the wrong study in my view. The false choice the Guardian offers us, the IEA or Uppsala, amounts to a kind of all or nothing proposition.

archived November 19, 2009
	

Solutions & sustainability - Nov 19

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Go forth and multiply a lot less
-The new wave of urban farming (and fresh food from small spaces!)
-Urban farms a fertile idea
-Summary Presentation for Plan B 4.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization
-The next Industrial Revolution will be people-powered
-Sustainability and Social Justice: Do the Math
-Greening Portland - Your City How To

archived November 19, 2009
	

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
	

Peak oil notes - Nov 19

Tom Whipple, ASPO-USA

A weekly review including:
- Production and prices
- Cambridge Energy’s new report

archived November 19, 2009
	

Review: The Ecotechnic Future by John Michael Greer

Frank Kaminski, Seattle Peak Oil Awareness (SPOA)

John Michael Greer has officially established himself as an institution within the peak oil community. Truly one of the finest minds working on the predicament of modern-day industrial civilization, he is so well-read in so many fields that he regularly gains access to insights that utterly elude his contemporaries. For this he is treasured by a growing number of loyal readers—and, I suspect, hated by equally many fellow bloggers who wish that they could be half as good.

archived November 19, 2009
	

Economics - Nov 18

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Will rising oil prices derail the recovery?
-Banks Hasten to Adopt New Loan Rules
-Finite Resources: One Possible Explanation for the Financial Crisis
-What Is Inflation and How Does One Measure It?
-They can make this rally last for years

archived November 18, 2009
	

Food Futures: Strategies for resilient food and farming (pdf)

Soil Association, www.soilassociation.org

Our current food systems are precarious and vulnerable to external ‘shocks’. A combination of one or more external factors, such as extreme weather conditions, global conflict or trade disputes could easily disrupt the continuity of food supplies unless we make fundamental changes to the way we farm, process, distribute and eat our food over the next 20 years.

archived November 18, 2009
	

Chris Nelder’s Notes on the 2009 ASPO-USA Peak Oil Conference (pdf)

Chris Nelder, Energy Bulletin

These are merely my notes from the conference. I hope they will be useful to others as an index to the volumes of material that were covered.

archived November 18, 2009
	

Gas debate heats up - Nov 18

Staff, Energy Bulletin

-Gazprom defends rigid contract terms with Europe
-Gazprom dismisses warnings of lengthy gas glut
-EU seeks Russian energy boost

archived November 18, 2009
	

Some predictions on the forthcoming Russian-Ukrainian gas 'crisis'

Jerome a Paris, The Oil Drum: Europe

We've recently heard more veiled threats from Putin about Ukraine being unable to pay for gas (thus presumably leading to new attempts at cutting them off), which suggests that Russia is getting itself ready to start a new crisis.

archived November 18, 2009
	

Time and the Latest CERA Report: Why 2030 for the Peak?

Heading Out, The Oil Drum

One of the features of many models that are used to predict future events is that they focus on target years. Decadal years are the most common target years, so that whether talking of climate or the amount of oil or natural gas available, models focus on, for example, the amount that will be available in 2030. The problem with this approach is that it leaves the public to think that a problem is not yet serious.

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