Stories tagged with "energy future"
Energy Prices, Inflation and Denial
Posted by Euan Mearns on June 11, 2008 - 10:15am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Demand/Consumption
Tags: berr, energy future, gas prices, inflation, investment, national grid [list all tags]
Higher energy prices are feeding through to rampant consumer energy price inflation. And yet the authorities and many investment houses still see energy prices falling in the future. This naive view of global energy supplies is starving energy markets of the capital required to expand conventional and alternative energy supplies.
UK National Grid, with responsibility for the distribution of natural gas and electricity in the UK, see flat to falling natural gas prices to 2015 and beyond. Comments welcome!

Global annual average natural gas spot prices from the BP statistical review of world energy 2007. Click all charts to enlarge
[Editor's note: this story was first run on 4th February 2008]
Energy Prices, Inflation and Denial
Posted by Euan Mearns on February 4, 2008 - 9:51am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Demand/Consumption
Tags: berr, energy future, gas prices, inflation, investment, national grid [list all tags]
Higher energy prices are feeding through to rampant consumer energy price inflation. And yet the authorities and many investment houses still see energy prices falling in the future. This naive view of global energy supplies is starving energy markets of the capital required to expand conventional and alternative energy supplies.

Global annual average natural gas spot prices from the BP statistical review of world energy 2007. Click all charts to enlarge
Turning an Oil Tanker
Posted by Heading Out on January 9, 2008 - 11:15am
Topic: Miscellaneous
Tags: education, energy future, rural living [list all tags]
Change, it seems to be the word of the moment. And it seems to be one of those popular words that pop up every time there is a likelihood of a change in the Administration. But when we change we should know what to expect from that change, and that does require more than a little knowledge of the consequences. One thinks of the Bay of Pigs debacle, or the politicization that led to the disaster that has been the Federal response to the damage Katrina imposed on New Orleans.
I was thinking of the ignorance of consequences as I read Baron Wormser’s book The Road Washes Out in the Spring. As one of the “hippy culture” of the 60’s he chose to build a house in rural Maine, discovering after having put it up that they could not afford to run a power-line to the house. Thus, through the raising of a family, they did without electricity (apart from a small generator to run a hand-iron, a Skil saw for large carpentry, and a blender). Water was pumped by hand, and heating and cooking used wood stoves. But, when they first went through a winter, they had no appreciation of the amount of wood that would be required, and so, accompanied by a flash-light, he ended up sawing and splitting wood into the night, for they had no backup furnace. They also became very dependent on the condition of the road of the title, the typical rural dirt road, with culverts and infrequent maintenance.


k Nation (Jim Kunstler)






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