Stories tagged with "internet"

The Rupture Index *

* An informal model of the global fossil fuels supply chain as a scale-free network

[editor's note, by Dave] Throughout, I will refer to the the global fossil fuels supply chain construed as a network by the acronym GFFSC. There is only a little math in this post. I will be referring to some pages where they do the math. This is meant to be a "naive", intuitive treatment. The mathematicians among us can take the ball and run with it.

I spend a lot of time worrying about ruptures in the GFFSC and what their effects will be. Standardly, these are called oil shocks at TOD. I just picked up the July 1-7 issue of New Scientist and there were two related articles of interest to me, "The Net Reloaded" and "Life is Unpredictable". Sorry, they are both behind a paywall. But I will refer to them in the text below. Ever since Stuart had mentioned Didier Sornette in his excellent post Is Oil In A Price Bubble?, I had also been thinking about so-called endogenous versus exogenous origins of crises, as Sornette puts it. The latter are forcings from outside the network. In other words, oil shocks. The former are due to the inherent self-organizing nature of the network itself.

Finally, it occurred to me to model the GFFSC as a scale-free network somewhat analogous to the internet and see where that went. I have never seen this kind of analysis done before and thought it would be interesting as a new take on peak oil and our current dilemma.

Activism or Joining the System or Both?

I'm really starting to build a local base of activism for environmentally friendly ideas. I've been thinking about setting up a separate website like the Park Slope Neighbors or paying the $19/month for a Meet-Up site. Another site recommended to me is the Open Plans Project. The Gotham Gazzette has also run a series of articles about local cyber-activism.This would help sustain my local environmental initiatives and give a voice to the majority of people in the district that support these ideas against the narrow micro-NIMBY naysayers and stagnant institutional players like the NYC Department of Transportation.

But maybe there is another path? Interloafer comments in my last post that I should apply for open spots on my local community board. BP Scott Stringer and the local council members will have full rights to appoint new people to the board. Indeed Stringer has made Community Board reform a major issue.

So what's a budding activist to do? Apply for Board membership or continue to build a local movement for policies that will help soften the impact of peak oil? Would it be possible to do both?

I welcome thoughts from my dear readers.