Archive for June, 2008

Citing Need for Assessments, U.S. Freezes Solar Energy Projects

// June 30th, 2008 // 1 Comment » // Environment, Renewable Energy Breakthroughs

Steve Marcus/Las Vegas Sun, via Reuters

Mirrors channel sunlight onto a tube filled with oil at a solar power plant in Boulder City, Nev. The plant produces energy to power about 14,000 homes.

Published: June 27, 2008

DENVER — Faced with a surge in the number of proposed solar power plants, the federal government has placed a moratorium on new solar projects on public land until it studies their environmental impact, which is expected to take about two years.

The Bureau of Land Management says an extensive environmental study is needed to determine how large solar plants might affect millions of acres it oversees in six Western states — Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico and Utah.

But the decision to freeze new solar proposals temporarily, reached late last month, has caused widespread concern in the alternative-energy industry, as fledgling solar companies must wait to see if they can realize their hopes of harnessing power from swaths of sun-baked public land, just as the demand for viable alternative energy is accelerating.

“It doesn’t make any sense,” said Holly Gordon, vice president for legislative and regulatory affairs for Ausra, a solar thermal energy company in Palo Alto, Calif. “The Bureau of Land Management land has some of the best solar resources in the world. This could completely stunt the growth of the industry.”

Much of the 119 million surface acres of federally administered land in the West is ideal for solar energy, particularly in Arizona, Nevada and Southern California, where sunlight drenches vast, flat desert tracts.

Galvanized by the national demand for clean energy development, solar companies have filed more than 130 proposals with the Bureau of Land Management since 2005. They center on the companies’ desires to lease public land to build solar plants and then sell the energy to utilities.

According to the bureau, the applications, which cover more than one million acres, are for projects that have the potential to power more than 20 million homes.

All involve two types of solar plants, concentrating and photovoltaic. Concentrating solar plants use mirrors to direct sunlight toward a synthetic fluid, which powers a steam turbine that produces electricity. Photovoltaic plants use solar panels to convert sunlight into electric energy. (more…)

It’s the wild deviations from the averages that are deadly to life

// June 30th, 2008 // 3 Comments » // Accelerating Shift, Economic Downturn, Global Warming, Pollution, Tipping Point

The looming food crisis was the primary inevitability I saw coming as a result of the engineered weather crisis now known as global warming.  All kinds of weather disasters are umbrellaed as being a result of global warming.  Nothing could be further from the truth.

If these nefarious agencies were at work to mitigate extreme weather events, instead of accentuating them, then there would be no food shortages ANYWHERE as a result of impacts from the sky.  But then there is no money to be made in times of peace and tranquility, is there now?

So the question now becomes: How bad will it have to get before the actions of man in the skies above promt man on the ground to call for accountability?

Global warming should have presented us a much, much weaker jet stream in all seasons.  This according to classical thermodynamics where reduced thermal contrast from the poles to the Equatorial region results is less vorticity available in extra tropical cyclones. The vertical thermal profile of the atmosphere is another discussion.

Instead Global warming has been blamed on increased CO2, this is a joke! Energy first arrives in an ecosystem then it responds with, in the case of Earth’s atmosphere, with increased water vapor, methane, and carbon dioxide.  The rapid rise of CO2 in the atmosphere is a result of both man’s arrogant polluting of the skies and of additional energies arriving from off planet plus those from heat generated as a by product of weather control.  Add these together and the 370+ppm level of CO2 gets the blame for all of it.  Sadly, its just not that simple.

While flooding ravages Iowa and the Mississippi River region, drought and thunderstorms built up specifically with the desire to start massive Western forest fires. (Its going to be a very long and expensive fire season).

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said he was told late Sunday evening that the state had 520 fires, and he found it “quite shocking” that by Monday morning the number had risen above 700.

Moments later, a top state fire official standing at Schwarzenegger’s side offered a grim update. The figure was actually 842 fires, said Del Walters, assistant regional chief of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. All but a couple were in the northern part of the state.”  Linked

All these weather disasters remain as an effort by the PTB as an assault on us for a myriad of reasons.  The one eventuality will be famine.  Famine the world over as global population reduction gets underway in earnest, soon.

To readers of this site this is not new news.  Preparations for the long cold (hungry) winter ahead should be effort ed ahead of all other considerations.  The globally engineered food crisis is nearly here.

Written by Jan Lundberg Culture Change Letter #189, June 20, 2008

The empire of cheap food is crumbling

You. Will. Not. Be. Able. To. Get. Food. Need this be spelled out any more plainly? It is time to consider that the stage has been set for petroleum-induced famine.

We have “innocently” accommodated rising population with greater and greater food production via technology and the profit motive. But now we have run out of room to grow, as biotechnology, for example, has severe limitations — major ones being petroleum dependence and topsoil loss. The biggest wild card for our existence is climate change, as we see with floods and other extreme weather affecting our food supply.

We are headed for massive shortages of food and other essentials, mainly brought about by the depletion of geological fossil reserves of cheap energy and water. The situation is demonstrated regularly with easy arithmetic based on statistical indicators from the United Nations, Worldwatch Institute, World Resources Institute, Earth Policy Institute, and numerous governments. Usually the full force of the message is offset by predictions of huge rises in future human population growth that are simple extrapolations of historical trends.

(more…)

White House Bounces EPA Reality Check

// June 29th, 2008 // No Comments » // Environment, Global Warming, Pollution

By Kerry Trueman

Last December, the White House simply refused to open an e-mail from the Environmental Protection Agency because it contained the unwelcome conclusion that greenhouse gas emissions pose a threat to public health and therefore need to be regulated. The EPA finding was a response “to a 2007 Supreme Court ruling that required it to determine whether greenhouse gases represent a danger to health or the environment,” the New York Times reported on Wednesday.

Faced with the proverbial inconvenient truth, the White House not only refused to open the e-mail, they ordered Jason Burnett, the EPA official who sent the document, to “recall it,” according to the Washington Post.

Burnett, who has, not coincidentally, since resigned, told the Post:

“In early December, I sent an e-mail with the formal finding that action must be taken to address the risk of climate change…The White House made it clear they did not want to address the ramifications of that finding and have decided to leave the challenge to the next administration. Some [at the White House] thought that EPA had mistakenly concluded that climate change endangers the public. It was no mistake.”

I’d accuse the administration of foot-dragging, but that implies some kind of forward movement, however glacial (now, there’s a word that’s headed for extinction, thanks to climate change.) The dinosaurs who’ve been dictating our energy policy in this country are as encased in asphalt as the fossils at the La Brea Tarpits, and just as unlikely to budge.

Jon Stewart highlighted this new low point from the Petro-Pusher-In-Chief on Wednesday’s Daily Show with a segment called “Be Patient– This Gets Amazing:”

“The White House is treating America’s environmental policy like a spam boner pill ad…

…Here’s the best part of the whole story–not opening the e-mail worked. Rather than walk the hard copy over to the government, the EPA rewrote the policy to Bush’s liking…”

The new version of the EPA ruling, according to the Times, “offers no conclusion. Instead, the document reviews the legal and economic issues presented by declaring greenhouse gases a pollutant.”

Well, sure, nobody likes to get bad news. But what you have to understand about this bizarre episode is that the e-mail actually contained some good news that the Bush Administration desperately wants to squelch–specifically, the finding “that tough regulation of motor vehicle emissions could produce $500 billion to $2 trillion in economic benefits over the next 32 years,” as the Times noted. Why? Because the Carbon Cartel can’t afford to sanction anything that might wean us off our dependency on Big Oil.

Of course, the Big Three fought higher fuel efficiency standards, too, on the grounds that it would be bad for business. Now that GM’s stock has plunged to a 53-year low, you’ve gotta wonder how much worse could business be? Why didn’t the U.S. auto industry anticipate the higher gas prices that have made American cars a bad buy for cash-strapped consumers?

Maybe they were referring to the same deliriously rosy projections that the Transportation Department relied on when it made its own fuel-economy proposals, which, as the Times reported, were “based on the assumption that gasoline would range from $2.26 per gallon in 2016 to $2.51 per gallon in 2030…”

Could these guys bury their heads any deeper in the tar sands? The price of oil may rise and fall, but the era of cheap oil is GONE FOREVER, as Paul Krugman points out in his Friday column, and nothing’s gonna bring it back.

The stock market tanked Thursday in the wake of predictions that the cost of oil could rise to $150-$170 a barrel, and a gallon of gas could cost $7 by the year 2010. As Krugman notes, a lot of folks are clinging to the notion that higher gas prices are a temporary phenomenon fueled by speculation. Others insist that the solution lies in offshore drilling.

But Ted Koppel put it all in perspective on the Daily Show Thursday night, where he dropped by to plug his upcoming four-part series on China for the Discovery Channel, The People’s Republic of Capitalism. As he told Jon Stewart:

“…look at the gasoline prices in this country, for example–$4.50 a gallon. The Chinese are now putting new cars on the road at the rate of about $25,000 a day, 9 million new cars a year. In another ten years, they’ll have as many cars as we do. You see a potential for competition and conflict, here?”

Oil is just another raw material like copper or lumber, whose prices have also jumped as more folks in China and India ascend to the ranks of the newly minted middle class. Increased demand for oil is simply going to outstrip the supply, regardless of whether we drill offshore or in Alaska.

If America truly is, as Sean Hannity is fond of saying, “the greatest, best country God has ever given man on the face of the earth,” we can hardly blame China for wanting to live like us. Unfortunately, in order for us to maintain the lifestyle to which we’ve become accustomed, Americans–who make up just four percent of the planet’s population–use about 25% of the world’s resources. For the greatest, best country God has ever given man on the face of the earth, we sure suck at math.

Oh well, we can always borrow a page from the White House playbook for how to handle reality when it comes knocking: don’t open the door. Just pretend you’re not home. Gotta send those facts with their liberal bias packing.
* updated to correct incorrect authoring attribution