Archive for March, 2009



16
Mar

Master Resource Report: oil, natural gas and energy news

I’ve been following Jim Hansen’s Master Resource Report for a few months as a way of keeping up with peak oil news and energy trends. I was turned on to it via Jim Kunstler, he of The Long Emergency and Clusterfuck Nation.  The report is a wealth of data and graphs on different things from week to week, and the overall trend is disturbing. Discovery of new oil fields is nil, new wells are down, and the ones that are producing are diminishing. The data is disturbing, and it appears that world oil production may have peaked sometime in the past few years. If this is correct, we may be on our way to a world wide crisis much like what America went through under the Carter administration. If that is the case, the gas prices we saw last summer is just a small taste of what we can expect to see in the next decades.

It used to be that any decrease in the world oil production could be offset to an increase in production from Saudi Arabia. There now seems to be signs that SA may be nearing the limit of their abilities. If supply has indeed reached a peak, then the increasing demand from India and China spells dire news indeed for the American Lifestyle.

One of the big stories coming out of the Report the past few weeks is that Mexico’s domestic oil production is off as much as 13% since last year, leading American policy makers to fear a collapse of the Mexican government. The Department of Defense has put odds of Mexican instability on par with Pakistan.  Of course, any news of political instability in Mexico is blamed on drug cartels, while it is the loss of oil revenues that means the Mexican government will be unable to stand up to the cartels and thier billions in drug money.

Other countries being affected by the recent drop in oil prices includes Russia, Iran and Venezuala, who all get a majority of their GDP from gas and oil sales and are seeing short term instability. Unlike Mexico, it is believed that they still maintain the reserves to benefit from a future increase in price.

I encourage everyone to take a look at the Master Resource Report weekly to see what’s been going on in world energy production. I am convinced that world oil production may have peaked this decade and that we might be seeing a transformation as the world runs out of oil. The report also keeps me informed on many of the issues surrounding natural gas and energy production.

Here’s  a couple facts out of the lastest report that you may find interesting:

  • The total amount of electrical energy lost during the generation, transmission and distribution of electricty, exceeds the amount consumed by 2 to 1!
  • US coal supply may only be 20-30 years.
  • Disposal of dried up coastal and sea drilling rigs may a future growth industry as the wells dry up.
  • China’s car sales now exceed the US market, meaning a change in petroleum demand.

Gas prices may be low for now as the economy runs down. Economic recovery will mean increased demand and increase in oil prices. The public may be enjoying the $2/gallon prices now; it is just a matter of time before we see record highs again. Oil is a finite resource, and scarcity will only lead to an increase in the wild price fluctuations that we have seen in the past few years. I have already invested some of my money in oil futures via USO, and when the big oil investors are done playing contango in the market, we’ll be seeing some high oil prices like never before.

06
Mar

Friday link dump

First off, I just wanted to say thanks to all of the people I’ve run into the past few weeks through Facebook, Twitter, and out and about round the area the past few weeks. I’ve reconnected with some old friends and classmates and met some interesting guys and gals out playing. Thanks for all those compliments everybody! I’ll do my best not to let you down.

This weekend, Hampton becomes the land of patchouli and psychedelics as Phish comes to the Hampton Coliseum, AKA The Mothership, for three days as part of their show since breaking up 4 1/2 years ago. I noticed a few hippies and dreadheads out at Marker 20 last night, and I’m sure there will be thousands of them in the area this weekend. The band and the fans couldn’t have gotten luckier with the weather, as Monday’s snow and ice has melted into lovely 70 degree weather. The city of Hampton has even turned the Pembroke Ave. baseball field into a temporary campground for the weekend. Also, judging by the Twitter traffic for #hampton and #phish, this is going to be an epic weekend on the Peninsula.

Spoiled: Organic and Local Is So 2008 – This Mother Jones article talks about some of the challenges with industrial food production and how so-called organic farming is not the solution. The problem is that the organic movement is not scaling well, and may even be doing more harm. It looks like something new is going to be required. My bet: it involves eating a lot less meat and processed food and growing as much as you can in home gardens.

Time For a New ‘New Deal’ by Marshall Auerback of the University of Texas, “mainstream economics and policy have been unable to come to grips with our current socio-economic problems because of a lack of historical memory.” This is for the next time someone puts down what Obama is trying to do with the stimulus bill by arguing that FDR made the Depression worse.

Relatedly, New York Times food columnist Mark Bittman was on the Cobert Report earlier this week, plugging his new book, Eating Consciously. Here’s the Hulu clip of the interview. Mark’s one of my favorite food authors next to Michael Pollan. Mark is a vegan until dinner; he believes that reducing our meat consumption is the best way to improve our health and the environment. He also cooks like a motherfucker.

H+ Magazine
The latest version of the quarterly transhumanist magazine is out. I would like to recommend this to anyone who is not familiar with the singularity or the concept of accelerating change. This is where the future is headed and I think it would be in your best interest to get acquainted with some of the concepts now. This issue addresses a slew of topics in short one or two page articles that you can skim over quickly: nanotechnology, renewable energy, post-scarcity society, and much more, including  an interview with Vernor Vinge, the man who first defined the singularity.

And a couple others that I twittered earlier this week and feel the need to repost here.

‘There will be blood’ Harvard economic historian Niall Ferguson predicts prolonged financial hardship, even civil war, before the ‘Great Recession’ ends

If you are a fan of HBO’s The Wire, you’ll want to read this Washington Post article from the series creator, David Simon:  In Baltimore, No One Left to Press the Police

That’s it for now, hope you find the reading informational and entertaining. I’ll be spending this weekend working on my Honey-Do list, so hit me up on Twitter or Facebook if you want to chat. Have a great weekend!

02
Mar

Skittles dot com implodes into Twitter.

The Skittles.com front page has been replaced with a twitter search page for the word skittles and has now become a playground for twits everywhere. My contribution is below, 2nd from the top.

skittles1

screenshot of skittles.com page

If you’ve never heard of Twitter then you’re no doubt confused right now. Here’s a short introduction to Twitter for the uninitiated.  Simply, it’s similar to a world wide chat room of short 120 character messages that can be sent to their front page over a cell phone or web application. You can follow a user to see all of their tweets on your private page, and users can follow each other to send private messages.

You can see the individual tweets of every single user on the public_timeline by clicking ‘everyone’ on the right sidebar. A look at this page for a few minutes can give you a good idea of how some people use the site. Most of it probably looks like gibberish; most people are new and everyone is trying to figure out how to use this latest technology, so keep that in mind if it seems confusing or full of vapid crosschatter and inane personal details.

A good way to make Twitter a little less daunting in scope and more useful in everyday life is to use the search.twitter.com page and narrow it down with the advanced search page. Try using the location search to show only people within a certain mile radius. A 15 or 30 mile radius usually works for me. Using the location search for a while will give you a good idea of what individuals and organizations are twittering in your area. By this point you should have found a few people worth following , or at least a few that are worth replying to.

The other handy search tool is the use of #hashtags. Hashtags function as a type of instant chat room that can be appended to you messages to make them searchable by those that use the same tag. For example; during President Obama’s  a few weeks ago, a bunch of us were including the #SOTU tag to our tweets and were thus able to chat with each other while we watched the speech. It was pretty crazy watching a live event play out like that in real time. Other popular tags during that time was the NOT The State of the Union Address, #nsotu, as well as #Obama. It also resulted in attention for some Congressmen and women who were twittering during the speech itself!

There’s only one rule people should keep in mind when using Twitter: Don’t believe anyone who says you are using it wrong.

Twitter is so simple that a whole wellspring of uses have spawned around it. News organizations and marketers have already hit the site hard along with the other early adopters, and now that Twitter has been getting mentions all over newspapers and on television shows like the View its popularity is sure to increase even more.

To close out, I’ll leave you with Evan Williams, Twitter Co-Founder, talking about how they got the idea for Twitter and how most of the sites current conventions were formed spontaneously by the users themselves. Enjoy, and see you on Twitter!