
Articles tagged with: oil
Jonah and the Whale
In June of 2010 I wrote several pieces about Columnist Jonah Goldberg and his outrageous statements about oil being the really true green fuel. This theme of his surfaces from time to time when he has trouble coming up with equally outrageous things to say in his column. The whale to which I refer in the title of this blog is the whoppers and half truths he tells. This Saturday, April 30 he drew a blank again and is making more ridiculous statements. He starts out saying that the green environmental community has realized that the fight against climate change has fizzled. He states President Obama's "sweeping" efforts to make good on his promise to turn back rising oceans was a total flop. Instead the push for clean energy, clean air and reversal of global warming only succeeded in losing jobs and causing the price of gasoline to go out of sight. Really? His reasons for this bogus statement are the whoppers.
Don't Write Off Nuclear-Just Yet
My support of nuclear as one of our choices, although luke warm, has been expressed in Running on Empty and in these blog pages. The recent melt down in Japan, now being called almost as serious as Chernobyl, has made us all spooked about nuclear. Yet even the Chernobyl accident affected relatively few people.
The UN Scientific Committee on the effects of Atomic Radiation (Unscear) reported that at Chernobyl, 134 suffered acute radiation syndrome and 28 died soon afterwards. Nineteen others died later, but generally not from diseases associated with radiation. Another 87 suffered complications including four cases of cancer and two of leukemia. In the general population there have been 6,848 cases of thyroid cancer among young children, arising "almost entirely" from the Soviet Union's failure to prevent people from drinking milk contaminated with iodine 131. Otherwise they found no persuasive evidence of any other health effects in the general population that can be attributed to radiation exposure. People living in the countries affected today "Need not live in fear of serious health consequences from the Chernobyl accident."
A vigorous discussion about this subject between George Monbiot, a British environmentalist and writer with the Guardian, and Helen Caldicott, the world's most vocal anti nuclear critic appears in Monbiot's blog.
Admittedly new nuclear plants are very expensive, but our addiction to fossil fuels is so pervasive that we will need every possible resource to bridge the gap between them and renewable clean fuels to power our modern world. New technology has produced new safer types of nuclear plants than those 40 year old plants used in Japan. Meltdowns of the type at Chernobyl, and Japan are highly unlikely. Go to www.Monbiot.com to read more about it.
Foxes in Charge of the Hen House
Vitter-Bishop Bill Puts "Foxes In Charge Of the Hen House"
[A Statement from The Wilderness Society]
(March 31, 2011) - The following statement is from The Wilderness Society Senior Policy Advisor David Alberswerth in response to the 3-D, Domestic Jobs, Domestic Energy, and Deficit Reduction Act of 2011 introduced by Sen. Vitter (LA) and Rep. Rob Bishop (UT).
The following is a direct quote from David Alberswerth.
"This legislation puts the foxes in charge of the hen house. Under this bill, the oil and gas industry would essentially run the Interior Department’s offshore oil and gas program and the BLM’s oil shale program. It also mandates the destruction of the fragile Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, eviscerates the Endangered Species Act, allows polluters to continue dumping greenhouse gases and endangering the public without any EPA oversight under the Clean Air Act, and restricts the right of Americans to use the federal courts to enforce environmental laws.
Another needless part of the bill reinstates a number of old Utah leases, even though those leases were deemed invalid in federal court. The Utah oil and gas industry doesn’t need more leases -- it is sitting on millions of acres of idle leases it isn’t using. According to BLM data, 4,855,833 acres of BLM lands are under lease in Utah, while only 1,088,431 acres of these leases are in production. In addition, last year the BLM issued 402 drilling permits (APDs) in Utah, while the industry only drilled 172 new wells on them. The bill is based on the myth that Administration policies are inhibiting oil and gas development on federal lands, while tens of millions of acres of federal leases lands sit idle in Utah and elsewhere, and thousands of drilling permits issued by the BLM go unused by the industry. What we really need to do is develop policies that will wean our economy from its dependence on oil and other fossil fuels, and toward a clean, efficient energy future. The Vitter-Bishop bill would take us backwards toward the twentieth century, rather than forward into the 21st."
The Wilderness Society is the leading public-lands conservation organization working to protect wilderness and inspire Americans to care for our wild places. Founded in 1935, and now with more than 500,000 members and supporters, TWS has led the effort to permanently protect 110 million acres of wilderness and to ensure sound management of our shared national lands. www.wilderness.org
How Big a Disaster is Big Enough?
Back in September of 2009 I wrote the following paragraph. It was a comment decrying the seeming inability of the public to grasp the true nature of our coming energy crisis. Here is the quote.
"What we really need is a dose of reality. A climate disaster might wake some people up, for a little while, but it would have to be catastrophic to have any real impact. The 2008 oil crisis did some good in calling attention to the energy crisis, but it didn't last. A large portion of the general public refuses to believe that climate change is anything other than a hoax perpetrated by those in power to bleed us dry and ruin our economy."
Jonah Goldberg's "True Green Fuel" #5
Comments on Jonah Goldberg's column of June 19, 2010, in which he states that oil is the "True green fuel."
His rationale for this outlandish statement: If you remove the argument over climate change from the equation...fossil fuels have been one of the great boons to humanity and the environment.
First, you cannot remove climate change from the equation. Admittedly the age of oil has afforded many technological advancements, growing more food to allow more people to thrive and population to soar. Industry would not have been possible on the scale to which it has risen without oil. It has given us leisure time and given some of us great wealth, although not to major parts of the world's population. While It has raised the standard of living of those with oil, it has not raised the quality of life for a very large portion of the world's population to whom these benefits are denied. That which allows population to grow unfettered is not a great boon to mankind. It makes sustainability of our life styles less and less attainable by the world's growing population. Oil is a finite commodity and the population growth permitted by oil is unsustainable. Relying on oil to the exclusion of that which can become sustainable is folly.
Jonah Goldberg's "True Green Fuel" #4
Comments on Jonah Goldberg's column of June 19, 2010, in which he states that oil is the "True green fuel."
His rationale for this outlandish statement: 4. Goldberg states we'll simply have to buy most of our oil from foreigners.
We already buy a major portion of our oil from foreigners. Ramping up domestic production enough to make a significant difference will take many years, Waiting for alternatives to be able to replace oil until it is either all gone or far too expensive for our transportation needs is short term thinking. The cost of drilling in deep water will mean that oil gets more expensive over time.
Who is to Blame for Spill?
Got a mirror? Take a squint at it. There's your culprit. As Pogo was wont to say, "We have met the enemy and he is us." There is very little in our modern world that is not either made from oil or doesn't depend on it to produce. Virtually all plastics have oil and gas in them. Even deodorant is made from oil. Think tooth paste. No kidding. It is derived from petroleum. Lipstick is too. We have petroleum in our bodies from all of the oil based chemical we consume. Taking vitamin capsules? Made from petroleum. The United States is the far and away largest consumer of petroleum in the world. A bottle of shampoo is typically 100% petrochemicals. The Center for Disease Control tested humans for environmental chemicals and found 212 chemical compounds and metals in human blood.
Saudis Mad at us Again
The Saudis are mad at us because we are developing renewables. Guess what? So are they. They understand that oil wont last forever, but they want to keep us addicted for as long as it lasts because it is what runs their economy...our money, that is. They claim that they were our good buddies over the years because they tried to keep production up so we wouldn't have shortages. We didn't see much of that last summer. And they were sooo good to us in 1973, cutting us off altogether. What did we do to deserve that? Oh, we supported Israel who was attacked by Egypt and Syria. What were we thinking...
