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Coal and oil: the dark monarchs of global energy (student thesis)
About 90% of the global coal production originates from only 6 countries. Some of them, such as the USA show signs of increasing maturity and exhaustion of the recoverable amounts. However, there is a greater uncertainty about the recoverable reserves and coal production may yield a global maximum somewhere between 2030 and 2060.
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Reflections from alongside the threshing machine
Last weekend I was at Embercombe, about 20 minutes drive from Totnes, for the West Country Storytelling Festival...Food production is becoming a key part of its work, and it now has a wonderful vegetable garden, orchards, field scale veg and, of particular interest to me, some small scale cereals production. The day I was there, they were threshing (or attempting to thresh) some of what they had grown, and I thought I would share some of the conversations that took place by the threshing machine.
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A symbolic solar road trip to reignite a climate movement
As I write this piece, we’re in the midst of a (biodiesel) road trip to Washington, D.C., towing behind us an unwieldy piece of history: a solar panel off the roof of the Carter White House. It’s decades old, though it still makes hot water just fine. In a sense, we’re traveling backward—which in another sense is what I think we’re going to have to do for a while in the U.S. climate movement.
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Climbing a dark mountain: Thoughts on a new culture
I've recently finished reading Dark Mountain issue 1, the first publication of the global artists' collective of the same name, of which I am a member. It's an astonishing collection (work of 37 different authors) of appreciation and reflection on our civilization's beginning collapse, and I recommend it without hesitation to anyone who has reached the point of understanding that our unsustainable civilization culture can't be saved, and is trying to cope with that terrible knowledge.
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The time has come the walrus said to talk of many things: Of floating nuclear reactors...
-'Floating Chernobyls' to hit the high seas
-Hurricane Earl ... and Floating Nuclear Plants
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How I became a “rail fan”
President Obama's proposal to spend $50 billion on transportation infrastructure - including 4,000 miles of rail lines - couldn't be a better expenditure. ... Trains are one of the last public spaces left in our society and they also demand a different kind of behavior than we are accustomed in today's fast-paced, impersonal, high-security, privatized society. You can interact with other passengers you don't know, feel safe with them, and be with people who are largely respectful toward their fellow travelers.
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An interview with Chris Bird, author of ‘Local Sustainable Homes’
In advance of the publication next week of Chris Bird's Transition Book "Local Sustainable Homes", I spoke to Chris about the book, and about what he set out to achieve in writing it.
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Peak oil review - Sept 6
A weekly roundup of peak oil news, including:
-Oil and the global economy
-Food
-The moratorium
-The Bundeswehr on peak oil
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Oil, health, and health care
The April 2010 oil leak in the Mexican Gulf illustrates the risks being taken to extract oil from inaccessible fields, and in June a Lloyd’s 360° risk insight report said, “we have entered a period of deep uncertainty in how we will source energy for power, heat and mobility and how much we will pay for it.” The reason why such damaging extraction methods are pursued, and why Lloyd’s are telling us we face a “new energy paradigm” rather than normal market volatility, is that oil discoveries peaked 40 years ago, and oil supply is probably at its maximum, with decline soon to follow. This has substantial implications for transport, food, jobs, health, and health care.
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The errant economics of detrimental dams and ruined rivers
Lessons from the massive flooding that has beset Pakistan, uprooting 14 million people, underscore the need for a new economic paradigm. River engineering (a mainstay of the old economic paradigm) in the Indus Basin reduced small and medium floods, but set up the conditions for millions to be harmed when larger floods occurred.
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Why learn permaculture? For the children and ourselves
Permaculture is one of the only ways home for humanity. If one believes in modernism, industrial agriculture and better living through chemistry read no further. However, if you feel something is not right about the way we live, read on.
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Review: "The Witch of Hebron" by James Kunstler
The Witch of Hebron picks up a couple of months after World Made by Hand ended. Returning to the small upstate New York town of Union Grove, the new book further defines the post-apocalyptic setting, adds depth to characters who played only minor parts in the first story, ties up loose ends from the previous book and introduces some all new dilemmas. And it does all of this against the backdrop of a full-moon Halloween, lending a delicious sense of foreboding to the proceedings.
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Nicole Foss, "Stoneleigh", launches "Paul Revere" tour in Michigan
Nicole Foss, a.k.a. Stoneleigh, of "The Automatic Earth" launches her modern day "Paul Revere" style tour in Michigan on September 10. Foss received rave reviews for her presentation at the Transition Towns UK conference, and recently appeared on the Financial Sense News Hour with Jim Puplava. Foss takes a "big picture" approach and describes peak oil in the context of the economic crisis, adding essential information to the understanding of the future.
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Steel, cycling and Steeltown
As the effects of Peak Oil make themselves felt, they will go far beyond gas prices.
The Canadian auto industry employs around a half million people directly and indirectly, almost all of which is in Ontario. This isn't just building and selling cars - there's a massive manufacturing empire needed to mine the ore, make the steel and machine the parts that extends well beyond Ford or Toyota. So what do we do with two of the nation's largest steel mills? ...
If cycling is going to catch on as a major means of transportation, somebody's going to have to start building new affordable and practical bikes. That's where steel comes in.
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Pulcinella's escape
Pulcinella was the most restless marionette in the old theater. He always had something to protest about. At performance time, he wanted to take a stroll. Or the puppet-master gave him a comic role when he had wanted something more serious.
"One day or another," he confided to Arlecchino the Harlequin, "I'm going to cut my strings." And that's what he did, but it wasn't during the day. One night he'd gotten a hold of a pair of scissors that the puppet-master had left behind. One after the other, he cut the strings tied to his head, his hands and his feet.
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