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6.17.2010

Oil Spill and America's Future

The Debate That Will Define America's Future

Published: May 28, 2010

The Gulf of Mexico oil spill disaster, the Massey, West Virginia coal mine accident, the Tennessee coal ash disaster in 2008, the BP oil refinery disaster in Texas in 2006, and countless other fossil fuel disasters are finally having an effect on public opinion. And the sting of record prices from 2008 is still in the recent memory of American consumers. Fully 2/3 of Americans believe Congress needs to make our country's energy needs a top priority.

Recent polls have found, however, that a shrinking portion of America believes that climate change is a human-caused problem or that we need to take serious action to mitigate climate change. A May, 2010, poll by the Pew Research Center for People and the Press found that only 32% of Americans thought that climate change should be a "top priority" for Congress  (see chart, below).

This is the debate, revolving around energy and climate change, that will define America's future. It is not the only debate that will do so, but I believe it is the most important debate we will have over the coming decades.

I've written frequently on peak oil and climate change. It is because of my fears about peak oil that I am heartened to see a solid two-thirds of Americans agree with me that addressing our energy needs should be a top congressional priority. This is a bipartisan area of agreement, with 75% of Democrats, 64% of Independents and 61% of Republicans agreeing that it should be a top priority.

No wonder then that the Kerry/Lieberman Senate bill introduced on May 12 is called the "American Power Act" and does not mention "climate change" in its title. However, this bill is very much an energy and climate change bill. The debate about its merits is complex and my early reaction is that it doesn't go anywhere near far enough. But it's a start and it may actually have a chance of passing in 2010 — albeit a slim chance as we go into major mid-term elections.

So why do I think the debate about energy and climate change is the debate that will define America's future? It's because the peak oil situation is actually more dire now than when energy prices were sky-high back in 2008. Prices are relatively low because of the ongoing global recession. Oil prices were rebounding steadily this year, up to almost $90/barrel before the euro crisis knocked them back down to about $70 (prices were as high as $147/barrel, leading to $5/gallon gasoline, in the middle of 2008 before the recession hit hard).

But there is now a growing consensus among energy economists and analysts that as soon as the global recovery gets under way in a serious way that prices will once again skyrocket. The situation is more dire now than before the recession, when prices were much higher, because the recession is leading to cancellation of many projects that would otherwise have gone forward. This means that we're looking at major shortfalls in oil supplies as the global economy gains steam.

While I'm not a supporter of oil as an ongoing source of energy, due to the obvious problems of major spills — with the Gulf of Mexico tragedy as a stark reminder of this ever-present danger — air pollution, energy security and climate change, among other problems, I recognize that we can't transition overnight to alternatives to oil. It is the largest source of our energy and the overwhelmingly dominant fuel source for transportation. It will take decades for a smooth transition to non-petroleum energy sources for transportation, as described in a major report commissioned in 2005 by the Department of Energy from Robert Hirsch and his associates.

As Hirsch writes, if we don't get serious about the transition at least 20 years ahead of a peak in global oil production we are likely to see major problems emerge in the U.S. and abroad.

We are, however, probably at or near the peak now, at least for conventional oil supplies, which are the large majority of our current global production. 2005 was the peak year for conventional oil production thus far. July, 2008, was the peak month, right as the global recession hit (see figure, below). We won't know for some time if these are all-time highs, but they may well be. And if not now, it's likely to be not too far off, as a growing number of analysts are warning.

But haven't people been predicting an impending peak in oil production for decades — and always been proven wrong? Well, some predictions have indeed been proven wrong. This time around, however, we have the major "official" organizations warning stridently of issues with energy security and supplies, which was not previously the case. The International Energy Agency, formed after the oil crises of the 1970s to ensure that that similar crises would never afflict the western nations (OECD), stated in their 2008  World Energy Outlook:

The world's energy system is at a crossroads. Current global trends in energy supply and consumption are patently unsustainable — environmentally, economically, socially. But that can — and must — be altered; there's still time to change the road we're on. It is not an exaggeration to claim that the future of human prosperity depends on how successfully we tackle the two central energy challenges facing us today: securing the supply of reliable and affordable energy; and effecting a rapid transformation to a low-carbon, efficient and environmentally benign system of energy supply. What is needed is nothing short of an energy revolution.

The IEA concluded:

Securing energy supplies and speeding up the transition to a low-carbon energy system both call for radical action by governments — at national and local levels.

In August of 2009, the IEA was even more strident in its warnings. The UK's Independent newspaper reported:

The world is heading for a catastrophic energy crunch that could cripple a global economic recovery because most of the major oil fields in the world have passed their peak production, a leading energy economist has warned.

Higher oil prices brought on by a rapid increase in demand and a stagnation, or even decline, in supply could blow any recovery off course, said Dr Fatih Birol, the chief economist at the respected International Energy Agency (IEA) in Paris, which is charged with the task of assessing future energy supplies by OECD countries.

Later in 2009, two IEA whistleblowers went public and claimed that the situation was even worse than the IEA was stating publicly. The UK's Guardian newspaper reported in November: "A … senior IEA source, who has now left but was … unwilling to give his name, said a key rule at the organization was that it was 'imperative not to anger the Americans' but the fact was that there was not as much oil in the world as has been admitted. 'We have (already) entered the 'peak oil' zone. I think that the situation is really bad,' he added."

So what do we do?

I had the pleasure recently of attending the Heartland Institute's 4th International Conference on Climate Change. This year's topic was "reconsidering the science and economics." This conference is well-known as the "skeptics' conference" on climate change. And indeed it is, with very few speakers or attendees hewing to the mainstream scientific view that climate change is a very serious human-caused problem. I attended, however, because I am a firm believer in dialogue. (In the spirit of full disclosure I was provided a small honorarium to attend). Whether it's international relations, family issues or energy and climate change policy, there is always room for dialogue.

Those now in the scientific mainstream on climate change fought for decades to achieve their mainstream status. And like many mainstream thought trends, there is a reluctance by today's mainstream climate scientists or policymakers to debate issues that they feel have been debated to death and have been resolved sufficiently well to allow for policy choices to be made.

What is clear, however, is that while there is a large majority of scientists and scientific bodies (like the National Academy of Sciences, World Meteorological Association, etc.) that believe that human-caused climate change is a major problem, there is no such consensus with the American public. In fact, the number of Americans who agree that climate change is a major problem has been going backwards in the last couple of years. So to pretend that a majority of the American public agrees with the mainstream scientific views on climate change, and thus to ignore the skeptics is, in my view, highly counter-productive. It is partly this attitude that has led to an erosion of support among the American public for making climate change mitigation a priority in Congress.

I spoke on "Renewable energy and the transformation of America" at the Heartland Institute conference in Chicago. I was not pressured or harassed in any way with respect to my presentation or its contents. I received many good questions after my presentation. My key point in this presentation and in every public presentation I've given over the last five years on these issues has been this: a rapid transition to energy efficiency and renewable energy is desirable and necessary for a number of reasons. Climate change is one of those reasons but we could entirely ignore the climate change debate and still have about ten compelling reasons to make this transition.

I focused on wind power as a good example because it is growing very fast in the U.S. and is currently the most cost-effective renewable energy technology. Wind power has grown over 30% each year in the US in the past decade and about the same globally. I discussed what I call law "Moore's Law in renewable energy" and how we are in the middle of a quiet revolution right now. This is the case because with 30-40% growth rates the installed capacity of wind and solar doubles every two years. It doesn't take long for this doubling effect to yield transformational change. I calculate that at even half this rate of growth through 2030 fully half of all electricity in the U.S. will come from wind and solar power, up from about 3% today.

My final point in Chicago was this: IEA and many others are calling for a revolution in energy to mitigate energy supply and climate change issues. We are in the middle of such a revolution right now and as long as we can "simply" continue the current growth rates of wind, solar, energy efficiency and other renewables we will have a good chance of transitioning away from oil without major problems.

I will end this rather long op-ed on this hopeful note and look forward to further productive dialogue in the future, whatever it holds.

Tam Hunt, J.D., is President of Community Renewable Solutions LLC, a company that develops medium-scale wind, solar and biomass projects. He is also a Lecturer in climate change law and policy at the Bren School of Environmental Science & Management at UC Santa Barbara.

The information and views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on its Web site and other publications.

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Scott's Contracting
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scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Researchers Propose US Offshore Wind Grid

June 15, 2010

The energy needs of the entire human population could potentially be met by converting wind energy to electricity. While offshore wind power resources are abundant, wind turbines are currently unable to provide steady power due to natural fluctuations in wind direction and strength. Offshore wind power output can be made more consistent by choosing project development locations that take advantage of regional weather patterns and by connecting wind power generators with a shared power line, according to a paper by researchers from the University of Delaware and Stony Brook University published in the April 5 issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"Making wind-generated electricity more steady will enable wind power to become a much larger fraction of our electric sources," said the paper's lead author Willett Kempton, UD professor of marine policy in the College of Earth, Ocean, and Environment and director of its Center for Carbon-free Power Integration.

The research team — which also included UD alumnus Felipe Pimenta, UD research faculty member Dana Veron, and Brian Colle, associate professor in the School of Marine and Atmospheric Sciences at Stony Brook University — demonstrated thoughtful design of offshore wind power projects can minimize the impacts of local weather on power fluctuations.

The researchers analyzed five years of wind observations from 11 monitoring stations along the U.S. East Coast from Florida to Maine. Based on wind speeds at each location, they estimated electrical power output from a hypothetical five-megawatt offshore turbine. After analyzing the patterns of wind energy among the stations along the coast, the team explored the seasonal effects on power output.

"Our analysis shows that when transmission systems will carry power from renewable sources, such as wind, they should be designed to consider large-scale meteorology, including the prevailing movement of high- and low-pressure systems," Kempton said.

Colle explained the ideal configuration. "A north-south transmission geometry fits nicely with the storm track that shifts northward or southward along the U.S. East Coast on a weekly or seasonal time scale," he said. "Because then at any one time a high or low pressure system is likely to be producing wind (and thus power) somewhere along the coast."

The researchers found each hypothetical power generation site exhibited the expected ups and downs, but when they simulated a power line connecting them, the overall power output was smoothed so that maximum or minimum output was rare. In the particular five-year period studied, the power output of the simulated grid never completely stopped.

No wind turbines are presently located in U.S. waters, although projects have been proposed off the coasts of several Atlantic states. This research could prove useful as project sites are selected and developed.

Reducing the severity of wind power fluctuations would allow sufficient time for power suppliers to ramp up or down power production from other energy sources as needed. Solutions that reduce power fluctuations also are important if wind is to displace significant amounts of carbon-emitting energy sources, the researchers said.

The University of Delaware, the flagship institution of the state of Delaware, is one of the oldest Land Grant institutions in the nation, and one of only three institutions to also have Sea Grant and Space Grant status. The university is classified by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching as a research university with very high research activity — a designation accorded fewer than 3 percent of U.S. colleges and universities. The university is a state-assisted, privately controlled institution with an enrollment of more than 16,000 undergraduates, 3,500 graduate students and 1,000 professional and continuing study students.

 The information on this page was created and posted by the company identified above. RenewableEnergyWorld.com does not endorse, edit, or substantiate this information and assumes no obligation for this content's accuracy

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Scott's Contracting
314-243-1953
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http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Join in Helping-Put Solar on the White House

 
Dear scotty:
 
Here's news of a campaign that started in the mind of a lone solar blogger, and has blossomed into a full-scale attempt to persuade President Obama to have solar panels installed on the White House roof!
 
The Administration is waiting to see how many people will sign the petition on the web site of the campaign before taking a decision.  Can you be one of those people?
 
Check out the latest on the campaign, and sign the petition,
http://capwiz.com/re-action/go/Globama
 
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Scott's Contracting
314-243-1953
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

6.16.2010

Green News 6/5-11/2010

The Week in Green: June 5-11

A roundup of green building news including a new solar leasing program in Philadelphia and the DOE's clarification on shower systems.

Washington Builders Sue to Stop Green Law
Just days after the Building Industry Association of Washington filed a federal court lawsuit to stop new green regulations for the construction of new homes, Governor Chris Gregoire asked the Washington State Building Code Council (SBCC) to delay implementation of the new energy code for nine months. (King5.com)

Business Leaders Push for More Clean Energy Spending
General Electric Co.'s Jeffrey Immelt and Microsoft Corp.'s Bill Gates called for the U.S. government to more than triple its spending on clean energy research and development to $16 billion a year. (Bloomberg Businessweek)

Report Names 10 Most Costly Appliances
The average U.S. household will spend about $2,160 this year on home energy; here's how the average annual utility bill is broken down by appliance. (walletpop.com)

Energy Star to Improve Efficiency of Water Heaters
Energy Star will tighten their gas storage water heater criteria this fall as news breaks of the increasing price of crude. (Business Review USA)

Delaware's Green Builders to Receive State Incentives      
The Home Builders Association of Delaware and state officials have created a program that offers cash incentives for homes certified to the National Green Building Standard. (NAHB)

California Town to be 85% Powered by Solar
Like many small towns with vast swaths of land, Nipton, on the edge of the Mojave Desert, is turning to renewable energy. (Los Angeles Times)

New Philadelphia Program to Offer Solar Leasing
Homeowners and small businesses would be able to forgo the significant upfront costs associated with buying a solar-energy system and instead make monthly payments of about $120 over the 15-year life of the standard lease. (The Philadelphia Inquirer)

DOE Rule Clarification Could Eliminate Some Multi-Head Shower Systems
Rule interpretation would clarify the term "showerhead," require entire systems to meet 2.5-gpm flow maximums. (EcoHome)

Beazer Adds Solar Leasing Option to Homes in Phoenix
A new option for the builder's eSMART green-home program allows buyers to reap some of the utility-saving benefits of solar power without paying the upfront installation costs. (EcoHome)

HUD Grants to Require LEED for Neighborhood Development
The newly released LEED-ND will be used to score the location efficiency of HUD grant applications. (EcoHome)

Home Star Bill Moves on to Senate
Supporters of the Home Star Energy Retrofit Act of 2010 say the initiative would spur construction activity, grow the energy efficiency retrofit market, and help homeowners. (Custom Home)

Habitat for Humanity's ReStores Get Online Storefronts
Through a unique partnership with a free construction classifieds website, many of Habitat for Humanity's local ReStores—purveyors of new and gently used construction and home improvement materials—have established online storefronts that allow them to reach beyond their local marketplaces to sell products. (Custom Home)

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Scott's Contracting
314-243-1953
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
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scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

June 15 Pres Obama-National Address-Gulf Oil Spill


Dear Scotty,

Last night, President Obama addressed the nation about the Gulf Coast oil spill. He laid out a crucial plan for recovery in the face of this unprecedented environmental disaster, and he called on Americans to seize this moment to end our addiction to fossil fuels and embrace clean energy.

The House of Representatives has already passed comprehensive climate and clean energy legislation. And tomorrow, the Senate Democratic caucus will meet to determine what legislation to push in the wake of the Deepwater Oil Disaster.

The Senate must choose between two paths -- but only one will embrace a clean energy future.

The first path focuses on the short term. It would do what is necessary to stop the leak, hold BP accountable, and hopefully tighten regulations on offshore drilling. But ultimately, it would do nothing to change our addiction to fossil fuels or the dirty energy policies that led to this disaster.

The second path is bolder. We would still prioritize stopping the leak, but rather than being satisfied with a quick fix, we'll finally seize control of our own destiny with comprehensive climate and clean energy legislation. We would create millions of jobs and strengthen our economy. We'd reduce our dependence on foreign oil and make our nation more secure. And we would prevent future environmental disasters by embracing clean, American energy solutions.

When the Senate Democratic Caucus meets tomorrow, they will make this choice for all of America. We know it will be far too easy for Senators to take the easy way out, and we can't let that happen. In the next 24 hours, we have a crucial window to help decide our country's future.

Your Senator will be in this meeting on Thursday and it's essential that he or she hear from you before making a decision. Call your Senator now and ask him or her to seize this opportunity and support comprehensive climate and clean energy legislation.
Call your Senator Now:

Senator McCaskill:
202-224-6154

Report your call here.

Once connected tell him or her:
  • You are a constituent.
  • We must take a bold stand in the wake of the Deepwater Oil Disaster.
  • Only a bill that caps carbon will end our reliance on dangerous, dirty energy.
  • Please, support a comprehensive climate and clean energy bill at the Thursday caucus meeting.
If ever there was a time for our Senators to stand up and end the devastating, dirty energy policies that have weakened our economy, endangered our national security and led to the worst environmental disaster in our nation's history -- this is the time.

But the influence of the oil and coal lobbies in Washington is still overwhelming, and Senators will be tempted to support a band-aid bill that claims to help the Gulf without actually confronting the dirty energy policies that made the Deepwater spill a reality.

This Thursday is decision day. Will the Democratic Caucus push for a new way forward or will they settle for more of the same?

Now is the time to make our voices heard. Call your Senator and ask him or her to support comprehensive climate and clean energy legislation on Thursday.

Report your call.

Our leaders won't rise above the forces of opposition without our help.

Thanks for your work at this crucial moment,

Dave Boundy
Campaign Manager
The Climate Protection Action Fund's Repower America campaign

DONATE
Contributions or gifts to the Climate Protection Action Fund are not tax deductible.

June 15 Pres Obama-National Address-Gulf Oil Spill

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Invitation: June 15 Pres Obama-National Address-Gulf Oil Spill @ Wed Jun 16 4pm - 5pm (scottscontracting.renewableenergy@blogger.com)

June 15 Pres Obama-National Address-Gulf Oil Spill

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6.15.2010

Roof Repair-Foam Insulation-

June  2010

Repairing a Rotting Roof

Reducing indoor humidity was a critical first step.

Repairing a Rotting Roof Reducing indoor humidity was a critical first step by Mark Parlee Water dripping from a skylight during an autumn rainstorm looked like a minor leak. But when the roofer making repairs discovered an unexpectedly large area of saturated OSB sheathing and extremely corroded nails and plywood clips, he called me to take a look. We agreed that this was more than a flashing problem. The roofer and I had worked on the house together 13 years earlier, when it was built. I was the framing contractor; the owners were the GCs. Vaulted ceilings were a key factor... article continued below

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