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NNPC, Japan Collaborates on Brass LNG
NNPC, Japan Collaborates on Brass LNG
[Read More]
CBN gives N300bn Intervention Fund to Power, Aviation
CBN gives N300bn Intervention Fund to Power, Aviation
[Read More]
Shell: Oil Pipeline Damage Increasing In Niger Delta Region
Shell: Oil Pipeline Damage Increasing In Niger Delta Region
[Read More]
NIGERIA: Presidency Set to Scrap PHCN
NIGERIA: Presidency Set to Scrap PHCN
[Read More]
AMEC Awards Contract for Young-Davidson Gold Project
AMEC Awards Contract for Young-Davidson Gold Project
[Read More]
Nigeria: PPPRA, Marketers Diverge On Criteria for Fuel Imports
Nigeria: PPPRA, Marketers Diverge On Criteria for Fuel Imports
[Read More]
PPPRA Advises FG to dump deregulation
PPPRA Advises FG to dump deregulation
[Read More]
We Have Stopped Flow of Oil to Gulf - BP Plc
We Have Stopped Flow of Oil to Gulf - BP Plc
[Read More]
AMERICA TO HELP NNPC WITH PIPELINE SURVEILLANCE
AMERICA TO HELP NNPC WITH PIPELINE SURVEILLANCE
[Read More]
FG Pledges Better Power Regulation
FG Pledges Better Power Regulation
[Read More]
EFEF looks at the new UK Government policy on Energy and Climate Change.
EFEF looks at the new UK Government policy on Energy and Climate Change.
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A new Energy Roadmap for the kingdom of Tonga
A new Energy Roadmap for the kingdom of Tonga
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Senator Maeba speaks at the Nigerian Oil & Gas Summit
Senator Maeba speaks at the Nigerian Oil & Gas Summit
[Read More]
GULF SPILL PROMPTS A CHECK IN CANADIAN OIL INDUSTRY
GULF SPILL PROMPTS A CHECK IN CANADIAN OIL INDUSTRY
[Read More]
Nigeria & China Still in Oil talks
Nigeria & China Still in Oil talks
[Read More]
Egypt Signs $2Bn Refinery Deal with China
Egypt Signs $2Bn Refinery Deal with China
[Read More]
An initiative to conserve energy in the human engine.
An initiative to conserve energy in the human engine.
[Read More]
 
 
Oil Reforms: NNPC Opens Talks with Foreign Banks

2010-03-17 00:39:39
China, OPEC & the IEA energy predictions

2010-03-12 22:44:36
Chevron Plans To Sell Refinery

2010-03-10 12:19:23
New Nuclear Power Gets America's Attention

2010-03-03 23:41:55
The transition to Electric Vehicles

2010-02-26 01:37:24
A new phenomenon: Generating Electricity from air!

2010-02-15 13:13:37
NIGERIA:STILL COMBATING FUEL SCARCITY

2010-02-03 23:07:52
COAL POWER OR RENEWABLE ENERGY: An emerging Crisis

2010-01-29 23:12:29
MASDAR : Driving Future Energy Postulations

2010-01-25 12:14:21
Two encounters attempting to decipher alternatives to traditional energy efforts at the World Future Energy Summit.

2010-01-19 21:59:56
The World’s first solar powered aircraft at World Future Energy Summit

2010-01-15 02:00:19
More than 70 companies from Germany have confirmed their participation in the World Future Energy Summit, clearly demonstrating the nation’s strength in renewable energy.

2010-01-13 00:31:07
Copenhagen Summit : Gains Or Losses

2010-01-04 10:51:55
Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. in lawsuit over gas and water contamination

2010-01-02 19:09:56
Oil production to hold steady at the 155th OPEC annual conference

2009-12-22 21:35:21
MEND on the attack again?

2009-12-21 22:48:46
Nigeria: NNPC Stands to Combat Fuel Crisis

2009-12-18 13:28:18
INDIA -" We are interested in sourcing LNG terminals in Africa."

2009-12-10 01:01:05
Nigerian Vessel with stolen Oil seized by the Ghanaian armed forces :

2009-11-30 09:27:32
Federal Government’s decision to end gas flaring, Shell Petroleum Development Company

2009-11-21 00:08:01
Oil& Gas firms operating on the Nigerian

2009-11-15 22:05:51
ESSAR ENERGY TO BUY SHELL REFINERIES

2009-10-31 23:49:09
Nigerian crisis and the Jump in US oil crisis

2009-10-18 19:49:14
How soon will algea become fuel

2009-10-10 00:03:20
NIGER DELTA MILITANTS ACCEPT AMNESTY

2009-10-06 09:07:03
N46bn Debt: PPPRA Awaits Approval To Pay Marketers

2009-09-30 09:10:02
Yar’adua’s amnesty, UN Position and Peace in Niger Delta

2009-09-25 19:11:39
CORRUPTION AS A SNAG TO ELECTRICITY SUPPLY IN NIGERIA.

2009-09-21 16:18:42
Energy & sustainibility

2009-09-15 22:16:58
BP divests Ningbo LPG

2009-09-04 12:48:45
'Sustainability can solve all our energy problems'

2009-08-26 22:39:43
Without oil, does Nigeria have a future?

2009-08-05 18:08:15
The emergence of Nigeria’s largest indigenous drilling contractor

2009-08-04 01:08:13
An unprecedented push by the U.S. government to widen rewards for energy-conscious homeowners is underway.

2009-07-27 08:52:48
Financiers bid to handle Nigeria Power Privatisation

2010-09-01 18:35:58
Shell reopens Shut Flow Stations in Niger Delta

2010-08-30 15:15:25
Nigeria: Govt. Drags Chevron to UN Over Oil Spill

2010-08-18 15:14:39
Allied Energy to Double Electricity Generation Capacity

2010-07-27 21:58:23
Protesting a 2-yr PHCN black-out in Delta State

2010-07-10 12:01:01
New Refineries to Reduce Unemployment – NNPC Chief

2010-07-05 22:23:45
Nigeria Warns Exxon Mobil on Offshore oil Spills

2010-06-16 15:23:36
Reforming The Power Sector

2010-05-28 03:23:48
Nigeria: Tracking Oil Transactions in NNPC

2010-05-24 19:30:22
NNPC Fully Supports Deregulation

2010-04-24 16:54:19
MOHAMMED BARKINDO EXPLAINS 6,000 MEGAWATTS FAILURE

2010-03-30 17:46:13
DAMAGE BY NIGERIA's OIL BILL MAY BE Hard To FIX

2010-03-24 18:01:01
NIGERIA: fuesl AT last

2010-02-10 19:27:29
Nigeria To Sell Off Rights To Oil fields

2010-02-03 19:22:53
India To Invest in Nigeria's Oil Blocks

2010-01-24 00:34:26
Nigeria exceeds OPEC Target

2010-01-04 21:23:41
Niger Delta - Amnesty on Shaky Ground

2009-12-26 13:59:02
NNPC REPAIR NIGER DELTA PIPELINES

2009-12-05 23:17:19
Updates in Niger Delta

2009-11-01 14:03:09
MEND VOWS TO RESUME ATTACKS DESPITE AMNESTY

2009-10-09 23:58:06
MEND NAMES MEDIATION TEAM

2009-10-02 13:40:19
Nigeria Cease fire and Nigeria Government readiness

2009-09-15 22:08:47
Technology at increasing oil production in Nigeria underway.

2009-08-25 00:46:53
Multinationals Oil firms criticize government’s decision to legislate CSR

2009-08-17 20:19:54
ExxonMobil says it has invested $3.7b in research and development in the last 5 years

2009-08-13 00:53:17
Civil society group makes a statement the on low standards of living of communities in the Niger Delta

2009-08-07 00:17:47
Fate of Petroleum Bill hanging

2009-08-05 19:21:55
World Bank Lends Tanzania $150 mln for Power Transmission

2010-09-01 18:30:41
Ethiopian government, EIB Stop Cooperation on Gibe III Hydro Project

2010-08-13 23:12:23
Fire destroys 110 Megawatts Thermal Power Plant in Ghana

2010-07-19 20:03:36
Regional Leaders Endorse New Initiative To Improve Solar Energy

2010-07-08 12:09:41
'REDUCE POWER CONSUMPTION' - Dipuo Peters

2010-06-18 11:27:58
Solar is a System With Many Benefits- Zuma

2010-04-29 14:04:16
UNEP CALLS FOR CAUTION ON POWER PROJECT

2010-03-23 11:53:36
UGANDA: "IT's Time TO Take Energy Seriously"

2010-02-15 17:31:38
Zimbabwe Welcomes Power Project Investors

2010-02-11 18:05:40
Climate Change Increases The Risk Of Malaria

2010-01-03 01:22:33
Iran & Russian establish a joint venture as Russian gets invited to OPEC conference in Angola

2009-12-03 00:27:08
Angola considers Norwegian-style wealth fund

2009-11-28 21:56:10
Sonangol and Petrobras Hit Oil in Deepwater Angolan Well

2009-11-18 10:58:00
Kenya and France agree $168.8 million in energy funding

2009-10-23 20:27:51
Uganda - "We Welcome China..."

2009-10-04 12:11:47
Angola begins LNG production by 2012

2009-10-02 13:42:15
Corruption undermines Libya's oil-rich economy

2009-09-04 12:46:09
Ghana proffers measures to improve Nigeria’s power sector

2009-08-25 00:52:47
South Africa seen as renewable growth area

2009-08-19 19:49:49
Halliburton to keep up fluid services for Total in Angola

2009-08-19 19:48:36
ExxonMobil Starts Drilling Libya''s First Deepwater Well

2009-08-13 00:59:11
Chevron Announces Significant Discovery Offshore AngolaChevron Announces Significant Discovery Offshore Angola

2009-08-13 00:58:34
Ghanaian government approves phase one of Jubilee

2009-08-13 00:56:39
Africa going green: report

2009-08-09 23:02:37
The Ministry gives PA Resources the nod for Aseng oil field project

2009-08-04 01:10:42
Expro awarded subsea contract on Ghana's first deepwater field development

2009-08-04 01:09:54
Saipem wins new offshore contracts worth $ 650 million

2009-08-04 01:09:15
EnerGulf provides updates on Namibia Block 1711

2009-07-27 08:56:41
Rocksource to drill the “low-risk” Cheval in Senegal

2009-07-27 08:53:50
 

'Sustainability can solve all our energy problems'
The more I probe the hardest questions about the future of energy and our best shot at sustainability, the more I am convinced that the real questions are not about technology, but about human nature.

We have all the technology we need to make homes that produce their own energy. We know how to build high-efficiency rail and sailing ships. We know how to grow food organically and sustainably. We have the science to create economic systems that internalize all effects and operate in a beneficial manner. We’ve had the quantitative knowledge for decades that we would eventually go into resource and environmental overshoot.

We certainly have the technology to build an all-electric infrastructure entirely powered by renewables. We will crack the storage problem and all the other technical problems. I have no doubt that the technology also exists to build an all-nuclear solution, or even an all-hydrogen solution.

We have the technology to recycle all our water and reclaim all our waste. We could even control our population if we had the will. We also know what real sustainability means. I don’t think I have ever seen it better put than by Paul Hawken in his book, The Ecology of Commerce:

Sustainability is an economic state where the demands placed upon the environment by people and commerce can be met without reducing the capacity of the environment to provide for future generations. It can also be expressed in the simple terms of an economic golden rule for the restorative economy: Leave the world better than you found it, take no more than you need, try not to harm life or the environment, make amends if you do.

The real problem is we don’t want to act that way. Virtually no business in existence meets that standard.

Technology and knowledge simply aren’t the issue.

We don’t want to think about having to put CO2 back in the ground after we burn fuels. We don’t want to worry about the waste from our consumption. We don’t like to hear about limits to anything we want to do. We don’t want to rearrange our stuff, our lifestyles, so that they are truly sustainable. And we certainly don’t like anybody telling us we can’t have more kids.

In fact we don’t even like to think about it, so when the subject comes up, we dismiss it with a flip comment like, “So I suppose you want us all to be living in caves and working by candlelight?”

The upwelling of emotions that this topic inspires—especially fear—usually makes a neutral and scientific discussion out of the question.

And from fear, most people leap to faith: faith in the perfect wisdom of free markets, faith in technology, faith in human ingenuity. No rational discussion needed.

Nor is this aspect of human nature a news flash. ‘Twas ever so. At the suggestion of a smart hedge fund manager buddy, I recently put Thucydides’ history of the Peloponnesian War in my reading queue for clues on how humanity actually performs when presented with serious fiscal and resource challenges.

I know some very smart people who are fully armed with the data on resource depletion and peak oil, and who still choose to believe in a cornucopian future where humanity acts wisely, humanely, justly, and in concert with a view toward long-term planning, solving all of our problems without any serious hardship.

This time, they contend, it will be different. After all, aren’t we entering the Age of Aquarius, when humanity finally embraces unity and understanding?

Well, forgive me for being skeptical. The degree of cooperation they envisage has no precedent whatsoever in human history, and there are thousands of examples to the contrary.

In fact I was a bit shocked today when I looked back on my first opus on sustainability (”Envisioning a Sustainable Future“), published in my online magazine Better World 13 years ago, and realized that all of the problems are the same now as they were then, only worse: population, energy, water, extinction, environmental destruction, flawed economic theory, global warming, and humanity’s problem with long-term planning.

It gave me pause. A long pause. Are all my efforts, and those of my fellow agitators for sustainability, simply battling human nature? And if so, what good is it?

Tantalizing Technologies and Hard Questions At this point, 13 years later, the questions are even less tangible: How will people respond to the coming changes? Can the political support for truly sustainable solutions be marshaled? Will the economy hold out long enough to accomplish the transformation? And how will declining energy supply impede our efforts?

Certainly, in theory, we could replace 220 million light ICE cars and trucks with electric models, and heavy transport trucks with a combination of biofuels, natural gas, and hydraulic storage technologies. The technology exists. But will we have the investment and primary energy supply to build them, if we simply let the market and politics guide us?

Consider “Cash for Clunkers.” Using data and estimates from the New York Times, I calculate that the program pays off in nine years at $70 oil, and in five years at $120 oil. In terms of effective investment in the future, that’s really not too bad. (The photovoltaic systems I designed and sold in my previous career typically paid off in more like 20 years, before incentives.)

Even so, Cash for Clunkers was reviled for swapping out over a quarter-million cars for more efficient ones at a mere cost of $1 billion. What are the chances we’ll have the political support to do 220 million vehicles that way? Especially if oil gets more expensive and we start having shortages and more heavy industry failures when oil goes into decline a mere two years from now?

Sure, we can run airplanes on “renewable” synthetic diesel fuel made from green waste such as yard clippings, and early investors in such technologies will make a bundle. Rentech’s (AMEX: RTK) recent announcement that it had signed a deal to provide as much as 1.5 million gallons per year of the stuff to eight major airlines sent the stock soaring over 360% in two weeks.

But 1.5 million gallons per year is nothing, and thanks to the transport and handling cost of green waste, it doesn’t scale. If it requires transporting massive amounts of the feedstock with diesel-powered trucks, it isn’t sustainable either. Need we even discuss recycled fryer oil?

Similar problems bedevil the alcohol fuels and biofuels, including algae. There are many interesting approaches to both in the lab, but for a long list of reasons (including water availability and the net energy of the processes), they don’t scale well. I don’t see any of the biofuels making more than a 50% gain from their current paltry levels for a good many years yet — and then we’ll be having so many other problems with energy, water, food, and the economy, that the long-term outlook gets very murky.

Sure, we can try to turn to Canada’s tar sands and deepwater heavy oil as the good cheap stuff runs out, but a cursory look at their net energy tells us that doing so is an attempt to play the oil game into overtime, not an attempt to do something sustainable. Thinking otherwise is simply denial.

A straightforward analysis of the data suggest that once we take peak oil, peak gas, and peak coal into account, there may not be enough time left to use cheap fossil fuels for the decades it would take to accomplish a transformation to true sustainability, let alone the human will to do it. And the experience of the last year gives me no confidence at all that the world can smoothly transit this inflection point in economics.

Yet I want to foster inspiration, not desperation. For most people, hope is as essential to survival as food, water, and air. And there is hope — not for business as usual, but for a much better kind of business. Not for endless growth, but for a more sustainable future.

But I am not one for false hope. I have endeavored to bring a dose of realism to this column for three years now, and I will soldier on. The opportunities to create sustainable solutions and profit from them are probably greater now than they have ever been. It’s our task to find them, promote them, invest in them. . . and beyond that, hope for the best.
 
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