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Drumbeat: December 22, 2009
11 hours ago ago from The Oil Drum - Discussions about Energy and Our Future
Energy 2.0: What Comes From After Oil What happens after the world hits peak oil and prices skyrocket? Or when coal pushes the carbon count in the atmosphere into the danger zone? Soylent Green might turn out to be more prophetic than you thought. But, luckily, entrepreneurs are devising new ways to produce energy even beyond solar and wind. Here are some of the more intriguing and far out ones. Iran: Border spat with Iraq was ...
Related contentOil demand will grow 1.5% yearly: Al-Falih
17 hours ago ago from Doc's Talk
http://www.saudigazette.com.sa/index.cfm?method=home.regcon =2009122257767 JEDDAH - Global energy demand will increase 40 percent by 2030, Saudi Aramco President and CEO Khalid A. Al-Falih said during a recent visit to its markets in Asia. “The developing economics of the world are at the heart of the International Energy Agency’s forecast that the world’s primary energy demand will increase,” he said, noting that the forecast projects ...
Related contentThe Coming Green Sprawl
9 hours ago ago from Enterprise Irregulars
A research paper published by the Nature Conservancy is warning of expanded reliance renewable energy leading to a new phenomenon called “green sprawl”. While not critical of renewable energy development the paper’s authors point out that there is another side of the coin to consider as these less efficient means of producing energy resources requires devoting more physical space to accomplish it in. The stated shift in U.S. energy ...
Related content456% Renewable!
20 hours ago ago from DIY HOME ENERGY
In the U.S., we have an abundance of natural resources that we can use to reach 100% renewable energy, although many still insist we will continue to need coal, nuclear, oil, and gas. Why? Our rene
Related contentPalm oil millers can help solve Sabah power shortage
15 hours ago ago from MY palm oil
SABAH'S power shortage can be mitigated if the government provides better incentives for palm oil millers to generate renewable energy. There are 410 palm oil mills in the country, of which 117 are in Sabah. Mills emit methane from retention ponds after oil extraction. "Estate owners can trap methane from the mill sludge to fuel up steam turbines and generate electricity, a renewable source of clean energy," said Malaysian Palm Oil Board ...
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