Archive for November 9th, 2010

How France eclipsed the UK with Brittany tidal success story

Ecologist: The UK may have turned its back on the Severn barrage but across the channel they have been harnessing tidal energy from the River Rance for more than 40 years - and it may yet point to a way forward for smaller-scale renewable projects Although France is rich in many areas, it is very poor in energy resources. The Germans and Spanish have coal, Britain has enjoyed an abundance of oil, gas and coal, the Dutch have gas from the North Sea, and the Swiss enjoy plentiful hydro-electric power. French...

Oil demand to rise during next 25 years

Agence France-Presse: Oil demand and price are set to grow steadily during the next 25 years despite environmental policies, essentially dooming climate-change goals, the International Energy Agency (IEA) forecast on Tuesday. Even under climate change pledges made under the Copenhagen Accord last year, fossil fuels will still account for over half the increase in total energy demand, with oil to remain the dominant fuel, the IEA said in its World Energy Outlook report. It forecasts demand for oil to rise by 18 per...

Ex-CEO says BP was unprepared for oil spill

Associated Press: Former BP PLC chief Tony Hayward has acknowledged that the company was unprepared for the disastrous Gulf of Mexico oil spill and the media frenzy it spawned, and said the firm came close to financial disaster as its credit sources evaporated. In an interview with the BBC to be broadcast Tuesday, Hayward said company's contingency plans were inadequate and "we were making it up day to day." "What was going on was some extraordinary engineering," he said in extracts released in advance by the...

The view from beneath the waves: climate change in the Solomon Islands

Guardian: The smaller outer islands in the Solomon Islands are already seeing devastating impacts of the rising sea level. The impact of climate change is already affecting the rural population of Solomon Islands, an archipelago of eight bigger islands and hundreds of small, mostly uninhabited islands. The ocean is part and parcel of the livelihood of 500,000 people of this country situated just north of Australia. But the ocean is turning against the very people it supposed to serve and is destroying their...

U.S. companies should help drive push toward sustainable palm oil

Mongabay: U.S. companies should take a leadership role in helping ensure that palm oil production is sustainable and does not come at the cost of forests, climate, and communities, argues a new report published ahead of the annual meeting of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO). The report, published by the National Wildlife Federation (NWF), says that while the U.S. is only a minor consumer of palm oil, its demand for the vegetable oil is fast rising, increasing four-fold since 2006. Palm oil, which...

World must act today to boost rice supply: experts

Agence France-Presse: Urgent action is needed to reverse inefficient farming methods and boost the world's supply of rice in order to prevent rising poverty and hunger, experts told a major world rice congress on Tuesday. "We must take action now, not next week, not next month, not next year, but today," Kanayo Nwanze, president of the UN's International Fund for Agricultural Development, told the gathering in Hanoi. Rice is the staple food for more than three billion people, about half the world's population, and...

Canada: Secret Agreement in the Works Between ENGOs and Tar Sands Industry

Montreal Media Co-op: A slew of recent articles have pointed to the likelihood that some foundation-funded environmental groups and the tar sands extraction industry are getting ready to make peace and sign a deal. The precedent, these reports note, has been set with the Canadian Boreal Forest Agreement and the Great Bear Rainforest Agreement. What the media coverage doesn't mention is the actual character of these previous deals, and the unprecedented consolidation of funder influence in the hands of one man that is...