The Economics of Climate Change Mitigation: Policies and Options for Global Action Beyond 2012

4:16 PM Reporter: Baris Sanli 0 Responses
Against the background of a projected doubling of world greenhouse gas emissions by mid-century, this book explores feasible ways to abate them at least cost. Through quantitative analysis, it addresses key climate policy issues:
What would an ideal set of climate policy tools look like?
How large are the economic and environmental costs of incomplete country or sector coverage of climate change mitigation policies? What are the pros and cons of policy tools to broaden that coverage, such as international sector-wide agreements or border-tax adjustments? What are the main challenges in incorporating a mechanism to reduce emissions from deforestation and forest degradation?
How can we concretely develop a global carbon market?
What is the case for, and what can we reasonably expect from, R&D and technology support policies?
How great are the incentives for major emitting countries to join a climate change mitigation agreement, in terms of the costs and benefits (including the co-benefits from reduced local air pollution and improved energy security) of action? How can they be enhanced? How can international transfers of resources and technologies broaden support for action?

http://www.oecd.org/document/56/0,3343,en_2649_34361_43705336_1_1_1_1,00.html

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Alternative Energy Myths

5:18 PM Reporter: Baris Sanli 0 Responses
  • it would take more than 400 years of biodiesel use to "pay back" the carbon emitted by directly clearing peat for palm oil
  • The grain it takes to fill an SUV tank with ethanol could feed a hungry person for a year;
  • first new U.S. reactor is only scheduled for 2017
  • average U.S. household now has 26 plug-in devices
  • Only 4 percent of the energy used to power a typical incandescent bulb produces light; the rest is wasted
  • China is expected to build more square feet of real estate in the next 15 years than the United States has built in its entire history, and it has no green building codes or green building experience.
  • modern American refrigerators use three times less energy than 1970s models

    Baris's note : such a shame : "we can subtract a coal-fired megawatt every time we add a wind-powered megawatt". Coal works 6500-7000 hours/year, where wind hardly sees 3000 hours/year. It's capacity factor!

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/08/12/seven_myths_about_alternative_energy?page=full

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A series of articles regarding oil reserves and prices

4:52 PM Reporter: Baris Sanli 0 Responses
Matthew Simmons' article is the most visited in FP's web site for a couple of days. Before reading his article, as he suggests, check the links in this paragraph:
"The four pieces were Pulitzer Prize-winning author Daniel Yergin's seven-page article in Foreign Policy, energy analyst Michael Lynch's three column op-ed in the New York Times, analyst Edward Morse's essay in Foreign Affairs, and scholar Amy Jaffe's paper published by the Baker Institute at Rice University." http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/09/04/oil_spin?page=0,0

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Lies, Damn Lies and Chinese Lies

9:46 AM Reporter: Baris Sanli 0 Responses
Pretty interesting piece to read:
China's economy grew at an annualized 6.1 percent rate in the first quarter, and
7.9 percent in the second. Yet electricity usage, a key indicator in industrial
growth and a harder metric to manipulate, declined 2.2 percent in the first six
months of the year.

Ref:
http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2009/09/03/how_china_cooks_its_books?page=0,1

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Energy Industry Photos

2:55 PM Reporter: Baris Sanli 0 Responses

There are really good energy photos at this link. Especially the blowouts



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Wireless Electricity Transmission

3:34 PM Reporter: Baris Sanli 0 Responses
A professor fed up with his wife's phone beeping for low battery came up with this idea, which is not very complex. It is charging by induction I guess. But there is a video and pdf file to see.
Video: http://www.ted.com/talks/eric_giler_demos_wireless_electricity.html?CNN=YES
PDF: http://www.witricity.com/pdfs/4.0_home_news_2008_03-04.pdf

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