lørdag 4. juli 2009

Chris Nelder om fremtiden


The Seven Ways To Solve The Energy Problem (Business Insider)

Også publisert som How to Navigate Peak Fossil Fuels. . .And Profit (Energy and Capital)

Strålende oppsummering av situasjonen:

By the end of this century then, a mere 90 years from now, we'll need to have an infrastructure that runs exclusively on renewably generated electricity, biofuels, and possibly nuclear energy. That's where we're going.

Fortunately, there is more than enough available renewable energy to meet all of our needs, if we can harness it. Unfortunately, we're starting from a point at which less than 2% of the world's energy comes from renewables like wind, solar and geothermal.

Hydro provides about 6%, and nuclear about 6%, but for reasons too numerous to get into here, some of which my longtime readers have already heard, I don't believe either source will increase much in the future, and both could actually decline.

Our challenge then is to make that 2% fraction grow to replace about 86% of the world's current primary energy, in 90 years or less.

We are currently at peak oil, a short, roughly 5-year plateau which goes into terminal decline around 2012. All fossil fuel energy combined peaks around 2018, less than a decade from now.

All strategies for accommodating the fossil fuel decline require decades to have any significant effect. The now-iconic study "Peaking of World Oil Production: Impacts, Mitigation, & Risk Management" (Hirsch et al., 2005) demonstrated that it would take at least 20 years of intensive, crash-program mitigation efforts to meet the peak oil challenge gracefully. Another study, "Primary Energy Substitution Models: On the Interaction between Energy and Society," (C. Marchetti, 1977) showed that it generally takes decades to substitute one form of primary energy for another, and 100 years for a given source of energy to achieve 50% market penetration.

[...]

The final and most important factor is population. The few population models that actually take fossil fuel depletion into account assume that global population increases roughly out to the global fuel peak, and then stabilizes at that level or declines naturally while economic development promotes lower fertility rates and renewables and energy efficiency increase to fill the gap of declining fossil energy. I understand why this assumption is made—because the alternative is too ghastly to contemplate—and for the immediate purpose of this article I will go along with it. I will note however that history and scientific observation of populations suggest some sharp episodes of decline are more likely, and in my estimation we will end this century with a considerably smaller population than anyone forecasts, at some level well below today's.


Jeg er veldig, veldig glad for at jeg bor i Norge, som dekker kanskje 40% av energibehovet sitt med vannkraft (og ved ta enkle grep - som å forby "snømåking" vha varmekabler i oppkjørselen - kan redusere energi"behovet" betraktelig), som har rikelig med ferskvann, som er langt mindre overbefolket enn de fleste andre steder på kloden, som har en distrikspolitikk som i lys av PO framstår som clairvoyant, som faktisk bevilger penger til bygging av toglinjer og vindparker til havs... (Ja, det er vindparkene som skal bygges til havs, ikke toglinjene, altså).

Norge, kjempers fødeland!

Peak Oil er hard kost for sarte sjeler


Bugging Out (The Monthly)

Simon taught himself to read at the age of two. At ten, he could explain the sub-atomic workings of a semi-conductor. Later, his work in physics won him a university medal: "I discovered two new star nebulae. Very minor ones." But he was already disillusioned by the academy, because "a scientist is someone who finds out more and more about less and less, until they know everything about nothing." After September 11, he began to read about the theory of peak oil. He was compelled by the idea that vast population growth has relied on cheap oil and that vast populations will use all the oil, or at least make it very expensive, resulting in massive, rapid population decline. After a great deal of reading and thought, he could find no way around this impasse.

"The attraction of civilisation fits so many of the characteristics of addiction," he says. "It has appeal. It has immediate benefit and gratification. It has hidden costs. My mistake was trying to quit civilisation cold turkey."

[...]

But what finally sealed Simon's conviction was the fact that his beliefs seemed to trigger a personal cataclysm. Soon after he found out about peak-oil theory, he collapsed at a local swimming pool. He collapsed again at his computer. A terrible, gnawing pain took hold of his gut; he lost 20 kilograms in three weeks; his right hand swelled so much that he had to learn to write with his left, one of the few skills he was able to learn after the onset of the illness. Simon was diagnosed with fibromyalgia, which is thought to be psychogenic, perhaps a demonstration of the mind's awesome ability to wreak havoc on the body.

fredag 3. juli 2009

Verdens matforsyning II

Et par interessante artikler:

Whatever happened to the food crisis?
(The Economist)

At the moment, the world’s population is 6.7 billion and 750m people are born each year. Though the rate of increase is declining, inertia means the total will go on rising until 2050, when the population will reach 9 billion. In Ethiopia, for example, 18m children are born every year, rising to 24m a year by 2040. That will double its headcount from 80m to 160m.

The FAO reckons that, to keep pace, the amount of food available in developing countries will have to double by 2050, equivalent to a 70% rise in world food production. If that does not happen, fears Joachim von Braun, the head of the International Food Policy Research Institute in Washington, DC, there could be a return to the food conflicts of 2007-08 which caused riots in more than 60 countries and set off a controversial worldwide land grab—a rush by rich food-importers to buy swathes of Africa and South-East Asia on which to grow food. Even if the rise in output comes about but in the “wrong” way, there could be problems, since water in some areas is growing scarce and increasing food output will make it scarcer.

[...]

Almost all the increase in cereals output in 2008 came from rich countries: the harvest in those nations increased 11%. In developing countries, the rise was a mere 1%; if you exclude China, India and Brazil, grain output in poor countries actually fell. So while the costs of the food crisis bore heavily upon the poor, the benefits accrued more to farmers in industrialised countries. And nowhere were there signs that yields (output per acre) were rising. Harvests increased because farmers took more land under the plough.

The European Union shelved a programme that had obliged farmers to leave 10% of their land fallow; China scrapped a scheme that had allowed marginal arable to return to woodland. Both these actions boosted the amount of farmland. This was not bad in itself, and it was the quickest way to boost output. But it is only a first step. World food production cannot be increased by 70% just by increasing acreage: there is simply not enough unused land to go around.


Airdale på TOD kommenterer:

Corn futures have been dropping like a rock...

Sept corn was way down...this is going to be a very very interesting crop year.

The USDA gave corn reports on acreage that had no corn even planted on it as yet and so the market responded by dropping.

Illinois and Indiana hadn't even planted due to spring rains and the report came out..I think they are making this shit up out of thin air.

Most corn farmers are really pissed now.


Agriculture and Food in Crisis
(Monthly Review)

What are the prospects for the future? Are they really as dire as Lester Brown suggests? As we write this, a severe recession has set in around the world — deep and, perhaps, long lasting. It has already resulted in much more hunger and food insecurity in the United States and many other countries. How much worse can things get? Probably quite a bit, is the unfortunate answer

Jernbanetrøbbel i Storbritannia

Jeg har vel nevnt før at jeg er motstander av å privatisere infrastruktur...
 
I påvente av en lengre post om emnet:
 
 
"It is simply unacceptable to reap the benefits of contracts when times are good, only to walk away from them when times become more challenging," said [transport secretary, Lord] Adonis.
 
 
Uakseptabelt ja, men også svært forutsigbart.
 
Privatisering av profitt og sosialisering av kostnader kalles det
 

Sykling forbundet med lav bentetthet

 
 
 
A study published in March, for instance, that compared the bone densities of weight lifters, runners, and cyclists found that the cyclists had lower bone mineral density than the runners or the weight lifters. In another study, triathletes added moderately to their bone mass over the course of a season.

Cycling, unlike running or weight-lifting, causes little impact to skeletons. Bones react to external stresses by strengthening bone. [...]  From their studies they have found that body mass is a central factor. In Smathers' study, the lightest riders had the lowest bone density. In addition, many serious riders burn more calories in a day than they consume, an energy imbalance that is being studied to determine its impact on bone loss. And sweat could play a role. A rider can lose hundreds of milligrams of calcium an hour through sweat.

Slankepresset i sykkelsporten er jo nesten like legendarisk som i hopp...
 

torsdag 2. juli 2009

Personlighet



Snublet over Myers-Briggs personlighetsklassifisering.

Jeg er definitivt Introvert (ikke ekstravert), og definitivt Perceiving (ikke Judging). Jeg er også Thinking mer enn Feeling.

Litt mer tvil om jeg skal kalle meg Sensing eller iNtuiting... men jeg ligger og vipper mellom INTP (dvs. Introvert, iNtuitive, Thinking, Percieving) og ISTP, det er klart.

Disse karakteristikkene synes jeg er treffende:

INTPs organize their understanding of any topic by articulating principles, and they are especially drawn to theoretical constructs. Having articulated these principles for themselves, they can demonstrate remarkable skill in explaining complex ideas to others in simple terms, especially in writing. On the other hand, their ability to grasp complexity may also lead them to provide overly detailed explanations of "simple" ideas, and listeners may judge that the INTP makes things more difficult than they are. To the INTP, however, this is incomprehensible: They are merely presenting all the information.

Given their independent nature, INTPs may prefer working alone to leading or following in a group. During interactions with others, if INTPs are focused on gathering information, they may seem oblivious, aloof, or even rebellious—when in fact they are concentrating on listening and understanding. However, INTPs' extraverted intuition often gives them a quick wit, especially with language. They may defuse tension through comical observations and references. (fra Wikipedia-artikkelen linket over)


Eller hva med:
It is difficult for an Architect to listen to nonsense, even in a casual conversation, without pointing out the speaker's error. [...] Architects regard all discussions as a search for understanding, and believe their function is to eliminate inconsistencies, which can make communication with them an uncomfortable experience for many.

Ruthless pragmatists about ideas, and insatiably curious, Architects are driven to find the most efficient means to their ends, and they will learn in any manner and degree they can. They will listen to amateurs if their ideas are useful, and will ignore the experts if theirs are not. Authority derived from office, credential, or celebrity does not impress them. Architects are interested only in what make sense
(hentet herfra)



Spot on... jeg klarer for eksempel ikke se på TV-nyheter, jeg begynner å kjefte på oppleseren: "Tøys! Tror du på det du selv sier?!?"... Og jeg har alltid sett på diskusjoner som en leting etter forståelse, men har smertelig erfart at det ikke er vanlig, at mange (de fleste?) ser på diskusjoner som konkurranser, dominansspill... Og samboeren min spacer alltid ut når jeg prøver å forklare noe... "Du forteller så vanskelig!" Hæ? Jeg bare presenterer all (den relevante) informasjonen!...


Men på den andre siden,

[ISTPs] can be closet daredevils who gravitate toward fast-moving or risky hobbies (such as bungee jumping, hang gliding, racing, motorcycling, and parachuting), recreational sports (such as downhill skiing, paintball, ice hockey, and scuba diving


Skal vi se... Har spilt ishockey, gikk dykkelinje på folkehøyskole... Drevet med triatlon... padler kajakk...

Men alt i alt er jeg nok mer N enn S.

---

Tar vi egentlig dette seriøst?

I et annet kjent klassifiseringssystem er jeg Slangebærer.

onsdag 1. juli 2009

Bra om elbiler


 

What will the electric car look like in 2015? It will weigh around 1,000 kilograms. It will have a drag coefficient of 0.34, and its 40-kilowatt motor will be capable of speeds up to 120 kilometers per hour. In Germany today, the average distance covered each day by 90 percent of cars is under 80 kilometers. According to recent surveys, however, drivers want the electric car to have a minimum range of 200 kilometers. To make this possible, our electric car needs a battery with a capacity of 35-kilowatt hours.

Based on the technology we expect to be available in 2015, this battery will weigh 250 kilograms and cost around 12,000 euros, or 350 euros per kilowatt hour [US$495/kWh]. Depending on the design of the electric vehicle—how heavy it is, for example—and depending on how the lithium-ion battery develops, the cost of the battery may be slightly lower, at around 8,000 euros.

—Wolf-Henning Scheider