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Nuclear Power Offshore Drilling May Keep Oil Prices Artificially High

October 20, 2011 :: The Editors :: No Comment Yet

With gasoline prices at record highs in 2008, 2009 and 2010, 2011 has looked like a microcosm of the longer oil-market trend: consistent increases in pricing, fuel costs hurting small business and the middle class, slowing the pace of economic growth in the US, and—maybe most strangely of all—no national policy to motivate a rapid, [...]

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Saturation vs. Scalability: Old & Costly vs. Clean & Efficient

September 13, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Saturation means more of a given ingredient cannot be added to a given volume or fabric of activity, without spilling over, and being wasted. The fossil fuels market is saturated, in the sense that it cannot effectively capitalize on major new production investment without major new construction of productive facilities. The industry has effectively pushed prices higher and cannot reduce them without seeing a dropoff in profits. Most people can no longer afford the fuel they used to consume.

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Roadmap for Solving the Debt Crisis & Restoring the Middle Class

August 13, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

The debt crisis is attributable to “structural” causes, meaning the way the nation’s financing is structured over the next several decades, but also to political and economic causes, meaning the way we make policy and the way our marketplace for trade, credit and consumer purchases plays out. We need to implement policies that make serious, sustainable corrections on all three fronts.

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We Need 100% Not-for-profit Cooperative Bond Rating Agencies

August 8, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

With the objectivity and commitment to fact of S&P now seriously in question, and allegations now revived that it and other rating agencies were paid to give AAA ratings to junk securities derivatives, it is clear that we need a 100% not-for-profit (NFP) cooperative bond rating agency. The independent NFP agency could be one of several, staffed by top economists, stakeholders and public servants, and standing somewhere between the public and the private sectors.

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The Road from Mokha to Sanaa

August 1, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Yemen may be where the Arab spring, this sweeping current of democratic upheaval in the Arabic-speaking world, takes a turn definitively toward violence or toward civic solutions. The regime of Ali Abdullah Saleh, a tribal dictatorship using feudal power tactics, based in the capital Sanaa, is now waging one war against extremist Islamists and another against non-violent pro-democracy protesters.

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21st Century Business Needs to Learn to Deal with Uncertainty

July 23, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

It is a virtual mantra in the universe of political analysis that “business doesn’t like uncertainty”, and it is true that declining consumer spending, increasing fuel costs, squeeze profits and that in some cases, businesses worry about changes to the regulations they must follow. But uncertainty is the nature of an evolving global economy, and with the accelerating pace of innovation, doing any business well is going to require dealing intelligently with uncertainty.

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Borders Closure is Green Light for Bookstore Innovation

July 21, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Borders Books and Music was a place of pilgrimage for book lovers, music lovers and people who loved to sit with coffee and read, chat or peruse magazines they might or might not buy. It has played a vital role in the distribution of books of both wide and narrow market interest, and has driven the cathedral-warehouse paradigm of big bookstore chains. Its failure, however, opens the field for more innovative, more reader-friendly experiments in book selling.

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Health & Fitness Benefits Expand Generative Potential of Businesses

July 6, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Generative economics is rooted in a simple insight: that economic activities can have corrosive or generative impacts on future available resources. The dynamics of an economic environment can add another layer of corrosive or generative potential to the activities in question. Analysis can be subtle, however, because generative qualities are often not the focus of conventional thinking or play out over the long term.

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Moving Minds with Citizen-Centered Non-partisan Discourse

June 26, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Citizens Climate Lobby is an international non-partisan, non-profit volunteer organization, working to build political will for a livable world. To do that, they aim to find an ideologically neutral, democratically viable, market-focused way to reduce the amount of carbon trapped in Earth’s atmosphere and speed the transition to clean, renewable fuels. I am proud to be a member of the organization, and one who is inspired by the passion of its volunteers and fortunate to count so many good friends among its partners.

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U.S. Food Crisis: Until We End Poverty, We Are Not Free

November 2, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The United States of America is the “wealthiest country in the history of the world”. We hear this repeated so often, it’s almost as if it has become the national slogan. Economists tend to agree that it’s the truth, but that wealth is relative: tens of millions of Americans live in abject poverty, unable to obtain basic sustenance, medical care, adequate education or even basic public safety. One in five children in the United States now live in poverty. Among African American and Hispanic children, the rate is 30 percent.

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The Buckminster Fuller Challenge: Design to Serve Humanity

July 17, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Buckminster Fuller was one of the 20th century’s most visionary architects, whose philosophy of socially responsible planning and design has influenced cutting-edge technology research and public policy the world over, through the UN’s development programs and pioneering entrepreneurship aimed at lifting billions out of poverty. His vision was, in his own words, “To make the world work for 100% of humanity in the shortest possible time through spontaneous cooperation without ecological offense or the disadvantage of anyone.”

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Black Swan Blow-out Means We Can Now Estimate Real Cost of Oil (discussion)

June 10, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The blow-out (explosion and collapse) of the Deepwater Horizon drilling rig and the well 5,000 feet below has brought into high contrast a serious problem inherent in the way we produce energy: we have long refused to calculate the real costs of extracting fossil fuels. Ecological economics is founded on this point: we should calculate the value of the natural ecosystem services disrupted by the after-effects of carbon emissions.

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Modern Slave Labor: How to Win Justice for Migrant Workers

May 28, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

In Florida and elsewhere, migrant workers who do not enjoy the legal protections that come with legal paperwork are easily subjected to abuses, near zero pay and even violence. Conditions on some farms amount to slavery, and the US Justice Department has prosecuted at least 7 such farms in the last decade.

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Financial Regulatory Reform: Sharing the Best Ideas

April 17, 2010 :: staff :: Comments Off

How can the Obama administration’s proposed financial regulatory reforms do the best work of preventing the fictionalization of wealth through abstract, unregulated derivatives trading, while allowing the freedom for the private sector to innovate, negotiate and invest boldly and responsibly?

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Copenhagen Accord Gives No Guarantees, but Could Drive More Ambitious Targets

January 8, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

After decades of environmental scientists seeking to raise awareness about the detrimental impacts of burning ever more carbon-based fuels, the Copenhagen Accord shows a global willingness to recognize the gravity of the issue and to take concrete —if as yet unnamed— policy actions to address the challenges of coming decades.

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On the Profitability of Investments in Energy Sector (discussion)

November 19, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

If we’re looking at a rise in overall global energy consumption as an “opportunity”, we should class all particulars of the debate in terms of the long-term viability of the energy resource to be exploited. While carbon-based commodities may see steep returns in the short term, heavy front-end investment in carbon-based fuels will reduce the long-term viability of those commodities as business models, thus curving down the benefit over time.

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Are Financial Exotics a Long-term Risk to the US Economy? (discussion)

September 6, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

In the wake of last year’s collapse of American credit markets, and the contagion of financial sclerosis to markets around the world, Wall Street’s major banks, which took tens of billions of dollars in taxpayer bailout money, may again be looking to securitize fixed-asset financial products.

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Fuel Efficiency: Hybrid, Electric, Solar or ‘Exotics’ (discussion)

August 15, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The quest for the most fuel-efficient vehicles has entered a new phase, with major government private-sector investment in research and development for industrial-scale commercial production of a new class of gas-electric hybrid vehicles and EVs (all-electric cars). Swiss-based Solar Impulse is building the world’s first 100% solar-powered airplane, an achievement that will revolutionize the travel, industrial production, transport and fuel sectors.

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Green Vehicles for Public Services: Potential Watershed for Clean Fuel Economy

July 29, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

One day, recently, I saw a fire-engine, crawling its way through a stop light, sirens blaring, hulking its way to provide the noble service of putting out someone’s fire or performing some other rescue operation. It was pouring a dark grey exhaust from one side, looking shiny new and well cared for, but obviously lacking advanced exhaust filtering or clean-energy drive technologies.

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UK Announces Plan for 40% Low-carbon Energy by 2020

July 16, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

The Labour party government of the United Kingdom has announced plans to establish an aggressive overhaul of national energy markets, shifting to 40% low-carbon energy sourcing, across all industries, by 2020. The energy secretary, Ed Milliband, will be given control of allocation of electricity across the energy grid, in an effort to speed the green-energy revolution to allow the UK to meet its legally-binding agreed emissions cuts of 34% by 2020.

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Airtight Online Security Against Identity Theft (discussion)

June 10, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

How can we reach the state of affairs in which online activity is entirely secure against identity theft? Hyper-convergence means media and services of all kinds will be increasingly integrated across a broad-spectrum multi-media fabric, where one’s actions and interests, private information and financial data, will be increasingly widespread.

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What can be done to strip predatory lenders of power over the consumer economy? (discussion)

May 25, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

Now that such institutions are being tasked with taking the same responsibility for sustainable debt relationships that borrowers are tasked with, how can the power to manipulate, shape or undermine the viability of the consumer markets be removed from those institutions, without undermining sustainable growth?

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Consumer Paradigm in Flux: Spending Must Be Cut Back Across the Board

May 12, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The US economy has faced serious challenges on a number of fronts, over the last few years, contributing to a complex downturn with little easy salvation in sight. In order to transition to this new era of recovery and slower growth, the US consumer will have to cut back drastically on luxury spending, and the market will have to rely less on the easy flow of consumer credit.

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‘WindCube’ Marks New Phase in Wind-power Amplification

May 11, 2009 :: staff :: 4 Comments

The wind-power generation paradigm is wind turbines turning due to the pressure of oncoming winds. The standard is a single fan with three blades that turns at a relatively slow and constant rate to maximize energy extraction from wind currents passing over the blades and turning the turbine. The ‘WindCube’, however, fits a wind-amplification paradigm, a possible first-step to a new era in wind-turbine technology.

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Convert Pontiac into the First True Green ‘Muscle-car’ Maker

April 28, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

We are witnessing the systematic implosion of the American auto industry. The situation is so grave that instead of seeking to reinvent, or spin off or sell off its Pontiac division, GM is simply closing it down and laying people off. No attempt to fix problems or to take advantage of the opportunity to comprehensively reinvent a company already fitted with major industrial manufacturing capacity, just the unilateral shuttering of major plants and an entire company.

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US Banks to Be Subjected to ‘Stress Test’ to Measure Resilience

March 2, 2009 :: Denver Lessing :: 2 Comments

The Obama administration is looking at the severity of the banking crisis with a mind to settling the issue of survivability and recoverability of banks, case by case, based on facts in evidence. The first step will be to gather evidence, through a series of ‘stress tests’ designed to examine what resources troubled banks have to weather oncoming storms, then plan according to the results of those tests.

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Chasing the Rainbow: Wall St. Gambled on Fictional Expansion-potential

March 2, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The hardest thing to understand about the current, and deepening, economic crisis, is that it came about largely because some of the most experienced, well-staffed and prestigious financial institutions in the world gambled on untenable projects of unlimited expansion, without ever producing sound mathematics to back up the projections. Philosophical exuberance replaced philosophical underpinnings, and the dynamo of financial speculation greased the wheels of commerce in a way that masked underlying shortfalls.

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Federal Competitive-Lending Bank Could Be Used to Spur Credit

February 13, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

There is talk of a major overhaul of the US banking system, with some analysts and economists saying the situation is so dire that widespread “nationalization” —or government takeover— will be necessary, and others saying there needs to be a bad-debt takeover bank, that takes on the huge financial risk of major banks’ “toxic assets”, so that the banks can “clear their books” and begin to lend. But another possibility looms as the likely more appealing option: the creation of a Federal Competitive-Lending Bank (FCLB)…

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Toward a ‘Transactional’ Cosmology: Web Dynamics for the Information Age

January 6, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Each information transaction, sometimes as exemplary, sometimes as single element added to a sweeping aggregate of historical sway, is a precedent, which can motivate, influence or redirect the push of future happenstance. And, we must take note, every transaction involving matter or energy contains information, traces of a history of its coming into being, and generates a “footprint”, a trace of its appearance and its transition into something beyond the transactional moment.

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Cloud Clarity vs. Shadow Banking

December 22, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

In the spring of 2008, it was becoming apparent that a deep-seated financial crisis was threatening to overwhelm credit markets in the US. The major Wall Street investment bank, Bear Stearns was the first towering financial entity to have its fate decided by a government-backed transaction designed to prevent a crisis in confidence from spreading. But questionable financial dealings, which had become standard and were now underpinning important investments held by the majority of major Wall Street firms, were coming to light and inspiring a wildfire spread of uncertain credit valuations.

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Poznan Climate Conference Seeks Consensus on Emissions Reductions, Climate Policy

December 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

The climate change conference currently underway in Poznan, Poland, seeks to build on the Bali agreement, adopted by 180 countries in 2007, in hopes of achieving a global emissions regime. A sweeping economic downturn overtaking North America and Europe, and now hitting China’s manufacturing and export base, it is feared, will hamper efforts to implement comprehensive green industrial and economic reforms.

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Transparency Network as Means of Restoring Financial Confidence

December 10, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

It may be that “a few bad apples” got the ball rolling on what has turned into a massive international financial disaster. Or, it may be that a few bad apples got their names in lights, while the entire system conspired unwittingly in a spectacular collapse. Either way, the best expression of the problem might be to say that markets have stopped working, in part, because they have been comprehensively modified to stop working like markets. An open banking transparency network would reduce the motivation for wrongdoing and privilege more reliable sources of information, creating confidence and motivating sound market dynamics.

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The Age of Hyper-exploitation & its Aftermath

November 25, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

As the “perfect storm” gathers from inchoate, deceptively non-threatening winds, we can look ahead, backward and into the mirror and ask how crisis comes, or why, if it is inevitable, if we might just fall right out of it, as we fell into it. But the answer is simple: human crisis comes from excess, from inordinate ambition, from misplaced aggression, from over-exploitation of resources, each of which generates real and problematic tension across the landscape of human experience.

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Economic Downturn Cannot Be Allowed to Slow Shift to Green Resources

November 25, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 3 Comments

The issue is not, as so many would like to believe, whether carbon-based fuels are affordable to the end-user. They are not. The total costs per gallon of gasoline are estimated at more than $11, covered by government subsidies, public-private research funding, tax incentives, military spending, public health funding, and funds devoted to cleaning up the ill effects of pollution. Capitalist markets need not be dependent on unsustainable excesses in resource use, but we are in the current global economic crunch, because they have been.

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The Future is Not Simplicity, but Complexity, Better Understood & Managed

November 13, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Complexity is not an outlandish tendency of troubled souls and pretentious intellects; it is the basic state of nature as we know it. The more we discover, the more certain we can be of this: even elemental particles are less solid than they seem, behaving like tightly bound arrangements of spherical bodies —irreducible monads—, they apparently achieve this physics by behaving like something they are not (now widely accepted in particle physics, “string theory” proposes that elemental particles are actually 2-dimensional vibrating “strings” whose vibration causes them to interact as if they were not strings at all).

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How a Generative Economic Strategy Trumps ‘Trickle-down’

November 10, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

To understand the relevance and virtues of Barack Obama’s economic vision, we have to look at the long history of struggle between American laissez-faire capitalism and American middle-class capitalism. We are on the verge of what is likely to be a comprehensive philosophical shift in economic policy toward generative investment, which means counting as economic imperatives the resilience and productive expansion of the positive bases of economic growth, i.e. human and environmental health and well-being, resource-density and cyclical models of resource use and reproduction.

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The Nature of Volatility is Not Gain or Loss, but Volatility

October 14, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA/Dow) today had its single biggest day of gains in history, climbing 936 points. It could be a good sign, that on Friday the market “established a bottom”, but it’s important to remember: the nature of volatility is not that it is ripe for gain or ripe for loss, but that it is volatility, and one’s will and judgment are not always as relevant as one would like.

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Clean Desert Energy to Fix China’s Rampant Pollution & Energy Deficit?

August 29, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

China is choking under a thick covering of contaminants produced from burning carbon-based fuels for industrial production, power-generation, and transport. Environmental degradation is so rampant that much of the northwest of the country is being lost to rapidly expanding deserts. And desertification threatens the already shaky balance between China’s available arable land and its skyrocketing demand for cheap food. Policy makers and market theorists in China and abroad should be thinking about whether that desert can produce something to help China escape the mounting environmental and public health cataclysm.

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Al Gore Pushes National Effort to Produce All U.S. Energy from Renewables in 10 Years

July 17, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Former US vice-president Al Gore is calling on the nation to marshal its resources and divorce itself from the combustible fuels economy. Gore says the US can produce all its energy requirements from renewable resources within 10 years, if action is taken. The bold initiative is designed to drive debate on the topic and move discussions about how to deal with high fuel prices toward the new opportunity they provide for funding renewable infrastructure development.

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U.S. Pres. Bush Lifts Executive Ban on Offshore Drilling; Congress May Renew its Ban

July 15, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

US pres. George W. Bush has lifted the executive ban on offshore oil drilling on the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS), and has challenged the US Congress to act to open the OCS to new oil exploration, saying the US needs to increase domestic production to reduce its dependence on imported oil. The ban was put in place by his father, George H.W. Bush, the 41st US president, for environmental concerns and in part because the oil companies have leases for huge expanses of underwater terrain they have not explored or exploited.

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EPA Chief Says Congress Should Pass Laws to Mandate Emissions Reduction Regulations

July 14, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 4 Comments

The chairman of the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), Stephen Johnson, says the Clean Air Act is “ill-suited” to fighting the greenhouse effect, and that Congress should pass laws mandating the regulation of carbon emissions, with global warming in mind. The move may lead to a more comprehensive regulatory regime, but as the Guardian newspaper notes: “Last year’s Massachusetts v. EPA Supreme Court ruling had found that greenhouse gases can be regulated under the U.S. Clean Air Act. The decision pressured the EPA to reconsider its refusal to regulate carbon dioxide emissions from new cars and trucks.”

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Transparent Dyes Allow Windows to Act as Super-powerful Solar Panels

July 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Special transparent dyes coating glass or plastic panes concentrate the Sun’s rays, guiding them to solar-voltaic cells lining the edges, allowing a window to act as a solar panel with 10 times the electricity generation capacity of solar cells, by current standards. The ‘organic solar concentrator’ (OSC) system also reduces cost, by reducing the surface area that needs to be coated by solar-voltaic cells and by eliminating the need for large concentrating mirrors and sun-tracking mechanisms.

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Oilman T. Boone Pickens Wants to Create National Wind-energy Network in the US

July 10, 2008 :: staff :: Comments Off

T. Boone Pickens has started what USA Today reports will be “the biggest public policy ad campaign ever” to promote a national economic shift from oil to renewable fuels, primarily wind. The campaign is centered on the PickensPlan website, which shows the oil tycoon explaining how and why the US can and must break its dependence on foreign oil —for which American consumers pay $700 billion per year— by transitioning to an energy economy founded on exploiting the massive wind resources of the Great Plains.

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Oil Shock: the Coming Economic Unraveling & How We Can Adjust

July 9, 2008 :: staff :: Comments Off

Petroleum is the most pervasive base resource other than water in the global economy of the 21st century, and as demand is exploding, production is nearing its geological peak, and untenable price increases are hitting a strained economy hard. Oil prices could be in a stagflation lock, unable to readjust to consumers’ means, unable to compete as emerging energy sources repeatedly slash development and commercial prices. Whatever factors are at play, crude oil prices have jumped over 900% since 1998, and it looks like production cannot meet global demand.

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Clean Fuel: Toyota to Add Solar Panels to Hybrid Vehicles

July 7, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The green technology transition is gaining momentum. Japanese auto manufacturer Toyota has announced it will add solar panels to some of its fleet of hybrid vehicles. The “high-end” third-generation Prius models will sport Kyocera-produced solar panels on the roof, aimed at assisting with powering the air-conditioning and other peripheral operations, freeing up battery energy to give the hybrid engines more non-combustion mileage.

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What the Market Doesn’t Know Can Hurt You, Whoever You Are

July 3, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

TheHotSpring.com :: Every participant in any system, is dependent upon the quality of information behind the major forces at play, just as any player in any system is beholden to the quality or jeopardy posed by the system’s prevailing methods. Free flow of information is the best hope of achieving the optimum level of functionality [...]

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Biggest Unemployment Surge in 2 Decades Stokes Concerns About Impending US Recession

June 23, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

As unemployment has reportedly jumped from 5% to 5.5% in just one month, the single worst increase since February 1986, economists say the US is headed for a deep, “painful” recession. Together with record oil prices, the lending and credit crisis gripping the US banking, consumer and housing sectors, and the sinking value of the US dollar, the outlook for a rapid road back to healthy growth is not a positive one.

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Reforestation, Ecosystem Resilience & Paper Technologies

May 30, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Reforestation is a necessary part of the process of any ecologically responsible development strategy. Forest cover is not only a potent natural resource feeding the overall resilience of an ecosystem, but the hydrological and soil-quality stability, along with the biodensity it can generate, mean it is now more clear than ever that natural levels of forest cover have a very high economic value over the long term.

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US Begins Difficult Task of ‘Breaking Addiction’ to Foreign Oil

May 26, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

According to the Financial Times, the United States is, however gingerly, beginning to break its dangerous reliance on foreign-sourced petroleum-based fuels. Foreign oil has been a major driving force in US economic and political trends for the better part of a century, and many in the US, both in politics and in private life, are increasing their calls for the country to move away from the resource that’s sown so much instability and propped up undemocratic regimes.

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Price of Rice Doubles on World Markets, Undermining Asian Stability

March 29, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Rice is a basic food staple for nearly half the world’s population. The world’s two most populous nations, China and India, depend heavily on the grain for basic sustenance, and for economic stability. The price of rice has doulbed in the last 3 months, causing concern about potential for conflict along Asian border regions. The [...]

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Against the Good Nukes / Bad Nukes Fallacy

Cynicism often lends itself to the construction of intellectually convenient, overly facile descriptions of future events, which —bolstered by the impassioned worries and self-promotion of the cynic, the anti-prophet— quickly assume an air of prophetic certainty. Buoyed by the psychological satisfaction of carrying prophetic certainty within, the cynic then commits more and more fully to the proclamation of unshakeable doctrines about the future, based on bad-faith arguments and a passion for the despairing global outlook.

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