July 11, 2007

Oh Shit! Mexican Guerillas attacking oil pipelines!

Fuck me, as if the Mexicans didn’t have enough problems with the declining production of the Cantarell, now they have to deal with militants.

An obscure guerrilla group that has been barely active for a decade
took responsibility today for a recent series of pipeline explosions in
central Mexico.

The People’s Revolutionary Army, which until now has been active
mostly in Guerrero, Oaxaca and other southern Mexican states, said in a
communique that “several platoons” of its militants blew up the
pipelines in the past week as part of a new campaign.

At this point I’m going to file this under bad news.

It is probably safe to say that our only hope is for Leonardo Dicaprio to make a movie about it! (at which point it gets filed under bad-movie)

Read the full story here.

July 9, 2007

Forget Peak Oil- Lets go for Peak Leonardo!

So I did a search on google for “peak oil” - the first sponsored result was for Leonardo Dicaprio’s upcoming climate change cash grab - the 11th Hour.CropperCapture[8]

WHat does this mean?

Is Leo officially on the Peak band wagon?

Is it really aimed at Treehuggers and is there an automatic assumption that anyone concerned with climate change is automatically enlightened and equally concerned with Peak Oil?

Is Leo going to save the world?

July 5, 2007

Peak Oil vs Peak H2O

Not content with conflict over religious difference, geographic boundaries, who hates Western Foreign policy more, it looks like the Middle East is going to throw another cause for war into the mix: water.


Potential Water Conflicts in the Middle East

Water will remain one of the most volatile issues in the Middle East
and the source of potentially serious conflicts. The oil rich countries
have resolved their water shortage through desalination. Israel is
moving in that direction as well. Countries with more restricted
financial resources such as Syria, Jordan, Morocco and Yemen are
constrained from going through the desalination path. Rapidly growing
population and a trend toward urbanization will heighten water
shortages and exacerbate potential political or military conflicts.

Water is the key to war or peace. Borders can be redrawn,
refugees resettled, trade barriers can be removed and agriculture
reformed and made more efficient. But water will still be required to
meet basic human needs. Population growth and a shift toward
urbanization will render these needs even greater in the future.

As much as I’d like to file this one under good news as it might distract some of the energies that are currently spent over fighting for engery, the net result is more conflict. More instability in the cradle of my oil supply  = one more checkmark for the  bad news column.