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Michael T. Klare

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The Energy Wars Heat Up

Posted: 05/10/2012 9:45 am

Six Recent Clashes and Conflicts on a Planet Heading Into Energy Overdrive

Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com

Conflict and intrigue over valuable energy supplies have been features of the international landscape for a long time.  Major wars over oil have been fought every decade or so since World War I, and smaller engagements have erupted every few years; a flare-up or two in 2012, then, would be part of the normal scheme of things.  Instead, what we are now seeing is a whole cluster of oil-related clashes stretching across the globe, involving a dozen or so countries, with more popping up all the time.  Consider these flash-points as signals that we are entering an era of intensified conflict over energy.

From the Atlantic to the Pacific, Argentina to the Philippines, here are the six areas of conflict -- all tied to energy supplies -- that have made news in just the first few months of 2012:

* A brewing war between Sudan and South Sudan: On April 10th, forces from the newly independent state of South Sudan occupied the oil center of Heglig, a town granted to Sudan as part of a peace settlement that allowed the southerners to secede in 2011.  The northerners, based in Khartoum, then mobilized their own forces and drove the South Sudanese out of Heglig.  Fighting has since erupted all along the contested border between the two countries, accompanied by air strikes on towns in South Sudan.  Although the fighting has not yet reached the level of a full-scale war, international efforts to negotiate a cease-fire and a peaceful resolution to the dispute have yet to meet with success.

This conflict is being fueled by many factors, including economic disparities between the two Sudans and an abiding animosity between the southerners (who are mostly black Africans and Christians or animists) and the northerners (mostly Arabs and Muslims).  But oil -- and the revenues produced by oil -- remains at the heart of the matter.  When Sudan was divided in 2011, the most prolific oil fields wound up in the south, while the only pipeline capable of transporting the south’s oil to international markets (and thus generating revenue) remained in the hands of the northerners.  They have been demanding exceptionally high “transit fees” -- $32-$36 per barrel compared to the common rate of $1 per barrel -- for the privilege of bringing the South’s oil to market.  When the southerners refused to accept such rates, the northerners confiscated money they had already collected from the south’s oil exports, its only significant source of funds.  In response, the southerners stopped producing oil altogether and, it appears, launched their military action against the north.  The situation remains explosive.

* Naval clash in the South China Sea: On April 7th, a Philippine naval warship, the 378-foot Gregorio del Pilar, arrived at Scarborough Shoal, a small island in the South China Sea, and detained eight Chinese fishing boats anchored there, accusing them of illegal fishing activities in Filipino sovereign waters.  China promptly sent two naval vessels of its own to the area, claiming that the Gregorio del Pilar was harassing Chinese ships in Chinese, not Filipino waters.  The fishing boats were eventually allowed to depart without further incident and tensions have eased somewhat.  However, neither side has displayed any inclination to surrender its claim to the island, and both sides continue to deploy warships in the contested area.

As in Sudan, multiple factors are driving this clash, but energy is the dominant motive.  The South China Sea is thought to harbor large deposits of oil and natural gas, and all the countries that encircle it, including China and the Philippines, want to exploit these reserves.  Manila claims a 200-nautical mile “exclusive economic zone” stretching into the South China Sea from its western shores, an area it calls the West Philippine Sea; Filipino companies say they have found large natural gas reserves in this area and have announced plans to begin exploiting them.  Claiming the many small islands that dot the South China Sea (including Scarborough Shoal) as its own, Beijing has asserted sovereignty over the entire region, including the waters claimed by Manila; it, too, has announced plans to drill in the area.  Despite years of talks, no solution has yet been found to the dispute and further clashes are likely.

* Egypt cuts off the natural gas flow to Israel: On April 22nd, the Egyptian General Petroleum Corporation and Egyptian Natural Gas Holding Company informed Israeli energy officials that they were “terminating the gas and purchase agreement” under which Egypt had been supplying gas to Israel.  This followed months of demonstrations in Cairo by the youthful protestors who succeeded in deposing autocrat Hosni Mubarak and are now seeking a more independent Egyptian foreign policy -- one less beholden to the United States and Israel.  It also followed scores of attacks on the pipelines carrying the gas across the Negev Desert to Israel, which the Egyptian military has seemed powerless to prevent.

Ostensibly, the decision was taken in response to a dispute over Israeli payments for Egyptian gas, but all parties involved have interpreted it as part of a drive by Egypt’s new government to demonstrate greater distance from the ousted Mubarak regime and his (U.S.-encouraged) policy of cooperation with Israel.  The Egyptian-Israeli gas link was one of the most significant outcomes of the 1979 peace treaty between the two countries, and its annulment clearly signals a period of greater discord; it may also cause energy shortages in Israel, especially during peak summer demand periods.  On a larger scale, the cutoff suggests a new inclination to use energy (or its denial) as a form of political warfare and coercion.

* Argentina seizes YPF: On April 16th, Argentina’s president, Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, announced that her government would seize a majority stake in YPF, the nation’s largest oil company.  Under President Kirchner’s plans, which she detailed on national television, the government would take a 51% controlling stake in YPF, which is now majority-owned by Spain’s largest corporation, the energy firm Repsol YPF.  The seizure of its Argentinean subsidiary is seen in Madrid (and other European capitals) as a major threat that must now be combated.  Spain’s foreign minister, José Manuel García Margallo, said that Kirchner’s move “broke the climate of cordiality and friendship that presided over relations between Spain and Argentina.”  Several days later, in what is reported to be only the first of several retaliatory steps, Spain announced that it would stop importing biofuels from Argentina, its principal supplier -- a trade worth nearly $1 billion a year to the Argentineans.

As in the other conflicts, this clash is driven by many urges, including a powerful strain of nationalism stretching back to the Peronist era, along with Kirchner’s apparent desire to boost her standing in the polls.  Just as important, however, is Argentina’s urge to derive greater economic and political benefit from its energy reserves, which include the world’s third-largest deposits of shale gas.  While long-term rival Brazil is gaining immense power and prestige from the development of its offshore “pre-salt” petroleum reserves, Argentina has seen its energy production languish.  Repsol may not be to blame for this, but many Argentineans evidently believe that, with YPF under government control, it will now be possible to accelerate development of the country’s energy endowment, possibly in collaboration with a more aggressive foreign partner like BP or ExxonMobil.

* Argentina re-ignites the Falklands crisis: At an April 15th-16th Summit of the Americas in Cartagena, Colombia -- the one at which U.S. Secret Service agents were caught fraternizing with prostitutes -- Argentina sought fresh hemispheric condemnation of Britain’s continued occupation of the Falkland Islands (called Las Malvinas by the Argentineans).  It won strong support from every country present save (predictably) Canada and the United States.  Argentina, which says the islands are part of its sovereign territory, has been raising this issue ever since it lost a war over the Falklands in 1982, but has recently stepped up its campaign on several fronts -- denouncing London in numerous international venues and preventing British cruise ships that visit the Falklands from docking in Argentinean harbors.  The British have responded by beefing up their military forces in the region and warning the Argentineans to avoid any rash moves.

When Argentina and the U.K. fought their war over the Falklands, little was at stake save national pride, the stature of the country’s respective leaders (Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher vs. an unpopular military junta), and a few sparsely populated islands.  Since then, the stakes have risen immeasurably as a result of recent seismic surveys of the waters surrounding the islands that indicated the existence of massive deposits of oil and natural gas.  Several UK-based energy firms, including Desire Petroleum and Rockhopper Exploration, have begun off-shore drilling in the area and have reported promising discoveries.  Desperate to duplicate Brazil’s success in the development of offshore oil and gas, Argentina claims the discoveries lie in its sovereign territory and that the drilling there is illegal; the British, of course, insist that it’s their territory.  No one knows how this simmering potential crisis will unfold, but a replay of the 1982 war -- this time over energy -- is hardly out of the question.

* U.S. forces mobilize for war with Iran: Throughout the winter and early spring, it appeared that an armed clash of some sort pitting Iran against Israel and/or the United States was almost inevitable.  Neither side seemed prepared to back down on key demands, especially on Iran’s nuclear program, and any talk of a compromise solution was deemed unrealistic.  Today, however, the risk of war has diminished somewhat -- at least through this election year in the U.S. -- as talks have finally gotten under way between the major powers and Iran, and as both have adopted (slightly) more accommodating stances.  In addition, U.S. officials have been tamping down war talk and figures in the Israeli military and intelligence communities have spoken out against rash military actions.  However, the Iranians continue to enrich uranium, and leaders on all sides say they are fully prepared to employ force if the peace talks fail.

For the Iranians, this means blocking the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow channel through which one-third of the world’s tradable oil passes every day.  The U.S., for its part, has insisted that it will keep the Strait open and, if necessary, eliminate Iranian nuclear capabilities.  Whether to intimidate Iran, prepare for the real thing, or possibly both, the U.S. has been building up its military capabilities in the Persian Gulf area, deploying two aircraft carrier battle groups in the neighborhood along with an assortment of air and amphibious-assault capabilities.

One can debate the extent to which Washington’s long-running feud with Iran is driven by oil, but there is no question that the current crisis bears heavily on global oil supply prospects, both through Iran’s threats to close the Strait of Hormuz in retaliation for forthcoming sanctions on Iranian oil exports, and the likelihood that any air strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities will lead to the same thing.  Either way, the U.S. military would undoubtedly assume the lead role in destroying Iranian military capabilities and restoring oil traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. This is the energy-driven crisis that just won’t go away.

How Energy Drives the World

All of these disputes have one thing in common: the conviction of ruling elites around the world that the possession of energy assets -- especially oil and gas deposits -- is essential to prop up national wealth, power, and prestige.

This is hardly a new phenomenon.  Early in the last century, Winston Churchill was perhaps the first prominent leader to appreciate the strategic importance of oil.  As First Lord of the Admiralty, he converted British warships from coal to oil and then persuaded the cabinet to nationalize the Anglo-Persian Oil Company, the forerunner of British Petroleum (now BP).  The pursuit of energy supplies for both industry and war-fighting played a major role in the diplomacy of the period between the World Wars, as well as in the strategic planning of the Axis powers during World War II.  It also explains America’s long-term drive to remain the dominant power in the Persian Gulf that culminated in the first Gulf War of 1990-91 and its inevitable sequel, the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

The years since World War II have seen a variety of changes in the energy industry, including a shift in many areas from private to state ownership of oil and natural gas reserves.  By and large, however, the industry has been able to deliver ever-increasing quantities of fuel to satisfy the ever-growing needs of a globalizing economy and an expanding, rapidly urbanizing world population.  So long as supplies were abundant and prices remained relatively affordable, energy consumers around the world, including most governments, were largely content with the existing system of collaboration among private and state-owned energy leviathans.

But that energy equation is changing ominously as the challenge of fueling the planet grows more difficult.  Many of the giant oil and gas fields that quenched the world’s energy thirst in years past are being depleted at a rapid pace.  The new fields being brought on line to take their place are, on average, smaller and harder to exploit.  Many of the most promising new sources of energy -- like Brazil’s “pre-salt” petroleum reserves deep beneath the Atlantic Ocean, Canadian tar sands, and American shale gas -- require the utilization of sophisticated and costly technologies.  Though global energy supplies are continuing to grow, they are doing so at a slower pace than in the past and are continually falling short of demand.  All this adds to the upward pressure on prices, causing anxiety among countries lacking adequate domestic reserves (and joy among those with an abundance).

The world has long been bifurcated between energy-surplus and energy-deficit states, with the former deriving enormous political and economic advantages from their privileged condition and the latter struggling mightily to escape their subordinate position.  Now, that bifurcation is looking more like a chasm.  In such a global environment, friction and conflict over oil and gas reserves -- leading to energy conflicts of all sorts -- is only likely to increase.

Looking, again, at April’s six energy disputes, one can see clear evidence of these underlying forces in every case.  South Sudan is desperate to sell its oil in order to acquire the income needed to kick-start its economy; Sudan, on the other hand, resents the loss of oil revenues it controlled when the nation was still united, and appears no less determined to keep as much of the South’s oil money as it can for itself.  China and the Philippines both want the right to develop oil and gas reserves in the South China Sea, and even if the deposits around Scarborough Shoal prove meager, China is unwilling to back down in any localized dispute that might undermine its claim to sovereignty over the entire region.

Egypt, although not a major energy producer, clearly seeks to employ its oil and gas supplies for maximum political and economic advantage -- an approach sure to be copied by other small and mid-sized suppliers.  Israel, heavily dependent on imports for its energy, must now turn elsewhere for vital supplies or accelerate the development of disputed, newly discovered offshore gas fields, a move that could provoke fresh conflict with Lebanon, which says they lie in its own territorial waters.  And Argentina, jealous of Brazil’s growing clout, appears determined to extract greater advantage from its own energy resources, even if this means inflaming tensions with Spain and Great Britain.

And these are just some of the countries involved in significant disputes over energy.  Any clash with Iran -- whatever the motivation -- is bound to jeopardize the petroleum supply of every oil-importing country, sparking a major international crisis with unforeseeable consequences.  China’s determination to control its offshore hydrocarbon reserves has pushed it into conflict with other countries with offshore claims in the South China Sea, and into a similar dispute with Japan in the East China Sea.  Energy-related disputes of this sort can also be found in the Caspian Sea and in globally warming, increasingly ice-free Arctic regions.

The seeds of energy conflicts and war sprouting in so many places simultaneously suggest that we are entering a new period in which key state actors will be more inclined to employ force -- or the threat of force -- to gain control over valuable deposits of oil and natural gas.  In other words, we’re now on a planet heading into energy overdrive.

Michael Klare is a TomDispatch regular, professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College, and the author, most recently, of The Race for What’s Left: The Global Scramble for the World’s Last Resources. To listen to Timothy MacBain's latest Tomcast audio interview in which Klare discusses global energy conflicts, click here or download it to your iPod here.

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Six Recent Clashes and Conflicts on a Planet Heading Into Energy Overdrive Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com Conflict and intrigue over valuable energy supplies have been features of the internati...
Six Recent Clashes and Conflicts on a Planet Heading Into Energy Overdrive Cross-posted with TomDispatch.com Conflict and intrigue over valuable energy supplies have been features of the internati...
 
 
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
09:21 PM on 05/19/2012
It seems to me that many of the Energy arguments are in fact nothing more than industry distortion. Take, for example, the Keystone pipeline: First After much unneeded prodding from the State of Oklahoma, the line has finally,and sanely, been rerouted away from the water table. It never should have been put through that location in the first place, Second: There will not nor were there ever going to be tens of thousands of jobs here. There will be around 6000 TEMPORARY construction jobs to build the line, after which there will be several hundred (not thousands) of permanent jobs maintaining the line. Third: the oil will not help America's fuel independence goals, since 1. the oil is mainly for export, because 2. it is too heavy and polluted to be used in the US. So all the spin my fellow Republicans are putting on this is close to and in some cases out and out lies! Oh and I just love the "Clean Coal" advertising on TV, this from an industry that has already ruined hundreds of miles of streams and acres of forests with the "STUPID" mountaintop mining! Also, while I am at it, what is with the TV commercials What the blazes is "An Energy Voter"? is that someone paid by the energy business to tell us how nice they (the energy companies) are?
09:19 PM on 05/10/2012
Mr. Klare, you're essay was just fine right up the point you treated the Malvinas/Falklands dispute as the equivalent of all those other conflicts. In those other conflicts, the shooting has already started or at least is being anticipated. But apart from some knuckleheads and nationalists, I don't know any people who believe there's going to be any shooting between Argentina and the UK.

And the disputed over the Malvinas/Falklands did NOT heat up because of oil.

It heated up because of the 30th anniversary of the Falklands War, and because the Argentine officials have truly screwed up the economy and - like generals 30 years ago - they need a distraction.
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AlanBannacheck
President of the Deep Thoughts Association (DTA)
07:32 PM on 05/10/2012
The only reason the human population is at 7 billion odd souls is because of ever increasing energy consumption. See this chart:

http://www.energybulletin.net/image/uploads/32651/image002.png

A barrel of oil is equal to 25,000 hours of labor. It is easily transferable to other locations around the country (unlike natural gas). As aforementioned in the article, finding new oil is getting harder to achieve whilst we are using it at record rates (the world at least, US consumption is declining). Thou who controls the flow of oil will control the world as long as we continue living our high energy lifestyles.
04:10 PM on 05/10/2012
As the wise Colin Powell said:

"We will soon be in a everywhere forever war."

Enjoy this brief respite from the 4 men on horses, for soon they shall ride again across the benighted world.
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
09:25 PM on 05/19/2012
it is sad to say that your metaphors are unfortunately more than likely correct! I have had thoughts of what would happen when global (that does not exist) starts to really take it's toll and folks have to move in order to eat In my mind, it is not a pretty picture and the General/Secretary of State is sadly, right! So are you!
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Michael D Ballantine
Texas Justice Party - Chairperson
02:05 PM on 05/10/2012
SInce the 1930s, we have been fighting over energy and oil. I see nothing especially different today. Most of these tensions would ratchet down a notch if the US would stop trying to dominate global energy exchange. Our imperialistic hegemon foreign policy harks back to the 19th century and is quickly becoming moronic given our movement to renewable American based energy sources. If the Sudanese want to to squabble over yesterday's energy source, that is their business. If the Iranians want to produce enriched uranium for their nuclear industry, let them. Those are yesterday's solutions, we need to invest in tomorrow's technologies and stop chasing history. Otherwise we risk letting it pass us by. Here is my proposal for energy independence: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fS0_5vjR2js
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01:27 PM on 05/10/2012
Almost no area is an "energy deficit area!" If there is daylight, there is energy, people just have been so brainwashed into thinking that energy is something we need to mine, drill, destroy, bulldoze, dynamite and industrialize wilderness and enrich a Big Energy company to get, that they really have no idea that they can largely power themselves with clever use of passive designs, passive heating/cooling (including air pumps), rooftop solar and microwind and energy efficiency. Current battery systems are OK but a microgrid is better at this point for most developed nations, while better energy storage comes online.

These wars are not actually for Energy, they are for Energy Profiteering. Local, point of use energy savings and generation that is democratically owned will eliminate all of them. So why are we still handing Chevron, BP and Goldman Sachs all our money and land to centralize Big Solar and Big Wind? Do we all have Stockholm Syndrome or something? ENERGY DEMOCRACY is the future.
04:11 PM on 05/10/2012
No one listens to wise men when there is money or blood in the water.
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
09:31 PM on 05/19/2012
Hey, this is not a new attitude by the oil companies or the auto companies, any body, besides me old enough to remember the "TUCKER" car was so far ahead of it's time Detroit, killed it! because his car was better, safer, more fuel efficient, and would have cost less than anything they (Detroit) could or would build at the time. So with the help of bought and paid for politicians they killed it! (the car)
12:58 PM on 05/10/2012
The international community should stand with the Philippines and make China respect international treaties. The world does not accept another Munich or Dictak.
State-run television anchor, He Jia, may have mis-spoken that the Philippines is inherent part of China’s territory. What is surprising about the incident is not the gaffe itself but the attitude afterward the mistake. Chinese netizens haveshown such arrogance and nationalism and even called for war.Neither the anchor nor China Central Television’s (CCTV) has bothered to make apology to the Philippines of a such blunder.
Time has come for China to stand tall and respect the international treaties so that it can gain the respect of the world it deserves. Bullying the small countries will only damage its emerging world stage power.
China’s state TV claims the Philippines is part of China: Arrogant, Nationalistic, Imperialist, and War-Mongers.
http://www.eyedrd.org/2012/05/chinas-state-tv-claims-the-philippines-is-part-of-china-arrogant-nationalistic-imperialist-and-war-mongers.html#more-12053
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
09:42 PM on 05/19/2012
HA HA what I have read about this was the the Chinese are basing their claim on a map drawn in the 1300's by a Chinese Navigator, so they are claiming that they were there first and that make it theirs! Here is the problem, as I see it, with the Chinese position: If this claim is validated, the next thing that happens is that the Chinese extend their borders out to the 200 mile limit and than claim everything else inside that line, and then extend again and again. I am not a skilled diplomat, or International boundary expert, however (:) smirk,) I have a suggestion: Find a point in the water that is mid way between accepted Chinese borders and the borders of Vietnam, Philippines, Korea, Japan, and all the others on the water, set up a corridor of, I don;t know ten miles wide where ALL the countries will work from a joint venture to mine, drill and explore for the energy resources that all those Countries require and want access to. Division of the resources could be perhaps based on population percentages, this would give China a large share of anything found, but at least all the Nations would be getting a fair % oh and it might help prevent a war over resources. Just the silly ramblings of an old man. :)
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Overtone
See bio on the Aesop Institute website
12:46 PM on 05/10/2012
Time to accelerate alternatives - it can happen faster than might be imagined.

See Moving Beyond Oil and Cheap Green at www.aesopinstitute.org

Japan has shown how rapidly change in the energy arena can occur. Nuclear power provided 30% of that nation's energy and in a year that source of supply has been abandoned.

Revolutionary, cost-competitive, renewable innovations can move into the market this year.

For example, the Hydroelectric Fuel Cell invented in Vietnam. It needs only water - fresh or salt - to be added. A 2,000 watt home generator will retail for $1,600 in that nation. The system will be scaled to power cars.

Our survival may literally depend upon such Black Swans - highly improbable innovations with huge implications. The Aesop Institute website explains why.
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
09:50 PM on 05/19/2012
You sir are correct in all you say: sadly you miss the crux of the problem. As long as the Oil, Gas, Coal, Industries, are able to buy through their PAC"s, Lobbyists, and Public Officials who owe them favors, we as a Nation can't get to where we could have been twenty years ago!
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Overtone
See bio on the Aesop Institute website
10:16 PM on 05/19/2012
What is new is that their lives are now at hazard!

This is the change that opens the door to action that has been impossible until now.

But, it is not yet widely understood how mortally dangerous the situation has become.

Getting the reality out is now urgent or we are about to find we have probably ended human life in the Northern Hemisphere.

Wake up folks. The life you save may be your own
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RagMag
still living a Ragtime Life
12:43 PM on 05/10/2012
Human power is the only answer. Bicycles (for example) and the will to control the world's human population. Disregarding that, science fiction, pollution and war.
ElCojonuo
I believe in WISDOM
12:42 AM on 05/11/2012
China's been riding Bicycles since they were invented; their legs are tired and they wanna ride cars instead.
What do YOU ride ? ( and please don't tell me you ride a Bike other than for Sport or Excercise ).
Wanna control population ? , crastate and sterilize ( good luck with that one)
I don't think the world is ready for an increase in the Eunuch and Sterile population.
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RagMag
still living a Ragtime Life
07:54 AM on 05/11/2012
Yes we ride bicycles for transportation and there are ways to reduce the human population (restructuring families) without death or mutilation. Open your mind!
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
09:52 PM on 05/19/2012
I just bought a bicycle last week: I got it cause at 71 my belly is to dam big and I can't fit many of my cloths. I live in NY I am NOT going to get on my bike and ride to Kmart to shop! My Honda and I will make the trip. Nice try thou
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
11:26 AM on 05/10/2012
War and nationalism over oil. Wouldn't it be splendid if nations put equal attention on getting house builders to install passive solar and cross ventilation!
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ogis
powerdown baby powerdown
04:58 PM on 05/10/2012
But how to pay for it. Your check is in the mail. It takes 8 minutes to arrive here!
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artleads
Let's have a national retreat.
08:31 PM on 05/10/2012
Simple. Stop the militarism in pursuit or defense of oil, and do what I suggest instead. That will actually SAVE money. :-)
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
09:58 PM on 05/19/2012
:) good thinking, the problem with it is this===It uses "common sense" when did big business and/or the bought politicians use common sense?
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drkazmd65
Mom Taught me - Question Everything - Thanks Mom!
11:23 AM on 05/10/2012
Follow the petrodollars,.... They explain a lot.
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hagagaga
You can't take the sky from me.
11:18 AM on 05/10/2012
Energy conflicts will cause a nuclear exchange by 2030.
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
10:01 PM on 05/19/2012
there is a possibility that, unfortunately, you might be correct. I hope for the sake of the world that you are wrong. I have visited Nagasaki Japan, I do not like the picture of that as a metaphor of what the world will look like if you are correct!
10:55 AM on 05/10/2012
I must have missed the HuffPo reports on Egypt cutting off Israel.
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
10:02 PM on 05/19/2012
last week
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wmnorton
Moderate where moderate used to be
10:44 AM on 05/10/2012
People are starting to figure out that energy is a bigger factor in the price of a product than labor costs. That is why manufacturing is starting to return to this country. It is better to hold the price of transportation to a minimum by having the manufacturing close to the customers. Right now we generate most of our electrical energy from coal, we need to transfer that to renewable supplys We need to start looking at energy cost on a life time basis not on installed costs, It is cheaper to build a coa;l fired power plant, but when you put in 30 years cost for coal it is no longer attractive compared with the installed cost of a windmill and no energy extration costs for the next thirty years. Of course we need to have an energy supply for when the wind doesn't blow and the sun doesn't shine, that is why I support the expansion of well regulated nuclear.
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lhoffman5
72 yr old,Eisenhower Rep. Retired history Teacher
10:09 PM on 05/19/2012
I am with you on the nuclear, And we should tell Harry Reid and Arizona, that after a few billion worth of digging we are going to store waste in the mountain. However, even though clean coal does not, yet, actually exist, it too must be part of the equation in America. We have the ability to use ALL methods of energy Oil, Coal, Gas, Solar, Thermal. Hydro, Geothermal, wind Tidal (yes the tides are being used to generate energy) we only need to make sure that we make access to the energy affordable. Oh I am sorry, my fellow Republicans ( sorry I am a registered one of them) keep insisting that Government spending on things like that is bad for business. Ahh, well :( I am sure that Mitch McConnell, Paul Ryan, Eric Cantor, and Speaker Boehner are all smarter than the rest of us out here.