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Matt Ridley: Beware The Corruption Of Science

Date: 08/12/14 Matt Ridley, The Times
Environmental researchers are increasingly looking for evidence that fits their ideology, rather than seeking the truth.

As somebody who has championed science all his career, carrying a lot of water for the profession against its critics on many issues, I am losing faith. Recent examples of bias and corruption in science are bad enough. What’s worse is the reluctance of scientific leaders to criticise the bad apples. Science as a philosophy is in good health; science as an institution increasingly stinks.

The Nuffield Council on Bioethics published a report last week that found evidence of scientists increasingly “employing less rigorous research methods” in response to funding pressures. A 2009 survey found that almost 2 per cent of scientists admitting that they have fabricated results; 14 per cent say that their colleagues have done so.

This month has seen three egregious examples of poor scientific practice. The most recent was the revelation in The Times last week that scientists appeared to scheme to get neonicotinoid pesticides banned, rather than open-mindedly assessing all the evidence. These were supposedly “independent” scientists, yet they were hand in glove with environmental activists who were receiving huge grants from the European Union to lobby it via supposedly independent reports, and they apparently had their conclusions in mind before they gathered the evidence. Documents that have recently come to light show them blatantly setting out to make policy-based evidence, rather than evidence-based policy.

Second example: last week, the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), a supposedly scientific body, issued a press release stating that this is likely to be the warmest year in a century or more, based on surface temperatures. Yet this predicted record would be only one hundredth of a degree above 2010 and two hundredths of a degree above 2005 — with an error range of one tenth of a degree. True scientists would have said: this year is unlikely to be significantly warmer than 2010 or 2005 and left it at that.

In any case, the year is not over, so why the announcement now? Oh yes, there’s a political climate summit in Lima this week. The scientists of WMO allowed themselves to be used politically. Not that they were reluctant. To squeeze and cajole the data until they just crossed the line, the WMO “reanalysed” a merger of five data sets. Maybe that was legitimate but, given how the institutions that gather temperature data have twice this year been caught red-handed making poorly justified adjustments to “homogenise” and “in-fill” thermometer records in such a way as to cool down old records and warm up new ones, I have my doubts.

In one case, in Rutherglen, a town in Victoria, a recorded cooling trend of minus 0.35C became a reported warming trend of plus 1.73C after “homogenisation” by the Australian Bureau of Meteorology. It claimed the adjustment was necessary because the thermometer had moved between two fields, but could provide no evidence for this, or for why it necessitated such a drastic adjustment.

Most of the people in charge of collating temperature data are vocal in their views on climate policy, which hardly reassures the rest of us that they leave those prejudices at the laboratory door. Imagine if bankers were in charge of measuring inflation.

Third example: the Royal Society used to be the gold standard of scientific objectivity. Yet this month it issued a report on resilience to extreme weather that, in its 100-plus pages, could find room for not a single graph to show recent trends in extreme weather. That is because no such graph shows an upward trend in global frequency of droughts, storms or floods. The report did find room for a graph showing the rising cost of damage by extreme weather, which is a function of the increased value of insured property, not a measure of weather.

The Royal Society report also carefully omitted what is perhaps the most telling of all statistics about extreme weather: the plummeting death toll. The global probability of being killed by a drought, flood or storm is down by 98 per cent since the 1920s and has never been lower — not because weather is less dangerous but because of improvements in transport, trade, infrastructure, aid and communication.

The Royal Society’s decision to cherry-pick its way past such data would be less worrying if its president, Sir Paul Nurse, had not gone on the record as highly partisan on the subject of climate science. He called for those who disagree with him to be “crushed and buried”, hardly the language of Galileo.

Three months ago Sir Paul said: “We need to be aware of those who mix up science, based on evidence and rationality, with politics and ideology, where opinion, rhetoric and tradition hold more sway. We need to be aware of political or ideological lobbyists who do not respect science, cherry-picking data or argument, to support their predetermined positions.”

If he wishes to be consistent, he will therefore condemn the behaviour of the scientists over neonicotinoids and the WMO over temperature records, and chastise his colleagues’ report, for these are prime examples of his point.

I am not hopeful. When a similar scandal blew up in 2009 over the hiding of inconvenient data that appeared to discredit the validity of proxies for past global temperatures based on tree rings (part of “Climategate”), the scientific establishment closed ranks and tried to pretend it did not matter. Last week a further instalment of that story came to light, showing that yet more inconvenient data (which discredit bristlecone pine tree rings as temperature proxies) had emerged.

Full op-ed


You seem to be losing awareness of what you post and by whom, given that the author above has been well identified for what he is here:

http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Matt_Ridley

And you posted this site yourself.

Just why escapes me though, as you still deem him worthy enough to copy and paste his crap.

Early onset dementia??

I certainly hope not.



Take care.
 
The Nuffield Council on Bioethics published a report last week that found evidence of scientists increasingly “employing less rigorous research methods” in response to funding pressures. A 2009 survey found that almost 2 per cent of scientists admitting that they have fabricated results; 14 per cent say that their colleagues have done so.

Do you think that posting this twice helps your case or is it something else.....
Matt Ridley LOL yup and expert but at what? Would you say he is an expert in managing all forms of risk ;-) Does he not hold a 150 year old record in the UK. I would not bank on him.... LOL

added:
http://scienceblogs.com/gregladen/2...nti-science-writer-climate-science-denialist/
 
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More Corporations Flee as ALEC Rolls Out Its Legislative Agenda

Only nine funders of the American Legislative Exchange Council's annual winter meeting in Washington, DC, are listed on ALEC's conference brochure this year.
The small number comes at a time when ALEC is crowing about the November 4 elections, which swept in more Republican legislators and potential recruits for ALEC's operations--where elected lawmakers vote as equals with corporations behind closed doors on "model' bills to change Americans' rights.
The way ALEC works has been called a "corporate dating service" by U.S. Rep. Mark Pocan, who has observed ALEC's closed-door votes of corporate lobbyists and state legislators. But with nearly 100 private sector funders having leftALEC since CMD launched ALECexposed.org in 2011 and citizens across the country began learning about how special interests wine and dine lawmakers through ALEC to push controversial bills into law, ALEC brochures listing corporate sponsors are not as full as they used to be. (The list of sponsors is uploaded below.)
Only Nine ALEC Funders Listed, While Nearly as Many Dumped ALEC in Recent Weeks over Climate and More
In the past several weeks, the corporate exodus from ALEC has continued with Google, Facebook, Yelp, Yahoo, Overstock.com, SAP America, AOL, and Emerson Electric all announcing that they had left ALEC or would soon leave ALEC. Microsoft announced earlier this year that it had stopped funding ALEC, joining General Electric, General Motors, Walmart, and other Fortune 500 firms in leaving the controversial group.
Then in September, Google Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt went on NPR's Diane Rehm show. Following a question from a caller about ALEC, Schmidt admitted that Google had made a mistake in providing ALEC with funding because of its position on climate change and its opposition to renewable energy. "We should not be aligned with such people. They are just literally lying," Schmidt said.
Within weeks, Facebook, Yahoo, Yelp, Overstock.com all announced that they too had or would soon leave ALEC. Most recently, SAP America, the German software firm and the ALEC corporate board chair, announced that it would immediately cease support for ALEC, telling CMD in a statement that this was because of the groups "strange policies" on climate change, renewable energy, guns and voting rights.
- See more at: http://www.prwatch.org/news/2014/11...-latest-confirm-alec-exit#sthash.1j7PpWUC.dpu, Yelp, Overstock.com, SAP America, and Emerson Electric all announcing that they had left ALEC or would soon leave ALEC.
This fall, Google's Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt admitted on NPR that ALEC's disinformation on climate change and its opposition to renewable energy made Google's funding untenable:
"We should not be aligned with such people. They are just literally lying."
Similarly, SAP America, the U.S. part of a German software firm that was the chairman of ALEC's corporate board told the Center for Media and Democracy--which publishes PRWatch.org and ALECexposed.org--that SAP was leaving because of ALEC's "strange policies" on climate change, renewable energy, and other issues, in addition to SAP's concerns about corporations playing such a role in a democracy.
In response, ALEC has claimed that it does not have any policies on climate change and ALEC's new executive director, Lisa Nelson, dodged a reporter's question of whether man-made carbon emissions are causing climate change with the talking point: "I don't know the science of climate change."
However, as CMD, the Climate Investigations Center, Energy and Policy Institute, Forecast on the Facts, Greenpeace, the Union of Concerned Scientists, NRDC, Sierra Club, Common Cause, and other organizations have documented or noted repeatedly, for two decades through to this day, ALEC has been at the forefront of peddling climate change denial to state policymakers. Its legislative agenda is replete with an array of bills to block almost every effort by the Environmental Protection Agency or other governmental bodies to respond to the cimate changes underway.
As CMD and Forecast the Facts documented in response to ALEC's climate claims this fall, at its annual summer meeting in Dallas, ALEC featured climate change denier Joseph Bast of the Heartland Institute telling lawmakers, among other things:

  • "There is no scientific consensus on the human role in climate change."
  • "There is no need to reduce carbon dioxide emissions and no point in doing so."
  • The International Panel on Climate Change "is not a credible source of science or economics."
As CMD uncovered, that ALEC meeting a few months ago included a powerpoint presentation by climate change deniers who call themselves the "Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow" in which lawmakers were coached on how to talk about what it called "man-made climate fears."
ALEC has also routinely featured climate change deniers, including Sherwood Idso, who hasasserted the virtues of increased carbon dioxide include longer lifespans, in a session called "Warming Up to Climate Change" that Rep. Pocan attended where he was astonished to see fellow lawmakers believing the ALEC spin on climate.
In fact, despite ALEC's PR claims this week, this conference in DC has a session titled "The Greening of Planet Earth," which does not list who paid for that session or who is speaking at it, but that "green" sounding title is actually the same title as a video and set of work by Sherwood Idso's co-author and fellow climate change denier Craig Idso, as documented byDeSmog Blog.
ALEC's Anti-Climate Antics Have Repelled Silicon Valley, but Peabody Coal, UPS, Altria, GTL, and Stink Tanks Remain
With all the public attention on the reality of ALEC's track record on climate change denial and its obstruction of legislation to deal with carbon perhaps it should come as no surprise that one of the only corporations publicly identified as underwriting ALEC's winter conference this year is the largest privately held coal corporation in the US., Peabody Energy. In recent years, Peabody has expanded its efforts to ship high-sulfur coal from the western U.S. to China while spinning off its east coast coal operations to Patriot Coal, loaded up with pension and health care liabilities for the miners who toiled for decades, which it then tried unsuccessfully to void in bankruptcy proceedings. Meanwhile, the Peabody CEO's compensation is more than $15,000 a day.
Along with Peabody as a "vice chairman" level sponsor of ALEC on the brochure is UPS, whose slogan is "What Can Brown Do for You?" UPS is underwriting a conference where ALEC's legislative agenda (and its counterpart American City County Exchange (ACCE)) includes more union-busting along with efforts to thwart popular moves to increase the minimum wage, to limit access to Medicaid and life-saving health insurance options, and other bills that do not help make life better for UPS customers.
This is the first official meeting of ACCE, an effort to spread ALEC's corporate agenda to local elected officials by providing them with measures like those designed to try to cut off private sector union organizing through local restrictions.

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The Texas Public Policy Foundation, which has received funding from Koch Industries and from the part of the Koch family fortune housed in its philanthropies, is also a vice chair level sponsor of ALEC's meeting. TPPF is part of the State Policy Network (SPN), a sibling of ALEC's created to make the national legislative agenda of ALEC corporations pushed by ALEC look more local through "think tanks" branded with local names. (CMD has launched two efforts that document the activities of SPN and its affiliates: Exposed: The State Policy Network and Stinktanks.org.) Koch Industries' lobbying arm, Koch Public Sector, also continues to support ALEC and have a seat and vote on its corporate board; Koch money has been funding ALEC for about two decades.
SPN itself is one of the top four spenders on the ALEC conference that are listed in the brochure, along with Altria (the rebranded Philip Morris global tobacco corporation), PhRMA (the special interest trade group of global drug companies that has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars funding trips, called "scholarships," for ALEC lawmakers, as CMD has documented), and an entity called "Citizens for Self-Governance" (CSG).
CSG was founded by Mark Meckler who helped launch the political operation called the Tea Party Patriots. CSG's investment in ALEC comes at a time when proponents of a constitutional convention believe they are gathering steam to win enough states to launch a convention to amend the Constitution to force drastic cuts to the federal budget. Meckler has paid for breakfast for ALEC legislators on Thursday morning to hear talk show jock Mark Levin, who leads a firm called the "Landmark Legal Foundation," urge state legislators to make Meckler's wish of a constitutional convention a reality. Levin's group has repeatedly sued to try to force taxpayers to fund private religious education or home schooling, among other things.
While Meckler is pushing a convention on what's named the "balanced budget amendment," Levin has pushed for a broader series of amendments to the Constitution, including repealing the amendment that allows for the direct election of U.S. Senators by the people and an amendment to constitutionally require restrictions on IDs to vote, among changes. ALEC helped push Voter ID restrictions that made it harder for Americans to vote bills from 2009 to 2012, when it sought to distance itself from that part of its agenda after public outcry, although the legislation it ratified continues to be promoted by ALEC legislators. Alongside the ALEC meeting, CSG's "Convention of States" is meeting to maximize opportunities to recruit state legislators to push for a constitutional convention.
Also willing to share the ALEC spotlight as a funder of ALEC's convention is the Guarantee Trust Life company, which markets life insurance to schools and universities to cover students, who have a very low mortality rate.
For years, Guarantee Trust Life has paid for a seat and a vote on ALEC's Health and Human Services Task Force, which has been focused on stopping the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, which provides protections against children and adults with pre-existing health conditions from being denied health insurance coverage and which has become the most controversial legislation signed into law by President Obama. The efforts to prevent implementation of the ACA will almost certainly be aided by the new ALEC alums in Congress that ALEC touts in its brochure: Senators Thom Tillis, Joni Ernst, and Cory Gardner, who join nearly 100 other federal legislators who cut their teeth in ALEC's corporate bill mill.
Rounding out the nine named underwriters of ALEC's DC convention is ccAdvertising, which provides "constituent research and data acquisition." One of the sessions for lawmakers at the conference is titled "The New Knock on the Door!--How Mobile Phone Channel Voter Targeting and GOTV Affected the 2014 Elections!" It is not known how many ALEC legislators hired the firm for their election campaigns in prior years.
ALEC Continues to Mislead Lawmakers about its Critics and More
ALEC's brochure opens with its celebration of the election results that it says it has been preparing for since 41 years ago, when it was founded. ALEC was created in 1974 after U.S. Chamber of Commerce lawyer Lewis Powell called for corporations to fund a new infrastructure to push the corporate agenda in the wake of an American awakening about how corporations were polluting the planet.
In its welcoming message to lawmakers and lobbyists, ALEC also smears citizens and groups that have opposed ALEC's agenda--which has included making it harder for Americans to vote and making it easier for killers to get away with shooting people--by describing their opponents as embracing "the scare tactics and anti-liberty ideas propagated by those motivated to weaken our society."
Yet, the Americans opposing ALEC hail from working families across the country who are concerned about how a shadowy group puts special interest legislation in the hands of lawmakers whose trips may be underwritten by those same special interests. ALEC's opponents contend that ALEC is the one weakening democratic society by creating a forum where unelected corporate lobbyists actually vote in secret with legislators on bills that advance corporate interests but undermine their constituents opportunities for better wages, benefits, health care, public schools, air, and water.
ALEC's smear basically recasts people and groups speaking out about their personal rights--such as the right to collectively bargain, for example, which ALEC has long assailed--as "anti-liberty."
Meanwhile, one of ALEC's sessions this week is about trying to stop shareholders from exercising their rights to manage whether corporations spend money to influence elections or legislation through groups like ALEC, without the consent of the owners of the corporation. In the ALEC universe, it is anti-liberty for people to exercise their liberty to constrain corporations, which cannot vote in a democracy, from exercising undue influence in a democracy, but it is pro-liberty for corporations to spend shareholder money in ways that drown out the voices of real people in elections and on the laws that should be passed in a representative democracy.
Despite ALEC's rhetoric and its PR outreach to select reporters to claim it is transparent--even as it cleanses its public agendas of which special interests are the real writers of the bills it is promoting--ALEC has continued to lose corporate funders once its actual legislative agenda and its operations receive public scrutiny. As CMD has reported, ALEC's funding was down by at least $1.3 million in 2013, nearly 20% of its budget.
Although some ALEC members are boasting that it has more legislators attending its winter session than ever before, the $50 per year paid by lawmakers--or paid unwittingly by the taxpayers--as nominal ALEC dues in some states, cannot offset the loss of the core funders of ALEC, the corporations that pay thousands of dollars for seats for their unelected lobbyists on ALEC task forces where they vote as equals with legislators and thousands more for the privilege of using ALEC's one-stop shopping for lawmakers from across the country to pitch their legislative wishlists for the new year.




LISA GRAVES

Lisa is Executive Director and Editor-in-Chief. She previously served as the Chief Counsel for Nominations on the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee and Deputy Assistant Attorney General in the U.S. Department of Justice, among other roles.



 
An inside look at U.S. think tank's plans to undo environmental legislation

The corporate-sponsored American Legislative Exchange Council works with lobbyists and legislators to derail climate change policies.

http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/...k_alec_fights_environmental_legislation.html#
By: Mike De Souza Ottawa Bureau, Published on Sun Aug 24 2014
Scientists are exaggerating the climate change crisis.

There’s no need to reduce carbon dioxide emissions because the benefits of warmer temperatures outweigh the costs.

Over-the-top environmental regulations are linked to such problems as suicide and drug abuse.

These aren’t the ramblings of a right-wing conspiracy theorist, but the opinions expressed at a midsummer retreat for U.S. state legislators held by a powerful U.S. think tank and sponsored by corporations as varied as AT&T and TransCanada, the company behind the controversial Keystone XL pipeline proposal.

Internal documents from this summer’s Dallas meeting of the American Legislative Exchange Council, leaked to a watchdog group, reveal several sessions casting doubt on the scientific evidence of climate change. They also reveal sessions focused on crafting policies that reduce rules for fossil fuel companies and create obstacles for the development of alternative forms of energy.

The meeting, hosted in Dallas from July 30 to Aug. 1, involved a mix of lobbyists, U.S. legislators and climate change contrarians, and was sponsored by more than 50 large corporations, including several that do business in Alberta’s oilsands.

One workshop had the goal of teaching politicians “how to think and talk about climate and energy issues” and provided them with guidance for fighting environmental policies and regulations.

“Legislators are just there as foot soldiers, really,” said Chris Taylor, a Democratic state representative from Wisconsin and a member of ALEC.

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Taylor, who said she belongs to the group in order to keep people informed about what it’s doing, said research groups appear to be writing policies presented at the meeting on behalf of corporations that are trying to get rid of obstacles to profit.

“Legislators aren’t coming up with these ideas,” she said.

An ALEC spokeswoman, Molly Fuhs, said in an email to the Star that all of its meetings are meant to bring together members “to discuss and debate model solutions to the issues facing the states,” using principles of limited government, free markets and federalism.

All of the model policies, which must first be introduced by a legislator member, are voted on and approved by a national board made up of 23 state legislators, she added.

“This is to ensure ALEC model policies are driven by, and are reflective of, state legislators’ ideas and the issues facing the states,” she wrote.

The group, founded in 1973, says it has about 2,000 elected Democratic and Republican state legislators in its membership. Its non-partisan status as an educational organization allows it to give U.S. tax receipts to its donors.

With nine separate committees made up of corporate representatives and politicians, the council says it can contribute to as many as 1,000 different policies or laws in a single year. And on average, about 20 per cent of these become laws or policies in areas such as international trade, the environment or health care, it says.

“For more than forty years, ALEC has helped lobbyists from some of the biggest polluters on the planet meet privately with U.S. lawmakers to discuss and model legislation,” said Nick Surgey, research director at U.S. watchdog Center for Media and Democracy.

“ALEC is a big reason the U.S. is so far behind in taking significant action to tackle climate change.”

A separate session on climate change at the ALEC retreat, presented by another educational charity, featured several proposals to discourage development of renewable energy, to stop new American rules to reduce pollution from coal power plants, as well as a “model resolution” in support of Keystone XL, which is seeking approval from the Obama administration.

According to a conference agenda, obtained by the Center for Media and Democracy, this presentation was given by Joseph Bast, president of the Heartland Institute, a Chicago-based conservative think tank. Neither Bast, an author and publisher with an undergraduate degree in economics, nor the institute responded to requests for comment.

Slides from the presentation show that it also challenged established scientific evidence on climate change, while proposing to dismantle the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Other internal ALEC records released by the watchdog show that it previously asked its elected members to publicly speak out in support of Keystone XL, providing them with “information” to include in submissions for the U.S. State Department, which is reviewing the TransCanada project.

“They lobby,” Taylor, the Wisconsin Democrat, said of ALEC. “They come up with model policies. They send emails to legislators. They urge people to support model policies. They send thank-yous when the model policies pass. My goal in going is to make sure it’s not stealth, to make sure people know where these policies come from. And these policies come from big corporations through ALEC.”

The Harper government has also participated in an ALEC event, sending a Canadian diplomat, Canada’s consul general in Dallas, Paula Caldwell St-Onge, to a 2011 conference in New Orleans to promote the Keystone XL pipeline, the oilsands and other fossil fuels. Speaking notes from her presentation don’t mention climate change.

Fuhs, ALEC’s spokeswoman, confirmed that several multinational corporations were among those to sponsor the Dallas conference, including telecommunications giant AT&T, pharmaceutical companies Pfizer and Bayer and energy companies such as Chevron, Devon, Exxon Mobil and TransCanada.

But she stopped responding to questions from the Star after being asked about the internal documents circulated at the meeting and obtained by the watchdog group.

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Most of the companies contacted by the Star confirmed they had sponsored the event, explaining that this didn’t necessarily mean they endorsed all of ALEC’s proposed policies.

Alberta-based TransCanada, which sponsored an “Ice Cream Social” event at the ALEC meetings in each of the past two years, downplayed its role.

“I cannot honestly speak to whether or not someone who was a consultant for our company was at the event — because we are not their only client — but no one was directed to be at this event to present views on behalf of TransCanada,” said TransCanada spokesman Shawn Howard. “I can’t be any clearer than that.”

Howard, who said the company’s contributions to ALEC weren’t considered to be charitable donations, said the sponsorship doesn’t mean TransCanada agrees with the organization’s policies.

“Reasonable people wouldn’t expect us to only go to or support things that are a perfect match for our own company’s views and values,” Howard said, noting TransCanada has a climate change policy that includes billions of dollars of investments in renewable energy.

“Sometimes you have to speak to people with different viewpoints to develop better public policy and decisions — that’s just common sense,” Howard said.

A spokesman for ExxonMobil told the Star the company didn’t want to comment about its sponsorship of ALEC, saying that it wasn’t a member of the organization. ALEC’s website lists representatives from 17 organizations on its “private enterprise advisory council” including ExxonMobil, AT&T, Pfizer, as well as Peabody Energy, the largest private-sector coal company in the world.

ALEC declined to explain the role of this “advisory council.”

A spokesman from Devon Energy, Tim Hartley, confirmed that it was “one of the many sponsors” of the Dallas meeting, explaining that the company “generally favours the principles of free markets and limited government that animate ALEC.” But he said he couldn’t discuss specific public policy issues.

“We interact with a variety of stakeholder groups in the course of our business, and we embrace our responsibility to participate in the free and open marketplace of ideas,” said Hartley.

Although she is often critical of ALEC, Taylor, who joined the organization as a legislative member a few years ago, said she doesn’t expect to be kicked out since it is trying to promote its bipartisan nature to preserve its charitable status.

She said energy was a major theme at the Dallas conference, driven by some large corporations, with one corporate representative from Peabody Energy urging the conference to help spark a “political tsunami” against new U.S. EPA regulations proposed to slash pollution from coal power plants.

Peabody Energy didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Surgey, from the Center for Media and Democracy, said one of his biggest concerns about ALEC is its secrecy.

“We have many of our state elected officials going on to these conferences, and yet we’re not allowed to know who they meet with,” said Surgey. “We just know that it’s a very large number of lobbyists from big multinational corporations but ALEC refuses to tell us who’s there.”

ALEC has also sponsored a pair of trips for U.S. politicians to the Alberta oilsands — described as an “oilsands academy” — arranging meetings for the politicians with representatives from TransCanada and Devon Energy, as well as one environmental group, the Pembina Institute, in October 2012.

TransCanada said it doesn’t organize or fund these types of visits, but it assists by freeing up staff to explain operations at facilities.

Sandi Walker, an Alberta government spokeswoman from the provincial department of international and intergovernmental relations, said it hosted 54 trips to the oilsands in 2012, including the fall visit co-ordinated by ALEC as part of ongoing efforts to inform legislators and officials about the industry with “fact-based information” to allow key decision-makers to make informed decisions about energy. Each trip typically cost about $3,000, she said.

She said an ALEC representative had contacted Alberta to set up the meeting, explaining that the province maintains relations with a variety of stakeholders and organizations in the U.S.

Walker said the province is committed to being a leader in greenhouse gas reduction technology by renewing its climate change strategy so that it can effectively reduce emissions at the source, noting it has already implemented a price on carbon emissions for industry.

While TransCanada’s pipeline proposal has popped up on the agenda at multiple ALEC events in recent years, Taylor said that the company’s latest “ice cream social” reminded her of what happened last year when it hosted a similar event.

The ice cream started melting, and in a crowd of skeptics, she joked that she thought this might be accepted as evidence of global warming.
 
[h=1]Scientists to Media: Stop Calling Climate Change Deniers “Skeptics”[/h]http://www.csicop.org/news/press_releases/show/deniers_not_skeptics
[h=4]December 10, 2014[/h]For Immediate Release: December 10, 2014
Contact: Paul Fidalgo, Communications Director
press@centerforinquiry.net - 207-358-9785

Prominent scientists, science communicators, and skeptic activists, including Bill Nye“the Science Guy,” physicist Lawrence Krauss, Cosmos co-creator Ann Druyan, and many others are calling on the news media to stop using the word “skeptic”when referring to those who refuse to accept the reality of climate change, and instead refer to them by what they really are: science deniers.
The statement, signed by 48 Fellows of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI), comes as a response to a New York Times article from Nov 10, 2014, “Republicans Vow to Fight EPA and Approve Keystone Pipeline,” which referred to Sen. James Inhofe, who believes climate change to be an elaborate hoax, as “a prominent skeptic of climate change.”
“As scientific skeptics, we are well aware of political efforts to undermine climate science by those who deny reality but do not engage in scientific research or consider evidence that their deeply held opinions are wrong,” says the joint statement. “The most appropriate word to describe the behavior of those individuals is ‘denial.’
“Not all individuals who call themselves climate change skeptics are deniers. But virtually all deniers have falsely branded themselves as skeptics. By perpetrating this misnomer, journalists have granted undeserved credibility to those who reject science and scientific inquiry.”
Signatories to the statement, drafted by physicist and science communicator Mark Boslough, also included Nobel laureate Sir Harold Kroto, philosopher Daniel C. Dennett, science education advocate Eugenie Scott, and David Morrison, Director of the Carl Sagan Center for the Study of Life in the Universe at the SETI Institute, as well as CSI executive director Barry Karr, Skeptical Inquirer editor Kendrick Frazier, and Center for Inquiry president and CEO Ronald A. Lindsay.
CSI promotes scientific inquiry, critical investigation, and the use of reason in examining controversial and extraordinary claims. It is an affiliate of the Center for Inquiry. The complete statement is available at bit.ly/DeniersNotSkeptics.
* * *
The Committee for Skeptical Inquiry (CSI) encourages the critical investigation of paranormal and fringe-science claims from a responsible, scientific point of view. Learn more at http://www.csicop.org.
The Center for Inquiry (CFI) is a nonprofit educational, advocacy, and research organization headquartered in Amherst, New York, with executive offices in Washington, D.C. It is also home to both the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry and the Council for Secular Humanism. The mission of CFI is to foster a secular society based on science, reason, freedom of inquiry, and humanist values. Learn more athttp://www.centerforinquiry.net.
 
And in the real world.



NEW YORK (AP) — North America, once a sponge that sucked in a significant portion of the world's oil, will instead be supplying the world with oil and other liquid hydrocarbons by the end of this decade, according to ExxonMobil's annual long-term energy forecast.

And the "almost unspeakable" amount of natural gas found in recent years in the U.S. and elsewhere in North America will be enough to make the region one of the world's biggest exporters of that fuel by 2025, even as domestic demand for it increases, according to Bill Colton, Exxon's chief strategist.

"The world has such an improved outlook for supplies," Colton said in an interview. "Peak oil theorists have been run out of town by American ingenuity."

In a forecast that might make economists happy but environmentalists fret, Exxon's two chief products, oil and natural gas, will be abundant and affordable enough to meet the rising demand for energy in the developing world as the global middle class swells to 5 billion from 2 billion and buys energy-hungry conveniences such as cars and air conditioners.

This is a result of advances in drilling technology that have made it possible for engineers to reach oil and gas in unconventional rock and extreme locations and quieted talk that the world was quickly running out of oil.

And it is despite what Exxon assumes will be increasingly strict policies around the world on emissions of carbon dioxide and other gasses emitted by fossil fuel use that scientists say are triggering dangerous changes to the world's climate.

Exxon's outlook forecasts world energy supply and demand through 2040 and is updated every year. It is noted by investors and policymakers and used by Exxon to shape its long-term strategy. Colton said the recent sharp decline in oil prices does not have much effect on the company's long-term vision, and that the company expects prices to rise and fall, sometimes dramatically, throughout the period.

Exxon's vision is broadly similar to that of other forecasters, including those by the International Energy Agency, which released its most recent long-term forecast last month. Demand for energy will grow rapidly in coming decades in the developing world, while demand in the developed world is expected to be flat or even decline as countries impose stricter emissions policies and become more efficient.

The use of coal, now the world's second most important fuel after oil, will eventually slip as countries try to reduce air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. Natural gas, which burns cleaner than coal and emits half the global warming gases as coal, will supplant coal in the number two spot.

Exxon takes a relatively dim view of the prospects for renewable energy, however. It believes that some of the aggressive targets for renewables cited by governments are too expensive to come to fruition, and the technologies have not advanced far enough to make them cheap or effective enough for broad adoption globally.

"They are just not ready for prime time," Colton says.

While Exxon expects wind, solar and other non-hydro electric energy to grow faster by far than any other energy technology over the period, those renewables will provide just 4 percent of the world's energy by 2040, up from 1 percent in 2010. Fossil fuels will still dominate: Oil will account for 32 percent of world energy, natural gas for 26 percent, and coal for 19 percent. Nuclear and biomass will account for 8 percent each, and hydroelectric power will account for 3 percent.

Michael E. Mann, a climate scientist and director of Penn State's Earth System Science Center, notes that many experts dispute Exxon's conclusion on renewables because in several places around the world renewable energy is competitive with the price of traditional power, even without a high price on carbon pollution that Exxon and others seem to agree is coming.

Scientists say if Exxon's vision comes to pass the world's climate system will become dangerous and chaotic, and some environmental economists suggest that economies will be forced to stop burning fossil fuels at such high rates to prevent catastrophic climate change.

"Exxon's vision of a fossil fuel-driven future is one in which carbon dioxide levels rise well beyond the dangerous limit, where we will witness fundamental threats to food, water, land, our economy, national security, and our environment," Mann says. "Let us hope, for the sake of us and our planet, that this is not our future."

Other recent scientific studies suggest oil and gas companies and government forecasters could be overestimating how much oil and gas is accessible in the shale formations that have fueled the U.S. boom in oil and gas production.

Ken Cohen, Exxon's government and public affairs chief, says the studies "are not consonant with the facts." He says Exxon is finding instead that improving technology is increasing productivity of each well they drill.

That will mean that the end of the decade, North America will be exporting more oil and liquid hydrocarbons than it imports, a remarkable turnaround for a region that was a major global importer.

"Limitations are political and policy-related more than technical," Cohen says.
 
exxon traded at 105 a share in July now it's trading at 84 time to put all your savings into it as it's cheap. Oh... our dollar dropped from 95 cents in July to what 84 cents today..... nothing could go wrong right?
 
THE oil price has fallen by more than 40% since June, when it was $115 a barrel. It is now below $70. This comes after nearly five years of stability. At a meeting in Vienna on November 27th the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which controls nearly 40% of the world market, failed to reach agreement on production curbs, sending the price tumbling. Also hard hit are oil-exporting countries such as Russia (where the rouble has hit record lows), Nigeria, Iran and Venezuela. Why is the price of oil falling?

The oil price is partly determined by actual supply and demand, and partly by expectation. Demand for energy is closely related to economic activity. It also spikes in the winter in the northern hemisphere, and during summers in countries which use air conditioning. Supply can be affected by weather (which prevents tankers loading) and by geopolitical upsets. If producers think the price is staying high, they invest, which after a lag boosts supply. Similarly, low prices lead to an investment drought. OPEC’s decisions shape expectations: if it curbs supply sharply, it can send prices spiking. Saudi Arabia produces nearly 10m barrels a day—a third of the OPEC total.

Four things are now affecting the picture. Demand is low because of weak economic activity, increased efficiency, and a growing switch away from oil to other fuels. Second, turmoil in Iraq and Libya—two big oil producers with nearly 4m barrels a day combined—has not affected their output. The market is more sanguine about geopolitical risk. Thirdly, America has become the world’s largest oil producer. Though it does not export crude oil, it now imports much less, creating a lot of spare supply. Finally, the Saudis and their Gulf allies have decided not to sacrifice their own market share to restore the price. They could curb production sharply, but the main benefits would go to countries they detest such as Iran and Russia. Saudi Arabia can tolerate lower oil prices quite easily. It has $900 billion in reserves. Its own oil costs very little (around $5-6 per barrel) to get out of the ground.

The main effect of this is on the riskiest and most vulnerable bits of the oil industry. These include American frackers who have borrowed heavily on the expectation of continuing high prices. They also include Western oil companies with high-cost projects involving drilling in deep water or in the Arctic, or dealing with maturing and increasingly expensive fields such as the North Sea. But the greatest pain is in countries where the regimes are dependent on a high oil price to pay for costly foreign adventures and expensive social programmes. These include Russia (which is already hit by Western sanctions following its meddling in Ukraine) and Iran (which is paying to keep the Assad regime afloat in Syria). Optimists think economic pain may make these countries more amenable to international pressure. Pessimists fear that when cornered, they may lash out in desperation.






exxon traded at 105 a share in July now it's trading at 84 time to put all your savings into it as it's cheap. Oh... our dollar dropped from 95 cents in July to what 84 cents today..... nothing could go wrong right?
 
[h=1]What oil does to democracy | Andrew Nikiforuk | TEDxCalgary[/h]Published on Jun 27, 2013
Most petrostates -- economies where oil accounts for more than twenty percent of revenue -- share the same chronic problems. At TEDxCalgary, Andrew Nikiforuk shows that these polities tend to overspend, undertax, suffer from overvalued currencies, and become undemocratic. A solution, Nikiforuk believes, is to instate a taxation structure like that which exists in non-oil economies, leading to greater public inclusiveness and preventing one vested interest from dominating the political process.
[nOAVrPsIMes]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOAVrPsIMes

This was before the drop in crude oil price.
I personally think he is bang on with his view. What was it the our "dear leader" said about LNG? eliminate the provincial tax, pay off the debt, pay for our medical and supply money to a fund for the future. Classic petro state thinking.....
 
Alberta Won't Appeal Decision to Allow Jessica Ernst to Sue

Landowner's landmark lawsuit against the fracking industry continues.
By Andrew Nikiforuk, Yesterday, TheTyee.ca
Wanless-Ernst-Klippenstein-2-600px.jpg



Jessica Ernst, the businesswoman and oil patch scientist defiantly challenging the regulation of hydraulic fracturing in Alberta, has scored another legal victory.
The Alberta government will not appeal a recent ruling that allows Ernst to sue Alberta Environment for the alleged negligent investigation of water well contamination during the shallow fracking of coal seams in central Alberta.
The Alberta government, which is highly dependent on hydrocarbon revenue, gave no reason to the Canadian Press for not appealing the decision.
Last month, Alberta Chief Justice Neil Wittmann dismissed all key arguments made by the government of Alberta against the lawsuit of Ernst, including the fear that it may unleash a flood of lawsuits against a government that supports hydraulic fracking of energy wells with numerous subsidies.
The Alberta government argued that Ernst's $33-million lawsuit had no merit; that the government owed no duty of care to landowners with contaminated water; and that the government had statutory immunity.
But Wittmann's ruling disagreed on all major counts and ordered the lawsuit against the government to proceed. "While this is a novel claim, I find there is a reasonable prospect Ernst will succeed in establishing that Alberta owed her a prima facie duty of care," Wittmann wrote.

Ernst cautiously welcomed the government's decision. "It cost me a year of time in my lawsuit and lots of money, but it is a major victory," she said.
"There is still a lot of hell ahead. The government maintains that fracking is safe and that all methane contamination of water wells is natural. I think my lawsuit, which is built on corporate and regulatory data, will prove things differently."
Ernst added that she looks forward to the Alberta government's statement of defence "and the disclosure of many more dirty details in document exchange."
To date, Ernst has filed more than 2,000 documents with Encana to support her lawsuit. The gas giant must disclose its documents by Dec. 19.
The suit so far
Ernst's seven-year-old lawsuit alleges that Encana, a pioneer of hydraulic fracturing, drilled and fractured shallow coal bed methane wells directly in her local groundwater supply between 2001 and 2004 near Rosebud, Alberta, polluting Ernst's water well with enough toxic chemicals and methane to make it flammable.
The lawsuit also alleges that two provincial regulators, the Energy Resources Conservation Board (ERCB) and Alberta Environment, failed to act on documented and repeated violations of the law.
Chief Justice Wittman, however, struck the ERCB from the case last year on the grounds it couldn't be sued or charged with breaching Canada's Charter of Rights due to an immunity clause.
Ernst's lawsuit alleges that the ERCB (now the Alberta Energy Regulator) violated her constitutional rights by falsely accusing her of making criminal threats and banishing all contact with her due to her outspoken criticism of the board.
After Alberta's Court of Appeal upheld Wittmann's decision in favor of the ERCB, Ernst told her lawyers to take the case to the Supreme Court.
If the Supreme Court hears the case (only a small percentage are heard), Ernst's lawyers will argue that immunity clauses in provincial legislation cannot protect the state and "block an individual from seeking a remedy for breach" of her fundamental rights and freedoms under the nation's Charter of Rights.
ERCB's response
Glenn Solomon, a prominent Calgary lawyer representing the ERCB, filed a response to Ernst's special filing before the Supreme Court.
"The ERCB submits that there is no legal issue of general importance which requires further guidance from this Court nor any injustice to the Applicant to remedy," says the document.
Last year, Solomon advised a global oil and gas driller seeking legal help for his mother, Ann Craft, that suing energy regulators was akin to "World War Three" and that a citizen would be "crazy" to do so.
In a taped iPhone conversation, Solomon, one of Alberta's top energy litigators, also explained how the multi-billion-dollar fracking industry actively bought the silence of landowners claiming damages with buy-outs and confidentiality agreements.
Fracking still contentious
Hydraulic fracturing, the pressurized injection of fluids, chemicals and sand into shallow and deep rock formations as tight as granite, has sparked concerns about earthquakes, methane leaks, groundwater contamination, land fragmentation and toxic air pollution across the continent.
Although industry lobbyists still contend that fracking poses no risk to groundwater, studies and textbooks by petroleum geologists tell a vastly different story.
The Nontechnical Guide to Petroleum Geology, Exploration, Drilling and Production by Norman J. Hyne, for example, spells out the hazards bluntly: "A well can be fracked several times during its lifetime and in some instance, however, hydraulic fracturing can harm a well by fracking into water. The hydraulically induced fractures extend vertically into a water reservoir that floods the well with water."
The popular book is cited in numerous journals and industry websites.
Ernst said that Hyne's description fits what happened to the aquifer near her home in Rosebud, during a frenzied drilling boom for shallow sands and coal bed methane, an unconventional resource with marginal economic returns.
In Rosebud, Encana repeatedly fracked directly into the aquifer, according to a 2005 report by Hydrogeological Consultants. The report has been disclosed to Encana in what's known as a document exchange.
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http://thetyee.ca/News/2014/12/10/Alberta-Wont-Appeal-Ernst-Decision/
 
[h=1]SprayLD coats various surfaces with energy-producing solar cells[/h]http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/sprayld-coats-various-surfaces-with-energy-producing-solar-cells-1.2867170

In the next decade, people may be able to convert almost any surface into a solar power generator.
Scientists have built a device that can spray on solar cells, the first step toward quickly and easily coating variously shaped objects that could range from airplane wings and road surfaces to the roof of your house.
"My dream is that you could have a couple of technicians with Ghostbuster backpacks show up at your house and spray paint your roof," says Illan Kramer, a University of Toronto and IBM researcher funded through a collaborative program between the company, the Canadian government and various universities.
While he admits that dream is still a long way from reality, Kramer and other U of T researchers have made the first step toward a spray-on solar power future with the creation of what they call sprayLD.

The sprayLD deposits solar cells (specifically, colloidal quantum dots or CQDs) onto a flexible film that can then be used to wrap very large, awkwardly shaped surfaces. It could be used to cover kilometres of road, an airplane wing or a car fender.
The film can be used to cover anything "that's bent in funny ways, that's not a standard shape," says Kramer, who tested the process on different materials, including one similar to the plastic sheets used for overhead projectors.
The process is much better for these types of shaped surfaces than standard assembly-line style batch processing, he says, which doesn't allow for continuous coating.
"If your hope is to coat every road or ... make many, many, many kilometres worth of solar cells, you need to be able to coat very large areas in a ... quick amount of time and in a uniform way," he explains.
[h=2]$1,000 to build sprayLD[/h]The approach requires a way to produce inexpensive, spray-paintable solar cells.
"We started by buying a few art store airbrushes," Kramer says, "and it kind of grew from there."
The scientists stopped by an art store near the university and purchased a few airbrushes for a little over $100. They also bought three spray nozzles, including one fine-mist type from a vendor who mostly services the steel mill industry.
The device they created, which looks like something constructed during a Junkyard Wars episode, cost a little less than $1,000 to build — solar cells not included.

Next, the scientists want to build a bigger version of the sprayLD device to test whether increased size will affect its performance.
They also need to improve the efficiency of the solar cell material. The performance benchmark for solar energy is typically a product that can convert 10 per cent of the sun's energy into electrical energy, he says.
"We're close," Kramer says. Their best measured efficiency is 8.1 per cent.
"So, we're getting there."
Kramer's innovative approach offers cheap, spray-on solar power
 
Look who just got thrown under the bus....... welcome to the party. Translation is we're going to stop helping and spending money on these pipelines to nowhere..... and somehow we want to smell like a rose......

Up to pipeline firms, not Ottawa, to make Gateway, Trans Mountain work, industry minister says



Federal government has 'done everything we can,' Industry Minister James Moore says

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/up-...ountain-work-industry-minister-says-1.2868997

Industry Minister James Moore says the federal government did its job to advance the cause of two proposed oil pipelines through his home province of British Columbia, and now it's up to the companies to ensure the projects succeed.
"We've done everything we can in a responsible way,'' Moore said in an interview with CBC News in his Parliament Hill office when asked about Enbridge's proposed Northern Gateway pipeline and Kinder Morgan's planned expansion of its Trans Mountain pipeline.
As the senior cabinet minister from B.C., Moore's played a pivotal role in advancing the government's signature economic policy: promoting the benefits of getting Alberta's oil sands bitumen to markets overseas.
It's been a tough slog, and now Moore appears to be signalling that he is looking to other challenges in the new year — like advancing his government's consumer-first agenda and promoting competitiveness through investments in technology.

But both are hugely controversial, and have spawned protests by First Nations, environmental groups and others.
Also, neither is close to being approved or helping the Conservative government in Ottawa realize its goal of making Canada an oil superpower, feeding the energy needs of countries along the Pacific Rim.
"But it's still up to the proponents to meet the environmental tests, to engage with First Nations, to meet provincial standards that are expected and to engage with municipal governments as well in terms of local benefit,'' Moore said.
"It's up to the firms to deliver on these projects.''
Questions were raised

The federal Conservatives have an enormous stake in seeing these pipelines proceed — stemming from the potential creation of thousands of jobs in construction and related industries to legitimizing the government's resource-first economic policies.

Developing Canada's vast natural resources has driven the economic recovery these past years, and is what underpins the Conservatives' economic policy.
What's more, among the potash, minerals, precious metals and natural gas, it's the oil sands that stand atop the list of Canada's resources the Conservatives most want to see exploited and exported.
As Stephen Harper's senior cabinet minister from B.C., Moore understands all of this.
And he insists the government couldn't have done anything differently to avoid the protests that have stalled the two projects.
"We have a culture in British Columbia that is … that invites disagreement. But frankly these were not particularly massive protests. They were pointed and there were questions that were raised, and that's fine."
'Bulldozer politics'

The protests also seem to be having an effect.
Kinder Morgan dismantled a partially-completed drilling site on Burnaby Mountain two weeks ago after protesters defied a court order to leave the area.

New Democrat MP Nathan Cullen scoffs at the idea that the federal government couldn't have done things differently. Northern Gateway would end in his riding of Skeena-Bulkley Valley.
"They made a fatal mistake that convinced the public there's no fair process, that it's a rigged exercise in which the answer is always going to be the same: Yes to every pipeline no matter what the opposition, no matter what the economic or environmental impacts are.''
Cullen calls it the ''old bulldozer politics of the 1950s'' when the government just rammed things through.
His assessment of whether either pipeline will be built? "Dark and growing darker.''
Moore is not nearly as pessimistic, but he acknowledges plunging oil prices, and the prospects that prices may stay well below the government's budget forecasts of around $82 a barrel for the next four years, pose a risk to the companies.
"I hope it's positive from their perspective, in terms of taking a Canadian commodity and seeing an opportunity for it in the world market. But they have to make the economics work.
"We've done everything we can federally in Ottawa in driving down the cost of doing business.''
As industry minister, his focus now is on promoting other areas of the economy.
Cellphones, jet engines

Just this week, for example, Moore's department provided $300 million in loans for Pratt and Whitney plants in Ontario and Quebec to develop a new jet engine.
He also unveiled new legislation to narrow the price gap on identical items sold in Canada and the U.S. And next week his department will release the guidelines for another telecom auction of wireless spectrum.
Moore is confident cellphone rates can drop even more, and that the government will meet its targets of expanding broadband access across the country.
But his big focus now is on ways to encourage Canadian companies to become more competitive, and to embrace new technologies.
"You know we've had a number of programs at Industry Canada we've delivered and had very mixed results. That's one of the areas I would look for an update."
And unlike pipelines, it's an area in which Moore believes the government has more to do.
 
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Nothing could go wrong.... right OBD.

Norway’s Oil Decline Accelerating

New oil projects are being scrapped in Norway amid falling production and low oil prices.
Long held up as the model for managing oil abundance, Norway has painstakingly sought to prevent the problems that occur with other natural resource-based economies, such as corruption, slow economic growth, currency appreciation, and subsequently, deindustrialization.
Since 1990, Norway has diverted much of its oil earnings to a sovereign wealth fund, which has become the world’s largest. The money, reaching $890 billion as of June 2014, amounts to $178,000 for every Norwegian citizen. The sovereign wealth fund helps Norway avoid some of the problems associated with the “resource curse” by investing capital abroad. But more importantly, the money is set aside to be saved and invested to help the country plan for the eventual decline of oil production, with the intention of transitioning to a more diversified economy that can take oil’s place.
Related: Norway’s Energy Policies A Lesson For The World
The early cracks in Norway’s petrol-based economy are beginning to show, perhaps quicker than many predicted.
Energy analysts have explored in detail how the ongoing decline in oil prices – down 40 percent since June – might affect oil exporting countries like Russia, Iran, Venezuela, and other OPEC members. But even Norway, the model for using natural resources to build a modern wealthy economy, is not immune to the price fall.
Statoil, the mostly government-owned oil company, has seen its share price cut in half since July 2014. It is idling several offshore rigs as oil prices drop. Three rigs – the COSL Pioneer, Scarabeo 5, and Songa Trym – will be suspended until the middle of 2015 because of lower profitability. “These measures are necessary due to the overcapacity of rigs compared to the assignments we are prioritising. This situation is unfortunate, and we are doing what we can to minimise the extent of the suspensions,” Statoil procurement head Jon Arnt Jacobsen said in a statement.
To make matters worse, costs of developing new fields have been steadily rising. “The boom is probably over. But we’re not looking at a steep decline in investment or production,” Norway’s oil minister Tord Lien told Reuters in May 2014. “The costs are rising too high and too fast. The Norwegian costs have risen a little bit more than elsewhere.” Since those comments, oil prices have tumbled. Norway may in fact see a steep decline in investment.
Lower oil prices could force more than $150 billion worth of investments to be put on hold worldwide,according to an assessment by Norwegian firm Rystad Energy. Statoil is deferring a decision on investing $5.74 billion in the Snorre field, an offshore oil project in the Norwegian Sea. Also, Statoil’s Johan Castberg field, an estimated $16-$19 billion oil field in the Barents Sea, will be tabled for the time being. These costly projects won’t generate a sufficient return given today’s prices.
But the oil price decline is only accelerating a trend that is already underway. Even with high oil prices Norway was facing a tougher future due to years of waning oil production. Since 2001, Norway’s oilproduction has fallen by almost half, from around 3.5 million barrels per day down to about 1.8 or 1.9 million bpd in 2014.

ada849.png


The decline in investment is already pinching the labor market. Around 10,000 Norwegian oil workers have been laid off as the industry pares back spending, accounting for 10 percent of the sector’s total workforce, the Wall Street Journal reports. Oil workers are threatening to strike unless the government steps in to stem further losses.
And the way forward is murky. Despite its best efforts, Norway’s economy is overwhelmingly dependent on oil, which accounts for more than half of the country’s exports. Other export industries have struggled to develop as costs are too high – a classic symptom felt in countries suffering from the resource curse.
Related: Norway Unfazed By Drop In Oil Prices
But resuscitating the sector may be difficult. With such a high cost environment, it doesn’t make sense for many companies in Norway to invest in new projects. Spending could drop by another 18 percent next year as project economics look poor.
Conversely, without investment, new production will not materialize in the coming years, leading to further deterioration for the sector as existing fields age and decline.
To be sure, Norway has its almost $1 trillion sovereign wealth fund to fall back on, so it is not as if its citizenry will be thrust into poverty anytime soon. Still, Norway may need to begin building a post-oil economy sooner than it thought.
By Nick Cunningham of Oilprice.com

How is our fall back position?
You know the plan B....... Any money in the bank? Didn't think so. That's the problem when you get industry capture and the thinking that nothing can go wrong. The tunnel vision has a way of messing things up like we are see currently. There is pain in our future if we don't wake up from this BS.
 
Wow GLG, 6:42 am and your up posting pages of anti oil patch/pipeline rhetoric. Give it a break. I make my living working in the oil patch as many thousands of other hard working Canadians do. It puts food on my table and feeds my family.
 
Solution to that "grinding poverty" that the oil backers are so fond of telling us that their products solve.
[QX32yQgybaw]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QX32yQgybaw

Clever people can solve problems, given the chance.
 
Wow GLG, 6:42 am and your up posting pages of anti oil patch/pipeline rhetoric. Give it a break. I make my living working in the oil patch as many thousands of other hard working Canadians do. It puts food on my table and feeds my family.

Irrelevant as usual dennis.t .... I do hope you continue your job in the patch as you do bring some value to Canada. But the writing's on the wall that we can't depend on your industry for the future nor should we. Stay safe.

added....

“It is difficult to get a man to understand something, when his salary depends upon his not understanding it!”
Upton Sinclair
 
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So, who is going to fix this for you?
For this you need new governments, both federal and provincial.
Dont see that happening anytime soon and as both governments need tax money and people with jobs, the other partys will not be changing things.

There is this little problem as well.


The decline in investment is already pinching the labor market. Around 10,000 Norwegian oil workers have been laid off as the industry pares back spending, accounting for 10 percent of the sector’s total workforce, the Wall Street Journal reports. Oil workers are threatening to strike unless the government steps in to stem further losses.
And the way forward is murky. Despite its best efforts, Norway’s economy is overwhelmingly dependent on oil, which accounts for more than half of the country’s exports. Other export industries have struggled to develop as costs are too high – a classic symptom felt in countries suffering from the resource curse.
Related: Norway Unfazed By Drop In Oil Prices
But resuscitating the sector may be difficult. With such a high cost environment, it doesn’t make sense for many companies in Norway to invest in new projects. Spending could drop by another 18 percent next year as project economics look poor.
Conversely, without investment, new production will not materialize in the coming years, leading to further deterioration for the sector as existing fields age and decline.
To be sure, Norway has its almost $1 trillion sovereign wealth fund to fall back on, so it is not as if its citizenry will be thrust into poverty anytime soon. Still, Norway may need to begin building a post-oil economy sooner than it thought.


How is our fall back position? You know the plan B....... Any money in the bank? Didn't think so. That's the problem when you get industry capture and the thinking that nothing can go wrong. The tunnel vision has a way of messing things up like we are see currently. There is pain in our future if we don't wake up from this BS.
 
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