Foreign Policy Blogs

Energy

First US Hybrid Solar-NatGas Plant Unveiled in Florida

Florida’s political bigshots spent part of the week-end at the country’s first hybrid solar/natural gas power plant. Florida Power and Light’s Martin Next Generation Solar Energy Center has more than 190,000 mirrors that cover about 500 acres (202.34 hectares). The mirrors track the sun during the day to focus the sun’s rays onto water-filled pipes. […]

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Energy Blog Relaunch

Welcome to the Foreign Policy Association’s relaunched Energy Blog. As we all know, energy comes from a variety of sources with different international political-economic concerns tied each of them. Oil is affected by politics in the Middle East and affects politics around the globe. Coal and natural gas play different roles in global energy and […]

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Of Minerals and Strategy

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Energy Companies and The Whip Hand

Accidents happen, but the BP mess in the Gulf was an accident waiting to happen, which is not the same thing — faulty blowout preventer, faulty shears, faulty cement job, lack of blowout plan, possible lack of required permits, definite lack of oversight by the US Mineral Management Service. At the same time, quite below […]

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In Search of Missing Royalties

Oil and gas royalties have been all the news this week. First, the coveted Pulitzer Prize for public service went to a small Virginia paper, the Bristol Herald Courier. It’s the sort of story which reminds us why it is essential that small local newspapers not go the way of the dodo. Its eight-segment series dissected […]

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The Rio Tinto Case —When Governments Attack

Monday, the four executives, three Chinese nationals and one Australian from Australian mining giant Rio Tinto (and so dubbed The Rio Four by Mineweb) , were convicted of bribery and stealing commercial secrets after a closed, two-day trial in Shanghai. Their sentences ranged from seven to fourteen years. One defendant has already said he will […]

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Lithium: A Chance to Challenge The Resource Curse — Cross Post by Sean Goforth

As the move toward energy conservation takes hold, lithium for use in ion batteries is destined to play a significant role in the energy equation of the next generation. From 2003-2007, global demand for lithium carbonate doubled, and realizing current hybrid car technologies will require access to massive stocks of lithium, which is largely harvested […]

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Crude (2009) — Cross post

Crude (2009) — Cross post

A CROSS POST By Sean Patrick Murphy Monday, March 15 3:56 pm EST What is refreshing about this documentary is that it is balanced. It is about the 17-year, $27.3 billion lawsuit brought against Chevron for allegedly dumping toxic oil waste in the Amazon sector of Ecuador. The 30,000 residents of the area have filed a […]

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Should We Tax Green Energy?

Last Sunday, the New York Times reported on the wind energy industry in Wyoming (the eighth windiest state) and how the governor is pushing for a tax on wind energy. The wind power lobby has, of course, expressed its horror that the state would consider such a thing, practically comparing it to killing a newborn. […]

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Will Transparency Save The World?

Today, March 9, is the day about twenty countries,  including Nigeria, Gabon, and Equatorial Guinea, who have signed on to the Extractive Industries’ Transparency Initiative (EITI) were supposed to finish and have filed their Validation forms. Validation is EITI’s “quality assurance mechanism,” a step toward achieving Compliance with the EITI standards. The Initiative is designed […]

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The Joys of Fiscal Federalism

Perhaps —no, undoubtedly — only the World Bank would host an event to discuss the fiscal systems different countries have to divide oil and gas revenue. The conference, held in Washington DC by the Bank’s Oil, Gas and Mining division, concludes today. While some systems are unitary (like, on balance, Indonesia), many today are federal. […]

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India’s Better Way

Democracy produces stability only when it actually responds to the needs of the people. So India is taking steps to neutralize a Maoist rebellion in eastern India by increasing payments to local people being displaced by mining development. The government will introduce a new bill, probably in the current session of parliament, to raise the payout […]

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A Homeowner Considers the Bloom Box

Usually, I don’t drag myself into my own blogs but  the Bloom Box is the sort of energy project ultimately supposed to be aimed at people — homeowners — like me. Like most homeowners, I am not a tech geek, and, in theory, I am attracted to the idea of the Bloom Box. However, I […]

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Where is US energy policy going?

Where is US energy policy going?

States are going against the green energy wave and reverting back to the status quo: fossil fuels. In Wyoming, elected officials are mulling a legislation to add a tax to wind farms. In Vermont, the state senate voted to shut down a 38-year old nuclear power plant that is receiving a 20-year extension to operate. […]

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Another Falkland Islands War — over Oil?

Hard to say, this past week, who was madder and more affronted about a missed opportunity: Evgeni Plushenko, the Russian figure skater who won Olympic silver but felt he deserved gold, or Argentina, which found out that a British company was exploring for oil in the nearby but British-held Falkland Islands. Despite losing a short […]

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