Stories tagged with "media"

The Month of the Psychological Shock (Over Oil) in America?

In a country largely turned into itself, a lone journalist tries to bring reality on oil prices above the daily roll of news bits on football results, jet-set gossip and political fait-divers.

On the 24th of May Jorge Nascimento Rodrigues published on the newspaper Expresso (the largest weekly publication in Portugal with 120 000 printings) what is one of the most direct addresses of Peak Oil ever featured in Portuguese media. Apparently written about the US this article is replete with messages for internal consumption.

Peak Oil In The Australian

Peak oil coverage in the mainstream Australian media has generally been quite good in recent years - while the idea of an imminent peak is far from the accepted wisdom, pretty much every major news outlet has provided decent coverage of the subject at some point or another (see the Australian Financial Review, Sydney Morning Herald, ABC, Melbourne Age and Brisbane Courier Mail for a random set of examples)

While I tend to regard The Australian's Nigel Wilson as the best journalist covering energy news in the country, his column in The Australian ("Long-term oil prophecies proven wrong") this week left much to be desired.

IN the early 1970s the end of the world was predicted when a group of Middle East oil-producing countries decided to use their product as a political weapon.

At the time, the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries controlled more than 80 per cent of the world's traded oil, which was being sold at about $US7 a barrel. By 1978 oil was traded at around the equivalent of $US120 a barrel - and the end of the age of oil was widely predicted.

The Club of Rome predictions of the late 1960s, based on the idea that there is a limit to global economic expansion because of scarce natural resources such as oil, have not eventuated, and today there is scepticism about OPEC's ability to dictate oil prices.

And the political choices facing the OPEC members - 11 of them if you include Iraq - are nowhere near as simple as they were four decades ago.

OPEC oil ministers will meet in Abu Dhabi this week to consider a crude market that is again testing $US100 a barrel, and there is no certainty about what will happen. Theoretically, the OPEC members could just turn up their taps: more oil would flow and the world would be an easier place. ...

While its very easy sitting in an office in downtown Sydney to say that OPEC has as much oil as we could ever want and all they need to do is open the spigots a bit further and we'll be drowning in cheap, sweet crude, there doesn't appear to be a great deal of evidence for this theory if you look reasonably hard for it.

Resource Depletion, Persuasion, and the Ongoing World Meme

Many themes pervade the day-to-day attention span of the world's citizenry right now: terrorism, fear of religious systems not your own, Asian growth, crime, immigration, poverty, war, global warming/climate change--so many are called "important."

All of these sets of attitude objects vary in importance, salience, and validity depending on who you talk to; but all are definitely a part of the din of noise we subject ourselves to every day.

It still remains my concern, however, that the pillars to the myriad houses of problems I list above are those of world energy depletion--namely oil and its peak.

This leads me to my main question, which I will address in this post: how and when are human beings able to cut through all of that noise? How can they be persuaded? Is there a difference between "elites" (defined as the people who read The Oil Drum, of course) and the "masses"?

Surely persuasion and attitude change takes place; people change their minds every day on issues. What insights can we claim from psychology to get those we care about, and even those we don't, to dig deeper to get to an understanding of the pillars of the problems we face, instead of trying to buy aluminum siding for a house slowly falling in on itself?

Ed by PG: This post originally ran June '06. It seemed germane; some of the discussion of late has been about persuasion and individual attitudes...

Houston ASPO Day 1 part 2

The pace of information that comes at you during the ASPO meetings is so intense, and immediate that it is sometimes hard to capture all the information, particularly where it is tabulated data on a slide that is on the screen for only a short time. The organizers have, however, taken pity on the ineptitude of your humble scrivener, and from sometime in the morning (i.e. Saturday) they will have the Powerpoints up on their website . For the full power of the debate you will still, however, have to buy the DVD’s.

I had left you at the end of my earlier post with George Baker reviewing the situation in Mexico. We have seen Cantarell dramatically decline from the point that it was providing more oil than Mexico exported to the United States, to the current position where it produces significantly less. I asked George later about whether, given the choice between reneging on their contracts, and dropping internal use, which they would select. In contrast to Westexas views that countries will always look out for the internal demands first, he expected that they would fulfill their contracts. He was also curious as to why Pemex had installed an FPSO at the Ku Maloob Zaap field, since there is existing infrastructure that should have handled all the product. Mexican deepwater production is likely to come on in 2013, but the issue of cross-border fields has not been addressed.

Peak Oil, Persuasion, and the World Meme

Many themes pervade the day-to-day attention span of the world's citizenry right now: terrorism, fear of Islam/Islamofascism/religious systems not your own, Asian growth, immigration, poverty, war, global warming/climate change--so many are called "important."

All of these ideas vary in importance, salience, and validity depending on who you talk to; but all are definitely a part of the din of noise we subject ourselves to every day.

It still remains my concern, however, that the pillars to the myriad houses of problems I list above are those of world energy depletion--namely oil and its peak.

This leads me to my main question, which I will address in this post: how and when are human beings able to cut through all of that noise? How can they be persuaded? Surely it takes place, people change their minds every day on issues. What insights can we claim from psychology to get those we care about, and even those we don't, to dig deeper to get to an understanding of the pillars of the problems we face, instead of trying to buy aluminum siding for a house slowly falling in on itself?

BBC Newsnight mentions peak oil

Newsnight, the BBC's late night news programme mentioned peak oil last night (25/04/206). Almost a cross between news and current affairs the programme tends to tackle the issues of the day with more depth and analysis than a regular news broadcast. Asking questions rather than just presenting facts.

Last night covered the $75 oil story in some detail including an interview (reproduced below the fold) with Stephanie Flanders, their economics editor. This interview actually mentioned peak oil and displayed some graphs to illustrate the point.

Of course the economists conclusion was that current high prices would encourage us to conserve energy and also makes a lot of alternative and additional sources of energy more financially viable.

The full video of the programme is available for a short period from the Newsnight website: link.

This isn't the first time Newsnight has covered peak oil.

In December 2005 they hosted 'The End Of Oil Debate' featuring:
* James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency
* Sonia Shah, author of Crude: A History of Oil
* Richard D. North of the Institute of Economic Affairs in London
* Tom Burke of Imperial College London
* Prof. Paul Ormerod, author of Why Most Things Fail
* Prof. Felipe Fernandez-Armesto, author of Ideas that Changed the World

The 39 minute video is available from Global Public Media.