Energy

Not So Good At Safety But Great Lobbyists

It’s no surprise that the petroleum industry has political heft, but the number (courtesy of the Times) are impressive: The oil and gas industry is a formidable presence in Washington. It spent more on federal lobbying last year than all but two other industries, with $174.8 million in lobbying expenditures, according to the Center for …

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A Gateway to Information on the BP Spill

There’s getting to be too much material on the disaster in the Gulf to keep up with.  With the assistance of Aspen Publishing, we’ve posted a list of two-dozen key links here — just click on the “Related Links” tab on the left side of the page.  The Berkeley Law Library is working on a …

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We’ve Known the Risks in the Gulf for Forty Years

We’ve known all along that offshore drilling in the Gulf placed at risk exceptionally valuable and sensitive coastal areas.  We need look no further than a forty-year-old court decision on Gulf oil drilling, which made the dangers abundantly clear. In 1971, President Nixon announced a new energy plan involving greatly expanded offshore drilling.  In a …

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Natural Gas from Shale: The Next Energy Boom? The New Climate Solution?

Steve Levine has an interesting article in TNR touting shale gas as the Next Big Thing in the energy world. He predicts falling oil prices (as low as $30/barrel) and geopolitical dislocations.  He does observe, however, that there are some unresolved environmental issues.  Some of those issues are addressed in a programmatic EIS that’s available …

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Today’s Oil Spill News

BP is attempting the “top kill” method of stemming the leak with uncertain results as of yet.  Early results are encouraging, and we all hope for the best. In other developments: According to the White House, President Obama will announce six-month extension of moratorium on drilling new wells and will cancel new lease sales off …

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A Two-Word Phrase Beginning with “Cluster” and Rhyming with “Luck”

There’s a classic military term for the series of foul-ups that led to the BP oil spill.

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Carbon Sequestration: Is There a Lesson from Offshore Drilling?

When he lifted the moratorium on new offshore leasing in July of 2008, President Bush assured us that “advances in technology have made it possible to conduct oil exploration in the OCS that is out of sight, protects coral reefs and habitats, and protects against oil spills.” We know now that he was wrong, in part …

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Retrofitting homes to make them more energy efficient

When we ponder ways to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions that cause climate change, nothing says “low hanging fruit” more than retrofitting our existing homes and small businesses to make them more energy efficient. Energy use from commercial and residential buildings accounts for 22 percent of California’s greenhouse gas emissions. But relatively simple steps like …

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Kerry-Lieberman and State Government

The Georgetown Climate Center has put together a very useful  summary of how the bill would impact state regulation, both positively and negatively. The most important fact is that the summary is fifteen pages long.  The bill is obviously a big deal in terms of helping state regulation in some respects and curtailing it in …

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BP’s Disastrous PR Blowout

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EZidQAf8epE] Even Fox News is berating BP for its callous and inapt public response to the oil blowout.  And for good reason.  As Newsweek says: This hasn’t been a good few weeks for Tony Hayward, the chief executive officer of BP. In the weeks since the huge oil spill in the Gulf began, he has …

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