industryterm:energy policy

  • Gas pipelines run over EU energy policy
    http://us6.campaign-archive1.com/?u=6e13c74c17ec527c4be72d64f&id=3e34587e68&e=08052803c8

    Gas pipelines run over
    EU energy policy

    Critics claim €3bn European funding for the Southern Gas Corridor energy project would undermine EU climate change targets and gloss over human rights abuses.

    By Terry Macalister

    LONDON, 14 September, 2016 – Civil society campaigners have accused the European Union of pouring unprecedented amounts of state aid into a huge energy project that runs counter to its own climate change objectives.

    Critics say funding the construction of new gas pipelines from the Caspian region is also causing misery to communities living along the 3,500 kilometre route, while helping to prop up an autocratic regime in Azerbaijan.

    The concerns about the Southern Gas Corridor project come amid expectations that the European Investment Bank (EIB), which is owned by European Union member states, is about to provide the scheme with up €3 billion – its biggest ever lump sum.

    #gaz #guerre_du_gaz #europe #russie

  • World must wake up to China’s energy revolution - Climate News Network

    http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/world-must-wake-up-to-chinas-energy-revolution

    By Kieran Cooke

    New report says a successful outcome at this year’s Paris climate talks will be far more likely if the world takes note of how China is reducing emissions.

    LONDON, 11 June, 2015 − The pace of change in China’s energy policy means that the targets it has set for cutting greenhouse gases (GHGs) are likely to be achieved sooner than expected, according to a new study.

    As part of a joint China/US agreement last November on tackling climate change, China said its GHG emissions – the highest in the world – would peak in 2030 and subsequently decrease. It could now be five years ahead of schedule.

    The joint study by the London School of Economics (LSE) and the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment says that wholesale changes taking place in energy and industrial policy mean that China’s emissions are, in fact, likely to peak in 2025 – and fall sharply thereafter.

    #chine #énergie #climat

  • New energy policy needed as nuclear giants take a hit - Climate News Network

    http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/new-energy-policy-needed-as-nuclear-giants-take-a-hit

    By Paul Brown

    Plans for a worldwide fleet of huge new nuclear reactors have collapsed, with the cancellation of a major project and no new orders being placed.

    LONDON, 28 May, 2015 − The European nuclear industry, led by France, seems to be in terminal decline as a result of the cancellation of a new Finnish reactor, technical faults in stations already under construction, and severe financial problems.

    The French government owns 85% of both of the country’s two premier nuclear companies – Areva, which designs the reactors, and Électricité de France (EDF), which builds and manages them. Now it is amalgamating the two giants in a bid to rescue the industry.

    #nucléaire #énergie #climat

  • The Revival of South Stream on the Horizon
    http://neweasterneurope.eu/articles-and-commentary/1505-the-revival-of-south-stream-on-the-horizon

    Russia encourages its allies in the EU to participate in the Turkish Stream project which is aimed at delivering Russian gas to Central Europe. This initiative may be a threat to Ukraine’s position as well as a threat to the Southern Gas Corridor, a key European diversification initiative. Implementation of new Russian plans would be in fact a revival of the abandoned (?) South Stream project. Some European countries are ready to help Russia in the implementation of its business plans, although they might not serve the EU’s interest well.
     
    Hungary, indirectly, by its statements on energy policy, supported the Slavkov Triangle’s (Austria, Czech Republic and Slovakia) stand in the matter of energy cooperation with Russia. These countries see no obstacles in strengthening economic ties with the Kremlin in spite of the Ukrainian war. Viktor Orban recently paid a tribute to Vladimir Putin who visited Budapest on February 17th. Orban has been selling the Hungarian energy sector to Russia step by step. In exchange for lower gas bills and more flexible conditions of the gas deal, he accepted a Russian loan, nuclear deal on building new reactors in the city of Paks by Rosatom and agreed to not export purchased Russian gas to Ukraine. The latter is the most important thing.
     
    Russians now dictate to Orban to whom he can or cannot sell gas which is against the EU law. According to the EU regulations, each state has a full right to sell gas to any other country. Gazprom does not want this to happen because the situation in which its customers trade Russian gas between each other is highly uneconomic for the company which has been recently losing its firm position on the European market.
    (…)
    From Russia’s point of view one thing in gas relations is particularly important in this matter – to deprive Ukraine of the status of a transit country. If that happens, the Kremlin could easily cut off Ukraine from Russian gas and, thus, influence its politics. The Turkish Stream is an essential project to achieve this geopolitical goal.
     
    Slovak gas pipeline operator Eustream has offered its customers in Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania and ex-Yugoslav states to deliver western European gas to them within the frames of the Eastring project. It is a project aimed at modernisation of gas infrastructure in Romania, Moldova and Balkan countries (primarily Bulgaria) and building new gas pipelines to connect the region with Western gas markets. According to Slovak Eustream, it could be implemented within three years. The project was already supported by Bulgaria and Romania. Slovakia wants to discuss this project with the EU, more specifically, Austria and France in order to specify the source of supplies.
     
    Although Slovakia presents Eastring as a chance to provide gas from well developed, western European markets such as Germany to Central Europe, it could also serve as a replacement of the European part of the South Stream and a way to deliver Russian gas to Europe, via Turkish Stream. Slovakia and Hungary are ready to follow Russian interests in this case. Mirek Topolanek (not to be confused with the former Czech PM), Eustream’s external relations special representative has already admitted that Eastring is not going to compete with the Turkish Stream. Moreover, according to Topolanek, they may even be complementary as Eastring could also provide Russian gas to Western Europe.
     
    Topolanek’s statements are contradictory to the primary Eustream’s goal which was to transport gas from Western Europe to Central and Southern Europe. Thus, it appears that states interested in Eastring which are, at the same time, supporters of Russian interests which will allow Russia to connect Eastring with the Turkish Stream.
     
    It would mean, in fact, an implementation of the South Stream project in a complicated form, without waiting for the permission from Brussels. This would push the EU to face the policy of fait accompli. Russia adopted a similar strategy against Poland few years ago. When the European Commission gave the green light to the Nord Stream pipeline, Russia offered Poland a chance to take part in it. Poland, however, was not interested so it can now buy Russian gas from the German market which makes more sense as it is cheaper than gas transported through Belarus and Ukraine. However, the aim of Nord Stream has been to bypass Poland and other transit countries and send Russian gas to Western Europe directly; of course, if the European Comission allows it to develop with exemptions from EU law.
     
    The connection of Eastring with the Turkish Stream would provide the Balkans with a significant quantity of gas so it would not need to seek Caspian gas sent through the Southern Gas Corridor. This situation would not only mean a de facto revival of the South Stream but it would lead Russia to make its other geopolitical goal come true – cutting off Europe from the gas resources of the Caspian Sea, a key diversification alternative. It would happen by reserving the demand by Turkish Stream volumes. A blockade of the Southern Gas Corridor by Greece’s Syriza would be in this case the icing on the cake. Greece wants to maximise its profits from the Trans Adriatic Pipeline, a project which will bring natural gas from Turkish TANAPto southern Italy (both are parts of the Southern Gas Corridor project) but Azerbaijan does not want to make any concessions. The new Greek populist government may react nervously.
    (…)
    The Energy Union, a concept presented on February 25th in Brussels is a chance to react properly to Russia’s attempts to monopolise the energy markets in Central and Southern Europe. During the presentation of the Energy Union, the European Commission has also declared that its antitrust case against Gazprom will be concluded “within a few weeks”. But will it really happen?

    Très intéressant article sur les approvisionnements en gaz de l’Europe. À lire intégralement (même si j’ai mis de larges extraits…)

  • National Security and Renewable Energy | Meanderings of a Second-Rate Mind

    http://golfsierra.org/blog/?p=216

    Cette carte, signalé par quelqu’un du réseau de @freakonometrics, de conception intéressante et qui a quelques ressemblances avec la carte de la sanctuarisation.

    National Security and Renewable Energy

    Or, a more specific way to describe where we’re going with this: this is how our energy policy in the immediate future can impact our national security in the distant future: i.e., environmentalism may be more important we typically think it is, but for reasons that we don’t typically associate with it.

    ***

    Back in 2004, the military geostrategist Thomas P. M. Barnett published The Pentagon’s New Map, a book about (among other things) America’s place in the world after the Cold War, and how globalization relates to issues of national security. This wasn’t Barnett’s first book, but it’s was the first one to present his overarching view of American foreign policy, and (as far as I can tell) is the first one that made Barnett a household name . . . at least at the Pentagon. Since then, Barnett has written a few more books – Blueprint for Action, a sequel to Pentagon’s New Map, and Great Powers: America and the World After Bush, which came out in 2009.

    #cartoghraphie #représentation #sanctuarisation #discrimination_géographique

  • Energy policy: Has ‘ #peak_oil ’ gone the way of the Flat Earth Society? — 03/22/2013 — www.eenews.net
    http://www.eenews.net/public/energywire/2013/03/22/1

    The theory was straightforward and seemed to hold with common sense: One day soon, the Earth would hit its halfway point of global oil production — its “peak” — and thereafter, it would see a steady decline. Those behind the concept called it “peak oil.”

    (...) There’s one big problem: Those behind the theory appear to have been dead wrong, at least in terms of when the peak would hit, having not anticipated the rapid shift in technology that led to exploding oil and natural gas production in new plays and areas long since dismissed as dried up.

    #énergie #pétrole

  • Japan tears up nuclear plans in energy review
    http://blogs.nature.com/news/2011/05/japan_tears_up_nuclear_plans_i_1.html

    le #Japon abandonne sa politique pro-#nucléaire et va réviser tous ses plans pour favoriser les #énergies renouvelables.

    Japan’s prime minister Naoko Kan says the country will abandon existing plans to build new nuclear plants, and needs to “start from scratch” in creating a new energy policy.