industryterm:energy sector

  • The Making of Juan Guaidó: US Regime-Change Laboratory Created Venezuela’s Coup Leader – Consortiumnews
    https://consortiumnews.com/2019/01/29/the-making-of-juan-guaido-us-regime-change-laboratory-created-venezu

    [...] in 2007 [...] Guaidó moved to Washington, D.C., to enroll in the governance and political management program at George Washington University under the tutelage of Venezuelan economist Luis Enrique Berrizbeitia, one of the top Latin American neoliberal economists. Berrizbeitia is a former executive director of the International Monetary Fund who spent more than a decade working in the Venezuelan energy sector under the oligarchic old regime that was ousted by Chavez.

  • For #energy, It’s Digitization Before Decentralization
    https://hackernoon.com/for-energy-its-digitization-before-decentralization-823ac7db733e?source=

    Roughly 10 years ago the vision of a peer-to-peer electronic cash system was published, marking the launch of #bitcoin and the foundation of #blockchain. While an explosion of new startups have enamored the cryptocurrency craze, the energy sector has envisioned leveraging blockchain for reasons similar to that of finance — transparency, trust, and automation. I’d like to highlight a few observations (and debunk a myth or two) now that blockchain hype is subsiding and new distributed energy solutions remain scarce.The youth is starting to changeMany have speculated the crypto-revolution in finance will naturally come for other industries like energy. However, what finance had that energy did not is a disruption moment from mobile and digital — a trend that forced incumbent monopolies to rethink (...)

    #distributed-systems #distributed-ledgers

  • Peak oil? Majors aren’t buying into the threat from renewables
    https://www.reuters.com/article/us-oil-majors-strategy-insight/peak-oil-majors-arent-buying-into-the-threat-from-renewables-idUSKBN1D80GA


    REUTERS/File Photo

    A Reuters analysis of clean energy investments and forecasts by oil majors, along with exclusive interviews with top oil executives, reveal mostly token investments in alternative energy. Today, renewable power projects get about 3 percent of $100 billion in combined annual spending by the five biggest oil firms, according to energy consultancy Wood Mackenzie.

    BP, Chevron, Exxon Mobil, Royal Dutch Shell and Total are instead milking their drilling and processing assets to finance investor payouts now and bolster balance sheets for the future. They believe they can enter new energy sectors later by acquiring companies or technologies if and when others prove them profitable.

    There is no sign of peak demand right now,” said Chevron CEO John Watson, an economist by training, who is retiring in early 2018. “For the next 10 or 20 years, we expect to see oil demand growth.

  • Making History: China and Russia are Transforming Enemies into Friends
    https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2017/10/18/making-history-china-russia-transforming-enemies-into-friends.htm

    Russia, China and Iran have in recent years drawn enormous benefit from the declining military and economic power of the United States, further propelled by a general mistrust of Washington’s diplomatic and political abilities, both with Obama and now with Trump. The two previous articles showed that Moscow, Beijing and Tehran, even as they addressed different situations, shared similar interests and came to coordinate their military, economic and diplomatic strategy.

    The success of the Euro-Asian triptych is based on the essential principle of transforming enemies into neutral players, neutral players into allies, and further improving relations with allied nations. In order for this project to be realized, economic, military and diplomatic efforts are variously employed, depending on the country and the general regional context. The flexibility shown by Moscow and Beijing in negotiations has delivered historic deals, not only in the energy sector but also in the military sphere and also in education and poverty reduction, as seen in Africa.

    Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Syria are three countries that, when analysed individually, reveal this precise strategy of Russia, China and Iran. Particular attention is focused on the Middle East for several reasons. It is the region where America’s declining military power, unable to achieve its geopolitical objectives in Syria, meets with the progressive loss of Washington’s economic influence, highlighted by the increasingly precarious position of the petrodollar that is about to be challenged by petroyuan deals between Saudi Arabia and China.

  • G20: Launch of Africa Partnership and supporting protection in “regions of origin”

    Last week’s G20 meeting concluded with two initiatives towards migration and displacement. The first is the launch of the #G20_Africa_Partnership, the second, a commitment to step up “Coordination and Cooperation on Displacement and Migration.”

    Among the objectives of the G20 Africa Partnership is to address root causes of migration by improving inclusive economic growth and employment, developing quality infrastructure, especially in the energy sector and strengthening the framework for private finance in the form of investment compacts. Côte d’Ivoire, Ethiopia, Ghana, Morocco, Rwanda, Senegal and Tunisia have already presented their commitments for entering “#Investment_Compacts.”

    The G20 Africa partnership has received criticism among others by Barbara Sennholz- Weihard of Oxfam Germany who stated: “The narrative is: More investment will lead to jobs being created and then people stay in their home countries. However, it is wrong to see private investment and development cooperation as a way to contain migration. (As it) dismisses many lessons learned during the past decades on how sustainable development cooperation should be done. Empirical evidence strongly suggests that migration makes a positive contribution to development due to migrants’ #remittances.”

    https://www.ecre.org/g20-launch-of-africa-partnership-and-supporting-protection-in-regions-of-origi
    #externalisation #asile #migrations #réfugiés #Afrique #G20 #développement #investissements #infrastructure #croissance_économique #économie #travail #énergie #emploi #remises
    cc @reka

    Ici le texte de l’accord:
    https://www.g20.org/Content/DE/_Anlagen/G7_G20/2017-g20-annex-partnership-africa-en.pdf?__blob=publicationFile&v=6

    • Avec les deux versions de la folle #nuit_torride du 24 mai

      There are at least two narratives for how we got here. If you believe the government of Qatar, the official Qatar News Agency was hacked on May 24 and a fake news story was transmitted quoting Emir Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani as saying, “There is no reason behind Arabs’ hostility to Iran.” The allegedly false report reaffirmed Qatar’s support for the Muslim Brotherhood and its Palestinian offshoot, Hamas, as well as claiming Doha’s relations with Israel were good.

      The government-influenced media in Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, meanwhile, adopted an alternative narrative, treating the news story as true and responding quickly with a burst of outrage. The emir’s comments were endlessly repeated and, to the anger of Doha, internet access to Qatari media was blocked so that the official denial could not be read.

      There is a possibility that the initial hacking was orchestrated by Tehran, which was annoyed by the anti-Iran posture of the May 20-21 summit in Riyadh, when President Donald Trump met King Salman bin Abdul-Aziz Al Saud Salman and representatives of dozens of Muslim states.

    • Washington can play an important role in defusing this potentially explosive situation. U.S. officials may believe that Qatar was being less than evenhanded in its balancing act between the United States and Iran — but a drawn-out conflict between Riyadh and Doha, or a struggle that pushes Qatar into Tehran’s arms, would benefit no one. In this respect, Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is arguably well-placed. ExxonMobil, where he was CEO before joining the U.S. government, is the biggest foreign player in Qatar’s energy sector, so he presumably knows the main decision-makers well.

    • Crise du Golfe : le Qatar a-t-il été piégé par les Emirats arabes unis ?
      http://www.latribune.fr/economie/international/crise-du-golfe-le-qatar-a-t-il-ete-piege-par-les-emirats-arabes-unis-74414

      Les Emirats arabes unis seraient à l’origine d’une cyberattaque visant les réseaux sociaux et les sites du gouvernement qatari fin mai, assurent plusieurs membres des renseignements américains interrogés par le Washington Post. Ces plateformes ont affiché de fausses déclarations attribuées à l’émir qatari, cheikh Tamin ben Hamad Khalifa Al-Thani, dans lesquelles il faisait l’éloge du Hamas et surtout de l’Iran, l’ennemi juré des pays du Golfe.

      L’opération s’est déroulée le 24 mai, soit peu de temps après la tournée du président américain Donald Trump dans les pays du Golfe. A cette occasion, l’Arabie saoudite et ses alliés n’ont pas manqué de rappeler qu’ils considéraient l’Iran comme un «  facteur de déstabilisation  » dans la région en raison de son «  interventionnisme  » dans plusieurs pays notamment la Syrie, l’Irak et le Yémen. Dans son discours à Riyad le 21 mai, Donald Trump a fait part du même diagnostic, appelant «  toutes les nations de conscience » à « travailler ensemble pour isoler l’Iran  ».

      Citant ces fausses déclarations de l’émir du Qatar, l’Arabie saoudite, les Emirats arabes unis, Bahreïn et l’Egypte ont interdit les médias qataris, puis imposé des sanctions diplomatiques dès le 5 juin. Doha a déjà averti ses voisins que ses plateformes avaient été piratées. Les Qataris ont d’ailleurs ouvert une enquête, toujours en cours, et n’ont pour l’instant désigné aucun coupable. De son côté, Abou Dabi réfute toute tentative de cyberattaque suite à l’article du Washington Post.

      Ces révélations surviennent alors que, depuis plusieurs mois, des e-mails hackés de l’ambassadeur des Emirats arabes unis à Washington et publiés par l’organisation pro-qatari GlobalLeaks, démontraient la détermination d’Abou Dabi de rallier les Etats-Unis à sa cause dans sa querelle avec Doha.

  • Pipelines and Pipedreams : How the EU can support a regional gas hub in the Eastern Mediterranean | European Council on Foreign Relations
    http://www.ecfr.eu/publications/summary/pipelines_and_pipedreams_how_the_eu_can_support_a_regional_gas_hub_in_7276

    Où l’on reparle de la « guerre du gaz » ou « guerre des pipe ».

    Large natural gas discoveries in the eastern Mediterranean have raised hopes that the region could serve EU energy needs, helping it to fulfil its goals of energy diversification, security, and resilience.
    But there are commercial and political hurdles in the way. Cyprusʼs reserves are too small to be commercially viable and Israel needs a critical mass of buyers to begin full-scale production. Regional cooperation – either bilaterally or with Egypt – is the only way the two countries will be able to export.
    Egypt is the only country in the region that could export gas to Europe independently because of the size of its reserves and its existing export infrastructure. But energy sector reforms will be needed to secure investor confidence in this option.
    There are now two options for regional export: to build a pipeline that connects Israel and Cyprus to southern Europe, or to create a network of pipelines into Egypt, from which gas could be liquefied and exported.
    The EU should explore regional prospects by strengthening its energy diplomacy, developing more projects of common interest, working to resolve the Turkey-Cyprus dispute, and incentivising reforms in Egypt.

    #gaz #europe #guerre_du_gaz #russie #europe #tubes #pipelines #pipedreams (nouveau mot-clé)

  • Grabbing the bull by the horns: it’s time to cut industrial meat and dairy to save the climate
    https://www.grain.org/article/entries/5639-grabbing-the-bull-by-the-horns-it-s-time-to-cut-industrial-meat-and-dair

    @odilon

    Box 1. Added benefits of reducing meat and dairy consumption

    In addition to reducing global greenhouse gas emissions, reducing consumption in the countries that currently eat too much meat and dairy could have significant health and social welfare benefits. One study shows that reducing meat consumption as a means of fighting climate change would also cut the risk of colon cancer, heart disease and lung disease worldwide by 34 per cent.[31] Another says it would reduce global mortality by 6 to 10 per cent by 2050, translating into a healthcare cost savings of US$735 billion per year.[32]

    Other scientists point out that cutting meat and dairy consumption would cut infectious disease and reduce the emergence of antibiotic resistance, and have secondary effects as well.[33] One model shows that the worldwide adoption of a healthy diet could reduce mitigation costs for the energy sector by more than 50 per cent by 2050.[34] It would also free up land now used for animal feed production and, if combined with other policy measures, could help small farmers access much needed land.

  • Turkish delegation in Gaza to discuss electricity crisis http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkish-delegation-in-gaza-to-discuss-electricity-crisis.aspx?pag

    delegation from Turkey’s Energy and Natural Resources Ministry is currently visiting the Gaza Strip to discuss means of meeting the coastal enclave’s demand for electricity.

    The visit came two weeks after Ankara and Tel Aviv agreed to normalize relations following a six-year hiatus.
    According to ministry sources, members of the delegation, which arrived in the strip late on July 10, will meet both Israeli officials and representatives of Gaza’s Hamas-run government to discuss means of resolving the problems facing the territory’s energy sector.

    Following its visit to Gaza, the Turkish delegation is expected to provide a report on its findings to Energy and Natural Resources Minister Berat Albayrak.

    The report will include an assessment of the strip’s energy needs, facts about local production, transmission and distribution of energy and recommendations for tackling the chronic problems plaguing Gaza’s electricity infrastructure.

    The report will also be submitted to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and the Turkish cabinet, after which a roadmap will be prepared on the means of implementing the report’s recommendations.

    A number of private Turkish companies have reportedly expressed interest in helping meet Gaza’s energy needs in terms of the production, transmission and distribution of energy.

    @rumor #Turquie #Gaza #Electricité

  • Introducing #NEST

    In the construction and energy sector, launching new products and technology on the market quickly is easier said than done. Low energy prices, long investment periods and no end of red tape make companies think twice about taking the plunge. Nowadays, there is often a sizeable gulf between technology that works in the lab and the market, which demands reliable, well-engineered products. NEST expedites the innovation process by providing a platform where new developments can be tested, tweaked and demonstrated under realistic conditions.


    https://www.empa.ch/web/nest/aboutnest

    #matériaux #écologie #technologie #bois #architecture #innovation

  • Artificial wind energy may be Turkey’s answer to demand
    http://www.aaenergyterminal.com/news.php?newsid=7741127

    Produire du vent artificiel à partir des pertes d’énergie de différentes unités de productions et alimenter des éoliennes. C’est pas un peu comme si on utilisait un sèche cheveu pour produire de l’électricité ? Quelquechose m’échappe dans l’intérêt d’un tel projet !

    Turkey can meet growing energy demand from artificial wind, says innovative project owner. An innovative technology in the energy sector, which generates electricity by creating artificial wind, could provide Turkey with a much needed alternative to tackle its energy demand problem, Nurettin Aydin, the project’s patent holder, told Anadolu Agency on Thursday.

    The project utilizes energy sources which are unable to be turned into electricity by current power plants due to their low heat quality, he said, and added that these sources include, low heat geothermal energy, waste steam and hot water from industrial facilities

    #Turquie #Electricité

  • Turkey - Climate Action Tracker
    http://climateactiontracker.org/countries/turkey.html

    On 30 September 2015, Turkey submitted its Intended National Determined Contribution (INDC), with a greenhouse gas reduction target (including land use, land use change and forestry (LULUCF)) of up to 21% below business as usual (BAU) in 2030. Excluding LULUCF emissions, this target is equivalent to a 389% increase on 1990 levels, or a 110% increase on 2012 levels. In comparison, under Turkey’s BAU, emissions are expected to increase by 512% of 1990 levels, or 162% on 2012 levels. Through mitigation plans which target the whole economy, Turkey’s INDC aims to abate up to 255 MtCO2e in 2030 relative to BAU.

    We rate this target “inadequate”. Turkey’s commitment is not in line with interpretations of a “fair” approach to reach a 2°C pathway. This means it is not consistent with limiting warming to below 2°C: if all countries adopted this level of ambition, global warming would likely exceed 3-4°C in the 21st century. To make a fair contribution to holding warming below 2°C, Turkey would need to double - or even triple - its post-2020 target.

    According to our analysis, with the current policies it already has in place, we find that Turkey can achieve 28% of its proposed INDC target i.e. these policies are expected to abate 71 MtCO2e excl. LULUCF in 2030. If the planned policies of the INDC related to the energy sector are implemented,[1] Turkey will achieve 73% of its INDC target. The lion’s share of emissions abatement in Turkey in 2030 depends on its capability to fully exploit its hydro potential. If realised, 39% of the INDC target will be achieved solely by the additional capacity of hydro power installed.[2]

    Moreover, it has been reported in the Press (ClimateWire, 2015) that Turkey is planning to quadruple its coal power plants by 2020 to reach 80 GW, when the projection of a business as usual scenario in the INDC was to reach 23 GW in 2020 and 38 GW in 2030 (CAT estimation). If it does this, Turkey would emit an estimated additional 340 MtCO2e in 2020 and 250 MtCO2e in 2030 relative to BAU.[5] This added coal-fired capacity would cancel out all planned abatement measures mentioned in the INDC, and Turkey would not be able to meet its INDC goal

    #COP21 #Turquie #Environnement #Energie

  • Forget Ukraine. It’s Business As Usual Between Europe and Russia
    http://www.newsweek.com/forget-ukraine-its-business-usual-between-europe-and-russia-369730

    It was just like the old days before the European Union imposed sanctions on Russia in 2014. At the Eastern Economic Forum in Vladivostok Gazprom clinched three major deals with some of Europe’s biggest energy companies.

    One of the most important was the revival of a lucrative asset swap between the Russian energy giant and Wintershall, the energy division of BASF, a German chemical company. BASF had abandoned that swap arrangement in December 2014 because of the geopolitical consequences of Russia’s invasion of eastern Ukraine and its annexation of Crimea.

    The asset swap and other deals signed in Vladivostok show how German as well as Austrian energy companies are loath to quit Russia. They also show how Gazprom wants to tie Europe’s lucrative gas market more closely to Russia. In 2013, Russia supplied the EU’s 28 countries with 30 percent of their gas needs.

    But more importantly, the deals confirm how Russia is determined to end Ukraine’s role as the major transit route for Russian gas to Europe. Half of the Russian gas imported by Europe crosses Ukraine.

    Under the terms of the deal between BASF and Gazprom, BASF’s subsidiary Wintershall will obtain a stake of 25 percent plus one share in the Urengoy natural gas fields in Siberia. Both firms will develop the fields.

    In return, Wintershall will transfer to Gazprom its jointly owned gas storage and trading business in Germany as well as a stake in its business in Austria. Through the asset swap, Gazprom will also receive a 50 percent stake in Wintershall’s exploration and production of oil and gas in the North Sea. These activities amounted to sales of over $13.4 billion in 2014, according to BASF.

    The second deal agreed to in Vladivostok involves Gazprom and a European consortium building a second Nord Stream pipeline under the Baltic Sea. This will enable Russia to send more of its gas directly to Germany, bypassing Ukraine.

    The consortium consists of BASF, German energy company E.ON, French electricity company Engie, Austrian oil and gas firm OMV and Royal Dutch Shell. Gazprom will own a 51 percent share of a new company called New European Pipeline AG, which will develop the project. The other partners will have a 10 percent stake, except for Engie, which will own 9 percent.

    The fact that the global energy majors participate in the project bespeaks its significance for securing reliable gas supply to European consumers,” stated Alexey Miller, chairman of the Gazprom Management Committee.

    Tell that to Poland and the Baltic states—and Ukraine. They had criticized the first Nord Stream pipeline, which was agreed to under the then German chancellor Gerhard Schröder in 2005. At the time, Warsaw argued that the deal increased Europe’s dependence on Russian energy.

    Since then, however, Europe has been diversifying its energy supplies, spurred by the 2009 Ukraine gas crisis, which disrupted supplies to Europe because of a dispute between Russia and Ukraine over energy prices.

    Also, through its Third Energy Package, the European Commission is introducing more competition in the energy sector by breaking the hold any one company can have over the production, distribution and trading of gas. That is one of the main reasons why in December 2014 Russia pulled out of the South Stream project, which was to transport gas across the Black Sea to Southeastern Europe. Under the terms of the commission package, Russia would have had to open up the gas pipeline to competition.

    The third deal reached in Vladivostok involves OMV’s participation in the Urengoy oil and gas fields. When the deal is concluded, OMV will acquire a 24.8 percent stake in the project in exchange for Gazprom obtaining some of the assets of OMV.

    • Sans trop de surprise, le projet de #North_Stream_2 ne plait pas à l’Ukraine…

      Ukraine PM calls second Russia-Germany pipeline ’anti-European’ - Yahoo News
      http://news.yahoo.com/ukraine-pm-calls-second-russia-germany-pipeline-anti-173441635.html

      Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk on Thursday criticised as “anti-Ukrainian and anti-European” a deal between Russia’s energy giant Gazprom and several Western firms to build a second gas pipeline under the Baltic Sea.

      In June, Gazprom agreed with Anglo-Dutch Shell, Germany’s E.ON and Austria’s OMV to build the new gas pipeline — dubbed Nord Stream-2 — to Germany, bypassing conflict-torn Ukraine and also EU neighbour Poland.

      When the first Nord Stream was built, it brought the European Union no additional energy independence,” Yatsenyuk said after talks with Slovak counterpart Robert Fico in Bratislava.

      The construction of Nord Stream-2 is affecting the security of the continuous gas supply of the EU’s southeastern countries. It is a monopolisation of gas supply routes to the EU,” he told reporters.

      This project is anti-Ukrainian and anti-European.

  • Egypt: ENI’s Zohr, a boost for political stability
    http://www.mesp.me/2015/09/06/egypt-enis-zohr-a-boost-for-political-stability-in-egypt

    Regardless if it is correct or not, the discovery of Zohr is already perceived, in Egypt and beyond, as the result of the measures taken to reform the gas sector over the past year. As such, it is a boost for President Sisi. But the reasoning goes both ways: Political stability in Egypt relies on the performance of its energy sector, and putting the energy sector back on track relies on political stability. ENI’s discovery couldn’t have come at a better time for Sisi: On 30/08, Egypt announced it will hold parliamentary elections in October and November 2015. The intense media coverage will make sure Egyptians will head to polls with two “spectacular” achievements directly attributed to Sisi in mind: the inauguration of the new Suez canal, and the discovery of Zohr.

    #Egypte #gaz

  • Ukraine faces mounting coal shortage problems — Energy Ministry
    http://www.focus-fen.net/news/2015/07/31/379342/ukraine-faces-mounting-coal-shortage-problems-energy-ministry.html

    Ukraine’s thermal power plants face mounting problems with coal shortages while energy companies’ coal stocks are declining, Ukrainian Deputy Energy and Coal Minister Alexander Svetelik said on Friday, as cited by TASS.
    The deputy minister who spoke at a roundtable discussion on preparations for the upcoming heating season said the energy companies were required to have 2.7 million tons of coal at their warehouses while the available stocks stood at 1.5 million tons.
    […]
    Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk said on Friday during a working trip to Kharkov “the situation in the energy sector is disastrous.

  • Why is #Germany so tough on #Greece? Look back 25 years | Dirk Laabs | Comment is free | The Guardian
    http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jul/17/germany-greece-wolfgang-schauble-bailout?CMP=share_btn_tw

    The situation in the former GDR was not too dissimilar from that in Greece when Syriza swept to power: East Germans had just held their first free elections in history, only months after the Berlin Wall fell, and some of the delegates from East Berlin dreamed of a new political system, a “third way” between the west’s market economy and the east’s socialist system – while also having no idea how to pay the bills anymore.

    The West Germans, on the other side of the table, had the momentum, the money and a plan: everything the state of East Germany owned was to be absorbed by the West German system and then quickly sold to private investors to recoup some of the money East Germany would need in the coming years. In other words: Schäuble and his team wanted collateral.

    • But the reality of what the #Treuhand did is different from the popular perception – and that should be a warning for both Schäuble and the rest of Europe. Selling East Germany’s assets for maximum profit turned out to be more difficult than imagined. Almost all assets of real value – the banks, the energy sector – had already been snapped up by West German companies. Within days of the introduction of the West German mark, the economy in the east completely broke down. Like Greece, it required a massive bailout programme organised by Schäuble’s government, but in secret: they set aside 100bn marks (£35bn) to keep the old East German economy afloat, a figure that became public only years later

    • In reality, the #Treuhand became not just a tool for privatisation but a quasi-socialist holding company. It lost billions of marks because it went on paying the wages of many workers in the east and kept some unviable factories alive – a positive aspect usually drowned out in the vilifications of the agency. Because Kohl and, during the summer of 1990, #Schäuble weren’t Chicago economists keen on radical experiments but politicians who wanted to be re-elected, they pumped millions into a failing economy. This is where parallels with #Greece end: there were political limits to the austerity a government could impose on its own people.

  • Ukraine leader attacks Greek ‘disaster’ - FT.com
    http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/22f31128-2996-11e5-acfb-cbd2e1c81cca.html?siteedition=intl#axzz3fqZEexrA

    Ukraine’s prime minister has called Europe’s handling of the Greece crisis a “political disaster”, and said it was already leading to political repercussions for Kiev where opposition is rising to tough reforms required as part of an international bailout.
    In an interview with the Financial Times on Monday, Arseniy Yatseniuk bemoaned the fact that Greece was absorbing so much of the world’s attention — and Europe’s financial resources — even as Kiev had to deal with Russian tanks on its soil and was in dire need of more financial help.

    Everyone is so focused on Greece that Ukraine is not the priority. It is not on radars,” he said during a visit to Washington.
    […]
    The Greek saga had also complicated his government’s handling of its own crisis, he said, with factions in parliament introducing bills to roll back pension, energy sector and other reforms. In a rare political intervention the International Monetary Fund warned on Sunday that Ukraine’s parliament was risking “reversing economic reforms for the sake of short-term gains”.

    Pas un mot sur la loi votée par le Parlement imposant un cours forcé pour le remboursement des dettes (au taux du jour de conclusion de l’emprunt). C’est pourtant l’un des éléments relevés dimanche dans l’intervention du FMI

    IMF Warns Proposed Legislation in Ukraine Threatens Reforms - WSJ
    http://www.wsj.com/articles/imf-warns-proposed-legislation-in-ukraine-threatens-reforms-1436723753

    The fund also condemned a separate law passed by parliament earlier this month that would allow Ukrainians to repay foreign currency loans at a more favorable exchange rate, a move some experts have said could collapse the country’s banking system. President Petro Poroshenko has signaled he will veto the foreign-exchange bill.

  • China’s investment in renewables soars by a third - Climate News Network

    http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/chinas-investment-in-renewables-soars-by-a-third

    By Kieran Cooke

    Despite a slowdown in its economy and the continued reliance on coal, China is pumping billions of dollars into its renewable energy industry.

    LONDON, 30 May, 2015 − China invested more than US$89 billion in renewable energy projects in the country in 2014 – a growth of 31% on the previous year, according to a detailed report on the country’s energy sector.

    The soaring increase is revealed in a report by the US government’s Energy Information Administration (EIA). But it adds that fossil fuels − particularly coal − still look set to continue to dominate China’s power sector.

    Coal is by far the most polluting fossil fuel, and China is the world’s leading emitter of climate-changing greenhouse gases.

    #chine #climat #énergie #développement

  • Powerful wind blows through US energy sector - Climate News Network

    http://www.climatenewsnetwork.net/powerful-wind-blows-through-us-energy-sector

    By Kieran Cooke

    Wind power in the US now generates enough electricity for more than 11 million homes, but it needs government support for further growth.

    LONDON, 20 March, 2015 − The wind turbines are turning across America, and a major report by the US Department of Energy (DOE) says the wind energy sector now supplies 4.5% of the nation’s electricity.

    Given the right energy policies and investment in infrastructure, that figure could increase to 10% by 2020 and to 35% by 2050, the DOE predicts.

    That will not only benefit tens of thousands of workers who will be employed in one of the US’s fastest-growing industries. It’s also good news for the climate, and will help preserve increasingly precious water supplies.

    #états-unis #énergie #énergie_renouvelable #énergie_éolienne

  • Global energy-related emissions of carbon dioxide stalled in 2014
    http://www.iea.org/newsroomandevents/news/2015/march/global-energy-related-emissions-of-carbon-dioxide-stalled-in-2014.html

    Data from the International Energy Agency (IEA) indicate that global emissions of carbon dioxide from the energy sector stalled in 2014, marking the first time in 40 years in which there was a halt or reduction in emissions of the greenhouse gas that was not tied to an economic downturn.

    [...]

    The IEA attributes the halt in emissions growth to changing patterns of energy consumption in China and OECD countries. In China, 2014 saw greater generation of electricity from renewable sources, such as hydropower, solar and wind, and less burning of coal. In OECD economies, recent efforts to promote more sustainable growth – including greater energy efficiency and more renewable energy – are producing the desired effect of decoupling economic growth from greenhouse gas emissions.

    [...]

    In the 40 years in which the IEA has been collecting data on carbon dioxide emissions, there have only been three times in which emissions have stood still or fallen compared to the previous year, and all were associated with global economic weakness: the early 1980’s; 1992 and 2009. In 2014, however, the global economy expanded by 3%.

    More details on the data and analysis will be included in an IEA special report on energy and climate that will be released on 15 June in London.

    #climat #énergie #AIE

  • Israel Anti-Competition Hearing Looms for Nobel Energy
    http://www.naturalgaseurope.com

    GLOBE: ISRAELI GOV’T OFFICIALS MULL GAS FIELDS COMPROMISE

    Just before the final decision by Antitrust Authority head Prof. David Gilo on declaring if the Leviathan natural gas reservoir is a cartel, decision-makers in Israel’s energy sector face a dilemma. Should they offer the gas developers a package deal, a compromise that will instantly solve all the disputes interfering with the development of the natural gas reservoirs, or to continue on the “safe” course leading to a confrontation with the developers in the antitrust court. The current compromise proposals on the table involve the Delek Group Ltd. controlled by Yitzhak Tshuva, selling its rights in the Tamar reservoir, while leaving the US partner, Noble Energy, with its holdings in both reservoirs (with the possibility of diluting its rights in the Tamar reservoir). At the same time, mechanisms are being examined for ensuring that Noble Energy does not take an active part in negotiations for the sale of gas to the domestic market, which will, at least ostensibly, create competition between Isramco in the Tamar reservoir and Delek Group and Ratio Oil Exploration (1992) LP (in the Leviathan reservoir. A comprehensive agreement within the government on such a compromise proposal, however, is still far off.

    The path leading to the “end of the conflict” depends on achieving a broad consensus among all the regulators dealing in the sector: the Antitrust Authority, the Ministry of Finance budget department, the Ministry of National Infrastructure, Energy, and Water Resources, and the Public Utilities Authority (Electricity) - just to mention the first ones that come to mind. Beyond this, the question arises of what status and validity such an agreement will have - whether it will be binding on the next government in a way that will create certainty in a sector with strategic importance for the economy and the nation.

    As of now, it appears that the second question is simpler. Gilo has full authority to reach a compromise with the gas developers, regardless of the elections. He is entitled to issue a new consent decree, and he will receive approval from whatever new government is elected. Gilo can issue a consent decree at the end of the hearing for the gas companies that will be effective two days later (for Noble Energy on Tuesday, for Delek Group on Wednesday, and for Ratio on Thursday). The antitrust laws put no time constraints on Gilo, which is, by the way, a topic worthy of separate discussion.

  • Officiel : la corruption dans le secteur de l’énergie en Ukraine, c’est fini, #n_i_ni !

    Yatsenyuk : Ukrainian authorities rid energy sector of corruption
    http://www.kyivpost.com/content/politics/yatsenyuk-ukrainian-authorities-rid-energy-sector-of-corruption-376955.htm

    Ukrainian authorities have made some success in the fight against corruption in the energy sector, and in signing open and transparent contracts to buy gas from EU member states, Ukrainian Prime Minister Arseniy Yatsenyuk has said. 

    I would like to point out where we have succeeded: we have succeeded in overcoming corruption in the energy sector. We do not have billions of dollars, which have flowed into the pockets of Ukrainian oligarchs. At present, Ukraine buys gas in transparent and European conditions under open contracts with German companies and European companies,” Yatseniuk said at a joint press conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in Berlin on Thursday.

  • Visite d’Abdel Fattah Al Sissi et de ses ministres en Chine, des contrats à la clé - Ahram Online

    http://english.ahram.org.eg/News/117422.aspx

    Egyptian ministers travelled to Beijing on Monday to prepare for President Abdel-Fattah El-Sisi’s visit to China in a few days, according to state news agency MENA.
    Trade and Industry Minister Mounir Fakhry Abdel-Nour, International Cooperation Minister Naglaa El-Ahwan, Investment Minister Ashraf Salman and Transportation Minister Hany Dahy will discuss how to enhance commerce with China and encourage Chinese investment in Egypt, especially in the electricity and energy sectors.

    The ministers will meet with presidents of Chinese companies interested in investing in Egyptian infrastructure.

    Electricity and Renewable Energy Minister Mohamed Shaker left for Beijing on Sunday to explore possible cooperation in the energy sector.

    Investment Minister Ashraf Salman met with Chinese Ambassador to Egypt Song Aiguo in November to enhance Egyptian-Chinese relations and discuss ways to overcome problems that Chinese companies face in Egypt.

    El-Sisi had recently met with Meng Jianzhu, special envoy of Chinese President Xi Jinping and secretary of Central Politics and Law Commission of the Communist Party of China, during which the Egyptian president received an official invitation to visit China in December.

    Jianzhu stated during the meeting that Egyptian-Chinese relations would be upgraded to the level of “comprehensive strategic partnership,” according to Egypt’s State Information Service.

  • Statoil Signs Gas Deal With Ukraine’s Naftogaz | Business | The Moscow Times
    http://www.themoscowtimes.com/business/article/statoil-signs-gas-deal-with-ukraine-s-naftogaz/508415.html

    Norwegian energy firm Statoil has signed a deal to sell gas to Ukraine state gas firm Naftogaz, the Nordic firm said on Friday, providing another source of gas for Ukraine after Russia cut off supplies.

    On Thursday a source in the Ukrainian energy sector told Reuters Ukraine had received its first supplies from Norway via Slovakia and that the price was much lower than for Russian gas.

    Statoil has signed an agreement with yet another new-to-Statoil gas customer in the European gas market. The agreement with Naftogaz is for deliveries of gas in Slovakia,” Statoil spokesman Morten Eek said. “From there they are responsible for transportation.

    Statoil is Europe’s second-largest gas supplier after Gazprom.

    He did not say the value of the deal. “In a Statoil context, this is a short-term and relatively low-volume agreement,” he said.

    On remarquera que #Statoil laisse la Slovaquie se dépatouiller de la gestion du #flux_inversé,…