Category: Energy Matters

  • Iran a radioactive Situation

    Google Alert – DANGER TO US NUCLEAR PLANTS

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    News 8 new results for DANGER TO US NUCLEAR PLANTS
    Uddhav justifies Sainiks threatening scientist over Jaitapur N-plant
    Times of India
    Sena CEO Uddhav Thackeray saw nothing wrong in the Sainiks’ threat to Kakodkar. “In fact, the Jaitapur nuclear plant is a threat to all of us. Who will take responsibility if something goes wrong in the power plant,” he asked.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Fukushima Accident Proves That Nuclear Is Dangerous – Greenpeace
    AllAfrica.com
    The nuclear disaster could cost the Japanese government between US$500 billion to US$600 billion. According to Adam, nuclear reactors are a dirty and dangerous power source, one that will always be vulnerable to the deadly combination of human errors,
    See all stories on this topic »
    Evacuation of Tokyo considered during nuke crisis, former PM ‘saved Japan
    Waterloo Record
    The report seemed to confirm the suspicions of nuclear experts in the United States — inside and outside the government — that the Japanese government was not being forthcoming about the full dangers posed by the stricken Fukushima plant.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Shiv Sena disowns threat to disrupt talk
    Deccan Herald
    Shiv Sena which had jumped into the Jaitapur farmers’ agitation against the proposed nuclear power plant, is trying to distance itself from the latest controversy involving some of their supporters in Pune threatening to disrupt a scientific conference
    See all stories on this topic »
    OPPD’s nuclear problems: how far will they go?
    KVNO News
    But much of that only came to light when the plant actually came under threat of the Missouri waters. The plant has been offline since then – for just about a year now – and in that time the problems have only deepened. Take us back in the story to
    See all stories on this topic »

    KVNO News
    Anti-KNPP protestors in soup over threat to sue PM Singh
    Oneindia
    the anti-Kudankulam nuclear plant protestors who threatened to sue Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on foreign funds issue may land in trouble as the government seems ready to divulge facts regarding foreign fund’s use in the agitation for their food,
    See all stories on this topic »

    Oneindia
    N-safety: Russian green group backs NGOs
    Business Standard
    Indian NGOs opposing the proposed nuclear power plant in Kudankulam have got covering fire from Moscow. A Russia-based environmental group, EcoDefence, on Monday backed the Indian non-profit groups, saying Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s remark on
    See all stories on this topic »
    A Radioactive Situation
    Iranian
    Destroying Iran’s many reactors and processing facilities could release large amounts of radiation and create radioactive dust storms. Winds would carry this toxic miasma over Afghanistan and its large US military garrison. Dangerous radiation would
    See all stories on this topic »


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  • China Embraces Fracking in Seismically Active Province- Quakes to Follow?

    Daytime Credit a Thing of the Past as the Fed Rewards High Reserves

    Posted: 27 Feb 2012 10:18 AM PST

    In my 2008 post, Interpreting the Monetary Base Under the New Monetary Regime, I argued that the massive increase in bank reserves was neither a necessary harbinger of inflation (as people on the right feared) nor a sure sign of a liquidity trap (as people on the left claimed) but rather represented, at least in part, a sensible aspect of the new regime of paying interest on reserves. I wrote: When no interest was paid on reserves banks tried to hold as few as possible.  But during the day the banks needed reserves – of which there were…

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    The Darker Reality of India’s Nuclear Power Goals

    Posted: 26 Feb 2012 03:16 PM PST

    India is betting heavily on nuclear power to meet its surging energy needs. While India currently has six nuclear power plants (NPPs) with 20 reactors generating 4,780 megawatts, seven other reactors are under construction and are expected to generate an additional 5,300 megawatts.  This current rate of nuclear power generation pales into insignificance with New Delhi’s future plans, as on 22 February Power Minister Sushilkumar Shinde told a seminar at the India International Nuclear Symposium, “India plans to have a total installed…

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    Politics, Pandering and Petroleum Prices

    Posted: 26 Feb 2012 03:10 PM PST

    Oil prices were up more than $1 per barrel by Friday after the IAEA proclaimed that Iran was ramping up its enrichment activity, continuing a rally that began more than a month ago. Lingering concerns over oil-rich Iran is in part the reason for the rally, which makes its way to the pocket books of consumers by way of higher gasoline prices. However, with campaign season in full swing in the United States ahead of the November presidential elections, it’s likely the politicking and speculation are contributing to the energy woes. The U.S.…

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    China Embraces Fracking in Seismically Active Province – Quakes to Follow?

    Posted: 26 Feb 2012 03:04 PM PST

    While hydraulic fracturing, more familiarly known as “fracking,” a technique used to liberate shale oil and natural gas deposits, is in many countries coming under increased scrutiny because of environmental concerns, China has decided to embrace the process as a way to develop indigenous energy reserves. According to the BP statistical review of world energy, In 2010 global natural gas consumption increased 7.4 percent, the biggest increase since 1984. On 12 February China’s Ministry of Land and Resources (MLR) Vice…

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    Norway Hopes to Develop Thorium Nuclear Power

    Posted: 26 Feb 2012 02:53 PM PST

    Norway holds a resource of 170,000 tonnes of thorium, which amounts to 15% of the world’s total of 1.2 million tonnes. There is far more thorium than that within the earth’s crust all told, averaging 8 ppm compared with around 2.8 ppm for uranium, but the above figures refer to richer ores, most commonly monazite sand which contains up to 12% of thorium. There is some opinion that thorium nuclear power might be a better environmental/energy-strategy for Norway than relying on carbon-capture which many consider to be uneconomic. However,…

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    Natural Gas Analysis for the Week of February 27, 2012

    Posted: 26 Feb 2012 02:50 PM PST

    April natural gas continued to consolidate last week, but the weak close could mean another test of the support. Last week, the market sold off sharply after testing downtrending resistance at 2.7250. This has put the market in a position to break into uptrending Gann angle support at 2.6380 or 2.5380. A successful test of these two support angles will mean that buyers are stepping up and that a secondary higher bottom may be forming. If this occurs then all it is going to take is a breakout above 2.7250 to fuel an acceleration to the upside. Of…

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    Shell Makes a Bid for Cove Energy Plc as the Majors Move into Mozambique

    Posted: 26 Feb 2012 02:45 PM PST

    In recent months Mozambique has reared its head as a global power in natural gas, boasting fields that are expected to be larger than those owned by Norway. Italy’s Eni SpA has found 40 trillion cubic feet of natural gas in its Mamba field, and Anadarko Petroleum Corp discovered a 30 trillion cubic feet deposit at its Rovuma site near to Mamba. According to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy Norway contained 72 trillion cubic feet of gas reserves in 2010, Mozambique is expected to surpass that figure. The vast potential in East Africa…

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  • Malaysian protest against rare earth refinery

    Malaysians protest against rare earth refinery

    Opponents of plant, which will process radioactive ore from Australia, say it poses health and environmental risks

    • guardian.co.uk, Sunday 26 February 2012 17.27 GMT
    • Article history
    • Malaysia protest

      Protesters say the rare earth plant being built in eastern Malaysia poses a hazard from radioactive waste. Photograph: Bazuki Muhammad/Reuters

      About 3,000 Malaysians have staged a protest against a refinery for rare earth elements being built by the Australian mining company Lynas over fears of radioactive contamination.

      It was the largest rally so far against the £146m plant in eastern Malaysia, and could pose a headache for the government with national elections widely expected this year.

      Authorities recently granted Lynas a licence to operate the rare earth plant in Pahang state, the first outside China in years, and it has been the subject of heated protests over health and environmental risks posed by potential leaks of radioactive waste.

      Lynas says its plant, which will refine radioactive ore from Australia, has state-of-the-art pollution controls and plans to start operations by June.

      Protesters, including opposition MPs, pledged on Sunday to put pressure on the government to scrap the project. Many wore green T-shirts with the words “Stop Lynas” and some shouted “Destroy Lynas” during the two-hour rally in the Pahang state capital, Kuantan.

      The opposition leader, Anwar Ibrahim, said his alliance would seek an emergency motion in parliament to urge the government to cancel the project. He also pledged that the opposition would scrap the plant if it won national polls expected by June.

      “We don’t want [this project] to sacrifice our culture and the safety of the children,” he told the crowd.

      Lynas says its refinery could meet nearly a third of world demand for rare earths, excluding China. It also may curtail China’s stranglehold on the global supply of 17 rare earths essential for making hi-tech goods, including flat-screen TVs, mobile phones, hybrid cars and weapons.

      Malaysian activists and Pahang residents have sought a court order to halt the Lynas plant.

      An International Atomic Energy Agency team, which assessed the Lynas project last year, found it lacked a comprehensive long-term waste management programme and a plan to dismantle the plant once it is no longer operating.

      Malaysia’s last rare earth refinery, operated by Mitsubishi of Japan, in northern Perak state, was closed in 1992 after protests and claims that it caused birth defects and leukaemia among residents. It is one of Asia’s largest radioactive waste cleanup sites.

  • More Nuclear news

    News 5 new results for DANGER TO US NUCLEAR PLANTS
    UK firms in danger of missing out on nuclear plant contracts
    Telegraph.co.uk
    British companies will struggle to win the bulk of the £60bn expected to be spent building the next generation of nuclear plants, the Prime Minister has been told. The French nuclear plant taken in Nogent-sur-Seine. Tim Fox, head of energy at the
    See all stories on this topic »

    Telegraph.co.uk
    CLIMATE SPECTATOR: What’s really wrong with nuclear
    Business Spectator
    It has achieved this while resulting in significantly less deaths than coal use, a major plus in my book in spite of Fukushima. I worry that Japan and Germany, with their nuclear phase-outs, will instead revert to fossil-fuels rather than renewables,
    See all stories on this topic »
    Briefly World: Kim issues threat before S Korea-US drill
    Indian Express
    TEHRAN: Iran’s first nuclear power plant will be connected to the national grid at full capacity in the coming weeks, the head of the country’s Atomic Energy Organisation Fereydoun Abbasi-Davani was quoted as saying by Iranian media Sunday.
    See all stories on this topic »
    Iran Is the New Iraq
    World Press Review
    This is all too familiar for us Arabs. Ten years ago, Brian Whitaker wrote in The Guardian, “One of the oldest tricks in the run-up to a war is to spread terrifying stories of things that the enemy may be about to do. Government officials plant these
    See all stories on this topic »

    World Press Review
    Brian Leyland: The only way is full steam ahead
    New Zealand Herald
    For electricity, nuclear power and, in particular, reactors burning thorium, promise us a virtually unlimited supply of electricity at a reasonable price. And for those who believe it is too dangerous to contemplate, recent research into radiation
    See all stories on this topic »

     


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  • Oil Price Daily News Update

    Oil Price Daily News Update


    Hamas Strike Electricity Deal with Egypt

    Posted: 26 Feb 2012 07:11 AM PST

    On 23 February the Palestinian resistance movement Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, announced that Hamas Gazan leader Ismail Haneya had reached a “comprehensive agreement” with Egypt to permanently end Gaza’s ongoing electricity crisis. The agreement come in the wake of a visit Haniyeh made to Egypt, which began on 20 February. Hamas spokesman Taher al Nunu said in a statement released to the media, “A comprehensive agreement has been reached with Egyptian officials to put a permanent end to the electricity crisis in the Gaza Strip. The (fuel)…

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    Crude Oil Analysis for the Week of February 27, 2012

    Posted: 26 Feb 2012 06:48 AM PST

    Crude oil surged last week to its highest level since May 2011. The close at $109.77 represents a $13.96 gain since bottoming at $95.81 on February 2. Not only did the market breakout over a downtrending Gann angle from the $114.09 top at $108.72, but it also closed on the bullish side of a steep uptrending Gann angle from the $95.81 bottom. This angle comes in at $111.81 this week which means crude oil has to rally at least $2.05 to maintain its torrid upward pace. If April crude oil begins to flatten or if upside momentum begins to slow, then…

    Read more…

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  • Security in doubt as Australia’s aging oil refineries shut down

    Hot Topics  THE CONVERSATION

    27 February 2012, 6.37am AEST

    Security in doubt as Australia’s aging oil refineries shut down

    The looming closure of three Australian refineries will affect the security of liquid fuel supplies in Australia. This is particularly so if the government and the oil industry do not devise a joint strategy with which to respond to potential supply disruptions. Last week, Caltex Australia has written…

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    Kbjrrp8d-1330057450 Facing the music: Australia is losing its capacity to refine oil. AAP/Andrew Brownbill The looming closure of three Australian refineries will affect the security of liquid fuel supplies in Australia. This is particularly so if the government and the oil industry do not devise a joint strategy with which to respond to potential supply disruptions.
    Last week, Caltex Australia has written down the value of its two oil refineries (Kurnell in NSW and Lytton in Queensland) by A$1.5 billion. Caltex announced that the results of an operational review due in six months could lead to refinery closures.
    The closure may mark another milestone in the decline of Australia’s refining sector. Shell confirmed in July 2011 that it will shut down refining operations at Clyde and convert the Clyde Refinery and Gore Bay Terminal into a fuel import facility by mid-2013. ExxonMobil’s Port Stanvac refinery near Adelaide was mothballed in 2003. In 2009, the decision was made to close down the refinery.
    If an ongoing Caltex review results in closure of the two refineries, the nation will be reduced to just four, half the number in 2003.
    Caltex’s position also raises questions over the viability of the nation’s four other refineries. Analysts often tout ExxonMobil’s Altona refinery in Melbourne as a candidate for divestment.
    There is consensus among industry analysts that it is extremely unlikely there will be any new major additions to Australia’s refining capacity. In fact, BP’s chief economist Christof Ruhl described the future of the local refining industry as “dire”.

    Why are Australian refineries closing down?

    All of the recent refinery closures have been attributed to the rise of huge refineries in the Asian region, where a surge of new capacity has depressed profit margins in the industry. The closures were not carbon tax related.
    Australia’s refineries have experienced declining gross margins for several years, mainly due to competition from foreign refineries, an oversupply of refining capacity in Asia, and the high cost of transporting crude oil to Australia.
    Crude oil is transported in large tankers (VLCCs) – up to 200,000 tonnes. Petroleum products are transported in much smaller ships – up to 45,000 tonnes. The freight (per barrel) is cheaper for crude oil via VLCCs. However, this is eroded by the higher cost of refining in Australia which results from smaller scale, higher capital costs, and higher wages and energy costs. Thus, the key problem for Australian refiners is that the landed cost of crude oil in Australia plus refining costs and a profit margin is higher than the landed cost of petroleum products.
    Refineries need a production capacity of at least 200,000 barrels per day (bpd) in order to reach the minimum efficient scale. Australian refineries are small in capacity (see table) compared with new refineries in Asia. For example, the world’s largest refinery (Jamnagar in India with the production capacity of 1,240,000 bpd, owned by Reliance Industries) could supply more than Australia’s entire yearly fuel demand.
    Powering down: Australia’s oil refineries

    Click to enlarge

    As well as being comparatively small, Australia’s oil refineries are old, with the last refinery built in 1965. Consequently, they require large investment for upgrade in line with evolving environmental standards.
    Australia is not unique amongst developed countries in this regard. New oil refineries have not been built in the US since 1976, with more than 30 refineries being closed in the last decade. The story is similar in the UK, with the closure of ten refineries since the late 1970s. The majority of closures have happened in OECD countries and this trend is likely to continue.
    The prospects for Australian refineries depend on competitive conditions set by global refinery circumstances. The Australian refining industry operates in an internationally competitive market, with large refinery capacity existing in Asia capable of exporting substantial volumes of fuel to Australia. In this context, importing refined fuel from Asian mega-refineries, such as Reliance Industry’s Jamnagar, ExxonMobil’s Singapore refinery or Shell’s Singapore refinery is more cost-effective for oil companies.

    How do refinery closures affect Australia’s energy security?

    The total demand for petroleum products in Australia is 941,000 bpd. Consumption of refined petroleum products is projected to grow 1.2 per cent a year over the long term.
    Future reductions in refining capacity in Australia (from current 761,500 bpd to 433,000 bpd if only four refineries remain operational) and growth in demand imply that imports will play an increasingly greater role in meeting domestic demand.
    According to an Australian Strategic Policy Institute report, the fact that domestic oil production and refining capacity falls short of local demand means that Australia is, at least to some extent, vulnerable to the disruption of supplies of crude and refined petroleum products during times of crisis.
    According to the former managing director of Caltex Australia, Des King, “Retaining a substantial oil refining capability is essential to Australia’s energy security.” The closure of domestic refineries will not improve Australia’s energy security in liquid fuels.
    Future reductions in Australian refining capacity, coupled with higher levels of demand for liquid fuels, will result in the elimination of spare refining capacity. Domestic refineries will have limited scope to increase production or divert export cargoes into the domestic market in the event of a breakdown. Replacing domestic production losses with imported product may take time to deliver due to the longer supply chains associated with imported petroleum products.
    Domestic refineries provide a much greater degree of flexibility in the product supply chain in the event of an unexpected supply disruption. For example, as the major source of imported refined petroleum products to Australia, the loss of refining capacity in Singapore could be the source of significant product shortages in Australia.
    The closure of domestic refineries will make Australia more dependent on overseas refiners who may be less responsive to the needs of their Australian customers than would be the case with a domestic refiner. It will also reduce the diversification of supply options available for Australia.
    Fast track to dependence. AAP/Dean Lewins

    What has been the government’s reaction to closures?

    The Australian Government recognised in its 2008 National Energy Security Assessment, that liquid fuel security will decline significantly if the future viability of Australian refineries is challenged and more Australian refineries close.
    Yet, as with broader energy policy, the Federal Government has adopted a laissez faire approach to refining. It does not consider refinery closures as a threat to security of fuel supply.
    According to the government’s Draft Energy White Paper, a growing reliance on liquid fuel imports is not considered to impair long‐term liquid fuel security due to our ability to import an adequate and reliable supply of liquid fuels through well‐established and diverse international supply chains.
    In a statement following Shell’s decision to shut down the Clyde refinery, the Federal Minister for Resources, Martin Ferguson, said the future of the refinery was a commercial matter for Shell and he didn’t have concerns about security of supply.
    Yet, analysts suggest that a major disruption to Australia’s oil refining industry would have major consequences not only for the industry but also on society and the economy as a whole. Accordingly, the government and the industry are not adequately prepared to respond to or recover from major disaster or disruption. A substantial reduction in Australia’s refining capacity will cause a major shift in Australia’s liquid fuels supply chain and may have significant security implications if supply disruptions arise.
    While the government may not change its laissez faire approach to the refining industry, the possible implications of the decline of Australia’s refining industry require detailed scrutiny in Canberra.
    At the very least, a major review of government’s petroleum supply security policy, and industry’s preparedness to deal with potential supply disruptions, is in order as part of the 2014 National Energy Security Assessment process.
    Comments welcome below.