 Environment
By Issues nº 1994
For decades, Japan dominated Asia’s energy picture. At the time of the first oil shock in 1973, it held a 60 percent share of Asia’s oil demand. During the 1980s, Japan
looked to China for oil and coal as part of its energy import diversification strategy. Today, Japan remains an important energy market but its position in Asia’s energy supply and demand balance is rapidly changing. In the wake of surging regional demand, Japan’s share of oil consumption is likely to fall below 15 percent of total Asian consumption by 2020.
By Issues nº 1985
Changes in the atmospheric abundance of greenhouse gases and aerosols, in solar radiation and in land surface properties alter the energy balance of the climate system. These changes are expressed in terms of radiative forcing, which is used to compare how a range of human and natural factors drive warming or cooling influences on global climate. Since the Third Assessment Report (TAR), new observations and related modelling of greenhouse gases, solar activity, land surface properties and some aspects of aerosols have led to improvements in the quantitative estimates of radiative forcing.
By Issues nº 1979
Après l'affaire “Pétrole contre nourriture”, la justice française vient d'ouvrir deux nouveaux dossiers impliquant le groupe Total. Le lundi 8 janvier 2007, le procureur de la République de Paris a lancé une enquête préliminaire pour “corruption d'agents publics étrangers” visant l'exploitation et la commercialisation du pétrole camerounais.
By Issues nº 1921
Les Etats-Unis s'engagent à soutenir le Maroc dans le domaine du développement de l'énergie nucléaire civile. L'ambassadeur Greg Schulte, représentant permanent des Etats-Unis auprès du bureau des Nations unies et de l'Agence internationale de l'énergie atomique à Vienne, est en visite au Maroc pour s'entretenir avec les responsables marocains sur les opportunités de partenariat.
By Issues nº 1911
The economics of climate change is shaped by the science. That is what dictates the structure of the economic analysis and policies; therefore we start with the science.
Human-induced climate change is caused by the emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases (GHGs) that have accumulated in the atmosphere mainly over the past 100 years.
By Issues nº 1907
This year began with a European energy crisis caused by Russia's cutoff of gas supplies to Ukraine, where a democratic government not to the liking of Vladimir Putin had taken power. Because Russian gas passes through Ukraine on its way to Western Europe, the pressure also dropped in Paris and Vienna and Rome -- and Europeans suddenly realized they were dependent for electricity and warmth on an autocracy that was prepared to use energy as a tool of imperialism.
By Issues nº 1897
Après l’acquisition de son premier réacteur nucléaire, le Cnesten réfléchit à l’élaboration d’un plan d’urgence radiologique et nucléaire. Pour préparer le terrain, le centre a organisé un séminaire lundi dernier avec la participation des membres de la protection civile, la police, la gendarmerie royale, la Santé et l’Environnement.
By Issues nº 1893
The time has come for Americans to unite behind an 3
aggressive campaign to reduce our dependence on oil and increase domestic and global energy security. To succeed, we must move beyond the narrow interests, political polarization, and short-term thinking that have prevented meaningful national progress for the last twenty years. The Energy Security Leadership Council(“Council”) believes that real progress is possible if we can come together around balanced policies that address both the supply and demand sides of the oil equation. The Council’s recommendations, which reflect the realities of global energy interdependence, constitute a comprehensive and integrated plan for achieving a safer energy future for America.
By Issues nº 1884
Le premier débat national sur l’énergie qui a eu lieu le 30 octobre dernier a permis de faire le point sur l’évolution du secteur énergétique au Maroc. Les participants à cette rencontre ont passé en revue l’évolution du secteur à travers trois ateliers: la sécurité d’approvisionnement; le secteur électrique et les énergies renouvelables, et l’efficacité énergétique.
By Issues nº 1878
The Army should consider developing a self-contained nuclear power plant that could deploy with forces to provide energy for its garrisons and allow the service to significantly scale back its logistics operations -- including its reliance on foreign oil -- required to sustain troops around the world.
By Issues nº 1869
In late November, Unified Energy Systems, Russia's electricity monopoly, announced that it would cut electricity supplies to Azerbaijan from 300 megawatts to 60 megawatts in 2007. Just prior to the announcement, Russian gas giant Gazprom announced its plan to cut gas supplies to Azerbaijan and to raise the price of those supplies about 13 percent. Officially, Moscow made these decisions because Azerbaijan's gas production rose during recent months and the country is better able to cover its energy needs domestically.
By Issues nº 1850
At the November 24 E.U.-Russia summit, Brussels is hoping to sign a Cooperation and Partnership Agreement that covers a myriad of issues, including standardized trade and investing rules in the energy sector. Poland is blocking the agreement, however, citing fears of over-reliance on Russian oil and gas and Moscow's ban on Polish meat and plant products. Concurrently, Poland and Ukraine are calling for an extension of the Odessa-Brody pipeline that would connect Poland to oil and gas from the Caspian Sea region by bypassing Russia and thereby lessening European dependence on Russian oil.
By Issues nº 1847
On current trends, we are on course for an unstable, dirty & expensive energy future. In response, urgent government policy action is required in two key areas:*Promoting energy investment, *Promoting energy efficiency.
In addition to improving energy security and the environment, these policies also make economic senseOn current trends, we are on course for an unstable, dirty & expensive energy future. In response, urgent government policy action is required in two key areas: Promoting energy investment and Promoting energy efficiency. In addition to improving energy security and the environment, these policies also make economic sense.
By Issues nº 1840
As a major oil consumer, the People’s Republic of China (PRC) has turned outward, cultivating bilateral relationships with states that can literally fuel China’s rapidly growing economy. This paper deconstructs China’s foreign policy towards supplier states in the Middle East—especially Iran and Saudi Arabia— in an effort to assess China’s grand energy strategy. It rejects the view that China can successfully pursue a “neo-mercantilist” strategy of securing reserves. It will evaluate whether China’s “no strings attached” commercial relationships with unsavory regimes threaten global security. Finally, it will consider the strategic challenge posed to the U.S. by the emergence of China in the Middle East. The paper concludes that a policy of active engagement and support for China’s increasing diversity of energy sources can help prevent harm to U.S. economic interests. It can also constrain China’s incentive to take bilateral relations with energy
suppliers to the level of security guarantees, which would challenge U.S. military supremacy in the region.
By Issues nº 1827
Against this background the European Commission’s 2006 Green Paper on energy (European Commission, 2006) has launched a debate on a comprehensive response to the challenges facing the EU. The overarching question is how to ensure secure and low-carbon yet affordable energy. Hence, it focuses on the interface of market liberalisation, security of supply and climate change.
By Issues nº 1800
This paper argues that the January 2006 gas cut off in the
Ukraine encouraged EU policymakers and the media to focus on the wrong Russian gas issue. The core issue for the EU is not the threat of a politically motivated gas cut off.
Rather it is the prospect of Russia,through lack of investment, not being able to produce enough gas to cover
Russian and EU demands. The paper considers the extent of the likely gas deficit and determines that if no action
is taken by 2010 the EU may be facing a deficit close to or even beyond its current Russian gas import level.
By Issues nº 1789
When Labour came to power in 1997, energy was not a priority. Indeed, apart from the windfall tax and the need for a political gesture to address the ‘fat cats’ issue in the privatised utilities, it was widely assumed that energy would remain very much in the background. The privatisations and associated regulatory frameworks had reduced network costs, and fossil-fuel prices were low and falling. A policy of benign neglect, and acceptance of the Conservatives’ ‘market for energy’ approach, fi rst set out by Nigel Lawson in 1982 was adopted.
By Issues nº 1771
Are China’s growing energy needs insatiable, and is a resource war between China and other major energy-consuming countries, such as the United States, inevitable? China’s pursuit of overseas energy resources to feed its fast-growing economy has given rise to observations that energy is now the driving force behind Chinese foreign policy and predictions that potential conflicts between China and other countries are likely to arise as China becomes more aggressive internationally in search of resources.
By Issues nº 1767
This monograph examines Russia’s historical dependence on oil and gas production and the intricate system of distributing windfall profits (“rent sharing”) that
underpins its economy. A full accounting of rent distribution includes not only the traditional mechanisms like budgetary expenditures and corporate profits, but also
substantial informal flows through the entire economy—from price subsidies to inflated costs of production to bribes and various off-budget “contributions” by businesses to local and national government officials.
By Issues nº 1758
For years, international energy experts have stressed the increasing strategic importance of supply security among the goals to which economic efficiency and environmental
compatibility also belong.
By Issues nº 1413
The Nuclear Technology Review 2006 reviews the following areas: power applications, advanced fission and fusion, atomic and nuclear data, accelerator and research reactor
applications, radioisotope applications and radiation technology, nuclear techniques in food and agriculture, human health, and water and the environment. Additional documentation associated with the Nuclear Technology Review 2006 is available through www.iaea.org in English only on
nuclear power in developing countries, storage and disposal of spent fuel and high level radioactive waste, sterile insect technology — research and development, advances in medical radiation imaging for cancer diagnosis and treatment, applications of neutron beam technology
and the front end of the uranium fuel cycle.
By Issues nº 1210
Canada's province of Alberta and the country of Mexico are both renowned oil economies and in both places, the government owns the oil reserves. But that's where the similarities between the two end.
By Issues nº 1197
There is more to today's oil crunch than temporary jolts to supply and demand. What is also roiling the energy world is an enduring shift in the balance of power between the fuel-guzzling West and oil-rich developing countries.
By Issues nº 1189
As the world's energy resources diminish ever more rapidly, the question of how to keep the lights on is rocketing up the political agenda to become one of the key international security issues of the age.
By Issues nº 983
Russia and Algeria, the two largest suppliers of natural gas to Europe, have stepped up cooperation in the energy sector and other areas, raising fears in Europe that the two could form a gas cartel to control prices.
By Issues nº 901
Take any week of the year, and you are sure to find a top executive from the Russian state-owned natural gas monopoly Gazprom spending more time in a European capital than at headquarters in Moscow.
By Issues nº 870
I would like to begin my presentation with a few facts on the importance of the Western Hemisphere in supplying energy resources, especially crude oil and natural gas, to
the United States. Imports of crude oil from hemispheric countries (Canada, Latin America, and the Caribbean) amounted to 50 percent of total U.S. crude oil imports in 2004, the latest year for which annual figures are available. Over and above this, the United States imports
significant amounts of oil products from countries in the Western Hemisphere, as can be seen in the tables at the end of this presentation. With this much energy resource reliance on the hemisphere, it is remarkable that the U.S. government has so thoroughly ignored the hemisphere in its foreign policy.
By Issues nº 869
I plan to provide an update on our efforts, as well as the Department of Energy’s view on
the outlook for energy markets, integration, diversification, and exploration and development of
energy resources in the Western Hemisphere.
By Issues nº 868
Today we are convening a hearing on Energy Security in the Western Hemisphere. Your testimony will help the
Subcommittee in making an assessment of hemispheric oil markets, and the ongoing development of energy
resources in North America, the Andean and Caribbean regions. By the time we are finished today, I hope the
Subcommittee will have a better understanding of the energy investment climate in these regions, and the risks in hemispheric energy markets linked to political trends, the politicization of these strategic commodities, and
potential production and supply disruptions.
By Issues nº 809
Russia's choice of energy security to top the agenda of its Group of Eight presidency was both prescient and timely. In Europe, we have to address urgently the dual problems of our fragmented internal market and our increasing energy dependence, particularly on imported gas, which brings new risks to Europe's energy security.
By Issues nº 757
Emerging economies, such as China, account for much of the projected growth, with energy demand growing at a rate of 3.2% and total energy consumption projected to more than double by 2025. This growth in energy demand will be driven by large increases in both economic growth and world population coupled with rising living standards in these countries.
By Issues nº 723
China and Iran are trying to conclude a multibillion-dollar oil-and-gas deal in coming weeks, underscoring how China's appetite for energy could undermine Washington's efforts to isolate Iran.
By Issues nº 715
As American evangelical Christian leaders, we recognize both our opportunity and our responsibility to offer
a biblically based moral witness that can help shape public policy in the most powerful nation on earth, and
therefore contribute to the well-being of the entire world.1 Whether we will enter the public square and offer
our witness there is no longer an open question. We are in that square, and we will not withdraw.
By Issues nº 704
Ethanol could help cure America's "addiction" to oil, with the fledgling industry poised for a boom to sate the country's thirst for renewable alternatives to gasoline, industry sources said on Wednesday.
By Issues nº 701
Environmentally concerned evangelicals, including megachurch pastors, Christian college presidents, and theologians, announced their support February 8 for a major effort to combat global warming.
By Issues nº 693
The report indicated that the Complex had redundant facilities, security concerns, high cost, excessive competition between the weapons labs, and inadequate
equipment for the production plants. To redress these problems, the Task Force proposed restructuring the Complex.
By Issues nº 677
Yet far from being a sword the world community can brandish against a recalcitrant Iran, oil is a shield Iran can use to protect itself. Analysts predict interruption in Iranian crude to world markets would send oil prices to more than $100 per barrel, weakening the resolve of governments around the world to take on the security challenge of Iran's nuclear ambitions.
By Issues nº 670
If you do not know the difference between uranium metal and uranium oxide, you never heard of “Green Salt” until today, and you have been more interested in Pittsburgh vs. Seattle than Tehran vs. Vienna, here’s your chance to catch up on the latest developments in the Iranian nuclear showdown.
By Issues nº 592
Europe´s energy policy should focus on this new energy reality, rather on continuing to find ever more effective solutions to yesterday´s problem of excess supply and low cost.
By Issues nº 559
The United Nations Climate Change Conference closed with the adoption of more than forty decisions that will strengthen global efforts to fight climate change.
By Issues nº 542
The ratification and implementation of the Kyoto Protocol would have a significant impact on the economic performance of Spain. The carbon dioxide emission reductions for the first period (2008-2012) are significant, and the reductions required to meet either of the proposed emission caps for the second period (2013-2017) and beyond are daunting.
By Issues nº 541
The analysis, which was prepared by Global Insight Inc. an international economic modelling firm, assumes that the cost of emission allowances under Kyoto would be passed along to consumers in the form of higher energy prices and ultimately high prices for all goods and services.
By Issues nº 455
Science does not support the alarmist claims underpinning Kyoto and kindred schemes to curb industrial emissions of greenhouse gases (GHGs), chiefly carbon dioxide (CO2) from fossil energy use.
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