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World War for Oil & Gas

 
The war started years ago. It didn’t start in Iraq.
The Russians and the Chinese began aggressively exploiting the green movement to buck up their reserves at the expense of the west. The United States and Western Europe watched as the old communist gang began to gather economic strength and influence over the world’s energy supplies.

Building pipelines to the EU gives Russia power to dictate political terms to NATO and the west.

Russia has planted its flag over the Arctic which many believe contains as much as 18% of the world’s energy reserves.

Here Green, See Red has never been truer. The Georgia-Russian Pipeline War is just an obvious sign of battles to come.

We must join the fight at home to secure our energy supplies or fight a real shooting war.
 
It's time for the anti-war types to reject the Greenies before it's too late.
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Confessions of An Aussie Climate Scientist

  • I DEVOTED six years to carbon accounting, building models for the Australian Greenhouse Office. I am the rocket scientist who wrote the carbon accounting model (FullCAM) that measures Australia's compliance with the Kyoto Protocol, in the land use change and forestry sector.

FullCAM models carbon flows in plants, mulch, debris, soils and agricultural products, using inputs such as climate data, plant physiology and satellite data. I've been following the global warming debate closely for years.

When I started that job in 1999 the evidence that carbon emissions caused global warming seemed pretty good: CO2 is a greenhouse gas, the old ice core data, no other suspects.

The evidence was not conclusive, but why wait until we were certain when it appeared we needed to act quickly? Soon government and the scientific community were working together and lots of science research jobs were created. We scientists had political support, the ear of government, big budgets, and we felt fairly important and useful (well, I did anyway). It was great. We were working to save the planet.

But since 1999 new evidence has seriously weakened the case that carbon emissions are the main cause of global warming, and by 2007 the evidence was pretty conclusive that carbon played only a minor role and was not the main cause of the recent global warming. As Lord Keynes famously said, "When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do, sir?"

There has not been a public debate about the causes of global warming and most of the public and our decision makers are not aware of the most basic salient facts:

1. The greenhouse signature is missing. We have been looking and measuring for years, and cannot find it.

Each possible cause of global warming has a different pattern of where in the planet the warming occurs first and the most. The signature of an increased greenhouse effect is a hot spot about 10km up in the atmosphere over the tropics. We have been measuring the atmosphere for decades using radiosondes: weather balloons with thermometers that radio back the temperature as the balloon ascends through the atmosphere. They show no hot spot. Whatsoever.

If there is no hot spot then an increased greenhouse effect is not the cause of global warming. So we know for sure that carbon emissions are not a significant cause of the global warming. If we had found the greenhouse signature then I would be an alarmist again.

When the signature was found to be missing in 2007 (after the latest IPCC report), alarmists objected that maybe the readings of the radiosonde thermometers might not be accurate and maybe the hot spot was there but had gone undetected. Yet hundreds of radiosondes have given the same answer, so statistically it is not possible that they missed the hot spot.

Recently the alarmists have suggested we ignore the radiosonde thermometers, but instead take the radiosonde wind measurements, apply a theory about wind shear, and run the results through their computers to estimate the temperatures. They then say that the results show that we cannot rule out the presence of a hot spot. If you believe that you'd believe anything.

2. There is no evidence to support the idea that carbon emissions cause significant global warming. None. There is plenty of evidence that global warming has occurred, and theory suggests that carbon emissions should raise temperatures (though by how much is hotly disputed) but there are no observations by anyone that implicate carbon emissions as a significant cause of the recent global warming.

3. The satellites that measure the world's temperature all say that the warming trend ended in 2001, and that the temperature has dropped about 0.6C in the past year (to the temperature of 1980). Land-based temperature readings are corrupted by the "urban heat island" effect: urban areas encroaching on thermometer stations warm the micro-climate around the thermometer, due to vegetation changes, concrete, cars, houses. Satellite data is the only temperature data we can trust, but it only goes back to 1979. NASA reports only land-based data, and reports a modest warming trend and recent cooling. The other three global temperature records use a mix of satellite and land measurements, or satellite only, and they all show no warming since 2001 and a recent cooling.

4. The new ice cores show that in the past six global warmings over the past half a million years, the temperature rises occurred on average 800 years before the accompanying rise in atmospheric carbon. Which says something important about which was cause and which was effect.

None of these points are controversial. The alarmist scientists agree with them, though they would dispute their relevance.

The last point was known and past dispute by 2003, yet Al Gore made his movie in 2005 and presented the ice cores as the sole reason for believing that carbon emissions cause global warming. In any other political context our cynical and experienced press corps would surely have called this dishonest and widely questioned the politician's assertion.

Until now the global warming debate has merely been an academic matter of little interest. Now that it matters, we should debate the causes of global warming.

So far that debate has just consisted of a simple sleight of hand: show evidence of global warming, and while the audience is stunned at the implications, simply assert that it is due to carbon emissions.

In the minds of the audience, the evidence that global warming has occurred becomes conflated with the alleged cause, and the audience hasn't noticed that the cause was merely asserted, not proved.

If there really was any evidence that carbon emissions caused global warming, don't you think we would have heard all about it ad nauseam by now?

The world has spent $50 billion on global warming since 1990, and we have not found any actual evidence that carbon emissions cause global warming. Evidence consists of observations made by someone at some time that supports the idea that carbon emissions cause global warming. Computer models and theoretical calculations are not evidence, they are just theory.

What is going to happen over the next decade as global temperatures continue not to rise? The Labor Government is about to deliberately wreck the economy in order to reduce carbon emissions. If the reasons later turn out to be bogus, the electorate is not going to re-elect a Labor government for a long time. When it comes to light that the carbon scare was known to be bogus in 2008, the ALP is going to be regarded as criminally negligent or ideologically stupid for not having seen through it. And if the Liberals support the general thrust of their actions, they will be seen likewise.

The onus should be on those who want to change things to provide evidence for why the changes are necessary. The Australian public is eventually going to have to be told the evidence anyway, so it might as well be told before wrecking the economy.

Dr David Evans was a consultant to the Australian Greenhouse Office from 1999 to 2005.

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Pearsall Just Became Next Haynesville BOOM

TXCO Resources reports strong Pearsall well flows 
  
  Thursday, August 07, 2008

TXCO Resources Inc. has provided initial test results on its Myers 2-683H well targeting the Maverick Basins Pearsall shale gas resource play.

Following completion of a five-stage fracture stimulation, the well (100 percent working interest through completion) flowed an average of approximately 3.5 million cubic feet of gas per day and 2,500 barrels per day of frac fluid at 3,875 psi flowing tubing pressure. Flow rates continue to rise as the well returns frac fluid.

The well is TXCOs third horizontal Pearsall well to be fracture stimulated this year and the first to be successfully treated with five stages. It is the first Pearsall well in which the horizontal lateral, 3,000 feet long, was fully cased, cemented and perforated for limited entry. Also, the Company conducted microseismic monitoring from a nearby offset well during the treatment, allowing it to observe and modify the stimulation in real time. The Myers well provides TXCO with valuable data that will be used to improve future frac designs on other Pearsall wells to be drilled and fracture-stimulated in the future.

TXCOs combined Pearsall project area exposes the Company to the overpressured shale play on more than 848,000 gross acres (340,000 net acres) across the Maverick Basin in Southwest Texas.

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House Revolt Goes til Dem Convention!!!!

House Republicans are gearing up to continue their revolt of Congress’ adjournment for at least the next two weeks – right up to the start of the Democratic Convention in Denver – according to a memo sent Wednesday to GOP members from Minority Leader John Boehner.

“Republicans will not rest until we have an honest, up-or-down vote on the American Energy Act,” Boehner wrote. “To that end, we request that you contact the Whip’s Office and indicate any time you may have available to come to Capitol in the coming weeks. We specifically request that you indicate your availability for any days during the next two weeks, August 11th through 22nd, as soon as possible.”

 

  http://thehill.com/leading-the-news/gop-planning-to-revolt-right-up-to-dem-convention-2008-08-06.html

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Dems is SPACE-Chaos Over Drilling

To drill or not to drill? According to recent polls, two thirds of Americans think Congress should lift restrictions that prevent energy companies from exploring the outer continental shelf for oil and natural gas. President Bush, John McCain, most Republicans, and some Democrats support lifting the ban. Barack Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and Harry Reid find themselves on the wrong side of the drilling more tion, and it has thrown their party into disarray.
 
 
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Game Plan for Dems Hide Out til Obama Wins

A Capitol Hill source tells me that House Republicans are starting to hear that the 110th Congress may be just about done. Word is that once Democrats return to Washington in September, they may quickly complete their remaining work and then adjourn.

According to Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (whose job it is to oversee the legislative calendar), Democrats are planning to work until the end of September. That won't be enough time to complete any major work, but there's not much left to be done. Democrats have already punted on all 13 of the annual appropriations bills, opting for an extended continuing resolution instead. Speaker Pelosi talks bravely of another stimulus bill, but anything that makes it through Congress is veto bait. There's some significant tax legislation to pass, but it can be completed quickly once Democrats get their troops in line. A comprehensive energy bill? Forget it! There's nothing else Speaker Pelosi wants to do until Barack Obama is in the White House.

Word is that Democrats are kicking around the idea of simply completing work on the CR and other minor bills, and then adjourning for the year. This would allow their candidates to focus on their campaigns, end the attention to the ineffective Congress, and allow Barack Obama to become the face of the Democratic party months before the election.

On the downside, it would signal to the American people that the Democratic leadership of Congress has no intention to actually try to tackle the day-to-day problems of the American people. So in that sense, at least an early adjournment would have the virtue of being true to the reality of the situation.
 
http://www.redstate.com/diaries/brianfaughnan/2008/aug/06/democratic-congress-done-for-the-year/
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More from the House Drilling Wars

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Pelosi Takes A Vacation on US

Washington, D.C. -  After months of struggling at the gas pump, the voices of frustrated Americans are finally being heard. Since Friday, conservative legislators in the US House remained on the floor to protest Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s adjournment for a five week vacation without first voting on a bill that would increase domestic energy supply and lower gas prices. Led by Rep. John Shadegg (R-AZ), Rep. Tom Price (R-GA), Rep. Eric Cantor (R-VA), and Rep. Mike Pence (R-IN), a total of 48 lawmakers took turns speaking after Speaker Nancy Pelosi closed the Congress.

According to the Minerals Management Service and the Bureau of Land Management, America’s costal waters contain about 18 billion barrels of recoverable crude oil and 55 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. Potential oil shale production in America’s West is estimated to produce hundreds of billions of barrels as well. In light of record gas prices and tight crude supply, bringing new resources will help cushion the jump in gas prices.

Among the bills House conservatives are eager to debate is the American Energy Act, which takes an “all of the above” strategy to energy reform. If passed, the bill would remove federal restrictions on domestic oil production and oil shale development, while also encouraging energy conservation and efficiency through tax incentives and promoting renewable and alternative sources of energy including wind, solar, and nuclear power.

Conservative House legislators promise to continue demanding a practical, comprehensive resolution to high energy prices that will encourage innovation, allow competition, and protect the freedoms of taxpayers for “as long as it takes.” As Rep. Pence declared Monday on the House floor, “The American people can’t take a vacation from high gas prices; Congress should not be taking a 5 week vacation.”

Congressman Jeb Hensarling (R-TX) and Senator Jim DeMint (R-SC) have partnered up to defend American Energy Freedom Day from the threat of Congressional inaction. American Energy Freedom Day, on October 1, 2008, marks the expiration date of the federal restrictions currently preventing exploration on the Outer Continental Shelf and the leasing of oil shale on federal lands. The successful removal of the energy prohibition will allow Americans to exploit the gigantic supply of American energy resources that have been restricted by liberals for over 25 years.

FreedomWorks President Matt Kibbe commented:

“Over-regulation and government interference have spiked the average price of gas --once $2.00 in January 2007-- to an astronomical $4.00. The solution to rising energy costs boils down to the fundamental economic law of supply and demand, where lowering prices requires either a decrease in demand or an increase in supply. FreedomWorks salutes Rep. Hensarling and Sen. DeMint along with Representatives Shadegg, Price, Cantor, Pence and other conservative lawmakers for taking a serious step towards energy reform that Americans have been desperately looking for.”

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News from the House Revolt on Drilling

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Windmills vs OIL from Open Choke

 I was playing around with per capita energy use by type, and reduced it all to an interesting relationship.

1 Windmill (1.5 Mw) = 0.88 BOPD = 5357 cfg/d = .2446 short tons coal = 16,070 sq ft of solar voltaic cells = overall energy consumption of 5.5. Americans per day.

Thus, we can be energy independent on a pure play with either

54,727,727 windmills (at $1.5 million per = 75 trillion)

26,500,000 stripper oil wells (at .5 million per = 13 trillion)

3,311,000 80 bopd wells (at 1.5 million per = 5 trillion)

29,300,000 100 mcfg/d gas wells (at .5 million per = 15 trillion)

Huge amounts of strip mining

2921 sq ft/person or nearly a trillion square feet of photovoltaic cells or 23 million acres (around 1% of US land mass) (at $50 per sq. ft = $50 trillion)

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News From the House Front

The House GOP revolt--now christened the #dontgo/Don't Go Movement--has been sustained by bloggers and Twitter-ers dispersing information to everyone in the world. So in that spirit, here are some cleaned up notes from the Heritage Foundation's Conservative Blogger Briefing today. I'll be posting later about this here and on TechRepublican, but if these notes can help anyone in furthering this cause, wonderful. Perfect. Just what I'm hoping for.

For those looking for great soundbites, I took the liberty of pulling out from favorite quotes from each representative's talk with us. Anything not in direct quotations is my paraphrasing. Anything incorrect is most likely my transcription error.
 
 
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McCains Really BAD AD.. There he goes again

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The Decline of Western Gulf Civilization or How Dan Rather Screwed Up the World

 
It was 1961. A young TV reporter had gotten off the bus from Stephen F. Austin College for the bright lights and adequate barbeque of Houston a number of months before. Dan "Courage" Rather chained himself to the Flagship Hotel in Galveston while Hurricane Carla blew through. The storm must have sucked all the sense out of Dan's head as well a generations of would be so called journalist.
 
Grainy 8 MM black and white film of Dan blowing in the wind and the assignation of President Kennedy propelled the local reporter to the network. Everything in the news business and the nation has been steadily declining as lines of Dan Rather-would be airheads aspire to the greatness of news making rather than reporting.
 
Every time you see a TV type blowing down the beach during the storm of the century of the week, blame Dan Rather. Know on a September day in 1961 America sucked a little more and a long decline of truth began to erode faster.
 
The latest story line is (1) global warming caused this storm to be much worse than it would have been without men (2) George Bush will screw up all the lives of the people that got wet and(3) where's my FEMA debit card.
 
A little wind , a little rain, man we dodged a bb!
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Drill the Hill, McCain If You Want to Win , IBD EDITORIAL

House Republicans recognize that drilling for our own oil has become the issue this election year. Will the rest of the party join their crusade and use it to win in November?

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi may have sent the House of Representatives on a five-week vacation, but Republicans have decided to remain in the sweltering Washington, D.C., heat, take to the in-recess House floor and demand that Congress be called back so that Americans can get some relief from high gas prices.

Led by Reps. Mike Pence, R-Ind., Tom Price, R-Ga., and Lynn Westmoreland, R-Ga., and fully backed by House Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, this GOP attack could smack unwary Democrats as hard as the blast of a Texas oil gusher, because what Republicans are demanding is nothing more than a simple up-or-down vote on drilling for domestic oil in a Democratic-controlled House of Representatives.

Pelosi and the House Democratic leadership will not give them a roll call on drilling because she knows what doing so would mean: Enough Democrats would vote with the Republicans to pass legislation opening up offshore areas for oil drilling and to allow access to oil shale in Western states.

That would be public proof that Democrats are out of step with most Americans on how to bring down gasoline prices. And so on Sunday, we heard continual intransigence from Nancy Pelosi regarding having a simple floor vote in which the people's representatives could decide whether to drill or not to drill.

It was "a diversionary tactic," she said, "a decoy . . . not a solution," and so Republicans will just "have to use their imagination as to how they can get a vote . . . ."

Republicans have as an advantage the majority of the American public in support of drilling. Last month, an IBD/TIPP Poll found a broad-based 64% favoring offshore drilling, while 65% want our domestic oil shale made use of. A June Zogby poll found that a 74% majority of Americans in favor of offshore drilling.

Even in one of the bluest of blue liberal states, New Jersey, 56% of residents actually want oil rigs established off the state coast, according to a newly released Monmouth University/Gannett New Jersey poll conducted in mid-July. That shows just how deep and widespread pro-drilling sentiment now is.

During the House floor protest, Rep. Phil Gingrey, R-Ga., taunted Pelosi about conducting a tour to promote her new book while gas consumers suffer. Rep. Jeb Hensarling, R-Texas, read a letter from a family in his state that "can't afford to both go on vacation and send their son to Boy Scout camp." And so if they can't afford to go on vacation "then neither should Pelosi and the Congress!"

Republicans may even be willing to shut down the government when time comes to vote on the 2009 fiscal year budget resolution.

On the other side of the Capitol, Sen. Jim DeMint, R-S.C., is drumming up support from colleagues to demand that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., remove the drilling ban from that budget resolution. Such a ban has been renewed every year since 1982, prohibiting oil and gas leasing on most of the Outer Continental Shelf (OCS). As of now, Democratic leaders plan to extend it a year.

The presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, Sen. Barack Obama, D-Ill., now says he can live with "limited" drilling. But listen closely at what he said in his energy speech in Lansing, Mich., on Monday:

He called the inclusion of "a limited amount of new offshore drilling" in new bipartisan legislation a "drawback," adding that "I still don't believe that's a particularly meaningful short-term or long-term solution." But he said "I am willing to consider it if it's necessary to actually pass a comprehensive plan."

"Consider" should not be reported as "support," as the media have done. Moreover, Obama also wants a windfall profit tax — certain to exacerbate high fuel prices by lessening domestic production, as it did under Jimmy Carter.

John McCain and congressional Republicans have the opportunity to expose both Obama and Pelosi as enviro-extremists who refuse to let Americans use the treasure trove of oil that lies beneath our own soil, arctic ice and waters. Whether they take avail of that opportunity could determine both our economic and national security for years to come.

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Open Letter to Nancy Polosi from the House

WASHINGTON, D.C. – The following letter was just delivered to Speaker Nancy Pelosi on behalf of the American people and the Republican Conference requesting that she reconvene the House and allow a vote to provide relief to Americans suffering because of skyrocketing gas prices: 

An Open Letter to Speaker Pelosi  

On Friday August 1, 2008, at 11:23 a.m., your Democrat majority in the House of Representatives adjourned the House for five full weeks.

House Republicans believe that Congress should not go on vacation until we take action to lower gas and energy prices for struggling American families.

For the last two months we and our House Republican colleagues have used every tool at our disposal to try and get you and your Democrat majority to vote on legislation to lower gas and energy prices by expanding environmentally sound domestic production of oil and natural gas, improving energy efficiency, and encouraging the development of alternative energy technologies.

Many of the proposals we have asked you and your Democrat majority to allow us to vote on are bipartisan proposals that we believe would enjoy the support of a majority of the Members of the Congress. Yet because you and your Democrat Leadership personally oppose these proposals, you are not allowing them to come up for a vote.  This past Sunday, you even told George Stephanopoulos that you will never allow this vote to occur (see transcript on the reverse).

In protest of you and your Democrat majority not allowing an up or down vote on producing more American energy, we and our House Republican colleagues were prepared to take to the floor on Friday, August 1, 2008, and speak to the nation. Rather than allowing that to happen you and your Democrat majority adjourned the House, turned off the television cameras, shut off the microphones and turned out the lights. Nearly 50 House Republicans remained on the floor of the House in defiance speaking to those citizens gathered in the galleries and to the media.

Today we have again returned to the Capitol to continue speaking to the thousands of Americans from all across our country who are visiting the Capitol. We would have preferred if instead we were joined by our colleagues to have a true debate on this issue that ended in an up or down vote. 

 We think it is unconscionable that Congress has gone on vacation before we have addressed the high gas prices that are crippling our economy and hurting millions of families.  We are asking that you reconvene the House from your five-week vacation and schedule a vote on legislation to increase American energy production. Let us be clear, we are not asking for a guaranteed outcome, just the chance to vote.

Signed by: John Boehner, Republican Leader; Roy Blunt, Republican Whip; Adam Putnam, Republican Conference Chairman; Eric Cantor, Chief Deputy Whip; and Members of the House Conference



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