Low Carbon and Economic Growth

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Low Carbon and Economic Growth LOW CARBON AND ECONOMIC GROWTH This report is part of a group of documents focused on the compatibility of carbon emis- sion reductions and economic growth with a specific emph- asis on the situation of emer- ging economies. Our research arrives at the conclusion that growth in the industrial age is tightly linked to the availability of cheap and highly versatile energy sources. A shift to a different paradigm will likely reduce the potential to grow for most economies, but parti- cularly for aspiring industrial Low Carbon and societies (like China). The re- port is structured as follows: • Executive summary Economic Growth – • Core report with al- ternative (energy-focused) macroeconomic models Key Challenges • Topical Q&A supplements on a number of key issues related to low carbon • 2-4 page country sum- Institute for maries on a number of emerging economies Integrated Economic Research iier research economics explained Table of Contents Introduction .............................................................................. 3 1. A different macroeconomic theory .................................... 4 1.1. The main macroeconomic view ................................................... 4 1.2. An alternative view ..................................................................... 5 1.3. It is all about energy ................................................................... 5 1.4. Biophysical and ecological economics ......................................... 6 1.5. Energy and GDP - a stronger connection than expected .............. 8 1.6. An energy-based explanation of productivity gains ...................... 9 1.7. Human labour and fossil fuel costs compared ........................... 15 1.8. The role of technology .............................................................. 18 1.9. The overall trend for energy and resource cost .......................... 19 1.10. What energy efficiency accomplishes ........................................ 19 1.11. Globalization – a quest for lower energy cost ............................ 20 1.12. Conceptual Summary ............................................................... 22 1.13. The effects of growing energy cost on productivity ................... 24 2. Consequences for low-carbon efforts .............................. 26 2.1. Energy cost requirements in industrial processes ....................... 26 2.2. China - the main source of low cost energy .............................. 29 2.3. Why renewable energy likely will remain too expensive ............. 31 2.4. Why fossil fuels are cheaper ..................................................... 33 2.5. Specific issues for emerging economies ..................................... 35 2.6. Conclusions .............................................................................. 36 Authors: Hannes Kunz, Rembrandt Koppelaar, Tim 3. Low carbon in emerging economies ................................ 37 Raettig, Stephen Balogh 3.1. Types of economies .................................................................. 37 © IIER 2011, All rights reserved. The materials contained in this report may be copied or 3.2. Sector-specific energy use and carbon-intensity ......................... 38 referenced provided that ALL copies retain a reference 3.3. Finding feasible applications ..................................................... 39 to IIER and this report. No material may be modified, 3.4. The special role of electricity ..................................................... 41 edited or taken out of context such that its use creates 3.5. Low-carbon technologies .......................................................... 43 a false or misleading statement or impression regarding 3.6. Criteria for low-carbon technologies ......................................... 44 the positions, statements or actions of IIER. The production of this report has been funded by the Appendix A – Review of Low-Carbon Literature ...................... 44 UK Department for International Development (DFID). The findings, views and recommendations contained in Appendix B – Electrical Grid Review ........................................ 45 the research are those of IIER and do not necessarily re- present the views of the funders. Appendix C – Low Carbon Technologies ................................. 55 Contact:Institute for Integrated Economic Research P.O. Box 506, CH-8706 Meilen Switzerland About IIER ............................................................................... 60 Web: www.iier.ch,Email: [email protected] The main macroeconomic view Introduction This report questions one of the key mal3), are cost-prohibitive4, or pro- that the rural poor – the majority of underlying assumptions of most plans duce only lower quality energy5, a the population in developing nations, to reduce carbon emissions: that it is reality we don’t expect to change and 70% of those living on less than possible to grow or maintain eco- anytime soon. In a future where fossil $1.25 per day6, can benefit from nomic output while at the same time fuels are no longer available at low significant life and wealth improve- reducing the anthropogenic produc- cost, either due to extraction limits or ments, while greenhouse gas emis- tion of greenhouse gases.1 In this because they include the cost of ex- sions stay the same or even shrink. document, we will demonstrate our ternalities (such as a carbon tax or se- The lives of billions of people living in findings that the generally desired questration efforts), we cannot envi- dense urban centres could also be developmental path to urbanization sage how the current growth model positively affected by some of these and industrialization is very unlikely of advanced economies can continue, approaches, but because their unless it can be based on large quan- let alone support emerging eco- incomes and therefore their well- tities of low-cost and high-quality nomies to reach a comparable level. being are linked to industrial pro- energy. This contradicts the current cesses, it appears that meaningful Given this likely inability to grow in a push for greenhouse gas reductions, growth will be more difficult to carbon-neutral way, we suggest a as the only (seemingly) unlimited achieve in large urban areas without very different development path for energy sources with the right proper- increased fossil energy consumption the future which would allow im- ties are fossil fuels like coal, natural and thus carbon emission growth. provements in the quality of life, gas and (until recent price increases) health, and wealth for a large portion In this report, we introduce the con- oil. These fossil fuels have been at the of the population: the introduction cepts and data supporting this point core of economic development and of simple, mostly non-industrial re- of view, and suggest a few areas growth, but only as long as they were newable and sustainable techno- where improvements seem possible. not burdened with the cost of their logies. If done properly, we expect This report is divided into three parts: externalities: pollution, climate change, and depletion. In compari- • Review and refocusing of relevant son, renewable sources are either not http://www.eia.doe.gov/oiaf/ieo/electricity.html macroeconomic theory Accessed January 31, 2011. • scalable or geographically limited 3 See “Barriers”. IEA (2010). Renewable Introduction to high linkage bet- 2 Energy Essentials: Geothermal. Available from (such as hydropower and geother- ween energy (cost) and wealth http://www.iea.org/papers/2010/Geothermal_E • Low-carbon development poten- ssentials.pdf Accessed January 31, 2011. 4 See both 2005 and 2010 versions of IEA/NEA: tial, with a focus on emerging Projected Costs of Generating Electricity. economies 1 Economic output here refers to the commonly http://www.iea.org/publications/free_new_Desc used measurement of Gross Domestic Product,. .asp?PUBS_ID=2207 2 Hydropower development is limited in OECD 5 For example, solar hot water heaters have countries and limited by precipitation. EIA brief payback periods, are relatively inexpensive 6UN-IFAD (2011).Rural Poverty Report (2010).International Energy Outlook Electricity. to install, but only provide lower quality heat 2011.http://www.ifad.org/rpr2011/report/e/pri Available from energy. nt_rpr2011.pdf Accessed January 31, 2011. Low carbon and economic growth 3 The main macroeconomic view 1. A different macroeconomic theory 1.1. The main macroeconomic view • Population growth (labour are typically explained. The impli- 11 Most macroeconomic planning mo- availability) cations of these differences on dels operate under the assumption Our analysis generally supports the economic systems are significant. that “economic growth”, i.e. adding view that these key components are Our economic success over the past more real (inflation-corrected) output useful in describing past growth. 200 years has been remarkable, pro- 7 every year can continue indefinitely . However, while the ingredients of tra- viding steady growth in most This might be interrupted by reces- ditional models are in line with our societies, despite a rapidly growing sions and other distortions, but those findings, our approach sees them human population. Not only were do not alter the long-term trend. This only as derivatives of a broader re- there six times more humans in the view remains largely unchallenged source- and energy-based view. In year 2000 compared to 1820, but with the exception of some small this paper we aim to demonstrate
Recommended publications
  • Coal and Oil: the Dark Monarchs of Global Energy – Understanding Supply and Extraction Patterns and Their Importance for Futur
    nam et ipsa scientia potestas est List of Papers This thesis is based on the following papers, which are referred to in the text by their Roman numerals. I Höök, M., Aleklett, K. (2008) A decline rate study of Norwe- gian oil production. Energy Policy, 36(11):4262–4271 II Höök, M., Söderbergh, B., Jakobsson, K., Aleklett, K. (2009) The evolution of giant oil field production behaviour. Natural Resources Research, 18(1):39–56 III Höök, M., Hirsch, R., Aleklett, K. (2009) Giant oil field decline rates and their influence on world oil production. Energy Pol- icy, 37(6):2262–2272 IV Jakobsson, K., Söderbergh, B., Höök, M., Aleklett, K. (2009) How reasonable are oil production scenarios from public agen- cies? Energy Policy, 37(11):4809–4818 V Höök M, Söderbergh, B., Aleklett, K. (2009) Future Danish oil and gas export. Energy, 34(11):1826–1834 VI Aleklett K., Höök, M., Jakobsson, K., Lardelli, M., Snowden, S., Söderbergh, B. (2010) The Peak of the Oil Age - analyzing the world oil production Reference Scenario in World Energy Outlook 2008. Energy Policy, 38(3):1398–1414 VII Höök M, Tang, X., Pang, X., Aleklett K. (2010) Development journey and outlook for the Chinese giant oilfields. Petroleum Development and Exploration, 37(2):237–249 VIII Höök, M., Aleklett, K. (2009) Historical trends in American coal production and a possible future outlook. International Journal of Coal Geology, 78(3):201–216 IX Höök, M., Aleklett, K. (2010) Trends in U.S. recoverable coal supply estimates and future production outlooks. Natural Re- sources Research, 19(3):189–208 X Höök, M., Zittel, W., Schindler, J., Aleklett, K.
    [Show full text]
  • The Oil Depletion Protocol
    1 THE RIMINI PROTOCOL an Oil Depletion Protocol ~ Heading Off Economic Chaos and Political Conflict During the Second Half of the Age of Oil As proposed at the 2003 Pio Manzu Conference, and to be the central theme of the next Pio Manzu Conference, Rimini, Italy on October 28-30, 2005 2 INTRODUCTION Soaring oil prices have drawn attention to the issue of the relative supply and demand for crude oil, which is the World’s premier fuel, having a central place in the modern economy. Knowledge of petroleum geology has made great advances in recent years, such that the conditions under which this resource was formed in Nature are now well understood. In fact, it transpires that the bulk of the World’s current production comes from deposits formed in two brief and exceptional epochs, 90 and 150 million years ago. This fact alone tells us that oil is a finite resource, which in turn means that it is subject to depletion. People ask: Are we running out of oil ? The simple answer is: Yes, we started doing that when we produced the first barrel. But Running Out is not the main issue as the resource will not be finally exhausted for very many years. The much more relevant question is: When will production reach a peak and begin to decline? Depletion: Growth, Peak and Decline Much debate and study has focused on the calculation of the date of peak, but this too misses the main point. It is not an isolated or pronounced peak but merely the highest point on a long and gentle production curve.
    [Show full text]
  • The Commons Revisited: the Tragedy Continues
    ARTICLE IN PRESS Energy Policy 35 (2007) 5806–5818 www.elsevier.com/locate/enpol The Commons revisited: The tragedy continues Bob Lloydà Physics Department, Otago University, PO Box 56, Dunedin, Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand Received 20 April 2007; accepted 11 July 2007 Available online 23 August 2007 Abstract Garrett Hardin’s classic paper ‘‘Tragedy of the Commons’’ published in Science in 1968 struck a chord with scientists and non-scientists alike and has continued to provide a key reference point to how a number of ‘‘Commons’’-related problems can be viewed. Hardin’s paper will be in looked at in view of both anthropogenic global warming and peak oil and some of the solutions he posed for the ‘‘population problem’’ applied to the post-peak era. Possible solutions are compared with the Kyoto Protocol for global warming and the Rimini Protocol for peak oil. A carbon-indexed, universal tax on non-renewable energy resources ‘Unitax’ is mooted as a longer-term possibility to overcoming both global warming and the financing of post-peak oil problems. Alas, the process of dealing with global warming and peak oil seems to be falling into the ‘‘no technical solution’’ category that Hardin identified for population. r 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Commons; Peak oil; Global warming 1. The Commons revisited pogenic global warming has been due to the burning of crude oil, in addition to coal and natural gas. Garrett Hardin’s ‘‘Tragedy of the Commons’’, published For those that are not familiar with the ‘‘Tragedy of the nearly 40 years ago in Science (Hardin, 1968), struck a Commons’’ it should be explained that the paper was put chord with scientists and non-scientists alike and has forward as an attempt to show that long-term growth in a continued to provide a key reference point to how a finite world is impossible and that unless some rather number of Commons-related problems can be viewed.
    [Show full text]
  • Materialism and the Critique of Energy
    Materialism and the Critique of Energy Edited by Brent Ryan Bellamy and Jeff Diamanti Materialism and the Critique of Energy Materialism and the Critique of Energy Brent Ryan Bellamy and Jeff Diamanti Copyright 2018 by MCM' Publishing. Anyone may reproduce, store, and transmit any part of this publication in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, under the following conditions: you must give the original authors and editors credit; you must include original publication data; and you may not use this work for commercial purposes. Failing these conditions, all rights are reserved. Published by MCM' Publishing Chicago 60608 www.mcmprime.com Library of Congress Control Number: 2018949294 To Imre Szeman, for everything and more. For all those broken and exhausted by the impasse and for what yet may come. Materialism and the Critique of Energy ix Brent Ryan Bellamy and Jeff Diamanti: Materialism and the Critique of Energy Theories 1 Allan Stoekl: Marxism, Materialism, and the Critique of Energy 29 Peter Hitchcock: “Water, water, every where, Nor any drop to drink”: Accumulation and the Power over Hydro 51 Daniel Cunha: The Anthropocene as Fetishism 73 Katherine Lawless: Mapping the Atomic Unconscious: Postcolonial Capital in Nuclear Glow 95 George Caffentzis: Work or Energy or Work/Energy? On the Limits to Capitalist Accumulation 121 Elmar Flatschart: Crisis, Energy, and the Value Form of Gender: Towards a Gender-Sensitive Materialist Understanding of Society- Nature Relations Histories 161 Andreas Malm: Long Waves of Fossil Development: Periodizing Energy and Capital 197 Adam Broinowski: Nuclear Power and Oil Capital in the Long Twentieth Century 243 David Thomas: Keeping the Lights On: Oil Shocks, Coal Strikes, and the Rise of Electroculture 289 Gerry Canavan: Peak Oil after Hydrofracking 315 Daniel Worden: Oil and Corporate Personhood: Ida Tarbell’s The History of the Standard Oil Company and John D.
    [Show full text]
  • Policy Document of The
    Capping resource use Proposal for a reduction of non-renewable energy use within the EU I. Why do we need to cap our resource use? II. Why current policy responses are insufficient? III. What principles should guide the resource use cap? IV. Defining caps: a need for physical accounting of resources V. Public debate about resources use and resource cap VI. Our proposal: capping non-renewable energy use in the EU a. Non-renewable energy quota scheme b. Rimini Protocol - An oil depletion protocol VII. Strengthening international governance for sustainable resource use VIII. What is the Resource Cap Coalition? Annexes: 1. Non-renewable energy quota scheme for Europe 2. Rimini Protocol 1 I. Why do we need to cap our resource use? Global resource consumption is steeply on the rise, extracting 34 times more material resources now than hundred years ago. During the whole life cycle of associated goods and services, resource use poses growing pressure on the Earth’s ecosystems. This in turn diminishes their ability to provide services such as climate regulation, food provision and water purification, which underpin all economic and social processes. Thus our livelihood, cultural heritage and human well-being on the whole are more and more threatened. Resource extraction is also contributing to biodiversity loss, which is at present time between 1.000-10.000 times higher than its natural course. Living Planet Index: The global index shows that vertebrate species populations declined by almost 30% between 1970 and 2007 (Zoological Society of London/WWF, 2010) 2 However, the exponential economic growth in industrialized countries, fuelled by this increasing resource extraction did not eliminate social inequalities, hunger and poverty either in Europe or globally.
    [Show full text]
  • Peak Oil Strategic Management Dissertation
    STRATEGIC CHOICES FOR MANAGING THE TRANSITION FROM PEAK OIL TO A REDUCED PETROLEUM ECONOMY BY SARAH K. ODLAND STRATEGIC CHOICES FOR MANAGING THE TRANSITION FROM PEAK OIL TO A REDUCED PETROLEUM ECONOMY BY SARAH K. ODLAND JUNE 2006 ORIGINALLY SUBMITTED AS A MASTER’S THESIS TO THE FACULTY OF THE DIVISION OF BUSINESS AND ACCOUNTING, MERCY COLLEGE IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION, MAY 2006 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS AND CHARTS v LIST OF TABLES vii PREFACE viii INTRODUCTION ELEPHANT IN THE ROOM 1 PART I THE BIG ROLLOVER: ONSET OF A PETROLEUM DEMAND GAP AND SWITCH TO A SELLERS’ MARKET CHAPTER 1 WHAT”S OIL EVER DONE FOR YOU? (AND WHAT WOULD HAPPEN IF IT STOPPED DOING IT?) 5 Oil: Cheap Energy on Demand - Oil is Not Just a Commodity - Heavy Users - Projected Demand Growth for Liquid Petroleum - Price Elasticity of Oil Demand - Energy and Economic Growth - The Dependence of Productivity Growth on Expanding Energy Supplies - Economic Implications of a Reduced Oil Supply Rate CHAPTER 2 REALITY CHECK: TAKING INVENTORY OF PETROLEUM SUPPLY 17 The Geologic Production of Petroleum - Where the Oil Is and Where It Goes - Diminishing Marginal Returns of Production - Hubbert’s Peak: World Oil Production Peaking and Decline - Counting Oil Inventory: What’s in the World Warehouse? - Oil Resources versus Accessible Reserves - Three Camps: The Peak Oilers, Official Agencies, Technology Optimists - Liars’ Poker: Got Oil? - Geopolitical Realities of the Distribution of Remaining World
    [Show full text]
  • The Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas
    THE ASSOCIATION 1 FOR THE STUDY OF PEAK OIL AND GAS “ASPO” NEWSLETTER No 44 - AUGUST 2004 ASPO is a network of scientists, affiliated with European institutions and universities, having an interest in determining the date and impact of the peak and decline of the world’s production of oil and gas, due to resource constraints. The following countries are represented: Austria, Denmark, Finland, France, Ger- many, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. Missions: 1. To evaluate the world’s endowment and definition of oil and gas; 2. To study depletion, taking due account of economics, demand, technology and politics; 3. To raise awareness of the serious consequences for Mankind. Newsletters on Websites This and past newsletter issues can be seen on the following websites: http://www.asponews.org http://www.energiekrise.de (Press the ASPONews icon at the top of the page) http://www.peakoil.net A Spanish language edition is available on www.crisesenergetica.org CONTENTS 386. Russia faces depletion too 395. Depletion Protocol 387. It’s the same story for Natural Gas 396. China orders power-cuts 388. Comparison with BP Reserves Estimate 397. House of Commons Presentations 389. Crude turns sour 398. Oil Drought could be our Saviour 390. The Rimini Protocol and an over-populated 399. Running Flat Out world 400. The Wolf at the Door 391. Heavy oil of Canada 401. Chevron Texaco confesses 392. Updating the Depletion Model 402. Our final Century 393. Country Assessment - Azerbaijan 403. Next ASPO International Workshop 394. Britain becomes a net oil importer and the 404.
    [Show full text]
  • 3.4 Depletion Rates After the Onset of Decline Prior to the Onset of Decline, the Depletion Rate Generally Increases with Increasing Extraction
    http://www.diva-portal.org Postprint This is the accepted version of a paper published in Fuel. This paper has been peer-reviewed but does not include the final publisher proof-corrections or journal pagination. Citation for the original published paper (version of record): Höök, M. (2014) Depletion rate analysis of fields and regions: a methodological foundation. Fuel, 121(4): 95-108 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fuel.2013.12.024 Access to the published version may require subscription. N.B. When citing this work, cite the original published paper. Permanent link to this version: http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-214311 Published in Fuel Volume 121, 1 April 2014, Pages 95–108 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.fuel.2013.12.024 Depletion rate analysis of fields and regions: a methodological foundation Mikael Höök1 Contact e-mail: [email protected], phone: +46 18-4717643, fax: +46 18-4713513 1 Uppsala University, Global Energy Systems, Department of Earth Sciences, Villavägen 16, SE-752 36, Uppsala, Sweden. Abstract: This paper presents a comprehensive mathematical framework for depletion rate analysis and ties it to the physics of depletion. Theory was compared with empirical data from 1036 fields and a number of regions. Strong agreement between theory and practice was found, indicating that the framework is plausible. Both single fields and entire regions exhibit similar depletion rate patterns, showing the generality of the approach. The maximum depletion rates for fields were found to be well described by a Weibull distribution. Depletion rates were also found to strongly correlate with decline rates.
    [Show full text]
  • Submission to the Prime Ministerial Task Group on Emissions Trading
    Ian T. Dunlop March 2007 Submission to the Prime Ministerial Task Group on Emissions Trading Climate Change & Peak Oil - an integrated policy Contents: Summary Perspectives Climate Change Peak Oil Overview Policy Climate Change 1. Maximum Global Atmospheric Carbon Concentration 1. Contraction – a Global Carbon Budget 1. Convergence – a National Carbon Budget 1. Meeting the National Carbon Budget 1. The Kyoto Protocol 1. Directional Incentives 1. Fossil Fuel Exports 1. Domestic Carbon-Intensive Investment Projects 1. Airlines and International Sea-Freight Bunkers 1. International Emissions Trading Peak Oil 1. Oil Depletion Protocol 1. Meeting the Oil Descent Budget 1. International Oil Trading Community Awareness and Commitment References Ian T. Dunlop Sydney Australia 5th March 2007 1 Ian T. Dunlop March 2007 Acknowledgements: The core of this proposal is built around the concepts of: Contraction and Convergence, developed by Aubrey Meyer, The Global Commons Institute, London, UK. www.gci.org.uk Tradeable Energy Quotas (TEQs), developed by David Fleming, The Lean Economy Connection, London, UK. www.teqs.net Of the economic and regulatory options being considered to address the looming convergence of climate change and resource shortages, particularly peak oil, the combination of C&C and TEQs stands out as the simplest, most equitable and practical alternative. My thanks to both authors for their perseverance in developing these concepts over many years. Dr. Colin J. Campbell, Jean H. Laherrere, Kjell Aleklett, Chris Skrebowski, Richard Heinberg, Bruce Robinson and other members of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil (ASPO), internationally and in Australia, have shown great leadership in confronting a sceptical world with the inconvenient realities of peak oil.
    [Show full text]
  • Oil Shock Mitigation Strategies for Developing Countries
    OIL SHOCK MITIGATION STRATEGIES FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES JUNE 2013 OIL SHOCK MITIGATION STRATEGIES FOR DEVELOPING COUNTRIES JUNE 2013 PREPARED FOR THE PRINCIPAL AUTHORS United Kingdom Department Dr Jeremy Wakeford for International Development Associate Prof. Martin de Wit BY THE CONTRIBUTING CASE STUDY AUTHORS Sustainability Institute and School of Public Leadership Dr Sumetee Pahwa-Gajjar Stellenbosch University, South Africa Mr Blake Robinson RUSSIAN FEDERATION LATVIA LITH. BELARUS UKRAINE KAZAKHSTAN MOLDOVA MONGOLIA S ROMANIA . & M B.-H. BULG. UZBEKIST . GEORGIA KYRGYZ REPUBLIC MAC. TURKMENIST ALB. ARMENIA AZ. AN TURKEY TAJIKISTAN AN N SYRIA TA CHINA LEBANON CCO IRAN TUNISIA IRAQ JORDAN AFGHANIS AN NEP MORO ALGERIA AL LIBYA AKIST EGYPT P I IT MEXICO A CUBA H INDIA DOMINICANREPUBLIC MAURITANIA LA O PDR BELIZE JA ANTIGUA & BARBUDA CAPE VERDE MALI NIGER ERITREA MAICA SUDAN GUATEMALA HONDURAS DOMINICA SENEGAL CHAD MEN BANGLADESH ST. LUCIA YE EL SALVADOR NICARAGUA GRENADA GAMBIA CAM. VIETNAM ST. VINCENT DJIBOUTI GUINEA BISSAU GUINEA BURKINA COSTA RICA & GRENADINES FASO NIGERIA THAILAND PHILIPPINES N VENEZUELA E CENTRAL AFRICAN IR N GUYANA BENI TE OO ETHIOPIA O PANAMA SIERRA LEONE OGO O GHANA REPUBLIC SURINAM T C Note to Readers LIBERIA 'IV SRI D MALAYSIA COLOMBIA A MALDIVES LANKA CAMER ECUADOR SÌO TOM & PRINCIPE AND KENYA PAPUA UG This report is intended to serve as a ONGO DEMOCRATIC RWANDA NEW GUINEA GABON C REPUBLIC BURUNDI SEYCHELLES OF CONGO reference work for policy-makers, planners I NDONESIA PERU TANZANIA SOLOMON TIMOR-LESTE ISLANDS and researchers, primarily in developing BRAZIL COMOROS ANGOLA MALAWI SAMOA countries but also in multilateral agencies and ZAMBIA E VANUATU U Q BI BOLIVIA M A international aid organisations.
    [Show full text]
  • Aktörer, Nätverk Och Strategier
    ORDO AB CHAO Den politiska historien om biodrivmedel i den Europeiska Unionen – Aktörer, nätverk och strategier JACOB NORDANGÅRD Linköping Studies in Arts and Science No. 566 Linköpings Universitet, Institutionen för TEMA Linköping 2012 i Linköping Studies in Arts and Science No. 566 Vid filosofiska fakulteten vid Linköpings universitet bedrivs forskning och ges forskarutbildning med utgångspunkt från breda problemområden. Forskningen är organiserad i mångvetenskapliga forskningsmiljöer och forskarutbildningen huvudsakligen i forskarskolor. Gemensamt ger de ut serien Linköping Studies in Arts and Science. Denna avhandling kommer från Tema teknik och social förändring vid Institutionen för TEMA. Distribueras av: Tema teknik och social förändring Institutionen för TEMA Linköpings universitet 581 83 Linköping Författare: Jacob Nordangård Titel: Ordo Ab Chao Undertitel: Den politiska historien om biodrivmedel i den Europeiska Unionen – Aktörer, nätverk och strategier Upplaga 1:1 ISBN 978-91-7519-744-9 ISSN 0282-9800 © Jacob Nordangård 2012 Institutionen för Tema 2012 Omslagsmålning: Elaine Ni'Cuana 2012, http://elainec.wix.com/sgraffito LiU-tryck, Linköping 2012 ii FÖRORD Detta arbete är en del av en lång process där små delar har sammanförts till en helhet. Min personliga forskningsprocess har på många sätt varit parallell med det som har skett i avhandlingen. Där har funnits både förhoppningar, besvikelser och utlösande händelser. Det har också funnits ett nätverk av människor som alla har varit med mig på vägen. Alla har på sitt sätt bidragit med att förverkliga detta arbete. Genom alla möten och tankar har jag fått nya perspektiv som både utmanat och lyft mig. Jag har genom detta fått omvärdera mycket av de tankar jag hade med mig från början.
    [Show full text]
  • China's Dependence Upon Oil Supply: Part 2
    PART 2 23 CHINA’S DEPENDENCE UPON OIL SUPPLY PART 2 of 3 SERIALIZED STUDY BY – CAPT David L.O. Hayward Australian Army Reserve (Retd.) First published as an RUSI Defence Research Paper & republished as a SAGE International Special Study with the kind permission of CAPT David L.O. Hayward 2012 PART 2 24 Super-Power Oil Thirst Analogy Who knows if China will be able to quench its immense thirst? What are the alternatives? In the last resort, there may be a forced military option. Poolside Combatants Arbitrarily, we are confronted with a vision of the three/four super powers: expanding China, expanding India, uncertain Russia, and the declining US, together with all the other lesser powers, sitting around an ever dwindling pool of crude oil, greedily sucking profusely through straws to expeditiously gather in the last remaining drops of crude oil. This so-called pool may be construed as the “global” pool of total oil/gas resources available to hungry worldwide consumers. The Arabian Gulf littoral States are seen as the predominant and consistent faucets for replenishing the global pool of available oil/gas resources. The “chokepoint” Strait of Hormuz is the vital conduit for the passage of this oil/gas. Nonetheless, there are at least two other contributing de facto pools (1) the Caspian Sea and (2) the Nan Hai (South China Sea). The latter two will contribute substantial oil/gas supply in the future so as to partially mitigate China’s massive thirst. Other nations will assist in the depletion of these subsidiary-contributing pools. (As an exercise, it may be useful to calculate the contribution made by (1) and (2) above as a percentage of China’s total oil/gas supply in the next decade).
    [Show full text]