Saturday 12 November 2011

The winter of discontent

From Mike Ruppert:


I think I can safely speak for everyone in the Peak Oil movement when I say that this has always been one of our worst nightmares. It will sadly be coming true all over the world this winter of 2011-2012. Many will die... in Europe, in Pakistan, in India, in Europe and in Africa. I wonder if the world will choose to call them what the British do?... "Excess deaths". I am also becoming fairly certain that we should expect some very serious epidemics and pandemics this winter. This would be the time to unleash bioweapons. That would distract from what's happening economically and it would triple the size of the pharma bubble. - MCR


It's Official - A Cold La Nina Winter!

11 November, 2011


The new La Niña that is developing in the Pacific will have the impact of a strong event. Expect North America to have another cold winter. 

You’ve seen the headlines. The Northeast was hit by a Nor’easter snowstorm that affected 60 million people. Over three million were left without power and outages to last for days. New York City received its earliest inch of snow 
since the Civil War. Pennsylvania, Washington DC and the entire Northeast were buried in as much as two feet of snow and then hit by freezing weather.

The Northeast is not the only cold area. Even Texas, already drought-stricken, had snow this month in Amarillo. The Rocky Mountains, including my home 300 miles from the Mexican border, has been buried in white stuff two times in October. Sunny California started the month with heavy rain in the Fresno valley (hammering the drying raisin crop) and snow for the ski resorts in the Sierra Nevadas. And it is all due to hot water and cold, cold air.

We are being hit by a La Niña and a “wild card”. Welcome to the early beginning of the winter of 2011/2012.

For article GO HERE


Japan: Electricity shortages could mean chilly winter for some

12 November, 2011

People across most of the country should be preparing to bundle up.

With many nuclear power plants offline since the accident at the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear power plant, electric utilities in some regions will likely face difficulties securing enough power this winter.

Kansai Electric Power Co., which depends on nuclear power for more than 50 percent of its electricity generation, expects that its supply capacity will be 7.1 percent below peak demand in January and 9.5 percent in February.

Similarly, Tohoku Electric Power Co.'s capacity will be 3.4 percent below peak demand in January and 0.5 percent in February, according to estimates. At Kyushu Electric Power Co., the ratio will be 2.2 percent in January.

Other utilities expect their supply capacity to exceed peak demand in winter.

The government on Nov. 1 asked electricity users in the Kansai region to reduce peak consumption in winter by 10 percent or more from a year earlier and those in Kyushu to cut back by at least 5 percent.

Electricity users in other regions have been asked to save power, although no numerical targets were set.

For article GO HERE

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