##
Global Ponzi meltdown/House of Cards ##
##
Airline Death Spiral ##
Spending
56 minutes behind the controls at 30,000 feet is the equivalent of
20 minutes on a sunbed, the University of California has found
##
Fault lines/flashpoints/powder kegs/military/war drums ##
The
Assad regime sustained a major setback in northern Syria this
week with the loss of two major military bases, and the big
winner in the battle was al Qaida's Syrian affiliate, the Nusra
Front, which led the assault and captured what’s thought
to be an enormous arsenal.
Iraqi
Kurdish Peshmerga Drive Islamic State From Mount Sinjar;
Hundreds Of Trapped Yazidis Liberated
There's
no do-gooding going on here. The US has finally admitted that the
economic blockade, assassination attempts, and whatnot lasting five
decades have been unsuccessful is effecting a change in government
and bringing Cuba into the US orbit. It's just a new tack. And if
Cuba can be made into a US vassal state, it would presumably be
another blow to Russia. -- RF
This
sounds strangely complacent coming from a country whose own economy
has already begun to collapse. -- RF
Under
the concept of the "Maritime Silk Road," the PLA Navy
is ready to project its power into the Indian Ocean through
the establishment of naval base in Sri Lanka, David Brewster,
a researcher from the Australia India Institute at the
University of Melbourne wrote in his recent article for the
Tokyo-based Diplomat.
##
Global unrest/mob rule/angry people/torches and pitchforks ##
##
Energy/resources ##
The
EPA has long promoted cellulosic ethanol as the future of
biofuels, but technical challenges have kept production far below
targets. A recent rule change allows RNG, renewable natural
gas, to qualify as cellulosic biofuel even though RNG is not
cellulosic, but this helps the EPA to appear to be meeting their
goals.
Bond
investors, already stung by the biggest losses from U.S.
energy company debt in six years, are facing more pain as
the plunge in oil leads analysts to predict defaults may
more than double.
The
impact of falling prices has been working its way into the
services companies’ financial results since the summer, just
as it has through the offshore drillers that have seen
their share prices fall by 50% to 70%. The oil patch is a tough
place to make a living these days, and most observers
believe it is going to get tougher.
Canadian
oil producers deepened 2015 spending cuts on Wednesday, as
Husky Energy , MEG Energy and Penn West Petroleum joined those
hacking back capital budgets in response to tumbling crude
prices.
In
a stunning analysis this week, Goldman Sachs found almost $1
trillion in investments in future oil projects at risk.
They looked at 400 of the world’s largest new oil and gas
fields -- excluding U.S. shale -- and found projects
representing $930 billion of future investment that are no
longer profitable with Brent crude at $70. In the U.S., the shale-oil
party isn’t over yet, but zombies are beginning to crash it.
Large
U.S. onshore drilling firms that operate new, faster rigs are
best placed to weather the looming downturn brought by
slumping crude prices and could gain market share
from smaller drillers with considerable debt and outdated
equipment. Drillers are trimming rental rates for rigs and
idling older machines as their clients, oil producers, slash 2015
spending.
Generator
woes raises blackout risk (South
Africa)
How
power outages will hit our pockets (South
Africa)
South
Africa is very likely to have electricity shortages for the
next three to five years and possibly longer for big
projects. The costs are enormous: in money, direct economic
growth and perceptions too. Technology innovations will also
be affected.
A
shortage of diesel around New York Harbor and speculation that
colder weather will boost heating oil demand has driven the
premium for spot deliveries of the fuel to the highest level
since March.
Nearly
6 per cent of dwellings in Auckland never use heating, according to a
new survey by Statistics New Zealand.
Consumers
in New England got a shock in their utility bills this month. A 40%
increase over the previous month. National Grid , the
largest utility in Massachusetts, decided that electricity prices for
this winter would rise to 24¢/kWh, a record high.
Sweden's
government has decided to almost double a fee nuclear power
plant operators pay to the nuclear waste fund, in order to help
it cover the rising costs of decommissioning, the environment
ministry said on Thursday.
Some
20 power units across Ukraine have been idled due to a lack of
coal and the latest data shows coal reserves at plants have
fallen by another four percent, state-run energy firm Ukrenergo
said on Wednesday.
##
Got food? ##
##
Environment/health ##
Marine Le
Pen's National Front has launched the "New Ecology"
movement. The French nationalist party's take on environmental
activism will include opposing international climate
negotiations and promoting nuclear energy.
##
Intelligence/propaganda/security/internet/cyberwar ##
##
Systemic breakdown/collapse/unsustainability ##
When
civilisation collapses, will you be ready? (The
Economist)
Will we
ever tire of navigating the multiple layers of intermediaries between
the customer and the provider, while corporate profits soar
to unprecedented heights?
##
Japan ##
A
good read. -- RF
Two
days after Prime Minister Shinzo Abe secured a pledge
from Japan Inc. to do their best to boost wages to
revive the world’s third-biggest economy, data
showed companies hoarding record amounts of cash.
Japan's
trade ministry said on Thursday it plans to change a
feed-in-tariff scheme by making it possible for utilities
to limit renewable power output more flexibly while trying to
lower guaranteed payments to providers of such power.
Many
of these paper assets could become worthless at the drop of a hat. --
RF
Waste
of money. -- RF
Waste
of money. -- RF
An
increasing number of students are struggling to pay education
loans and more than 6,000 lawsuits were filed over the
fallout in the 2013 academic year alone.
The
government says reactor decommissioning costs ought to be passed
on to all customers even after the electricity market is
opened to newcomers in 2016.
Note
the article on Sweden above in the energy section. Nuclear plant
operators and governments are beginning to see that decommissioning
will cost far more than they thought. But no matter how much money
they set aside, there will never be enough. Watch for unmitigated
disaster as the world's nuclear power system falls apart. -- RF
Ain't
gonna happen. -- RF
##
China ##
China
is aiming to purge most foreign technology from banks, the military,
state-owned enterprises and key government agencies by
2020, stepping up efforts to shift to Chinese suppliers,
according to people familiar with the effort.
##
UK ##
##
US ##
U.S. electricity
costs are poised to reach the highest level since 1999 because
railroads are too clogged to deliver enough coal to power
plants.
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