Archive for the 'Third World' Category

In the Big Picture, Natural Gas and ‘Fracking’ Is Only One Piece of the Puzzle

by @ Wednesday, April 4th, 2012. Filed under Climate, Environment, Green Energy, Third World

How the Big Energy Companies Plan to Turn

the United States into a Third-World Petro-State

By Michael T. Klare
SolidarityEconomy.net via AlterNet.org

April 4, 2012 - The “curse” of oil wealth is a well-known phenomenon in Third World petro-states where millions of lives are wasted in poverty and the environment is ravaged, while tiny elites rake in the energy dollars and corruption rules the land.

Recently, North America has been repeatedly hailed as the planet’s twenty-first-century “new Saudi Arabia” for “tough energy” -- deep-sea oil, Canadian tar sands, and fracked oil and natural gas. 

But here’s a question no one considers: Will the oil curse become as familiar on this continent in the wake of a new American energy rush as it is in Africa and elsewhere? Will North America, that is, become not just the next boom continent for energy bonanzas, but a new energy Third World?

Once upon a time, the giant U.S. oil companies -- Chevron, Exxon, Mobil, and Texaco -- got their start in North America, launching an oil boom that lasted a century and made the U.S. the planet’s dominant energy producer.  But most of those companies have long since turned elsewhere for new sources of oil.

Eager to escape ever-stronger environmental restrictions and dying oil fields at home, the energy giants were naturally drawn to the economically and environmentally wide-open producing areas of the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America -- the Third World -- where oil deposits were plentiful, governments compliant, and environmental regulations few or nonexistent.

Here, then, is the energy surprise of the twenty-first century: with operating conditions growing increasingly difficult in the global South, the major firms are now flocking back to North America. To exploit previously neglected reserves on this continent, however, Big Oil will have to overcome a host of regulatory and environmental obstacles.  It will, in other words, have to use its version of deep-pocket persuasion to convert the United States into the functional equivalent of a Third World petro-state.

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Solar Power to the Poor! Green Energy Making Green Jobs and a Better Life

by @ Wednesday, September 28th, 2011. Filed under Green Energy, Solidarity Economy, Third World

In Rural India, Solar Power

is the Cheap and Easy Option

Photo: A small, ground-mounted array of solar panels stands in front of a thatched hut in rural southern India CHEAP ENERGY: Solar panels make electricity in the hot Indian sun. (Photo: premasagar/Flickr)

By Chris Turner
SolidarityEconomy.net via Mother Nature Network

Sept. 21, 2011 - Harish Hande launched his Indian solar company to dispel the myth that renewable energy was too expensive for the world's poorest people. The wealthy West could learn a lot from his math.

As right-wing opponents of renewable energy grandstand in Washington about the collapse of Solyndra, trotting out all the old hobby horses about price and competitiveness and the rest, I’ve decided this is a fine moment to let India’s most innovative solar energy entrepreneur teach us some remedial math.

The entrepreneur in question is Harish Hande, founder of the Solar Electric Light Company of India, aka SELCO. Hande is a graduate of India’s elite Indian Institute of Technology and the University of Massachusetts, and unlike many electrical engineers, he decided to focus on the socioeconomics of implementing technology rather than the technology itself. After graduating, he launched SELCO in 1995 and soon found a fantastic investment partner in E+Co., an innovative international development organization specializing in social entrepreneurship.

Hande will tell anyone who will listen — including me in an interview for my book, "The Geography of Hope," back in 2006 — that he built his company to dispel three myths. He was interviewed recently by the Indian Express newspaper, and here’s how he explained it:

The fundamental [premise in founding SELCO] was how to balance social, economic and environmental stability at the same level. And to destroy myths like the poor can’t afford technology, the poor can’t maintain, and thirdly that you can’t run a commercial venture while trying to meet social objectives.

Hande rejected the idea that renewable energy was too expensive for the hundreds of millions of Indians with no household electricity at all, dispelled the notion that the poor can’t manage a small loan and keep their power system running, and demonstrated that a development project could also be a profit-making enterprise.

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