I am currently ploughing through Global Climate Change Impacts in the United States, which is a comprehensive 188 page report from June 2009, and produced by a set of government agencies in the US, headed up by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, looking at the likely impacts of climate change on the U.S. I'm kind of going through it in a spirit of "How bad is this going to be?" if we make fairly pessimistic assumptions of very high emissions in future, which certainly seem warranted at the moment. More on that later.
However, I note that climate sceptics have been doing a great deal of crowing lately about how the heavy snowstorms on the East Coast prove global warming must be wrong (eg see here or here). And so it was interesting to come across this prediction from p38 (written last summer, recall).
Saturday, February 27, 2010
Friday, February 26, 2010
Thursday, February 25, 2010
Prosperity Without Growth
I recently came across a report, Prosperity Without Growth by the United Kingdom Sustainable Development Commission, which I didn't know about before, but according to the web page:
The Sustainable Development Commission is the Government's independent adviser on sustainable development, reporting to the Prime Minister, the First Ministers of Scotland and Wales and the First Minister and Deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland. Through advocacy, advice and appraisal, we help put sustainable development at the heart of Government policy.
On 1 February 2009, the Sustainable Development Commission (SDC) became an executive non-departmental body (Executive NDPB).
The SDC is registered with Companies House as a Company Limited by Guarantee, and registered with the Cabinet Office as an Executive NDPB. It is wholly owned by Government.
As a separate legal entity the SDC will:
reinforce its remit as the UK Government’s sustainable development watchdog and advisor;
have more freedom to make decisions over staffing and finances;
continue to have a close working relationship with the UK Government and the Devolved Administrations.
Wednesday, February 24, 2010
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
Popular Sunni political party to boycott Iraqi elections
According to the WaPo on Sunday:
BAGHDAD -- A popular Sunni party announced Saturday that it will boycott Iraq's parliamentary elections next month, but it stopped short of urging supporters not to vote.
The decision by the National Dialogue Front to pull out of the March 7 elections could cement views here that Shiite religious parties have rigged the vote against secular and Sunni candidates.
Saleh al-Mutlak, who leads the party, was among about 500 candidates disqualified from the elections because of their alleged ties to Saddam Hussein's Baath Party. A panel of judges signed off on most of the disqualifications. But before the appeals process, all but 171 were replaced by their parties or withdrew. Only 25 prevailed upon appeal.
"It's a bad environment for the election," said Haider al-Mullah, a spokesman for the National Dialogue Front, which has 11 seats in parliament. "They are preventing good leaders like Doctor al-Mutlak from running."
The disqualifications have caused widespread fear that the elections will be deemed illegitimate.
Monday, February 22, 2010
China and Comparative Advantage
In response to my rant about China the other day, commenter James (along with a few others) suggested that the problem was that I didn't understand enough economics, and helpfully assigned some remedial reading on the benefits of free trade, and in particular on Ricardo's theory of comparative advantage.
For example, he suggested the essay by Paul Krugman from 1996 entitled Ricardo's Difficult Idea, which I duly read, along with various other suggested references. Other references will have to wait, but I'd like to take the opportunity of this morning to outline why the conventional theory of international trade, as exemplified in Krugman's essay (but which I originally learned in high school), doesn't reassure me much at all.
I'll begin with some caveats: I've read Paul Krugman for many years, he's obviously a genius, as well as a brave and decent human being. This essay is from 1996, and doesn't represent his recent thinking on China (which in my opinion still has blind spots but is more nuanced). So I'm more using the essay above because it's a very accessibly written meditation on the case for the conventional economic wisdom of the benefits of international trade. Further, I'm not attacking international trade in general, or globalization in general, or suggesting protectionist policies as a specific response. At this point, I'm simply trying to make a specific case about some dangers to the United States of what is happening in China (probably to other western countries too, but I haven't had the chance to think about that much in depth yet). So in this post, I want to highlight what the conventional assumptions of the Ricardian model are, and point out that, empirically, they are materially violated here. End Caveats.
For example, he suggested the essay by Paul Krugman from 1996 entitled Ricardo's Difficult Idea, which I duly read, along with various other suggested references. Other references will have to wait, but I'd like to take the opportunity of this morning to outline why the conventional theory of international trade, as exemplified in Krugman's essay (but which I originally learned in high school), doesn't reassure me much at all.
I'll begin with some caveats: I've read Paul Krugman for many years, he's obviously a genius, as well as a brave and decent human being. This essay is from 1996, and doesn't represent his recent thinking on China (which in my opinion still has blind spots but is more nuanced). So I'm more using the essay above because it's a very accessibly written meditation on the case for the conventional economic wisdom of the benefits of international trade. Further, I'm not attacking international trade in general, or globalization in general, or suggesting protectionist policies as a specific response. At this point, I'm simply trying to make a specific case about some dangers to the United States of what is happening in China (probably to other western countries too, but I haven't had the chance to think about that much in depth yet). So in this post, I want to highlight what the conventional assumptions of the Ricardian model are, and point out that, empirically, they are materially violated here. End Caveats.
Sunday, February 21, 2010
China: The Mother of All Black Swans?
Commenter Manolo pointed to this presentation from Vitaliy Katsenelson on the possibility of an over-inflated China crashing. I haven't been able to come to a conclusion on how seriously to take this risk, but this seems a good summary of the case for it.
China - The Mother of All Black Swans - By Vitaliy Katsenelson
China - The Mother of All Black Swans - By Vitaliy Katsenelson
Saturday, February 20, 2010
Friday, February 19, 2010
Thursday, February 18, 2010
Chinese Labor Costs, Tea Partiers as True Believers
Source: Lett and Banister, China's Manufacturing Employment and Compensation Costs: 2002-2006, Bureau of Labor Statistics Monthly Labor Review, April 2009.
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Specter of Sectarian Violence in Iraq
The Washington Post has a piece on possible resurgence of sectarian violence in Iraq:
More Iraq blogging here.
It was only one killing, but it unleashed the demons of a bitter and perhaps unfinished past.I'm not fully persuaded by the evidence presented in the piece, but it's definitely worth a read. Needless to say, a return to pre-surge levels of violence would make success of the al-Shahristani plan much less likely, which in turn will make global oil supply problems far more severe in the medium term. There's a lot at stake.
The victim was a Sunni man in the mostly Shiite neighborhood of Hurriyah, in northwest Baghdad. The death and the aftermath were reminiscent of the prelude to the sectarian war, which began in late 2005 with a smattering of killings and threats and culminated with 100 bodies a day being dumped in the streets of the capital. With the imminent departure of American forces and fierce competition for power ahead of general elections on March 7, many here say sectarian strife is reigniting.
But this time, there will be no outsider acting as a buffer between the warring sects. U.S. military officials acknowledge that as Iraq regains sovereignty, their influence is waning. A senior U.S. military official who has spent years in Iraq said he fears that as the drawdown begins, American forces are leaving behind many of the same conditions that preceded the sectarian war.
"All we're doing is setting the clock back to 2005," said the official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to offer a stark assessment. "The militias are fully armed, and al-Qaeda in Iraq is trying to move back from the west. These are the conditions now, and we're sitting back looking at PowerPoint slides and whitewashing."
More Iraq blogging here.
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
Friday, February 12, 2010
Gone Kayaking
My wife and I are headed up to Tomales Bay with kayaks and camping gear for the long weekend.
No further blogging until Tuesday morning. Have a great weekend everyone. Will try to add a few photos to this post when I get back.
In the meantime, there's an actual post below.
Update: A few snaps below the break.
No further blogging until Tuesday morning. Have a great weekend everyone. Will try to add a few photos to this post when I get back.
In the meantime, there's an actual post below.
Update: A few snaps below the break.
Food Security: The Challenge of Feeding 9 Billion People
The New York Times Dot Earth blog last night pointed out that Science magazine (one of the two premier publication forums for academic science) has removed the paywall from a review by Godfray et al (a set of British biologists and development studies specialists) titled Food Security: The Challenge of Feeding 9 Billion People. This is a subject near to my heart, and I somehow missed it when it first came out online last month (I subscribe to Science but am inconsistent about reading it when it comes out - I mainly have a subscription so I can always go and search the archives and read any Science papers on some subject that I'm pursuing). So I enthusiastically headed over to read it. It turns out the current issue of Science is devoted to food security, so I'll probably be blogging about it a lot.
The point of a scientific review is to provide a survey of some field of inquiry, with references to the important papers. The best reviews provide the reader with a real synthesis of what the state of knowledge is currently, as well as an indication of where the frontiers of research currently lie - what things are most in need of further study (but where there is some hope of actually making progress). The target reader of reviews is generally considered to be non-specialist scientists who need to understand the field, or graduate students just coming up to speed. Actively working specialists in the field being reviewed are assumed to be up to speed on the literature and to already have their own perspective (though it can certainly be helpful to understand how someone else views the big picture).
The point of a scientific review is to provide a survey of some field of inquiry, with references to the important papers. The best reviews provide the reader with a real synthesis of what the state of knowledge is currently, as well as an indication of where the frontiers of research currently lie - what things are most in need of further study (but where there is some hope of actually making progress). The target reader of reviews is generally considered to be non-specialist scientists who need to understand the field, or graduate students just coming up to speed. Actively working specialists in the field being reviewed are assumed to be up to speed on the literature and to already have their own perspective (though it can certainly be helpful to understand how someone else views the big picture).
Thursday, February 11, 2010
Chinese Steel Production
Figures are from the World Steel Association. I've been making this chart for the last couple of hours, and the longer I've gone on, the more my heart sinks. One way or another, it's hard to see how this set of trends can end well.
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Tuesday, February 9, 2010
Monday, February 8, 2010
Oil Companies May Book Iraq Reserves
Saturday, February 6, 2010
Avatar and the Unabomber
I had said I would do a book review each weekend. However, I'm going to violate the pattern from the very beginning by starting with a movie review instead. But all is not lost: in explaining what I think about Avatar, I'm also going to have to work in discussion of half a dozen books that were formative in developing my worldview, and which are currently sitting in a pile on my desk, pulled off the shelf for the purpose. However, this essay ended up going so long that I'm splitting it into a series which will probably run from now to sometime around Oscar night (March 7th).
Avatar, if you've been living under a rock, is the blockbuster movie written, directed, and produced by James Cameron (Titanic, Terminator, Aliens...) and released last month, which is now the highest grossing movie of all time (taking in $2.1 billion as of this writing - admittedly these comparisons are not adjusted for inflation, which is tricky to do right because of the 3-D). It's becoming one of those must see events in which people are compelled to go a second and third time to take their friends, and just to see the movie again.
Here I'm going to assume the reader has seen the movie and I will try to analyze the strength of the feelings most of us have had to it - love it or hate it. If you haven't seen it yet, just go do it, ok? It's an amazing experience, and you're not going to be altogether culturally literate in future if you haven't seen it.
Avatar, if you've been living under a rock, is the blockbuster movie written, directed, and produced by James Cameron (Titanic, Terminator, Aliens...) and released last month, which is now the highest grossing movie of all time (taking in $2.1 billion as of this writing - admittedly these comparisons are not adjusted for inflation, which is tricky to do right because of the 3-D). It's becoming one of those must see events in which people are compelled to go a second and third time to take their friends, and just to see the movie again.
Here I'm going to assume the reader has seen the movie and I will try to analyze the strength of the feelings most of us have had to it - love it or hate it. If you haven't seen it yet, just go do it, ok? It's an amazing experience, and you're not going to be altogether culturally literate in future if you haven't seen it.
Friday, February 5, 2010
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Wednesday, February 3, 2010
Dec 2009 Iraq Stability Report is Still Missing
Where is the Dec 2009 report? Inquiring minds would like to read it please.
Update: Gotta love Google. Within twenty minutes of posting this, it's the number four result on a Google search for "iraq stability report". Quite right too.
Saudi Aramco: Peak Oil is Nonsense (but we are at peak)
I'm a bit behind the curve in commenting on this, but did anyone else find this hilarious:
So "nonsense of peak oil" but Saudi Arabia's oil production capacity "will stay at about its current level". What does he think we should call it when a country can't/won't raise it's oil production capacity any higher? And if Saudi Arabia can't/won't raise it's capacity, who does he think has more oil than them?
This tends to confirm my impression that the peak oil question is now mainly about Iraq.
Khalid Al-Falih: The nonsense of peak oil is now hopefully behind us. Sees no difficulty in getting above 100mb/d. Saudi Arabia has 1/3 of its capacity (4mb/d) idled at the moment. Will attempt to continue its role as price stabiliser (although idling capacity is v. expensive). Brought 2mb/d capacity onstream last year.
Incremental barrels of onshore Saudi oil capacity now cost 6-7 times what they used to in 2000. Projects take 7-10 years to come on stream. Will make investment to maintain capacity, scoffs at IEA former predictions of 25mb/d Saudi oil, but will stay at about its current level. Has long list of projects to offset its decline in current fields.
Very confident that technological improvements will facilitate increased production.
Very pissed off at rhetoric about 'moving away from oil' or misleading notions of 'energy independence'. Energy security should be addressed through the framework of energy interdependence. Fossil fuels predominant for decades to come. Focus on efficiency, renewable deployment will be very slow.
So "nonsense of peak oil" but Saudi Arabia's oil production capacity "will stay at about its current level". What does he think we should call it when a country can't/won't raise it's oil production capacity any higher? And if Saudi Arabia can't/won't raise it's capacity, who does he think has more oil than them?
This tends to confirm my impression that the peak oil question is now mainly about Iraq.
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Rumaila to increase by 110kbd in July or August
The WSJ reported yesterday:
That would be a modest start, but a start...
Also, the deal for West Qurna Phase II is final.
Crude oil production from the giant Rumaila oil field in southern Iraq is expected to increase by 110,000 barrels a day either in July or August, a senior Iraqi oil official said Monday.
Rumaila, Iraq's largest producing oil field, is currently producing an average of 1.07 million barrels a day, Abdul Mahdy al-Ameedi, director-general of the Iraqi Oil Ministry's Petroleum Contracts and Licensing Directorate, told Dow Jones Newswires
BP PLC (BP) and China National Petroleum Corp., known as CNPC, signed a 20-year technical service contract in November last year to develop the field, which holds oil reserves of 17 billion barrels.
"According to the plan submitted by the contractors, oil production from the field will increase by 10% in July or August, which means an additional 110,000 barrels a day," Ameedi said.
That would be a modest start, but a start...
Also, the deal for West Qurna Phase II is final.