Thursday, November 13, 2008

Richard Heinberg on Agricultural Reform

This long article is about a community response to the emerging threat of fuel shortages and possible food crisis. I have been saying much the same thing in my blog over the past year. Where I differ is that the idea of a managerial planning process with the direct power to alter things is the way to go. That is once again merely the road to catastrophic inefficiencies and sheer wastage.

Change must be implemented by first recognizing a desirable outcome, then allowing participants to create that outcome on their own time and money. It is desirable to free the farm community from fossil fuels. Great idea! First off, what will we replace it with? Suppose we decide on ethanol made from cattail starch as the new primary agricultural fuel. Obviously the farmer will throw any other starch into the brew that he has. But cattails allow the utilization of empty wetlands and the like and are several times more productive. Most important, he is adding in place ethanol production to his bag of tools. What the community can do is mandate this fuel as a common priority that all will transition too, thus establishing an interfarm market for the product.

After that it simply a case of getting the equipment makers on side to support the farmers in this endeavor and then phasing in the normal fuel taxes on fossil fuels going to the farm over ten years.

Governmental responsibility is simply to establish a plan of action and make sure that everyone is free to participate in order to dodge the tax stick. Smaller operators will simply buy fuel from their larger neighbors.

All such necessary change is really that easy. And while we are at it, policies that supported the gross expansion of subsidized monoculture are in dire need to be revisited with such thinking in place. The farm lobby has been historically shortsighted and has now failed the community at large by maximizing volume at the expense of quality and manpower and the public purse.

Again I have addressed methods by which that can be redressed in the modern era.



By Richard Heinberg

The only way to way avert a food crisis resulting from oil and natural gas price hikes and supply disruptions while also reversing agriculture's contribution to climate change is to proactively and methodically remove fossil fuels from the food system.
The removal of fossil fuels from the food system is inevitable: maintenance of the current system is simply not an option over the long term. Only the amount of time available for the transition process, and the strategies for pursuing it, can be matters for controversy.
Given the degree to which the modern food system has become dependent on fossil fuels, many proposals for de-linking food and fuels are likely to appear radical. However, efforts toward this end must be judged not by the degree to which they preserve the status quo, but by their likely ability to solve the fundamental challenge that will face us: the need to feed a global population of 7 billion with a diminishing supply of fuels available to fertilize, plow, and irrigate fields and to harvest and transport crops.
If this transition is undertaken proactively and intelligently, there could be many side benefits - more careers in farming, more protection for the environment, less soil erosion, a revitalization of rural culture, and more healthful food for everyone.
Some of this transformation will inevitably be driven by market forces, led simply by the rising price of fossil fuels. However, without planning the transition may be wrenching and destructive, since market forces acting alone could bankrupt farmers while leaving consumers with few or no options. The Transition
To remove fossil fuels from the food system too quickly, before alternative systems are in place, would be catastrophic. Thus the transition process must be a matter for careful consideration and planning. In recent years there has been some debate on the problem of how many people a non-fossil fueled food system can support. The answer is still unclear. But we will certainly find out, because there is likely to be no alternative, given that substitute liquid fuels - including coal-to-liquids, biofuels, tar sands, and shale oil - are all problematic and cannot be relied upon to replace cheap crude oil and natural gas as these deplete.
There are reasons for hope: a recent report on African agriculture from the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) suggests that "organic, small-scale farming can deliver the increased yields which were thought to be the preserve of industrial farming, without the environmental and social damage which that form of agriculture brings with it."
Nevertheless, given that we do not know whether non-fossil fuel agriculture can in fact feed a population now approaching seven billion - and given that current fuels-based agriculture cannot be relied upon to do so for much longer, given the reality of fuel depletion - the prudent path forward would surely be to tie agricultural policy to population policy.
Indeed, coordination will be essential also between agriculture policies and education, economic, transport, energy policies. The food system transition will be comprehensive, and will require integration with all segments and aspects of society.
This document is intended to serve as the basis for the beginning of that planning process. Our aim is to develop a template that can be used to strategically plan the transition of food and farming across the world, region by region, and at all scales (from the farm to the community to the nation), beginning here in the UK.
Elements of Transition
The following are some key strategic elements of the food systems transition process that will need to be addressed at all levels of scale, from the household to the nation and beyond. Re-Localization In recent decades the food systems of Britain and most other nations have become globalized. Food is traded in enormous quantities - and not just luxury foods (such as coffee and chocolate), but staples including wheat, maize, meat, potatoes, and rice.
The globalization of the food system has had advantages: people in wealthy countries now have access to a wide variety of foods at all times, including fruits and vegetables that are out of season (apples in May or asparagus in January), and foods that cannot be grown locally at any time of year (e.g., avocadoes in Scotland). Long-distance transport enables food to be delivered from places of abundance to areas of scarcity. Whereas in previous centuries a regional crop failure might have led to famine, its effects now can be neutralized by food imports.
However, food globalization also creates systemic vulnerability. As fuel prices rise, costs of imported food go up. If fuel supplies were substantially cut off as the result of some transient event, the entire system could fail. A globalized system is also more susceptible to accidental contamination, as we have seen recently with the appearance of toxic melamine in foods from China. The best way to make our food system more resilient against such threats is clear: decentralize and re-localize it.
Re-localization will inevitably occur sooner or later as a result of declining oil production, since there are no alternative energy sources on the horizon that can be scaled up quickly to take the place of petroleum. But if the transition process is to unfold in a beneficial rather than a catastrophic way, it must be planned and coordinated. This will require deliberate effort aimed at building the infrastructure for regional food economies - ones that can support diversified farming and reduce the amount of fossil fuel in the British diet.
Re-localization means producing more basic food necessities locally. No one advocates doing away with food trade altogether: this would hurt both farmers and consumers. Rather, what is needed is a prioritization of production so that lower-value food items (which are typically staple calorie crops) are mostly sourced from close by, with most long-distance trade left to higher-value foods, and especially those that store well.
This decentralization of the food system will result in greater societal resilience in the face of fuel price volatility. Problems of food contamination, when they appear, will be minimized. Meanwhile, revitalization of local food production will help renew local economies. Consumers will enjoy better quality food that is fresher and more seasonal. And transport-related climate impacts will be reduced.
Each nation or region will need to devise its own strategy for re-localizing its food system, based on a thorough initial assessment of vulnerabilities and opportunities. The following are some general suggestions that are likely to be applicable in most instances:
The process will benefit enormously from policy support at both national and regional levels. This could include, for example, the provision of grants to towns and cities to build year-round indoor farmers' markets.
Food-safety regulations should be made appropriate to the scale of production and distribution, so that a small grower selling direct off the farm or at a farmers' market is not regulated as onerously as a multinational food manufacturer. While local food may have safety problems, these will inevitably occur on a smaller scale and will be easier to manage because local food is inherently more traceable and accountable. Governments can require that some minimum percentage of food purchases for schools, hospitals, military bases, and prisons are sourced within 100 miles of the institutions buying the food. Channelling even a small portion of institutional food purchasing to local growers would greatly expand opportunities for regional producers while improving the diet of people whom these institutions feed. Cities and towns can rework their waste management systems so as to collect food scraps that can then be converted to compost, biogas, and livestock feed - which can in turn be made available to local growers.
But government can do only so much. Consumers must develop the habit of preferentially buying locally sourced foods whenever possible, and they can be encouraged in this by "Buy Local" educational literature distributed by retailers - who can also assist by clearly labeling and prominently displaying local products.
Growers themselves must rethink their business strategies. Instead of growing specialty crops for export, they must plan a transition to production of staple foods for local consumption. They must also actively seek local markets for their food. The Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) movement provides a business model that has proven successful in many communities. Small producers can also create informal co-ops to acquire machinery (such as small threshing machines for cereal and oilseed processing or micro hydro turbines for electricity).
The strategy of re-localizing food systems will be more challenging for some nations and regions than others. Given that the food footprint of London encompasses essentially all of England, the challenge for Britain is greater than is the case for many other nations. More urban gardens and even small animal operations (with chickens, ducks, geese, and rabbits) within London and other cities should be encouraged, but even then it will be necessary to source most food from the countryside, delivering it to the city by rail. Thus re-localization should be seen as a process and a general direction of effort, not as an absolute goal.
Energy As society turns away from fossil fuels, the energy balance of farming must once again become net positive. However, the transition process will be complex and problematic. Farms will still need sources of energy for their operations, and will need to provide much or all of that energy for themselves. Meanwhile, farmers could also take advantage of opportunities to export surplus energy to nearby communities as a way of increasing farm income.
Farms must be powered with renewable energy. However, many energy needs on farms - such as fuel for tractors and other machinery - are currently difficult to fill with anything other than liquid fuels, which currently come in the form of diesel or petrol made from crude oil. Farmers should first look for ways to reduce fuel needs through efficiency or replacement of machines with animal power or human labor. This is most likely to be economically feasible in dairy, meat, vegetable, fruit, and nut operations. Where fuel-fed machinery is still required, which is likely to continue being the case for grain production, ethanol or biodiesel made on-site could supplement or replace petroleum. Farmers could aim to apportion one-fifth of their cropland to production of biofuels for their own use.
Many other farm operations require electricity, and this can be generated on-site with wind turbines, solar panels, and micro-hydro turbines. Effort first must be devoted to making operations more energy-efficient. Because these technologies require initial investment and pay for themselves slowly over time, assistance from government and from financial institutions in the form of grants and low-interest loans could be instrumental in helping farmers overcome initial economic hurdles toward energy self-sufficiency.
Eventually farmers are capable of being not just self-sufficient in energy, but of producing surplus energy for surrounding communities. Much of this exported energy is likely to come in the form of biomass - agricultural and forestry waste that can be burned to produce electricity. While farmers can also grow crops for the production of biofuels, the ecological and thermodynamic limits of this energy technology require that the scale of production be deliberately restricted. Otherwise, society's demand for fuel could overwhelm farmers' ability to produce food - and food must remain their first priority. In exporting biomass from the farm, growers must always keep in mind the productive capacity of sustainable agricultural systems, and they must strictly monitor soil health and fertility.
The transition of farms to renewable energy will require planning. Farmers, ideally with the assistance of regional and national agencies, should plan to increase energy efficiency, to reduce fossil fuel inputs, and to grow renewable energy production according to a staged, integrated program designed for the unique needs and capabilities of each farm. As a general guideline, the plan should aim to reduce oil and natural gas inputs by at least half during the first decade Soil Fertility
In industrial agriculture, soil fertility is maintained with inputs provided from off-site. Of these inputs, the most important are nitrogen and phosphorus. Nitrogen comes from ammonia-based fertilizers made from fossil fuels - principally, natural gas. Phosphorus comes from phosphate mines in several countries. While sufficient low-quality phosphate deposits exist to supply world needs for many decades, high-quality deposits that are currently being mined are quickly depleting, which means that phosphate prices will likely rise within the next few years.
[Phosphate Primer]
Both nitrogen and phosphorus are essential to agriculture. And our current ways of supplying both are clearly unsustainable. Unless alternative ways of maintaining soil fertility are quickly found, a crisis looms.
The long-term solution will surely depend on a two-fold strategy: designing farm systems that build fertility through crop rotations, and recycling nutrients.
Crop rotation can help with maintaining nitrogen levels. Simply planting a cover crop after the fall harvest significantly reduces nitrogen leaching while cutting down on soil erosion. Meanwhile, introducing leguminous crops into the rotation cycle replaces nitrogen.
Cleverly designed polycultures can sustainably produce large amounts of food, as has been shown not only by small-scale "alternative" farmers in Britain and America, but also by large rice-and-fish farmers in China and giant-scale operations (up to 15,000 acres) in Argentina. There, farmers employ an eight-year rotation of perennial pasture and annual crops: after five years grazing cattle on pasture, farmers then grow three years of grain without applying fertilizer. The need for herbicides is also dramatically reduced: weeds that afflict pasture cannot survive the years of tillage, and weeds of row crops don't survive years of grazing.
Most industrial farmers have left behind the practice of cover cropping because commercial fertilizers have become the cheaper option. That cost equation is about to shift. It is therefore important that farmers begin planning for higher fertilizer prices now by gearing up their rotation cycles and building natural soil fertility ahead of the immediate need.
In industrial agriculture, the soil is treated as an inert substance that holds plants in place while chemical nutrients are applied externally. Without efforts to maintain natural fertility, over time organic matter disappears from the soil, along with beneficial soil micro-organisms. In the future, as chemical fertilizers become more expensive, farmers will need to devote much more attention to the practice of building healthy soil. But rebuilding nutrient-depleted soil takes, at minimum, several years of effort.
Traditional farmers increase organic matter in topsoil through the application of compost - which not only builds soil fertility, but also improves the soil's ability to hold water and thus withstand drought. There is also mounting evidence that food grown in properly composted soil is of higher nutritional quality. Currently, in typical modern cities, consumers, retailers, wholesalers and institutions discard enormous quantities of food. Some communities have already instituted municipal programs for composting of food and yard waste; such programs could be expanded and made mandatory, with compost being given free to local farmers. This would reduce the amount of garbage going to land fills, as well as farmers' needs for fertilizers and irrigation, while improving the nutritional quality of the British diet.
In addition, recent research with "terra preta" (also known as "bio char"), a charcoal-like material that can be produced from agricultural waste, suggests that its introduction to soils could reduce plants' need for nitrogen by 20 to 30 percent while sequestering carbon that would otherwise end up in the atmosphere.
The potential of composting and the use of terra preta to mitigate the climate crisis is hardly trivial: a one-percent increase of soil organic matter in the top 33.5cm of the soil is equivalent to the capture and storage of 100 tonnes of atmospheric CO2. per square kilometre of farmland.
Ultimately, there is no solution to the phosphorus supply problem other than full-system nutrient recycling. This will entail a complete redesign of sewage systems to recapture nutrients so they can be returned to the soil - as Chinese farmers learned to do centuries ago. But if sewage systems (or simpler variants) are to become primary sources of phosphorus and other soil nutrients, they cannot continue to be channels for the disposal of toxic wastes. It is essential that separate waste streams be developed for the disposal of all pharmaceuticals, household chemicals, and industrial wastes. Thus the problem of soil fertility is one that farmers cannot solve on their own: it is a crisis of the food system as a whole, and must be addressed contextually and holistically.
Diet The consumer is as important to the food system as the producer. During recent decades, consumer preferences have been shaped to fit the industrial food system through advertising and the development of mass-marketed, uniform, packaged food products that, while often nutritionally inferior, are cheap, attractive, in some cases even physically addictive. The advent and rapid proliferation of "fast food" restaurants has likewise fostered a diet that is profitable to giant industrial agribusiness, but disastrous to the health of consumers. However lamentable these trends may be from a public health standpoint, they are clearly unsustainable in view of the energy and climate crises facing modern agriculture.
Because processed and packaged foods and fresh foods imported out of season add to the energy intensity of the food system, rich and poor alike must be encouraged to eat food that is locally grown, that is in season, and that is less processed. Public education campaigns could help shift consumer preferences in this regard.
A shift toward a less meat-centered diet should also be encouraged, because a meat-based diet is substantially more energy intensive than one that is plant-based.
Government can help with a shift in diet preferences through its own food purchasing polices (see "Re-Localization," above). The process can be helped even further by a more careful official government definition of "food." It makes no sense for government efforts intended to improve the nutritional health of the people to support the consumption of products known to be unhealthful - such as soda and other junk food.
Farming Systems
During the past few decades farming has become more specialized. Today, a typical farm may produce only meat of a single kind (turkey, chicken, pork, or beef), or only dairy, or a single type of grain, vegetable, fruit, or nut.
This narrow specialization seemed to make economic sense in the era of cheap transport and cheap farm inputs. But because nature is diverse and integrated, the deliberate elimination of diversity on the farm has led to problems at every step. For example, animal feedlot operations (also known as concentrated animal feed operations, or CAFOs) produce enormous amounts of waste that end up in massive manure lagoons that pollute ground water and foul the air. Meanwhile, grain diets fed to the animals result in digestive problems requiring the large-scale administration of antibiotics that find their way into both the human food system and ground water, and that lead to antibiotic resistance among disease organisms that afflict humans.
Farm specialization also impacts the grain or vegetable grower: soils that annually produce these crops need a regular replenishment of nitrogen; but if the farmer keeps few animals, there may be no option other than to import fertilizers from off-site.
By switching to multi-enterprise diverse systems, farmers can often solve a range of problems at once. Feeding much less grain to livestock while giving them access to pasture that is in rotation with other crops maintains soil fertility while leading to better animal health and higher food quality. The farmer, the environment, and the consumer all benefit.
The post-hydrocarbon food transition may also compel a rethinking of the size of farm operations. The mechanization of farm operations and the centralization of food systems favored larger farms. However, as fuel for farm machinery becomes more costly, and as farming once again involves more labor, smaller-scale operations will once again be profitable. In addition, a smaller scale of operations will be needed as farms become more diverse, since farmers will have more system elements to monitor. Agriculture will thus become more knowledge-intensive, requiring a curious, holistic attitude on the part of farmers.
In urban areas, micro-farms and gardens - including vertical gardens and rooftop gardens that in some cases include small animals such as chickens and rabbits - could provide a substantial amount of food for growers and their families, along with occasional income from selling seasonal surpluses at garden markets.
Farm Work
With less fuel available to power agricultural machinery, the world will need many more farmers. But for farmers to succeed, some current agricultural policies that favor larger-scale production and production for export will need to change, while policies that support small-scale subsistence farms, gardens, and agricultural co-ops must be formulated and put in place - both by international institutions such as the World Bank, and also by national and regional governments.
Currently the UK has 541,0001 farmers, depending on how the term is defined. In the UK in 1900, nearly 40 percent of the population farmed; the current proportion is less than one percent. Today, the average farmer is nearing retirement age.
In nations and regions where food is grown without machinery, a larger percentage of the population must be involved in food production. For example, farmers make up more than half the populations of China, and India, Nepal, Ethiopia, and Indonesia.
While the proportion of farmers that would be needed in Britain if the country were to become self-sufficient in food grown without fossil fuels is unknown (that would depend upon technologies used and diets adopted), it would undoubtedly be much larger than the current percentage. It is reasonable to expect that several million new farmers would be required - a number that is both unimaginable and unmanageable over the short term. These new farmers would have to include a broad mix of people, reflecting the UK's increasing diversity. Already growing numbers of young adults are becoming organic or biodynamic farmers, and farmers' markets and CSAs are also springing up across the country. These tentative trends must be supported and encouraged. In addition to Government policies that support sustainable farming systems based on smaller farming units, this will require:
Education: Universities and community colleges must quickly develop programs in small-scale ecological farming methods - programs that also include training in other skills that farmers will need, such as in marketing and formulating business plans. Apprenticeships and other forms of direct knowledge transfer will also assist the transition.
Financial Support: Since few if any farms are financially successful the first year or even the second or third, loans and grants will be needed to help farmers get started. A revitalization of farming communities and farming culture: Over the past decades UK rural towns have seen their best and brightest young people flee first to distant colleges and then to cities. Farming communities must be interesting, attractive places if we expect people to inhabit them and for children to want to stay there.
Seeds Today's seed industry is centralized and reliant upon the very fuel-based transport system whose future viability is in question. Most commercial seeds are of hybrid varieties, so that farmers cannot save seed but must purchase new supplies each year.
Worldwide, a growing proportion of the commercial seeds that are available are genetically modified. GM seeds have primarily been developed by chemical companies to support the sale of their proprietary herbicides. The promise of more nutritious foods, or crops that can produce biofuels more efficiently, is years from realization. Given that the need for transition is immediate, efforts to build a post-fossil fuel food system cannot wait for new technologies that may or may not appear or succeed. In any case, the GM seed industry is based upon current systems of transport, and fuel-based inputs such as chemical fertilizers and herbicides, that are all inextricably tied to the wider fossil-fuel based provisioning systems of society. Thus GM crops would be unlikely to be of much help in the transition in any case.
What is needed instead is a coordinated effort to identify open-pollinated varieties of food crops that are adapted to local soils and microclimates, and a program to make such seeds available to farmers and gardeners in sufficient quantities. In addition, local colleges must begin offering courses on the techniques of seed saving.
Processing and Distribution Systems
The transition process will undoubtedly be fraught with challenges to food processing and distribution systems, which currently rely on large energy inputs and long-distance transport.
For example, the meat industry now depends upon centralized facilities for slaughtering livestock - which must be transported long distances to these facilities. Re-localizing food systems will entail creating incentives for the emergence of smaller, more localized slaughterhouses and butcher shops. One interim solution would be for a fleet of mobile abattoirs to go from farm to farm, processing animals humanely and inexpensively.
Many health regulations were originally designed to check abuses by the largest food producers, but such regulations may now inhibit the development of smaller-scale and more localized processing and distribution systems. For example, farmers should be able to smoke a ham and sell it to their neighbours without making a huge investment in nationally approved facilities. A small producer selling direct from the farm or at a farmers' market should not be subject to the same food safety regulations as a multinational food manufacturer: while local food may occasionally have safety problems, those problems will be less catastrophic and easier to manage than similar problems at industrial-scale facilities.
Food processors must look for ways to make their present operations more energy efficient, while government, consumers, and retailers find ways to reduce the need for food processing and also for food packaging. This gradual shift will require institutional support for families in storing, processing, cooking, and preserving food within the home.
Meanwhile, in view of inevitable problems with existing transport systems, national and regional food storage systems must be reconsidered. Reserves of grain, sufficient to provide for essential needs during an extended food crisis, should be kept and managed to avoid spoilage.
Packaging of food should be regulated to minimize the use of plastics, which will become more scarce and expensive as oil and gas deplete - and which are implicated as sources of toxins in any case. Government should institute policies that prioritize the distribution of food within the nation by rail and water, rather than by road, as trucks are comparatively energy inefficient.
Supermarkets are currently the ultimate distribution sites for food in most instances. However, this model presupposes near-universal access to automobiles and petrol. A resilient food system will require smaller and more widely distributed access points in the forms of small shops and garden or farm markets. Government regulations and tax incentives can help accomplish that shift. Wholesalers and distributors will have a changed role in a transitioning food system. They will still be needed to manage the supplies of various seasonally produced foods moving from producers to consumers. However, rather than favoring large producers and giant supermarket chains, they must alter their operations to serve smaller, more distributed farms and gardens, as well as smaller and more distributed retail shops.
Resilience Action Planning
The transition process will succeed by creating more resilience in food systems. Resilient systems are able to withstand higher magnitudes of disturbance before undergoing a dramatic shift to a new condition in which they are controlled by a different set of processes. One quality of resilience is redundancy - which is often at odds with economic efficiency. Efficiency implies both long supply chains and the reduction of inventories to a minimum. This "just-in-time" delivery of products reduces costs - but it increases the vulnerability of systems to disturbances such as fuel shortages. As more attention is paid to resilience and less to economic efficiency, redundancy and larger inventories are seen as benefits rather than liabilities. Other resilience values include diversity (as opposed to uniformity), and dispersion (rather than centralization) of control over systems.
Building resilience into our food systems as we move toward a post-fossil fuel economy will entail all of the Elements of Transition detailed above. It will also require planning at four levels: Government, Community, Business, and Individual or Family. At each level the planning process will necessarily be somewhat different. The purpose of this section is to delineate the main planning steps that will make sense at each of these levels. In some instances, steps within an action plan can or should be undertaken concurrently. In any case, what is offered here is merely a skeletal outline for a process that must be developed to fit unique needs of those it will serve. Government The following steps are applicable at any level of government - national, regional, or local. At the highest level of scale (the nation), each step will itself be the subject of planning and delegation. At the lowest level of scale (small villages), government may lack the capacity to undertake any of these steps and can do more than offer symbolic official support to volunteer citizen initiatives.
1. Assess the existing food system. Begin with a study of current systemic vulnerabilities and opportunities. How are farm inputs currently sourced? How much food is currently imported? What proportion of those food imports are staples, and what proportion are luxury foods? What are the environmental costs of current agricultural practices? How would the current food system be impacted by fuel shortages and high prices?
2. Review policies. How are current policies supporting these vulnerabilities and environmental impacts? How can they be changed or eliminated? Are there policies already in place that are likely to help with the transition? How can these latter policies be strengthened?
3. Bring together key stakeholders. Organizations of farmers, food processing and distributing companies, and retailers must all be included in the transition process. Many will wish simply to maintain the existing system; however, it must be made clear that this is not an option. Many companies involved in the food system will need to change their business model substantially. 4. Make a plan. The transition plan that is formulated must be comprehensive and detailed, and must contain robust but attainable targets with timelines and mechanisms for periodic review and revision. A scoping exercise must be undertaken to assess the impact of the plan on agricultural output and to quantify the changes in kinds of commodities produced and in their volumes and prices. Simon Fairlie's paper, "Can Britain Feed Itself?", is an initial attempt at such an exercise, and can be used as a model to be built upon and supplemented.
5. Educate and involve the public. The public must not only be informed about the government-led aspects of the transition process, but must be included in it to the extent that is practical. Citizens must be educated about food choices, gardening opportunities, and ways to access food from local producers. Their successes and challenges in adaptation will inform new iterations of the plan.
6. Shift policies and incentives. This is the key responsibility of government, as it either limits or enhances the ability of community groups, businesses, and families to engage in the transition process. Policy changes must reflect stakeholder input, but must nevertheless be designed primarily to further the Elements of Transition, rather than the short-term interests of any particular stakeholder group.
7. Monitor and adjust. An undertaking of this magnitude will inevitably have unforeseen and unintended impacts. Thus it is essential that progress be continually be reviewed with an eye to making adjustments to pace and strategy, while maintaining absolute adherence to the central task of methodically removing fossil fuels from the food system.
Community The following are action steps for adoption by voluntary community groups, as opposed to governments (see above). The Transition Network provides an excellent model for this kind of community action. Such efforts seem to work best when the scale of community is such that meetings are manageable in size and meeting participants need not travel long distances. Thus in large cities, neighborhoods could apply Resilience Action Planning while sending delegates to occasional city-wide coordinating meetings. The overlap and mutual support between community organizations and local government efforts must be a matter for discussion and negotiation. 1. Assess the local food system. This assessment process should be undertaken in cooperation with government, so as not to duplicate tasks. Volunteer citizen groups are in position to provide perspectives that otherwise might elude government assessment efforts - such as opportunities for community gardens, or problems with access to food from local producers.
2. Identify and involve stakeholders. Local growers, shop owners, public kitchens, restaurants, schools, and other institutions that produce or serve food should all be contacted and invited to join a voluntary re-localization initiative and to offer input into the process.
3. Educate and involve the public. Community groups can stage public events to raise awareness about food transition issues. "Buy local" brochures and pamphlets, paid for and distributed by a consortium of local businesses (but organized by volunteer groups), can list local producers, farm markets, restaurants, and shops.
4. Develop a unique local strategic program. This can include farmers' markets, CSAs, school lunch programs, and public kitchens, networked with local producers, including community gardens. The program, based on input from stakeholders, should feature targets and timelines developed through a "backcasting" process, beginning with a collaborative exercise aimed at envisioning the local food system as it might look in 2025 after fossil fuels have ceased to play a role.
5. Coordinate with national programs. Local volunteer efforts can play a significant role in informing national government policies, and in implementing the national transition strategy. However, this will require the maintenance of open channels of communication, which in turn will be the responsibility of both government and the local groups.
6. Support individuals and families. Individuals are likely to change food habits and priorities only if they see others doing so as well, and if they feel that their efforts are supported and valued. Community groups can help by establishing new behavioral norms through public events and articles in local newspapers. Practical help can be offered via canning parties, garden planting and harvest parties, and gleaning programs. Local food and gardening experts can be made available to answer questions and concerns. Neighborhood food storage facilities can also be created to supplement household cupboards.
7. Monitor and adjust. All of these efforts must be continually adjusted to assure that all segments of the community are included in the transition process, and that the process is working as smoothly as possible for all.
Business Relevant businesses include farms, shops, processors, wholesalers, and restaurants. However, the following steps could also be useful to organizations such as schools, colleges, and hospitals that dispense food as an ancillary part of their operations.
1. Assess vulnerabilities. Every business or organization that is part of the food system must take an honest look at the inevitable impacts of higher fuel prices, and fuel scarcity, on its operations. Examine scenarios based on a doubling or tripling of fuel costs to highlight specific vulnerabilities.
2. Make a plan. Develop a business model that works without - or with continually shrinking - fossil fuel inputs. Then "backcast" from that imagined future condition, specifying time-related targets. 3. Work with government and community groups. Given the fact that government will be developing regulations to reduce fuel use in the food system, and that community organizations will be offering support to local farmers and food shops that spearhead the transition, it makes good business sense to lead the parade rather than lagging at the rear.
4. Educate and involve suppliers and customers. No business is an island. The transition will flourish through strengthened relationships on all sides.
5. Monitor and adjust. For businesses, one obvious and essential criterion of success is profitability. The bottom line will help indicate which adaptive strategies are working, and which ones need work. However, negative financial feedback is no reason to abandon the essential goal of transition.
Individual and Family
1. Assess food vulnerabilities and opportunities. Whether at a family meeting or by oneself over a cup of tea, take a long honest look at your typical monthly food purchases and give careful thought to the implications. How much of your food comes from within 100 miles? How much is packaged and processed? How many meals are meat-centered? Where do you shop? How would you be impacted if food and fuel prices doubled or tripled?
2. Make a plan. Create an ideal food scenario for yourself, including diet, shopping habits, and gardening goals. Then "backcast" a series of time-related goals. Write these prominently on a calendar and attach it to the front of your refrigerator.
3. Garden. Even if you don't have access to a plot of land, you can still grow sprouts in a jar or a few food plants in a window box. Look for opportunities to contribute work to a community garden. Develop your skills by seeking out gardening mentors.
4. Develop relations with local producers. Even if you have a large garden you probably can't grow all the food you eat. Rather than shopping at a supermarket, begin to frequent your local farmers' market, or join a CSA.
5. Become involved in community efforts. Get to know your neighbors and compare gardening experiences with them. Together, form a "tool library" from which members can check out garden tools and gardening books. Organize or participate in planting, harvesting, food-swapping, gleaning, and canning parties.

6. Monitor and adjust. At the end of each month, revisit your plan and revise it if necessary.

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Pleistocene Nonconformity Sequel and Rebirth

This posting is a sequel to my article posted a year ago last July titled Pleistocene Nonconformity. It is submitted for publication on Viewzone who published the original article.
I advise reading the original article first in order to refresh your understanding of the original conjectures.

The UFO Conjecture and Pleistocene Rebirth

This article is an update and sequel to the article named Pleistocene Nonconformity and expands on the consequences of that particular article.

It has become increasingly clear that a body of compelling and conforming evidence has emerged to support the following conjecture:

That fully modern humanity emerged in excess of forty thousand years ago. That humanity had thirty thousand years to fully replicate our present achievement that took us ten thousand years. That they did so.

They inhabited a world locked in a Northern Ice Age that limited his presence to the tropics and the coastal lowlands exposed by a sea level that was three hundred feet lower than today. All other areas were subjected to climate variation an order of magnitude more violent than we now experience and inhabited by hunter gatherers only.

They decided to migrate into space and to induce a crustal shift that effectively ushered in the Holocene and ended the Northern Ice age. This led to the Pleistocene Nonconformity. Appropriate cadres of hunter gathers were put in place to commence the process of terraforming this new world.

They have not interfered with this process, but have chosen to simply observe and to not disturb. Their presence has been noted through thousands of UFO sightings. This age is rather obviously on the verge of ending as we close in on their technical capabilities.

The evidence

What is a UFO?

It is a craft that is designed to operate in a magnetic field and possibly even produce one. Its working skin is a sandwich of single atomic layers that include a semiconductor cooling layer and a high temperature superconductor. We can actually do this in our labs now. Technical finesse will take a lot longer of course. This means that an activated skin sealing off the exterior will exclude the Earth’s magnetic field producing massive lift. Most likely, the larger the craft design is, the stronger the lift as total density drops. With this technology it becomes simple to leave the Earth’s gravity well and perhaps even selectively navigate in the solar system itself.
For my next trick we place a super conducting magnetic ring around the outside edge and use it to produce a directed pinched magnetic bottle steered in the direction desired. It is not that simple but you get the idea.

Therefore leaving the Earth becomes cheap and easy. It we had this technology tomorrow; we could move every human off planet inside a generation. We already know how and it will likely take us only another generation to create a working craft.

What is a Dyson Sphere?

It is a trivial matter to build an effective space habitation once man himself is modestly reengineered to prosper in the necessary environments. Everyone has heard of the Dyson sphere which is perhaps a step too far. The original idea espoused by Freeman Dyson was to create a monster shell that encompassed the sun and used up most of the Solar System with humanity living on the interior of the shell. I suspect that it is not really feasible in the first instance and that a modification to the idea is vastly superior.

We can simply inflate a balloon anchored to the ends of a central axis and spin it up around the axis to create a one gee acceleration at the equator. Cargo vessels can access this shell at an axis end (zero gravity) and material may then be lowered to the equator. A suspended multishell structure can be built from the equator inward, possibly occupying half to a third of the contained volume while maintaining useful gravity throughout. The outer wall can be readily thickened with additional balloon wall material and expansive foams that also bind the skins together forming stress skin panels. A spherical structure with a radius of 2000 feet could house a million individuals all living with ample Earth gravity and personal space. Ample room can exist in the lower gravity areas to develop a living ecology that can also cleanse the air.

The entire system is cable stayed and can be readily built out with very light and strong materials. We can build it today. Thousands could be built in the Asteroid Belt and never be noticed and with an efficient outer surface of nanosolar cells they would be a black as coal.

What is ET?

Of course we are now speculating but the form that has been purportedly observed over and over again is an entity with a larger head and skinny human like body without significant musculature. A pair of unusual eyes is also reported. These can all be explained as a sensible modification for living comfortably in space. A child like body is quite suitable for working in an environment that is often at gravity levels that is much less than one gee. The less muscle mass the less effort required to maintain that muscle mass. It only becomes a disadvantage if one wishes to work hard in full Earth gravity.

The large head is necessary to accommodate the larger demands made on the visual part of the brain by the obviously expanded eyes. These eyes are designed to observe over a much broader range of the spectrum which is surely a clear advantage for an individual living in space and possible working in the space environment directly.

Assuming that the eyes are manufactured and interfaced with the brain, it is then pretty apparent that transitioning from Earth Human to Space Human through a genetic modification most likely could be done in a single generation. That also suggests that the reverse is just as true.

Once the decision to evacuate Earth was made, it was likely accomplished inside a single generation, leaving behind the parents of the space generation or even taking a number with them. One gee gravity existed on the habitats and accommodation was easy.

Reshaping the Earth

It was then time to reshape and terraform the Earth. The first task was to shift the crust thirty degrees south alone a longitude passing through present day Hudson Bay. This event was the principle topic of my article on the Pleistocene Nonconformity.

That this event actually happened is completely evident from a number of facts that are discussed in that article. The weakness in the argument came from determining how it was induced in the first place. I was forced to postulate a relatively high latitude meteor strike as a possible and perhaps the only credible mechanism. The difficulty with that was that unless it was an incredibly lucky hit, life of earth would suffer a mass extinction. I was groping for evidence that must surely exist and would clarify the situation.

Another alternative was to propose that the ice mass had made the crust unstable and that it had moved several times before it got it right. I am not satisfied that there is any evidence to support that position and now think that we are dealing with a carefully directed impact. It is important to understand that the crust must move essentially along the Hudson Bay longitude, in order to end the ice age. This is the only way that the full force of the Gulf Stream can be turned on.

Knowing that, I was forced to look in a very small area for the appropriate impact, and I was looking for something big enough to satisfy my expectation of a random strike. Instead we got a sharp shooter that nailed it with the right weight in the best possible location. This eliminated cosmic luck.

We have now discovered that a meteor impacted just to the west of the then location of the North Pole at a steep angle into the mile thick ice cap in 12900 BCE. The direction was south east and the impact blasted rock into the Ohio valley and large masses of ice into the Carolinas. We have found diamonds that could have reached their locale in no other way.
There is also recent buzz that we may have found the impact crater. This can only be described as a bulls eye that minimized the size of the impact.

The heat from the blast incinerated North America so quickly that a charcoal layer was left behind in the event horizon.

The crust was thus unstuck and begin moving south with perhaps a slight rotational slowing to spread out the final stresses. Braking was perhaps applied as the Indian Subcontinent and South America came off their respective equatorial bulges applying local compressive forces along the center of movement. The compressive stress may have been relieved by fresh mountain building in the Himalayas and the Andes since these were the primary areas of crustal weakness.

Massive tsunamis ravaged the coastal plains worldwide. It is reasonable to project extensive seismic activity as the crustal movement took place over perhaps several days. This would have released a fair bit of volcanic activity besides. The impact itself was remote from the tropics sparing them from the worst of the initial shock wave. However it appears at this time that the large animals out on the plains of Siberia were felled, perhaps by that shock wave or from the passage shock wave of the meteor. We have snippets of evidence that is otherwise impossible but put together create this coherent story.


Once the crust settled down and perhaps after the environment had begun to properly recover, the Earth was settled with a few cadres of hunter gatherers in a number of locales around the globe. Perhaps many such actually rode out the event itself. It seems reasonable though that some groups were also provided with a head start on some useful crops avoiding a long period of chancy empirical development. Further intervention appears also likely if the cultural record is interpreted correctly.

At some point is was all completely self sustaining and clearly running itself and no further intervention was necessary. More recently, intense observation appears to have become necessary generating the spat of sightings over the past sixty years. This appears coincidental with the onslaught of the nuclear age and our early enthusiasm for testing. I have always felt that the whole UFO phenomenon is a scientific sampling program focused on humanity as subjects. We can only speculate as to purpose.

If it is a sampling program and general data collection initiative, then it also make sense and sound practice to have agents embedded within the population. They certainly have all the tools necessary to land a human being on Earth and to support his efforts without us ever knowing. That means that they also tap into the internet and can now gather all the raw data they want.

Thus once you accept the existence of the Pleistocene Nonconformity and recognize that it was impossible unless it was intentional, you are led inexorably to accepting a living involvement with humanity in the here and now. We are also given a great genesis for all the legends and myths that have come down to us.

This also clarifies the mission of humanity. Our task is to terraform the Earth which has become a primary theme of my blog.

Through over a year of daily posting and related investigation, I have uncovered a range of agricultural protocols that will transform the planet into a verdant ecosystem that will support human populations at least an order of magnitude greater than the present. The most transformative is the use of biochar to quickly manufacture soil anywhere inside of a generation. Of equal importance will be the use of standalone atmospheric solar water harvesters to water any patch of earth anywhere. The rest is simple back work and an appreciative mind.

Venus

That then leaves us with the other great cosmic coincidence discussed at length in my article Pleistocene Nonconformity. That was the recent emergence of Venus from Jupiter as witnessed by the persistent red spot.
That it was a recent event is assured by the fact that the atmospheric temperature is still that of cooling magma. The greenhouse explanation is and was convenient only and clearly open to alternatives. The initial difficulty was that it was way too coincidental to believe that over several billions of years that it should just happen on our watch.

Yet it did. And obviously it was helped. Now I do not think that our cosmic engineers had to move a volume or rock the size of Venus. More likely ninety percent was already in place and waiting for the final straw. The temptation to create a sister planet was just too much for space human.
Sensibly they very likely did this about the same time that the crustal shift on Earth was engineered just in case of accidents. That suggests that Venus is almost fifteen thousand years old which I am more comfortable with in view of the long damping program necessary to circularize its orbit.

Essentially we have twin planet waiting for us to terraform. We will need to get out into the Kuiper Belt and nudge a great deal of both water and methane into an intersecting orbit. It should not be a very difficult trick.

The water will penetrate miles into the surface rocks of Venus, speeding the contained heat up to the surface until a balance is reached between boiling point and pressure. The atmosphere will also be saturated as huge amounts of incoming ice is melted and turned to steam. If we are lucky the incoming ice will be sufficient to absorb most of this heat without us having to wait for the surplus to be radiated of into space.

Once the temperature has stabilized it is a simple matter to introduce the necessary lifeforms to bring down the carbon in the carbon dioxide and the methane and to produce oxygen. This planet will surely start almost with a carboniferous age. Once breathing is possible it will be easy for humanity to quickly create working soils and derivative ecosystems. Any given patch of land should be within the ability of one person in a single lifetime.

It is hard to suggest time frames for Venus since we not clear on the time needed to bombard the planet or to cool it down, but I suspect that two lifetimes are ample. I estimate that it would take a lifetime of concentrated effort to finish the job on Earth.

Conclusions
We have integrated the mysterious phenomenon of the UFO into our human reality with this conjectured alternative human history and have resolved a number of unrecognized anomalies. Our eyes are now opened and we can see without been blind. There may be another better conjecture and some day we will have history, but for fifty years we have had neither.

For forty years, I lacked a physically possible explanation for the UFO craft itself. That was resolved for me in the lab work published over the past year. The demonstrations of capability have been made. We only need to energize it and we can do that with a battery in the early going.

ET may be a space faring alien from elsewhere. But then why does he care about us? Besides, I am really uncomfortable in terms of ever achieving a method of producing directed worm holes that can take us across the universe. I think that the equivalent of quantum worm holes will exist allowing the transmission of information. I am simply not so sanguine over anything larger been ever invented.

We are left with the challenge of determining how to actually test the veracity of our hypothesis. The crustal shift idea which got this all going is in many ways the easiest to test and prove out as much as such can because there will be predictable geological anomalies to uncover and delineate. The best evidence will have been destroyed as a result of the three hundred foot rise in the sea level, but we can still expect anomalies perhaps tied to locales in which the ground was up lifted. It was in this manner that the idea of continental drift resolved a massive amount of previously unexplained geology. This will not be as all encompassing but it will still work. Remember that there are huge numbers of geologists with the relevant information in their files that merely need to be recognized. They merely need to start looking.

We still have a lot of work to do before we can replicate the skin of a UFO, but it certainly is well started today, even if the researchers do not understand what they have discovered. Producing a first working prototype will utterly silence the naysayers of the UFO phenomenon and likely convince everyone that this conjecture is possible right.

Then we would like to find evidence of a modern technological age from around 15,000 years ago. This is a different challenge almost certainly made more difficult by the likelihood that our predecessors cleaned up before they left Earth. They needed all the metals and like us soon learned to mine all their waste tips.

Their civilization was based on the coastal plains which were slowly inundated by the sea with the natural result of utterly destroying any evidence. Even the soils were destroyed, so unless it is possible to locate a strata buried by the initial tsunami without wrecking the soil, we are not going to find 15,000 year old terra preta. And if we did it would not be evidence of an advanced civilization.

Since they were setting the stage for a complete rebirth of modern civilization from the ground up, they certainly made sure that real evidence was missing. We are looking instead for randomly lost tools and the like that are discovered just as randomly. We may even have stuff like that whose significance is not understood.
That really leaves only one place in which to look that would support the existence of a modern civilization 15,000 years ago. That is the remnants of large mined out deposits up in the hills. These are tough to find and recognize but it is exactly what our geological folk have been doing for years. And such evidence will be first identified as the nonerosional removal of mineral and perhaps the displacement of waste.

I think that the geologists will enjoy exploring the limits of this conjecture.

IEA admits Developing Oil Collapse

This has just been released a few hours ago and has been expected. This is the IEA’s biennial report and it is now acknowledging that production declines are been felt everywhere and it will take an incredible investment to just maintain current production. My readers already know that.

The hope that massive investment will solve this looming shortfall is whistling in the dark. Outside of the coming THAI /CAPRI revolution, only now slowly developing, there are no alternatives.

The industry is spending full out but they simply have run out of targets and options sufficient to make up the looming production decline (collapse?). After all, you drill in the seas off Kamchatka because you cannot drill one thousand new wells in much better places.

My readers know that Alberta’s tar sands are positioned to fill the demand gap. In fact I saw a newsletter quote a real reserve figure of 2.7 trillion barrels. Half or more of that will be recoverable with THAI/CAPRI. That gives us ample supplies for at least a century.

The point is though that a major industry authority has finally admitted what they knew all along, that replacing cheap oil with expensive oil is incredibly expensive and this makes expensive alternative fuel sources competitive now.

And since alternative energy sources are at least carbon neutral, they will quickly replace the entire oil industry over the next twenty years and leave most of that expensive oil in the ground.

The report continues to use weasel words but they are clearly now into covering their backsides since the supply failure is becoming visible. Their reference to forty years of supply almost lets you believe it is sitting in a tank somewhere. They fail to mention it will take eighty years to extract it all at increasingly higher cost. And it is forty years since all that oil was found and put on stream.

I think my headline makes it a little clearer.

Whenever I get access to this report in whole or in part, I will post useful data.

Energy body warns on oil prices

By Sarah Mukherjee

BBC News

One of the world's leading authorities on energy supply says the era of cheap oil is over and prices could soon be back up to $100 a barrel.

The International Energy Agency (IEA), in its World Energy Outlook for 2008, says prices could soar as high as $200 a barrel by 2030.

The immediate risk to supply, it says, is not one of a lack of global resources.

Instead, it points to a lack of investment where it is needed.

Rising costs

The world, the report's authors conclude, is not running out of oil just yet - indeed, there is enough of it to supply the world for more than 40 years at current rates of consumption.

But, they point out, field by field, declines in oil production are accelerating and more money will be needed in research and development to extract the oil there is.

While world oil supply will rise, the report's authors predict that massive investments in energy infrastructure will be needed - an eye-watering $26 trillion dollars up to 2030.

A significant amount of this money - $8.4 trillion - will need to be spent on oil and gas exploration and development.

In one scenario considered by the IEA, China and India will account for just over half of the increase in world primary energy demand between 2006 and 2030, and much of the increase in world oil demand.

But despite the agency's assessment of oil and gas reserves, the report contains a stark warning of the consequences of continuing to rely on fossil fuels.

The consequences for the global climate of policy inaction when it comes to decarbonising the world economy are "shocking", according to the report.

"Strong, co-ordinated action is needed urgently to curb the growth in greenhouse gas emissions and the resulting rise in global temperatures," it said.

Fuel Pellets

This item surprised me also. It demonstrates that waste fiber can now be converted into fuel pellets conveniently and then transported into the global market. This also demonstrates and validates my original thesis that the primary solution to our ecological problems will entail the cooperation of agriculture and industry.

This is actually great news. It means that farm grade machinery already exists that is capable of pelletizing waste wood and the like. Even if markets do not immediately exist, the ability to clean up woodlots and produce fuel pellets is a vast improvement in terms of handling than any other option.

The pellets can be stored for long periods very easily and reloaded and moved very easily, likely with equipment already in use.

This article brings home the shape of our own future. We see here the strategies that are only been talked about here been actually implemented with real success. This will remove the doubts that delay the necessary regulatory changes. Read it slowly. When he calls it a miracle, it is because a regulatory framework was imagined and implemented successfully. This is economic engineering at its best.

The eastern forestlands continue to be semi managed forests with a poor economic model. Suppose we could produce an annual crop of fuel pellets while we groomed the forest properly. Suppose we got a decent price from industry for those pellets. If a combination of market price and perhaps a subsidy to smooth out local variations were put in place, we could create a feed stock from the Eastern forests alone that is massive and possibly sufficient to satisfy most of our fuel needs.

The real dividend would come from the full development of a rich mature forest ecosystem that could supply the full range of forest products. We can restore and surpass the partly managed woodlands of the original inhabitants.

Since a real market has already been created, we have a pricing mechanism in place to support early work. This is a great gift and can change the whole economics of forest management by the local small owner. My original model woodlot needed some form of long term government partnership in order to create economic stability. This is a very positive development that may still be insufficient but will certainly allow a better partnership with natural feedback and control.

It will be necessary to price coal and wood chips at the same BTU point through regulation to make this work since the coal industry will be always in a position to dump into any market that suits them. It is here that a carbon tax is suddenly attractive, provided it is phased in at ten percent of the final tax rate per year and the revenue is used to support expansion of the fuel pellet industry.

http://www.mlive.com/businessreview/tricities/index.ssf/2008/09/alt_energy_swedens_economic_mi.html
Alt energy: Sweden's economic miracle and why it matters to Michigan

by Chris Schilling

Thursday September 18, 2008, 6:32 AM

Last week, I mentioned that I recently took a Swedish alternative energy tour organized by the U.S. Department of Labor.

I was struck that the Swedish countryside looks so much like central Michigan: green farm fields, windbreak trees in the distance. The farms were generally smaller, and it seemed they all had a windmill or two. I saw field after field of yellow flowering canola, a crop that is shipped to nearby biodiesel refineries. I saw field after field of native grass and salix (a native shrub), crops that make heating fuel pellets or methane biogas (an automotive fuel).

It seemed many people had jobs related to some aspect of farm-based renewable energy.

Is this a glimpse of rural Michigan's future?

For the past decade, high energy prices across the board have spawned remarkable economic growth across Sweden. And it turns out the miracle is spreading across Europe and the Former Soviet Republics.

It's characterized by a strong linkage that is forming among three existing industries: agriculture, forestry, and renewable energy production. Bottom line: these industries are joining forces to create a host of new food production and renewable energy operations large and small. As a rule, the supply chains for these industries are becoming more local. In turn, local jobs are created.

As food and fuel prices continue rising, I believe Michigan will eventually follow suit. We have a big advantage with our talented people and our abundant biomass resources.

How will the workforce change? Based on what I learned in Sweden, I predict farming will no longer be viewed as a smelly, impoverished business. I noticed little difference in the work qualifications of today's Swedish farmer, today's Swedish MBA, and today's Swedish chemical engineer / computer programmer.
The boundaries between these jobs are becoming blurred. And it's spreading across Europe. Since when did farming get sexy?

It happened before the King of Sweden decided to visit Flint to kick off the new biogas plant. Invented by clever Swedish engineers, it makes cheap auto fuel from all manner of biomass, including grass clippings, food waste, and manure. The affordable technology was born out of the same economic miracle described above. It's mimicked after the clean, odorless plants that have been perfected in small and large towns throughout Sweden.

Since when is a sewage treatment machine sexy? It became so when Swedish engineers figured out how to cheaply feed the machine native grass instead of manure, native grass that local farmers grow in big quantities. Did I mention Swedish gasoline filling stations have pumps that sell this locally-made biogas?
It's a symbol of national pride. So is the new generation of computer-savvy auto shop students, who can make any gasoline car switch from gasoline to biogas and back to gasoline again; drivers simply flip a switch on the dashboard. Sweden is bringing us the auto shop of the future.

The King's visit is part of a larger, concerted effort to market on a global basis a tremendous variety of new, renewable energy technologies recently born in Sweden. Car fuel from grass clippings is just one example. Others are slow, powerful, and quiet wind turbines, smart geothermal, cheaper biodiesel, and more.
Again, it's part of the Swedish economic miracle: high energy prices stimulating a strong linkage between the industries of agriculture, forestry, and renewable energy production over the past several years.

Did I mention the miracle is spreading throughout Europe and the Russian Federation? American inventors have some catching up to do.

Let's have a deeper look at one of these new industries coming our way: pellet fuel that burns cleanly in furnaces large and small, pellets made from biomass wastes such as grass clippings or sawdust. Last week I mentioned that this industry is growing rapidly across Europe. However, it now faces a big problem: in many locations, demand is outstripping the supply of locally available biomass. Sales of furnaces that consume this biomass are rapidly increasing. Across Europe, many new companies, small and large, are making these furnaces.

It turns out Canada is exporting massive quantities of pellet fuel to meet the fuel supply challenge in Europe. The Wood Pellet Association of Canada reports that, in 2006, Canada exported over 600,000 tons of wood pellets to Europe, eighty percent of which was shipped from the Canadian west coast. It is remarkable this business is profitable, given the rising cost of diesel fuel needed to ship this material from Vancouver through the Panama Canal to northern Europe. I would think a shorter trip from Saginaw might make more sense.

At its core, this Canadian industry utilizes a fleet of massive, ocean-going ships that are originally designed to haul grain. This industry uses much of the same infrastructure already in place for international grain markets: truck- and rail-transport equipment, ocean tanker terminals, and so on.

The rapid growth of this export industry is covered in a report by B. Verkerk, M. Junginber, and A. Faaij of Utrecht University; and E. Ackom and P. McFarlane of the University of British Columbia. Their report, "Current and Future Trade Opportunities for Woody Biomass End-Products From British Columbia, Canada," was presented at the 2008 World Bioenergy Conference that I attended in Sweden.

The authors report that sawmill residues are mainly used as feedstocks for pellet fuel in British Columbia. However, the availability of this material is becoming limited. As in many countries, the forest products industry is becoming more efficient, making less waste from wood cutting, and incorporating more residues into fiberboard. As a result, more and more Canadian companies are investigating alternative feedstocks to satisfy the European pellet fuel market. Prime candidates are native grasses and roadside trimmings of grass, shrubs, and trees.

The authors claim British Columbian pellet fuel production could cover a whopping 67 percent of the European Union's anticipated imported pellet demand (60.9 gigajoules) by the year 2020. However, cost reductions throughout the supply chain and increases in market prices are needed to expand trade. I think it is safe to conclude that market prices will increase as long as oil prices and shipping costs continue to rise.

It seems to me, Michigan can benefit from this growing industry. We have plenty of wood waste, plenty of roadside trimmings, and we can grow native grasses. We have deep water ports closer to Europe than Vancouver. Our shipping costs will be more competitive.

Make no mistake. I'm not talking about clear-cutting Michigan. And I'm not talking about reckless crop cultivation that destroys land. I can point you to an abundance of scientific literature that teaches best practices in grass and tree cultivation, best practices that prevent erosion, preserve wildlife, and conserve soil fertility for future generations. It is exactly these best practices that are producing a miracle of economic growth throughout many rural areas of Europe.

It will be essential that local schools and colleges teach these best practices; weed science is a hot college degree these days.

And just as in Sweden, we'll need regulatory agencies to protect against reckless land use as this new industry unfolds.
For more information on this exciting industry, have a look at the Wood Pellet Association of Canada, the Swedish Bioenergy Association, the (US) Pellet Fuels Institute (www.pelletheat.org), and the magazine, Bioenergy International.

China sends Global Warming Ransom Note

This is a timely article on the likelihood of international agreements similar to the Kyoto accord. I never thought that accord was ever worth the paper it was written on. Particularly since India and China begged off because of poverty and the USA refused to have anything to do with it. Of course the Europeans found a marvelous way to game it all while looking serious. And Canada said yes and our then liberal government promptly forgot about it all, leaving it to their successors to take the heat for telling the truth.

The joke was on everyone who believed any of it.

Of course with the global chilling possibly about to set in with a vengeance, it is wise to drag our feet for another couple of years. Someone needs to tell Obama that this is a great time to promote the excuse that he needs to concentrate on saving the global economy first for the next two years.

There is a real need to create global initiatives that contribute to the successful terraforming of the planet. Suspending development in order to prevent a third of the population from rising out of total poverty is not a good idea. Expanding their participation in the globe’s economic life is a good idea and can be a powerful global initiative.

That can be in the form of guarantees supporting micro credit everywhere. The infrastructure and expertise is growing naturally and making it a global undertaking would be a wonderful confirmation.

Adding the remaining third of the global population to the world of consumption will supercharge global growth for the next two generations.

China Sends Global Warming Ransom Note

November 2, 2008
by Dennis T. Avery

China has now destroyed Western hopes for a new global warming agreement, just weeks before global talks in Poland aimed at writing a successor for the Kyoto Protocol- which expires in 2012. China has attached a ransom note to its Polish meeting RSVP: They might go along with a new warming pact if the rich countries agree to hand over 1 percent of their GDP-about $300 billion per year-to finance the required non-fossil, higher-cost energy systems the West wants the developing countries to use.

Bad timing: The U.S. and Europe are trying to bail their financial systems out of Barney Frank's Fanny Mae/Freddy Mac sub-prime mortgage adventure. "
Climate change policies need a lot of money to be invested. However, developed countries have not made any substantive promises about how much they are going to spend on this," said Gua Guangsheng, head of China's Climate Change Office on Oct. 28. "And they did not fulfill some of the promises they made in the past very well either."

China, India, Brazil, and
Mexico had already demanded-in July- that the developed countries cut their own emissions

by 80-95 percent by 2050. Very unlikely. The EU has loudly boasted of trying to set an 80-percent cut in its emissions, but that now looks impossible. Italy, Poland, Hungary, and Greece are part of a "blocking force" saying says they can't afford to give up coal and oil during a financial crisis. Especially when the only alternative is imported Russian gas; Russia recently "invaded" Georgia, many think to stop Georgian efforts to build a gas pipeline that would have competed with Russia's.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who helped create the Kyoto Protocol, now says that drastic cuts in CO2 emissions are "ill-advised climate policy." She's building 26 brown-coal power plants instead, and re-thinking the German promise to scuttle its nuclear power plants.

Don't spend much of your "worry time" on a new climate treaty however. Global temperatures are doing their best to tell us that CO2 isn't very important after all.

Global thermometers stubbornly refused to rise after 1998, and have plummeted in the past two years by more than 0.5 degree C. The world is now colder than in 1940, when the Post-WWOII Industrial Revolution started spewing lots of man-made CO2 in the first place. On October 29, the U.S. beat or tied 115 low-temperature records for the date.


Alaska, which was unusually warm last year, recorded 25 degrees below zero Fahrenheit that night-beating the previous low by 4 degrees F.

London had snow in October for the first time in more than 70 years.

The 2007-08 temperature drop wasn't predicted by the global climate models, but it had been predicted by the sunspots since 2000. Both the absent sunspots and the Pacific Decadal Oscillation now predict a 25-30-year global cooling. After that, the remaining enthusiasm for global warming agreements will presumably have vanished-without any big payoff to the Chinese government.

Meanwhile, India is about to rescue our Appalachian coal industry. India is already importing 50 million tons of coal per year, and sees our high-sulfur eastern coal as an under-priced energy resource. While New
York and Philadelphia import low-sulfur coal from Wyoming's Powder River Basin, India wants to buy not just Appalachia's coal but the mines that produce it. They note, "It's a buyer's market."

Tuesday, November 11, 2008

Morgan Solar Technology

This story in the Toronto star is of some interest. I do not think that this approach will supersede the emerging use of printed solar cells that are already selling at $1.00 per watt capacity. Also, the road to technical improvement is broad and open and will soon include sculpted nanoscaled surfaces that are able to tap a much wider spectrum than any tackled to date.

However, this surely reduces the amount of expensive silica based cells with cheaper light guides. Whether it can bring the cost per watt down below $1.00 is a question that remains to be answered. It also seems that gains produced by component reduction will be offset by cooling equipment costs.

It is good however, to see the focus on lowering the cost per installed watt. Everyone can see the impact on the windmill business and how rapidly it will grow the moment it makes economic sense. The promise of Nanosolar is simply that they can deliver the power equivalent of one nuclear plant per year with one production tool at that opening charge of $1.00 per watt and are doing it now at a positive cash flow now.

And Nanosolar may be getting ahead of themselves, although I see no sign of that whatever.



A new solar-cell system could one day make power from the sun as cheap as electricity from fossil fuels

Nov 10, 2008 04:30 AM

Tyler Hamilton

ENERGY REPORTER

John Paul Morgan was a cutting-edge engineer at JDS Uniphase Corp., back when the optical telecom giant was a market titan and solar power was still perceived by many as a backwoods technology for off-grid tree huggers.

Seven years later, the high-tech whiz kid has become a solar hotshot. Morgan has developed a new type of solar panel that, like many other systems on the market, concentrates the sun's rays on to high-efficiency solar cells. The big difference is the simplicity of his design and the lower-cost materials used to build it could soon make power from the sun as affordable as electricity from fossil fuels.

All he has to do now is prove it. "We have to show this technology is bankable," he says.

Morgan's path from telecom to solar panels wasn't a straight line. A graduate of engineering science from the University of Toronto, he joined JDS in 2001 while in his mid-20s. Within three days at JDS he impressed higher-ups with his first invention and within three months broke the company record for most inventions in a year.

But the telecom market crashed and Morgan grew bored. As his older brother, Nicolas Morgan, explains, "developing products to make the Internet faster didn't inspire him." He quit JDS in 2003, and travelled a year through South America, Australia and Asia before heading back to UofT to get his graduate degree in electrical and biomedical engineering.

Following through on a lifelong goal, Jean Paul then went to the Democratic Republic of the Congo where he handled logistics and construction projects for Doctors Without Borders. To him, the work was loaded with meaning, and while he returned a year later, he spoke of going back to continue with the cause.

That's when his father, Eric Morgan, stepped in. He talked his son out of going back, arguing that if he really wanted to help people he had an obligation to use his smarts to solve bigger problems.

Jean Paul stepped up to the challenge. While working as a research associate at the Catholic University of Chile (where his family has roots), he decided that the best place to focus on was energy.

"I came to realize electricity was a fundamental human right and if you don't have electricity you're living in the dark ages," he recounts. "I decided there to devote my life to the problem of developing inexpensive, ubiquitous electricity. Solar was the obvious choice."

At first, Jean Paul looked for solar companies he might like to work for, but after researching the market he quickly found there was a technology gap that needed to be filled. Most of the solar-system designs that appealed to him were clumsy and complicated. He decided his goal should be to come up with a novel design that eliminates that complexity.

So began another adventure. Within just a few months an invention emerged, several patents were filed, and by June 2007 Morgan Solar Inc. was founded. Jean Paul, who turns 30 in December, now has six employees working out of a nondescript office near Richmond St. and Bathurst St., and his company has a prototype that was displayed for the first time last month at an international solar conference in San Diego.

As more people see it, "we know we're going to blow people out of the water," says brother Nicolas, who heads up the company's business development. Their father, a senior executive at managing consulting firm Capgemini, has thrown in some angel capital and provides guidance as chair.

It's not that Morgan Solar is alone in its mission. The biggest expense today in manufacturing a solar panel is the materials, usually silicon, that make up the solar cells within. Researchers are racing to discover and commercialize methods to reduce that cost.

Some companies have developed ways to make solar cells using high volume roll-to-roll processes. This is similar in many ways to how we print newspapers or paper currency, and companies such as First Solar, Nanosolar, Konarka and OptiSolar – all U.S. companies, by the way – are leading the pack.

Thin-film solar cells use less material but are generally less efficient than traditional cells. This shortfall, however, is supposed to be offset by their lower cost of production. In other words, low-cost volume makes up for the loss of high-cost efficiency.

At the other end of the spectrum are companies trying to dramatically improve the efficiency of solar cells, such as Ottawa-based Cyrium Technologies Inc., which uses a number of exotic materials in addition to silicon to make multi-layered solar cells that can absorb more energy-rich light. Spectrolab and Emcore are two U.S. companies leading this side of the market, but their product is pricey.

Morgan Solar is attempting to build a bridge between low cost and high efficiency by concentrating an immense amount of solar energy on to a tiny thumbnail space lined with a superefficient cell from a Cyrium, Emcore or Spectrolab.

The idea is that such a small fraction of the costly solar cell is needed and so much of the sun's energy is focused on it, that material costs can be kept to a minimum and efficiency can be increased.

It's an approach dubbed "concentrating photovoltaics," or CSP, and a number of companies are in the race, among them U.S. ventures GreenVolts, Energy Innovations, and SolFocus, as well as Ottawa-based Menova Energy.

Some, like SolFocus, use mirrors to focus the light on a solar cell as if 500 suns are shining down. Others claim the same goals by using specially designed lenses or prisms that concentrate the light like a magnifying glass on the cell.
It's a tricky thing to do. The target, often a tiny little chip no larger than a square centimetre, must be hit with pinpoint precision. Structures must be able to handle strong wind and special tracking systems are needed to make sure the sun is always shining directly. Being off by a few millimetres isn't good enough.
Also, the heat that results from focusing 500 suns, and up to 2,000 suns for some technologies, requires some creative cooling to keep the cells from melting.

Morgan Solar has come up with a completely different approach that relies on what it calls a light-guided solar optic. Basically, pieces of acrylic or glass are designed to capture sunlight as it hits a triangular surface less than a centimetre thick. Once inside the material, the sunlight is trapped and corralled through a bottom layer to one corner, where a tiny sliver of solar cell is positioned to absorb the barrage of concentrated light.

The triangles are packaged together to form a square about the size of a Compact Disc case and dozens of these squares make up a single panel.

"It's bloody amazing," says William Masek, president and chief technology officer of Brockville-based Upper Canada Solar Generation Ltd., which has plans to build 50 megawatts of solar farms in Ontario. In the next few weeks he will begin field-testing Morgan Solar's prototypes. "They probably have the most breakthrough solar technology announced in a long time."

Masek says the cost savings for him could be enormous if the technology, as claimed, can affordably convert more of the sun's energy to electricity per square metre than conventional solar panels. "With traditional solar panels we'll need over a thousand acres of property. But if we switch to their system, we can cut that land requirement in half and also substantially cut our costs," he says.

The materials that make up the panels are nothing fancy or expensive, Nicolas Morgan says during an interview at the company's office. The solar panels are flatter than the competition, lighter, cheaper to build and can concentrate the light at up to 1,500. "This is completely new. Nobody has done it this way," he says.

Now comes the tough part – turning it all into a commercial product without falling into the valley of death, that point in the life of a technology start-up where the difficulty of finding funding ends up starving promising companies.

Morgan Solar's office shows that the company is prepared to operate lean, making the most of the $600,000 is has raised so far from Eric Morgan and a grant from the Ontario Centres of Excellence. In one presentation room an old wooden door found in a nearby alley is being used as a conference table. On the wall, plastic shower lining purchased at Home Depot functions as a makeshift whiteboard for brainstorming sessions.

Nicolas says the company is talking to venture capitalists but doesn't plan to raise private equity until its prototype has been proven to work. This will depend on the results of several demonstration projects, including two in Spain and one at the Earth Rangers Centre in Woodbridge. Commercial production of the product, dubbed Sun Simba, is targeted for 2010.

Jean Paul realizes tremendous work lies ahead, but his goal of developing cheap solar power for the developing world keeps him focused and driven.

"It's what motivates me to work 14 hours a day every day, and I don't get tired, because I know this work is important," he says.

Scott Strobel finds Rainforest Fungus Converting Celluose to Diesel

This piece is amazing and unexpected and certainly worth following up with. Of course it will take decades to really see the light of day in practical applications but we at least know it is possible and other protocols are out there just as promising.

At least it is an interesting bit of unusual science that could well add to our growing biological palette. Enjoy the article.

Rainforest Fungus Makes Diesel Compounds From Cellulose

BOZEMAN, Montana
, November 4, 2008 (ENS) - A unique fungus that makes diesel compounds directly from cellulose has been discovered living in trees in the Patagonian rainforest.

"These are the first organisms that have been found that make many of the ingredients of diesel," said Professor Gary Strobel from Montana State University. "This is a major discovery."

The discovery may offer an alternative to fossil fuels, said Strobel, MSU professor of plant sciences and plant pathology, who travels the world looking for exotic plants that may contain beneficial microbes. The find is even bigger, he said, than his 1993 discovery of fungus that contained the anticancer drug taxol.

Strobel's paper, published in the November issue of the journal "Microbiology," is based on his discovery of the unique properties of the Patagonian fungus, called Gliocladium roseum.

"Gliocladium roseum lives inside the Ulmo tree in the Patagonian rainforest," Strobel begins, telling the story of how he and his team learned that they had found an entirely new source of fuel.

"We were trying to discover totally novel fungi in this tree by exposing its tissues to the volatile antibiotics of the fungus Muscodor albus," Strobel recounts. "Quite unexpectedly, G. roseum grew in the presence of these gases when almost all other fungi were killed. It was also making volatile antibiotics."

"Then when we examined the gas composition of G. roseum, we were totally surprised to learn that it was making a plethora of hydrocarbons and hydrocarbon derivatives. The results were totally unexpected and very exciting and almost every hair on my arms stood on end!"

Strobel calls the fuel produced by the fungus "myco-diesel," from the Greek-derived root word for the study of fungi - mycology.

"This is the only organism that has ever been shown to produce such an important combination of fuel substances," said Strobel. "The fungus can even make these diesel compounds from cellulose, which would make it a better source of biofuel than anything we use at the moment."

Intense research into ways of making ethanol fuel directly from cellulose now is taking place in public, private and university labs, and several companies are producing demonstration scale cellulosic ethanol from wood waste, from municipal solid waste and from agricultural residue.

Nearly 430 million tons of plant waste are produced from U.S. farmland alone every year, material that scientists are learning to convert to biofuel.

In current biofuel production, this waste is treated with enzymes called cellulases that turn the cellulose into sugar. Microbes then ferment the sugar into ethanol that can be used as a fuel.

"We were very excited to discover that G. roseum can digest cellulose," Strobel said. "Although the fungus makes less myco-diesel when it feeds on cellulose compared to sugars, new developments in fermentation technology and genetic manipulation could help improve the yield."

"When crops are used to make biofuel they have to be processed before they can be turned into useful compounds by microbes," said Strobel. "G. roseum can make myco-diesel directly from cellulose, the main compound found in plants and paper."

In the rainforest, G. roseum produces lots of long chain hydrocarbons and other biological molecules. When the researchers grew it in the lab, it produced fuel that is even more similar to the diesel we put in our cars.

The majority of hydrocarbons found naturally occur in crude oil, where decomposed organic matter provides carbon and hydrogen. When bonded, these elements can form seemingly limitless chains of molecules.

Professor Strobel, who travels the world looking for exotic plants that may contain beneficial microbes, says his discovery brings into question our knowledge of the way fossil fuels are made.

The accepted theory is that crude oil, which is used to make diesel, is formed from the remains of dead plants and animals that have been exposed to heat and pressure for millions of years.

Strobel speculates, "If fungi like this are producing myco-diesel all over the rainforest, they may have contributed to the formation of fossil fuels."

Strobel is the lead author of the paper published in "Microbiology." His MSU co-authors are Berk Knighton and Tom Livinghouse in the Department of Chemistry/Biochemistry, and Katreena Kluck and Yuhao Ren in the Department of Plant Sciences and Plant Pathology.

Other co-authors are Meghan Griffin and Daniel Spakowicz from Yale University and Joe Sears from the Center for Lab Services in Pasco, Washington.

Researchers in government agencies and private industry have already shown interest in the fungi. A team to conduct further research has been established between MSU's College of Engineering and researchers at Yale University.

One member of the team is Strobel's son, Scott, who is chairman of molecular biophysics and biochemistry at Yale and a Howard Hughes Medical Institute Professor. The MSU-Yale team will investigate a variety of questions, including the genetic makeup of Gliocladium roseum.

Scott Strobel said his team is already screening the fungus' genome. Besides determining the complete genetic makeup of the fungus, they will run a series of genetic and biochemical tests to identify the genes responsible for its diesel-making properties.

"The broader question is, what is responsible for the production of these compounds," Scott Strobel said. "If you can identify that, you can hopefully scale it up so you end up with better efficiency of production."

Scientists in a variety of disciplines may be able to combine their talents to optimize production and find a way to turn what is essentially a vapor into a burnable, liquid fuel.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Ghost of Herbert Hoover


There is a lot of froth about president elect Barack Obama facing the conditions faced by Roosevelt in 1932. It is time to restore the precepts of the New Deal and have a new ‘New Deal’ or so they say.

In fact the conditions faced today are those faced by Herbert Hoover in the winter of 1930 and his actions it is agreed stopped nothing and led to an exhausted economic bottom in 1932 when Roosevelt took over.

The Global money supply in the form of US credit instruments has collapsed. Trillions have simply disappeared. Every creditor is now looking for a new lender to replace the deal that just collapsed. And the underwriting method of reselling has blown up in everyone’s face because every new deal has an underwriter hole to fill.

A couple of trillion has been printed to stabilize the Global banking system. This has not been inflationary for the simple reason that it is merely replacing money invested in loans and lost over the past several years. When the banks cannot get their money back from the borrowers then the government must step in and fill the gap. And recall that it was government policy and serious regulatory blindness that was the cause of this train wreck.

Today we hear that the Chinese government is putting nearly a trillion of their reserves into their economy. This is very good news because they have just been handed a pause in their economic development in which they can monetize and grow the internal economy. If the world does not need Chinese goods for a year or two, then the Chinese certainly do.

This is a great time to introduce a proper pension system that reflects the cost of living and to establish western style social nets to stabilize the labor market. They have a good chance to come through this with a stronger and better regulated economy. The same holds true for India.

That leaves us with the huge consumption economies of the West. Wrong decisions now can accelerate this collapse and could easily wipe out half of the Globe’s purchasing power. We have already lost a lot and we could double that loss if the example of Herbert Hoover is followed. The problem is that the next round of losses will be borne by industry and their dependent workers.

We are now seeing how big a problem we have with the entire US auto industry looking for help. After all, they are in the finance business.

After they are patched up, it will be the turn of the workers who are also going to get hit very hard. Sorry folks, but we can expect unemployment numbers to hit two million over the next few months.

Right now the rush is on to keep the economies turning over. Once that is stabilized, and the banking system has discovered exactly where they stand in about another nine months, we can expect credit to begin increasing. That will allow the economy to start a slow rebuild back to good health over the next five years.

Increased taxes will make it worse. Protection will be disastrous. The best policy is to lend low cost money to the economic engines were needed because the banks cannot do so for a while. And otherwise stimulate social programs and perhaps reorganize the medical system which is the countries biggest single business problem.

To put this in perspective: Canada uses ten percent of its GNP to deliver satisfactory health care to the entire population. And if you have money it is possible to queue jump but is obviously not admitted.

The USA uses 15% of its GNP to supply health care to two thirds of its population while abandoning the other third at great economic cost in terms of lost tax revenue.

The point that I am making is that even a worse system than created by Canada is likely going to save the US GNP a third of their health budget and increase life expectancy. And it will not stop the rich from paying for special treatment.

The bulk of that extra healthcare money has and is been siphoned of by the financial gamers who brought you sub prime mortgages and securitization. I have understood for sometime that the systemic corruption is built into the system and have never yelled. Considering the disaster Wall Street delivered, it is time to confront the health care industry.

I do not think that the economy can be turned around before the fall, but then it could be recovering very quickly once consumers find that they will be surviving and their confidence returns. If you have cash invest wisely because we are entering one of the get wealth creation eras of human history.

In a way, the energy market vacuumed out global liquidity and now that the pricing has fallen back and governments have topped up the reserves of the banking industry, we can restore credit in general. All the high risk loans have been drained out of the system providing a much less vulnerable banking system. A wave of massive investment in energy resources is now fully underway and will hopefully restructure the industry. Expect LNG conversion to be a priority since it has already been implemented by Schwarzenegger in California.

Massive investment in energy will stimulate the US economy and lead us out of this rat hole.

So forget about the New Deal for a while even though there is plenty to do. The merchants of financial excess are all dead and will not be back for a long time. The US economy is shifting direction and it is best to nudge it in the optimal direction.

Bill Drake on Tobacco as Ethanol Feedsock

Bill Drake posted this recently and he has assembled a detailed report on his website at:

The quoted figures apply to a tightly seeded field without any rows for picking access. The huge tonnages appear to be a result of multiple harvesting with rapid intervening growth.

This produced tonnage likely surpasses that of potential hemp volume and is surely more amenable to later processing.

The sugar and starch content is surprising. What we have is a crop that can produce ethanol easily, be refined for protein and whose cellulose byproduct will be easy to use for additional processing because of the low lignin content. We have already identified cattails for wetland exploitation and now we have tobacco as a crop resource on marginal croplands in particular.
We have already commented on the viability of hemp.

Both these plants suffer from been politically incorrect and proper research and recognition has been hampered accordingly. This will be over come, but it will take time and will lack enthusiastic support for some time.

We only have to look at the strides been made by biochar into media consciousness over the past year and a half since I began talking about it. It is now popping up in strange but very normal places as accepted knowledge.
This had a lot to do with the recent article in National Geographic.

No one s pushing the use of tobacco yet while there is a small effort on promoting hemp.

Corn remains the best biomass producer for pure biochar production, simply because of mass and separate starch production which pays for it. Hemp has value for the fiber, but that negates any value as a biochar source. Tobacco has the same problem and producing a crop purely for biochar is unlikely to ever be popular.

Producing tobacco as a source of feedstock for ethanol production appears to be very competitive. The lack of lignin will make even the cellulose fraction more easily available as an ethanol feedstock.

This is leading to a need to produce ethanol production hardware for operating farm. This will be in the form of digesters and tankage and separation gear scaled to handle the tonnages. One hundred and fifty wet tons per acre from a hundred acres turns into a weekly throughput of three hundred tons. That is a lot of material and storage to accommodate. A small operation could work around twenty acres easily and scale their operation on sixty tons per week.

It is important to do the first stage of production on the farm and sell either brew at the farm gate or an upgraded liquor using membranes if possible. It could even be collected through a pipeline and concentrated at a large processing plant for final finishing.

Posted on: October 5th, 2008 by biomasstobacco

Would you be interested in knowing about a previously uninvestigated biomass energy resource with extraordinary potential well beyond any plant currently being investigated?

I do understand that the claim of a major crop plant that has never been investigated for its bioenergy potential doesn’t make much sense, but after reading my web page, please search the ORNL database or any other bioenergy database you like – you will find not a mention of this incredibly high potential resource.

For your information, this unknown bioenergy resource is ordinary tobacco, grown as biomass. Tobacco grown for biomass is completely different than tobacco grown for consumption, and while biomass tobacco has never been investigated for its energy potential, other than my own work, it may turn out to be the cost-effective, unsubsidized biomass resource that the industry has been seeking for so long.

Here are just a few of the relevant characteristics of this potential biomass game-changer:

1. Because of its vigorous coppicing behavior, multiple harvests of tobacco for biomass per season mean that producers can expect a seasonal biomass yield of between 100-300 Metric Tons/Acre of (150-180 MT/Acre has already been demonstrated in trials at North Carolina State University).

2. The dry weight yield of this tobacco biomass will be 10-20 tons per 100 tons green weight

3. Of this dry weight, approximately 20% will be sugars, or approximately 2-4 tons of sugars per 100 tons of green weight.

4. Another 10% or so will be starches, or about 1-2 tons of starch per 100 tons green weight.

5. About 20% of the dry weight will be mixed proteins, which break down into what is called Fraction 1 and Fraction 2 protein, or between 2-4 tons of pure protein per 100 tons of fresh, green weight. These are HUMAN FOOD-GRADE proteins, and can be recovered after energy is produced from the biomass.

7. Also, since tobacco is about 40% cellulose, dry weight equivalent, 100 tons green weight will yield between 4 & 8 tons of very low lignin, easily fermented or digested cellulose.

8. Finally, this biomass crop can be grown on marginal land unsuitable for food crops, and has a wider geographic range than either corn or sugar cane.

If you would like to read complete details on my proposal to utilize this previously uninvestigated bioresource please visit my non-commercial web page

Best wishes – Bill Drake

Terra Castings

This was posted on the terra preta forum recently and I have lost the attribution. What is interesting is the observation of orchard health and a remaining layer of leaf mould.

Anyway, we are reminded of the power of the earth worm in processing and making soil. Integrating that with biochar becomes common sense.

We already know that it takes at least a full growing season for the benefits of biochar to be fully established. We may now know how to deliberately speed it up.

An earthworm with a diameter of an eighth of an inch travelling an inch an hour (I am guessing here) can process a cubic inch in about sixty four hours. That suggests that a single worm can process most of a cubic foot in a year. It is also a good bet that the earthworm heads for soil that has not been disturbed recently in order to work fresh ground.

Put in that perspective, the earthworm is actually our most important single tool for processing soil and should be actively encouraged.

Terra Castings?

I have recently learned of the use of chitin in worm composting to select for fungi that decompose chitin (insects exoskeletons). Crab or lobster shell can be used, or the shells left behind by mantis, cicadas and locusts.

Though the process is patented, there is no law stopping me from doing this at home.This greatly intensified my interest in worms! Killing larval stages of fungus gnats and root aphids with worm castings!

So I'm thinking about worms, and the use of them for fighting disease and it occurs to me the healthiest orchards I've been in left the leaf litter on the ground. Worm food, complete with any and all problems the leaves may have incurred the previous season.

I'm also looking at bio-remediation, utilising bacteria and fungal symbionts to accelerate the 'organic properties' of badly abused land. This I believe can be enhanced by char amendment, and if the char addition contains the symbiotic bacteria fungi etc needed for enhancing soil biology, it could make it a one step process.

So out comes the mortar and pestle, and some nice char which is pine hardwood and avocado pits gets ground to dust and added as carbon for the worm farm.

Results will have to wait, and it's just me in my yard.

But others could try this. I imagine it will only take a small amount of these castings to make big changes to soil structure.

Of course, the castings need to be good. That is, displaying the range and speciation desired for soil restoration. Bacteria, fungi, protozoa, nematodes. These castings can be tilled in or spread, and also used in compost teas to 'breed' multitudes of micro-herd in a short space of time for soil and foliar application.
With worm castings said to retain 10 times the nutrition of compost it makes sense to me to process char in worm farms and then apply it.

My hope is that this will alleviate the nutrient drain seen in some soils as the char will be 'full'. Also, the setting up of correct biology for organic systems. Terra Preta does not require fertiliser, mulching and compost should be all that is required, recycling the lands wastes, very minimal addition. Soils that don't require inorganic fertiliser have a complete soil food web.

So, instead of loading the char with fertiliser, inorganic or organic, I'll load it with a microherd full of chelated ready to go organic nutrients.

Can also merely change the worms diet to alter nutrient profile of the castings.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Sunspot Cycle 24 Kicks In

This just in from the NASA feed and it is important. We have been waiting for the next solar sunspot cycle to stick its head up for a long time and it just did. The long delay will still give sunspot fans plenty to play with for a while yet , but at least we are no longer speculating on why they are not to be found.

The problem we have with sunspot theory is that the era of the Little Ice Age is coincident with an apparent lack of sunspots. And the problem with that is that the observation of sunspots was then in its infancy and we are not sure just how accurate they in fact were. Out of that and a few hints from the Dalton minimum we have woven a skein of theory.

The fact remains that the forty year cycle does coincide with an observed forty year hurricane cycle and a forty year shift of heat into the Northern Hemisphere which has just been turned off a few months past and not with the eleven year cycles of the sunspots. The apparent driver that is big enough to shift heat back and forth is the Pacific Decadal Oscillation and it also just shut down.

The heat masses are large enough to qualify for the observed impact in the Arctic.

The short term evidence is now pointing to a full return of colder winters in the Northern Hemisphere. That means that I need to buy proper winter foot ware for the first time in twenty five years in Vancouver.

What this is doing, particularly if it all stands up over the next couple of years, is establishing a forty year cycle that peaks with the conditions experienced in 2007 and then switches back to cool for forty years or so.

Simply put we have a natural cycle that we can isolate from our long term data that appears to a simple atmospheric response not unlike El Nino and unlinked to sunspots and cosmic rays and CO2 speculation.

Its range is about one degree and does not explain the unusual events such as the Little Ice Age and the Medieval Maximum.

As I have posted earlier, the Little Ice Age fits the profile of a Alaskan Volcano that spewed huge amounts of gas and ash into the Arctic during an era that did not give us access to the right locales. I would guess that we had a string of volcanoes letting loose over a twenty year span which is completely believable for that locale. We are actually in a quiet era and it is still going bang every couple of years.

So what about the Medieval Maximum or for that matter the Roman Maximum? Both lasted for hundreds of years. My surmise is that this cool period is actually going to sit at or above the average for the past forty years. I still think that the long term trend is toward those higher temperatures and will only be interrupted by those volcanoes in Alaska.

The Sun Shows Signs of Life

10.07.2008

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/07nov_signsoflife.htm?list1109684


Nov. 7, 2008: After two-plus years of few sunspots, even fewer solar flares, and a generally eerie calm, the sun is finally showing signs of life.

"I think solar minimum is behind us," says sunspot forecaster David Hathaway of the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center.

His statement is prompted by an October flurry of sunspots. "Last month we counted five sunspot groups," he says. That may not sound like much, but in a year with record-low numbers of sunspots and long stretches of utter spotlessness, five is significant. "This represents a real increase in solar activity."

Above: New-cycle sunspot group 1007 emerges on Halloween and marches across the face of the sun over a four-day period in early November 2008. Credit: the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO).

Even more significant is the fact that four of the five sunspot groups belonged to Solar Cycle 24, the long-awaited next installment of the sun's 11-year solar cycle. "October was the first time we've seen sunspots from new Solar Cycle 24 outnumbering spots from old Solar Cycle 23. It's a good sign that the new cycle is taking off."

Old Solar Cycle 23 peaked in 2000 and has since decayed to low levels. Meanwhile, new Solar Cycle 24 has struggled to get started. 2008 is a year of overlap with both cycles weakly active at the same time. From January to September, the sun produced a total of 22 sunspot groups; 82% of them belonged to old Cycle 23. October added five more; but this time 80% belonged to Cycle 24. The tables have turned.

At first glance, old- and new-cycle sunspots look the same, but they are not. To tell the difference, solar physicists check two things: a sunspot's heliographic latitude and its magnetic polarity. (1) New-cycle sunspots always appear at high latitude, while old-cycle spots cluster around the sun's equator. (2) The magnetic polarity of new-cycle spots is reversed compared to old-cycle spots. Four of October's five sunspot groups satisfied these two criteria for membership in Solar Cycle 24.

The biggest of the new-cycle spots emerged at the end of the month on Halloween. Numbered 1007, or "double-oh seven" for short, the sunspot had two dark cores each wider than Earth connected by active magnetic filaments thousands of kilometers long. Amateur astronomer Alan Friedman took this picture from his backyard observatory in Buffalo, New York:

On Nov. 3rd and again on Nov. 4th, double-oh seven unleashed a series of B-class solar flares. Although B-flares are considered minor, the explosions made themselves felt on Earth. X-rays bathed the dayside of our planet and sent waves of ionization rippling through the atmosphere over Europe. Hams monitoring VLF radio beacons noticed strange "fades" and "surges" caused by the sudden ionospheric disturbances.

Hathaway tamps down the excitement: "We're still years away from solar maximum and, in the meantime, the sun is going to have some more quiet stretches." Even with its flurry of sunspots, the October sun was mostly blank, with zero sunspots on 20 of the month's 31 days.

But it's a start. Stay tuned for solar activity.