Monday, January 14, 2013

End of Hard Contact Sports inevitable


 We are looking at a radical transformation in sports. Most certainly, football as we know it will disappear one way or the other, the other been a monster class action suite by the victims and the victim's families targeting both the NFL and the schools. All the rules regarding contact sports will need to be revisited and reset.

Boxing will have to operate without head shots. Will it still be boxing?

First let me make the case for the science so it is abundantly clear. If you receive one concussion capable of producing micro tears in the brain you have a problem that will take months to recover from. The good news is that it is plausible to often achieve full recovery. The bad news is that it will take a long time and we are not good yet at establishing recovery and mental stability.

The really bad news is that a concussion overlaid over an unhealed first concussion hugely weakens the prognosis to permanent damage and instability. Obviously if you then really work at it as happens in football, massive damage is inevitable.

The only ethical choice is to outlaw concussion risk and let the sports fraternity go figure it all out.

Hockey is likely fixable because the head is not used as a weapon normally and removing the body armor would subdue remaining risks. Other sports have generally already come to grips with concussion risk. If one event is sufficient to end a career, then so be it. We are already seeing just that happening in hockey.

We can not eliminate outright accidents but we can sure take the victims off the playing field and outright imprison deliberate offenders who target other players. It is draconian but the consequences are worse.

I am not sure that we can save football as we know it. It is abundantly clear that high school football needs to revert back to touch football rules. The remaining question is whether we toss the pads and make the whole sport operate with some version of touch football.

The game would be fast and furious and physical blocking still part of the game. We may even come to like it. Recall that watching a soccer virtuoso makes soccer incredibly exciting and maybe it is time to get serious about soccer.


Junior Seau’s suicide due to chronic football brain damage

jANUARY 10, 2013



Junior Seau’s suicide devastated the community of San Diego and raised the question of why. Today, that question has been answered. Junior Seau, the famous San Diego Charger #55 had degenerative brain disease after playing 20 football seasons. On Jan. 10, 2013, NBC 7 San Diego reports that “Junior Seau, one of the NFL's best and fiercest players for nearly two decades, had a degenerative brain disease when he committed suicide last May, the National Institutes of Health told The Associated Press on Thursday.”

Junior Seau had been a famous linebacker for 20 NFL seasons with San Diego, Miami and New England. He retired in 2009. On May 2, 2012, Junior Seau committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest. Junior Seau’s girlfriend found him in his home in Oceanside which is in the northern part of San Diego.

The studies and analysis done on Junior Seau’s brain were made upon the request of Junior Seau’s family.

After the studies were completed on Junior Seau’s brain, the National Institute of Health (NIH) was able to determine that Junior Seau’s brain showed abnormalities which were “consistent with chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).”

Traumatic encephalopathy, also known as Dementia pugilistica (DP) or Traumatic brain injury (TBI), can occur after frequent injuries to the head like a bump, blow, jolt, or direct head impact. While immediate concussions warrant a visit to the hospital, less apparent concussions and damage to the brain might not be visible until, as in Junior Seau’s case, it is too late.

Like in Junior Seau’s case, symptoms of traumatic brain injury due to repeated sports “invisible” head injuries can include memory problems, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, and if left untreated, suicide.

The study of Junior Seau’s brain was conducted by several independent experts who examined the tissue of Junior Seau’s brain.

Junior Seau’s suicide propelled the topic of concussions in the NFL and other sports leagues that involve head injuries into the public eye. After reports of other sports players having experienced depression or memory trouble, NIH conducted further research studies which were published on Jan. 7, 2013.

Dr. John Hart Jr. from the University of Texas at Dallas, who was involved in the NIH study of Junior Seau’s brain, emphasized that "Not everyone gets this problem. … It's a more complex issue than [that] has just sort of been thrown out there."

Dr. Hart does encourage more NFL and other sports players to “to get their brains checked out.” For most players, there are no consequences or minor consequences from playing sports. However, getting checked out can bring peace of mind not only for the player but also for the player’s family.

Ideally, he said, all players would be evaluated before, during and after their careers to check for brain changes. That would help doctors learn more about how head trauma is related to mental decline and dementia - and hopefully avert those problems in future athletes.”

In Junior Seau’s case, San Diegans, and especially Junior Seau’s family, knowing what caused Junior Seau’s suicide brings some closure.

Tyler Seau, Junior Seau’s 23-year-old son said that “"I was not surprised after learning a little about CTE that he had it. … He did play so many years at that level. I was more just kind of angry I didn't do something more and have the awareness to help him more, and now it is too late. … I don't think any of us were aware of the side effects that could be going on with head trauma until he passed away. We didn't know his behavior was from head trauma.”

According to Junior Seau’s wife, Junior Seau’s symptoms included wild mood swings, irrationality, forgetfulness, insomnia, depression, and emotional detachment from his surroundings.

The fact that Junior Seau was able to hide his invisible “brain damage” and its severe consequences so well from the public emphasizes the importance of close family members caring for a loved one who is involved in sports.

According to NBC’s report, Junior Seau “hid it well in public … But not when he was with family or close friends.”

BPA Absloved




This is major although it is actually downplayed here. It pretty well informs us that the earlier conclusions were biased by an agency other than that tested for and as a result BPA is fully absolved. The anti BPA campaign has been going strong for two decades now and stopping it cold is good news. I personally was never convinced simply because the tale was just too convenient to tin can makers who had to upgrade.

Can liners have given us a far higher quality of canned food as a matter of course. Thus allaying trumped up fears over the necessary liner is good.

It also shows just how easy it is to slant the science on an inconvenient commercial threat. Once wrong work is published in an obscure study it is often accepted just because it has not been seriously questioned. This makes the pay off for fraudulent work very safe.

It also a sharp reminder that much accepted science is actually untested science simply because it had not been practical or worthwhile at the time.

We do not know what generated the original results, but that two different substances were tested to effect at the time should have made the work suspect. What else was tossed into the feed?

Previous Studies on Toxic Effects of BPA Couldn't be Reproduced

by Timothy Wall for UM News

Columbia MO (SPX) Jan 04, 2013


Following a three-year study using more than 2,800 mice, a University of Missouri researcher was not able to replicate a series of previous studies by another research group investigating the controversial chemical BPA. The MU study is not claiming that BPA is safe, but that the previous series of studies are not reproducible.

The MU study, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, also investigated an estrogenic compound found in plants, genistein, in the same three-year study.

"Our findings don't say anything about the positive or negative effects of BPA or genistein," said Cheryl Rosenfeld, associate professor of biomedical sciences in MU's Bond Life Science Center.

"Rather, our series of experiments did not detect the same findings as reported by another group on the potential developmental effects of BPA and genistein when exposure of young occurs in the womb."

Creating reliable data on the effects of the chemicals on mice is important to human health since people are frequently exposed to BPA and genistein and humans share similar biological functions with mice. BPA is a chemical used in certain plastic bottles and may be found in the lining of some canned goods and receipt paper. Genistein occurs naturally in soy beans and is sold as a dietary supplement.

Research by Fredrick VomSaal, professor of biological science at MU, and others suggests the chemicals may have other adverse effects on many animals, including humans.

Researcher who conducted the original series of experiments claimed that exposure to BPA and genestein resulted in yellow coat color, or agouti, offspring that were more susceptible to obesity and type 2 diabetes compared to their brown coat color, healthy siblings.

However, Rosenfeld and her team did not obtain the same results when repeating the study over a three-year period.

After failing to repeat the original experiments findings with similar numbers of animals, Rosenfeld's group extended the studies to include animal numbers that surpassed the prior studies to verify that their findings were not a fluke and to provide sufficient number of animals to ensure that significant differences would be detected if they existed.

However, even these additional numbers of animals and extended experiments failed to reproduce the earlier findings. However, the current studies demonstrate that a maternal diet enriched in estrogenic compounds leads to a greater number of offspring that express an agouti gene compared to those that do not, even though equal ratios should have been born.[ that actually could be a fluke - arclein]

"This finding suggests that certain uterine environments may favor animals with a 'thrifty genotype' meaning that the agouti gene of mice may help them survive in unfavorable uterine environments over those mice devoid of this gene, Yet, the downside of this expression of the agouti during early development is that the animals may be at risk for later metabolic disorders, such as obesity and diabetes" Rosenfeld said.

"In this aspect, humans also have an agouti gene that encodes for the agouti signaling protein (ASIP) that is expressed in fat tissue and pancreas, and there is some correlation that obese individuals exhibit greater expression of this gene compared to leaner individuals.

Therefore, the agouti gene may have evolved to permit humans the ability to survive famine, but its enhanced expression may also potentiate metabolic diseases under bountiful food conditions."

While the research casts doubt on the previous study, Rosenfeld said that by understanding the genetic profile of the mice in the first series of studies, scientists could learn more about the correlation between certain genes and obesity. This could eventually influence prevention and treatment programs for patients with diabetes and other obesity-related diseases in humans.

For more details on the discovery, click here.

North Korea Enlists German Help to Prepare Economic Opening





Without question the tea leaves are clearly signaling a huge change in course. They are trying hard to avoid mistakes while they implement the changes so parts of it will appear slow. However, recall that China's conversion was also slow in appearance at any time and place. I am certain that they can get it right.

However, once the proper framework is established and this is happening now, and the key individuals have gotten a little used to it, the obvious step is simply negotiate the reunification of North and South Korea. This can instantly jump pensions to modern levels and fully extend the benefits of the richer state to the poorer state.

The North Korean population is then in position to advance into modernism as quickly as possible with huge capital support flooding the country.

Germany is certainly the best model simply because they have already done all this without making a porridge out of it.

North Korea Enlists German Help to Prepare Economic Opening

01/04/2013


Pyongyang may be preparing to open up its economy. A report in a prominent newspaper claims the regime has enlisted the aid of German economic and legal experts to lay the groundwork for foreign investment in North Korean companies. The move could be made as soon as this year.

On New Year's Day, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un called for a "radical" economic renewal for his country and an end to decades of conflict with South Korea. Now, a German media report says he is moving quickly to fulfill at least the first pledge.

According to an article to be published on Saturday by the daily Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, the communist regime in Pyongyang is preparing to open up the country's economy to foreign investors. Moreover, it has enlisted the assistance of German economists and lawyers to lay the groundwork for the move.

"There is a master plan," one of the economists involved in the plan told the paper. "They want to open up this year." The FAZdid not identify the economist, but noted that he works at a respected German university and that he had advised other governments in Asia in the past.

The economist told the paper that the country is primarily interested in modernizing its laws relating to foreign investment. However, North Korea is not intending to follow the Chinese model, which called for the creation of special economic zones for foreign investors, the economist told the FAZ. "Rather, they are interested in the Vietnamese model, in which specific companies were chosen as recipients of investments," the source said.

Signs of Change

Such a move would be revolutionionary for North Korea , which has long been largely cut off from the rest of the world by virtue of its heavy-handed regime. The country's economy is in a shambles as a result. But since Kim Jong Un took over from his late father just over a year ago, there have been signs of change.

His New Year's address was the most obvious indication that he is prepared to embark on a path different from the one followed by his father, Kim Jong Il. Indeed, even holding such an address was a departure; it marked the first such speech by a North Korean leader since Kim Il Sung held the last one in 1994.

Furthermore, Kim was surprisingly open about the poor economic situation in which his country finds itself. He pledged renewal, indicating that it would largely be dependent on continued technological advancement. He also highlighted last month'srocket launch, saying it was a boost for "national self-esteem."

Still, even as the FAZ reports that there are many in the country's leadership who are in favor of opening up the country to investments from Japanese, South Korean and Western companies, the professor the paper cites notes that it is far from a done deal.

"The military in North Korea," he told the paper, "will not want to give up power." He added that it is by no means clear whether Kim's reform efforts will be able to overcome military resistance.

Unique Mars Rock From Sahara





 I will take it. Any sample is superior to no sample and we are developing a spectrum of samples that could not be replicated with an actual expedition to Mars. In the meantime more eyeballs are getting familiar with the necessary characteristics and the desert regions are becoming more productive.

In the meantime these are data points that help in piecing things together for our expeditions to the planet.

Most ejecta will be part of a substantial event and that likely means that a lot of material went into space at the same time. Most of this will be from impact events. The low gravity and limited atmosphere on Mars and the Moon make this practical.


Martian rock from Sahara desert unlike others

By ALICIA CHANG, AP Science Writer

Updated 4:53 pm, Thursday, January 3, 2013


    This image provided Carl Agee, University of New Mexico, shows a rock from Mars that landed in the Sahara Desert. An examination of the Martian meteorite known as NWA 7034 determined it is 2.1 billion years old and is water-rich. Photo: University Of New Mexico, Carl Agee / AP




LOS ANGELES (AP) — Scientists are abuzz about a coal-colored rock from Mars that landed in the Sahara desert: A yearlong analysis revealed it's quite different from other Martian meteorites.

Not only is it older than most, it also contains more water, tests showed. The baseball-size meteorite, estimated to be 2 billion years old, is strikingly similar to the volcanic rocks examined on the Martian surface by the NASA rovers Spirit and Opportunity, which found water-bearing minerals.

"Here we have a piece of Mars that I can hold in my hands. That's really exciting," said Carl Agee, director of the Institute of Meteoritics and curator at the University of New Mexico who led the study published online Thursday in the journal Science.

Most space rocks that fall to Earth as meteorites come from the asteroid belt, but a number can be traced to the moon and Mars.

Scientists believe an asteroid or some other large object struck Mars, dislodging rocks and sending them into space. Occasionally, some plummet through Earth's atmosphere.

Short of sending a spacecraft or astronaut to the red planet to haul back rocks, Martian meteorites are the next best thing for scientists seeking to better understand how Earth's neighbor transformed from a tropical environment to a frigid desert.

About 65 Martian rocks have been recovered on Earth, mostly in Antarctica or the Sahara. The oldest dates back 4.5 billion years to a time when Mars was warmer and wetter. About half a dozen Martian meteorites are 1.3 billion years old and the rest are 600 million years or younger.

The latest meteorite NWA 7034 — nicknamed "Black Beauty"— was donated to the University of New Mexico by an American who bought it from a Moroccan meteorite dealer last year.

Researchers performed a battery of tests on the meteorite and based on its chemical signature confirmed that it was blasted to Earth from Mars. At 2.1 billion years old, it's the second-oldest known Martian meteorite that formed from a volcanic eruption.

There's also evidence that it was altered by water. Though the amount released during heating was small — 6,000 parts per million — it was still much more than other Martian meteorites. Scientists said this suggested there was interaction with water near the surface during a time when the planet was mostly dry and dusty.

More tests are under way to determine how long the rock floated in space and how long it had been sitting in the Sahara.

University of Alberta meteorite expert Chris Herd said the find was welcome since most Martian rocks that rain on Earth tend to be younger. And the latest find does not appear to be too contaminated, he said.

"It's fairly fresh. It hasn't been subjected to a whole lot of weathering," said Herd, who had no role in the research.

Read more:

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Resolving Bronze Age Atlantic Surface Temperature Anomoly





This is a revisit to an important problem. Sea bed work has shown us that during the Bronze Age or between 4000 BC through 1000BC, that the Northern Atlantic surface waters were two degrees warmer. My conjecture, albeit unsatisfactory was that the Sahara and the Middle East had remained vegetated during most of this and retained more warmth that somehow fed back to the ocean.

We have recently come to understand that the 1159BC geological event was vastly more important than I had ever suspected. Land masses the size of Ireland, France, Britain and Japan associated with the Mid Atlantic Ridge, the Bahama Bank and the Cuban Ridge to Yucatan subsided over a couple of days. This was a correction in the crust that offset the one mile or so rise of the Hudson Bay Basin and the related hydrostatic imbalance.

This strengthened the volume available to the Gulf Stream and also improved heat flow directly into the Arctic resulting in a cooler Atlantic.

This turned out to be a minor adjustment in the Holocene regime and it is geologically stable although we cannot write of minor subsidence still. We should be stable for millions of years matching that of the Cretaceous were the Tethys Sea ruled.

It is really quite a remarkable dispensation. The narrow Atlantic provides us a heat pump sufficient to eliminate Ice Age Conditions in the Northern Hemisphere while the Pacific remains cut of from either the Arctic or the Atlantic and exchanges heat with the conveniently located Antarctic Ice Age. All remaining lands in the Southern Hemisphere are well north to allow easy development.

All that we have left to do is to reforest the Sahara and the Middle East and clean up the odd mess.

Galactan and Biofuels




I suppose that the idea here is to increase the yield of galactan in order to produce a viable feedstock for high quality fuel. Since the model is some species of mustard, using canola can not be far behind. It would be convenient to covert a ton of canola waste into a couple hundred pounds of fuel feedstock.

Otherwise, I think that this is a long shot for the advertised benefits and more pure research.

Then again, converting plant waste into useful feed-stocks is high on the research agenda anyway. It allows us to jump past the oil industry with superior green credentials.



Boosting Galactan Sugars Could Boost Biofuel Production

by Lynn Yarris for Berkeley News

Berkeley CA (SPX) Dec 26, 2012



Galactan is a polymer of galactose, a six-carbon sugar that can be readily fermented by yeast into ethanol and is a target of interest for researchers in advanced biofuels produced from cellulosic biomass. Now an international collaboration led by scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE)'s Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI) has identified the first enzyme capable of substantially boosting the amount of galactan in plant cell walls.

Unlike ethanol, advanced biofuels synthesized from the sugars in plant cells walls could replace gasoline, diesel and jet fuels on a gallon-for-gallon basis and be dropped into today's engines and infrastructures with no modifications required.

Also, adanced biofuels have the potential to be carbon-neutral, meaning they could be burned without adding excess carbon to the atmosphere. Among the key challenges to making advanced biofuels cost competitive is finding ways to maximize the amount of plant cell wall sugars that can be fermented into fuels.

"We have confirmed the identity of the GT92 enzyme as the first enzyme shown to increase the biosynthesis of galactan," says Henrik Scheller, vice president for JBEI's Feedstocks Division and director of its Cell Wall Biosynthesis group. "This identification of the first B-1,4-galactan synthase provides an important new tool for the engineering of advanced bioenergy fuel crops."

Scheller, who also holds an appointment with DOE's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), is the corresponding author of a paper in the journal Plant Cell that describes this work.

The paper is titled "Pectin Biosynthesis: GALS1 in Arabidopsis thaliana is a B-1,4-Galactan B-1,4-galactosyltransferase." Co-authors were JBEI's April Liwanag, Berit Ebert, Yves Verhertbruggen, Emilie Rennie, Carsten Rautengarten, and Ai Oikawa, plus Mathias Andersen and Mads Clausen of the Technical University of Denmark.

Galactans are polysaccharide components of pectin, the sticky sugar substance that binds together the individual cells in plant cell walls and is used to make jellies and jams. The B-1,4-galactan component of pectin is especially abundant in the "tension wood" that forms in cell walls in response to mechanical stress from wind or snowfall.

"Galactans are composed of hexoses, which in contrast to pentoses, are easily utilized by fermenting microorganisms for the production of biofuels and other compounds," Scheller says. "It would be advantageous to develop plants with increased galactan content instead of hemicelluloses consisting largely of pentoses."

GT92 is a family of glycosyltransferase proteins whose genes are found in all plants that have been genetically sequenced. An increased expression of GT92 genes has been observed in studies of tension wood.

This observation combined with the knowledge that tension wood is rich in B-1,4-galactan led Scheller and his colleagues to investigate the function of GT92 proteins in Arabidopsis thaliana, a small flowering relative of mustard that serves as a model organism for plant studies.

Arabidopsis has three members of GT92, which Scheller and his colleagues designated as GALACTAN SYNTHASE 1,2 and 3 (GALS1, GALS2 and GALS3). While loss-of-function mutants in all three genes were found to be galactan deficient, Scheller and his colleague isolated and tested GALS1.

"Overexpression of GALS1 resulted in plants with 50-percent higher B-1,4-galactan content and no adverse phenotype," Scheller says. "We expect that the results for GALS2 and GALS3 overexpressors will be similar though we have yet to test them."

Given that all three Arabidopsis GALS genes showed overlapping but not identical expression, Scheller and his colleagues are now combining mutations of GALS genes to better understand the role of B-1,4-galactan in plants.

They're also carrying out basic studies on these enzymes, including crystallization and structural analysis. In addition, they're overexpressing the GALS proteins in different combinations to determine if even higher production of B-1,4-galactan results.

"As B-1,4-galactan is an ancient invention, the function of GT92 as a galactan synthase in Arabidopsis should also be applicable to switchgrass, Miscanthus, poplar and other plants being considered as crops for advanced biofuels," Scheller says. "We do not anticipate any difficulty in being able to overexpress GT92 genes in these plants."

This research was funded by the DOE Office of Science, and by the Danish Strategic Research Council.

Great Plains dust Storms Awake





 Our practices are substantially better but the necessary conditions happen to be upon us. Most likely we have an additional five years to suffer through before the climatic cycle turns over and provides enough water. We should still avoid severe dust bowl conditions.

In time engineering and the Eden machine (Google this blog) can change it all, but we may be a century away. I would still like to see the buffalo commons restored on the waste lands were growing is either impossible or inadvisable.

Otherwise, this will be followed by another sixty years of good growing conditions.

Maybe next time we will have it all right.


Storms on U.S. Plains stir memories of the "Dust Bowl"

By Kevin Murphy | Reuters – Sun, 30 Dec, 2012


LIBERAL, Kansas (Reuters) - Real estate agent Mark Faulkner recalls a day in early November when he was putting up a sign near Ulysses, Kansas, in 60-miles-per-hour winds that blew up blinding dust clouds.

"There were places you could not see, it was blowing so hard," Faulkner said.

Residents of the Great Plains over the last year or so have experienced storms reminiscent of the 1930s Dust Bowl. Experts say the new storms have been brought on by a combination of historic drought, a dwindling Ogallala Aquifer underground water supply, climate change and government farm programs.

Nearly 62 percent of the United States was gripped by drought, as of December 25, and "exceptional" drought enveloped parts of Kansas, Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.

There is no relief in sight for the Great Plains at least through the winter, according to Drought Monitor forecasts, which could portend more dust clouds.

A wave of dust storms during the 1930s crippled agriculture over a vast area of the Great Plains and led to an exodus of people, many to California, dramatized in John Steinbeck's novel "The Grapes of Wrath."

While few people believe it could get that bad again, the new storms have some experts worried that similar conditions - if not the catastrophic environmental disaster of the 1930s - are returning to parts of Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Kansas and Colorado.

"I hope we don't talk ourselves into complacency with easy assumptions that a Dust Bowl could never happen again," said Craig Cox, agriculture director for the Environmental Working Group, a national conservation group that supports converting more tilled soil to grassland. "Instead, we should do what it takes to make sure it doesn't happen again."

Satellite images on December 19 showed a dust storm stretching over an area of 150 miles from extreme southwestern Oklahoma across the Panhandle of Texas around Lubbock to extreme eastern New Mexico, said Jody James, National Weather Service meteorologist in Lubbock. Visibility was reduced to half a mile in places, stoked by high winds, he said. At least one person was killed and more than a dozen injured in car crashes.

"I definitely think these dust storms will become more common until we get more measurable precipitation," James said.

'DIRTY 30S'

The Great Plains is a flat, semi-arid, area with few trees, where vast herds of buffalo once thrived on native grasses. Settlers plowed up most of the grassland in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to create the wheat-growing breadbasket of the United States, encouraged by high commodity prices and free "homestead" land from the government.

The era known as the "Dirty 30s" - chronicled by Ken Burns in a Public Broadcasting Service documentary that aired in November - was when a 1930s drought gripped the Great Plains and winds carried away exposed soil in massive dust clouds.

Bill Fitzgerald, 87, a farmer near Sublette, Kansas, remembers "Black Sunday" on April 14, 1935, when a clear, sunny day in southwest Kansas turned black as night by mid afternoon because of a massive cloud of dust that swept from Nebraska to the Texas panhandle.

"My older brother and I were in my dad's 1927 or '28 Chevy truck a mile north and a mile west of the house and we saw it rolling in," Fitzgerald said. "It was about 10 p.m. when it cleared enough for us to go home."

Farming practices have vastly improved since the 1930s. Farmers now leave plant remnants on the top of the soil and less soil is exposed, to preserve moisture and prevent erosion.0

Irrigation beginning in the 1940s from the Ogallala aquifer, a huge network of water under the Great Plains, also made land less vulnerable to dust storms.

DRYING UP

But the Ogallala aquifer is drying up after years of drawing out more water than was replenished.

Many farmers have had to drill deeper wells to find water. Others are giving up on irrigation altogether, which means they can no longer grow crops of high-yielding and lucrative corn. They will instead grow wheat, cotton or grain sorghum on dry land, which depends completely on natural precipitation in an area that typically gets 20 inches of rain a year or less.


Near Sublette, Kansas, farmer Gail Wright said he would probably give up irrigating two square miles of his land and would plant wheat and grain sorghum instead of corn because of the diminishing aquifer. Drilling deeper wells would cost $120,000 each, Wright said.

"When we drilled those wells in the 1960s and 70s, we were doing 1,500 or 1,600 gallons per minute," said Wright. "Now, they are down to anywhere from 400 to 600 gallons per minute. We probably pumped out 200 feet of water."

Another farmer in Sublette, 79-year-old Lawrence Withers, whose family farms land his grandfather settled in 1887, is resigned to a future without irrigation.

"We have pumped 170 feet off the aquifer, that's gone. There's just a little tick of water at the bottom," he said.

The Ogallala supplies water to 176,000 square miles (456,000 square km) of land in parts of eight states from the Texas panhandle to southern South Dakota. That amounts to about 27 percent of all irrigated land in the nation, according to the U.S. Geological Survey.

The volume of water in the aquifer stood at about 2.9 billion acre feet in 2009, a decline of about 9 percent since 1950, according to the Geological Survey. About two-and-a-half times as much water was drawn out in the 14 years ended 2009 as during the prior 15-year period, data shows.

The water may run out in 25 years or less in parts of Texas, Oklahoma and southwest Kansas, although in other areas it has 50 to 200 years left, according to the Geological Survey.

Rationing has been imposed on irrigation in the region but it may be too little too late.

"It's a situation where across the Plains the demand far exceeds the annual recharge," said Mark Rude, executive director of the Southwest Kansas Groundwater Management District.

RECORD DROUGHT

The worst drought in decades has exacerbated the situation. The semi-arid area around Lubbock, which typically gets about 19 inches of rain a year, received less than 6 inches in 2011, the lowest ever recorded. This year was better but still far below normal at 12.5 inches, meteorologist James said.

Climate change is also having an impact on the region, said atmospheric scientist Katharine Hayhoe, co-director of the Climate Science Center at Texas Tech University in Lubbock.

"It is definitely hotter in the summer and drier in the summer because of climate change," she said.

The average annual temperature in Lubbock has increased by one full degree over the last decade, according to National Weather Service data, and the average amount of rainfall has fallen during summer months by about .50 inch over the decade.

Some say government policies are making things worse.

Federal government subsidized crop insurance pays farmers whether they produce a crop or not, encouraging farmers to plant even in a drought year.

Another subsidized U.S. government program that pays farmers to take sensitive marginal land out of crop production and put it into grassland is gradually shrinking.

In a possible case of history repeating itself, high commodity prices are encouraging farmers to break up the land and plant crops when the 10-year conservation contracts with the government expire, said environmentalist Cox. This is similar to what happened in the 1920s when vast areas of grassland were plowed up.

The government also has imposed restrictions on how much land can go into conservation reserves to save money at a time of massive U.S. budget deficits, he said.

The amount of land in conservation reserves has declined by more than 2.3 million acres over the last five years in five states of the Great Plains - Texas, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado and New Mexico, according to U.S. Agriculture Department data.

If most of that land is plowed up for crops it could lead to more dust storms in the future.

"I think you are probably going to see increased erosion if that happens," said Richard Zartman, Chairman of the Plant and Soil Science Department at Texas Tech, adding that it was unlikely to get as bad as the Dust Bowl days.

(Additional reporting by Greg McCune and Christine Stebbins; Editing by Claudia Parsons)

Fracking Abundance Questioned


This is not pleasant reading. Shale production has been capital driven and plenty of smoke has obscured economic reality.

I have been in and around oil industry finance for decades. So let us make it all simple. All the capital costs are up front. After that a successful well pays back quickly and then on to produce a decent living for years at a modest percentage of the original production.



The only important question to answer is just how many months of production is required to achieve payback. We can live with two to three years on conventional wells.

In the present case, the wells cost twice as much, almost all wells produce, and decline is rapid. So when do we get our money back? It is here that I have been skeptical until someone shows me a success. It may turn out that the turnaround time approaches a decade or never.

It may still work only because production is certain as in the Tar Sands which also has a long capital cycle.

The bad news is that it may be far worse than I would ever have guessed or thought. We will need to track this because it has certainly been clouding the under production declines and structural weakening of the industry. Be very nervous.

Rosy Forecast of Cheap Oil Abundance, Economic Boom a Myth

Monday, 31 December 2012 00:00By Dr. Nafeez Mosaddeq Ahmed ,



Headlines about this year's "World Energy Outlook" (WEO) from the International Energy Agency (IEA), released mid-November, would lead you to think we are literally swimming in oil.

The report forecasts that the United States will outstrip Saudi Arabia as the world's largest oil producer by 2017, becoming "all but self-sufficient in net terms" in energy production - a notion reported almost verbatim by media agencies worldwide, from BBC News toBloomberg. Going even further, Damien Carrington, head of environment at The Guardian, titled his blog: "IEA report reminds us peak oil idea has gone up in flames."

The IEA report's general conclusions have been backed up by several other reports this year. Exxon Mobil's 2013 Energy Outlook projects that demand for gas will grow by 65 percent through 2040, with 20 percent of worldwide production from North America, mostly from unconventional sources. The shale gas revolution will make the US a net exporter by 2025, it concludes. The US National Intelligence Council also predicts US energy independence by 2030.

This last summer saw a similar chorus of headlines around the release of a Harvard University report by Leonardo Maugeri, a former executive with the Italian oil major Eni SpA. "We were wrong on peak oil," read environmentalist George Monbiot's Guardian headline. "There's enough to fry us all." Monbiot's piece echoed a spate of earlier stories. In the preceding month, the BBC had asked "Shortages: Is 'Peak Oil' Idea Dead?" The Wall Street Journal pondered, "Has Peak Oil Peaked?" while the New York Time's leading environmental columnist Andrew Revkin took "A Fresh Look At Oil's Long Goodbye."

The gist of all this is that "peak oil" is now nothing but an irrelevant meme, out of touch with the data and soundly disproven by the now self-evident abundance of cheap unconventional oil and gas.

Burning our Bridges

On the one hand, it's true: There are more than enough fossil fuels in the ground to drive an accelerated rush to the most extreme scenarios of climate catastrophe.

The increasing shift from conventional to unconventional forms of oil and gas - tar sands, oil shale, and especially shale gas - heralds an unnerving acceleration of carbon emissions, rather than the deceleration promised by those who advocate shale as a clean 'bridge fuel' to renewables. According to the CO2 Scorecard Group, contrary to industry claims, shale gas "cannot be credited" with US emissions reductions over the last half decade. Nearly 90 percent of reductions were caused not by switching to shale gas, but by a "decline in petroleum use" linked to the "replacement" of coal "by wind, hydro and other renewables." To make matters worse, where natural gas saved 50 million tons of carbon by substituting for coal in electricity, increased gas use in commercial, residential and industrial sectors generated 66 million additional tons of carbon.

In fact, studies show that when methane leakages are incorporated into an assessment of shale gas' CO2 emissions, natural gas could even surpass coal in terms of overall climate impact. As for tar sands and oil shales, emissions are 1.2 to 1.75 times higher than for conventional oil. No wonder the IEA's chief economist Fatih Birol remarked pessimistically that "the world is going in the wrong direction in terms of climate change."

But while the new evidence roundly puts to rest the "doomer" scenarios advocated by staunch "peak oil" pessimists, the global energy predicament is far more complicated.

Scaling the Peak

Delving deeper into the available data shows that despite being capable of triggering dangerous global warming, we are already in the throes of a global energy transition for which the age of cheap oil is well and truly over. For most serious analysts, far from signifying a world running out of oil, "peak oil" refers simply to the point when, due to a combination of below-ground geological constraints and above-ground economic factors, oil becomes increasingly and irreversibly more difficult and expensive to produce.

That point is now. US Energy Information Administration (EIA) data confirms that despite the US producing a "total oil supply" of 10 million barrels per day, up by 2.1 mbd since January 2005, world crude oil production and lease condensate - conventional production - remains on the largely flat, undulating plateau it has been on since it stopped rising that very year at 74million barrels per day (mbd). According to John Hofmeister, former president of Shell Oil, "flat production for the most part" over the last decade has dovetailed with annual decline rates for existing fields of about "4 to 5 million bpd." Combined with "constant growing demand" - particularly from China and emerging markets - he argues, this will underpin higher oil prices for the foreseeable future.

The IEA's  "World Energy Outlook" actually corroborates this picture - but the devil is in the largely overlooked details. Firstly, the main reason US oil supply will overtake Saudi Arabia and Russia is because Saudi and Russian output is projected to decline, not rise as previously assumed. So while US output creeps up from 10 to 11 mbd in 2025, post-peak Saudi output will fall to 10.6 mbd and Russia to 9.5 mbd.

Secondly, the report's projected increase in "oil production" from 84 mbd in 2011 to 97 mbd in 2035 comes not from conventional oil, but "entirely from natural gas liquids and unconventional sources" (and half of this from unconventional gas including shale) - with conventional crude oil output (excluding light tight oil) fluctuating between 65 mbd and 69 mbd, never quite reaching the historic peak of 70 mbd in 2008 and falling by 3 mbd sometime after 2012.

The IEA also does not forecast a return to the cheap oil heyday of the pre-2000 era, but rather a long-term price rise to about $125 per barrel by 2035.

Thirdly, oil prices would be much higher if not for the fact that governments are heavily subsidizing fossil fuels. The WEO revealed that fossil fuel subsidies increased 30 percent to $523 billion in 2011, masking the threat of high prices.

Therefore, world conventional oil production is already on a fluctuating plateau, and we are now increasingly dependent on more expensive unconventional sources. The age of cheap oil abundance is over.

Fudging the Figures

But there are further reasons for concern. For how reliable is the IEA's data? In a series of investigations for the The Guardian and Le Monde, Lionel Badal exposed in 2009 how key data was deliberately fudged at the IEA under US pressure to artificially inflate official reserve figures. Not only that, but Badal later discovered that as early as 1998, extensive IEA data exploding assumptions of "sustained economic growth and low unemployment," had been systematically suppressed for political reasons, according to several whistleblowers.

With the IEA's research under such intense US political scrutiny and interference for 12 years, its findings should perhaps not always be taken at face value.

The same goes, even more so, for Maugeri's celebrated Harvard report. By any meaningful standard, this was hardly an independent analysis of oil industry data. Funded by two oil majors - Eni and British Petroleum (BP) - the report was not peer-reviewed and contained a litany of elementary errors. So egregious are these errors that Dr. Roger Bentley, an expert at the UK Energy Research Centre, told ex-BBC financial journalist David Strahan: "Mr Maugeri’s report misrepresents the decline rates established by major studies; it contains glaring mathematical errors. . . . I am astonished Harvard published it."

What the Scientists Say

In contrast to the blaring media attention generated by Maugeri's report, three peer-reviewed studies published in reputable science journals from January through to June this year offered a less than jubilant perspective. A paper published in Nature by Sir David King, the UK's former chief government scientist, found that despite reported increases in oil reserves, tar sands, natural gas and shale gas production via fracking, depletion of the world’s existing fields is still running at 4.5 percent to 6.7 percent per year. They firmly dismissed notions that a shale gas boom would avert an energy crisis, noting that production at shale gas wells drops by as much as 60 to 90 percent in the first year of operation. The paper received little, if any, media fanfare.

In March, Sir King's team at Oxford University's Smith School of Enterprise & the Environment published another peer-reviewed paper in Energy Policy, concluding that the industry had overstated world oil reserves by about a third. Estimates should be downgraded from 1150-1350 billion barrels to 850-900 billion barrels. As a consequence, the authors argued: "While there is certainly vast amounts of fossil fuel resources left in the ground, the volume of oil that can be commercially exploited at prices the global economy has become accustomed to is limited and will soon decline." The study was largely blacked out in the media - bar a solitary report in the Telegraph, to its credit.

In June - the same month as Maugeri's deeply flawed analysis - Energy published an extensive analysis of oil industry data by US financial risk analyst Gail Tverberg, who found that since 2005, "world [conventional] oil supply has not increased," that this was "a primary cause of the 2008-2009 recession" and that the "expected impact of reduced oil supply" will mean the "financial crisis may eventually worsen." But all the media attention was on the oilman's oil-funded report - Tverberg's peer-reviewed study in a reputable science journal, with its somewhat darker message, was ignored.

What Happens When Shale Boom Goes Boom?

These scientific studies are not the only indications that something is deeply wrong with the IEA's assessment of prospects for shale gas production and accompanying economic prosperity.

Indeed, Business Insider reports that far from being profitable, the shale gas industry is facing huge financial hurdles. "The economics of fracking are horrid," observes US financial journalist Wolf Richter. "Production falls off a cliff from day one and continues for a year or so until it levels out at about 10 per cent of initial production." The result is that "drilling is destroying capital at an astonishing rate, and drillers are left with a mountain of debt just when decline rates are starting to wreak their havoc. To keep the decline rates from mucking up income statements, companies had to drill more and more, with new wells making up for the declining production of old wells. Alas, the scheme hit a wall, namely reality."

Just four months ago, Exxon's CEO, Rex Tillerson, complained that the lower prices due to the US natural gas glut, although reducing energy costs for consumers, were depressing prices and, thus, dramatically decreasing profits. This problem is compounded primarily by the swiftly plummeting production rates at shale wells, which start high but fall fast. Although in shareholder and annual meetings, Exxon had officially insisted it was not losing money on gas, Tillerson candidly told a meeting at the Council on Foreign Relations: "We are all losing our shirts today. We're making no money. It's all in the red."

The oil industry has actively and deliberately attempted to obscure the challenges facing shale gas production. A seminal New York Times investigation last year found that despite a public stance of extreme optimism, the US oil industry is "privately skeptical of shale gas." According to the Times, "the gas may not be as easy and cheap to extract from shale formations deep underground as the companies are saying, according to hundreds of industry e-mails and internal documents and an analysis of data from thousands of wells." The emails revealed industry executives, lawyers, state geologists and market analysts voicing "skepticism about lofty forecasts" and questioning "whether companies are intentionally, and even illegally, overstating the productivity of their wells and the size of their reserves." Though corroborated by independent studies, a year later such revelations have been largely ignored by journalists and policymakers.

But we ignore them at our peril. According to Arthur Berman, a 32-year veteran petroleum geologist who worked with Amoco (prior to its merger with BP), "the decline rates" for shale gas reserves are "are incredibly high." Citing the Eagleford shale - the "mother of all shale oil plays," he points out that the "annual decline rate is higher than 42 percent." Just to keep production flat, they will have to drill "almost 1000 wells in the Eagleford shale, every year. . . . Just for one play, we're talking about $10 or $12 billion a year just to replace supply. I add all these things up, and it starts to approach the amount of money needed to bail out the banking industry. Where is that money going to come from?"

Chesapeake Energy recently found itself in exactly this situation, forcing it to sell assets to meet its obligations. "Staggering under high debt," reported the Washington Post, Chesapeake said "it would sell $6.9 billion of gas fields and pipelines - another step in shrinking the company whose brash chief executive had made it a leader in the country’s shale gas revolution." The sale was forced by a "combination of low natural gas prices and excessive borrowing."

The worst-case scenario is that several large oil companies find themselves facing financial distress simultaneously. If that happens, according to Berman, "you may have a couple of big bankruptcies or takeovers, and everybody pulls back, all the money evaporates, all the capital goes away. That's the worst-case scenario." To make matters worse, Berman has shown conclusively that the industry exaggerated EURs (Estimated Ultimate Recovery) of shale wells using flawed industry models that, in turn, have fed into the IEA's future projections. Berman is not alone - writing in Petroleum Review, US energy consultants Ruud Weijermars and Crispian McCredie argued there remains strong "basis for reasonable doubts about the reliability and durability of US shale gas reserves," measures of which have been "inflated" under new Security & Exchange Commission rules.

The eventual consequences of the current gas glut, in other words, are more than likely to be an unsustainable shale bubble that collapses under its own weight, precipitating a supply collapse and price spike. Rather than fueling prosperity, the shale revolution will instead boost a temporary recovery masking deeper, structural instabilities. Inevitably, those instabilities will collide, leaving us with an even bigger financial mess, on a faster trajectory toward costly environmental destruction.

So when is crunch time? According to a new report from the New Economics Foundation out last month, the arrival of 'economic peak oil' - when the costs of supply "exceeds the price economies can pay without significantly disrupting economic activity" - will be around 2014-15.

Black gold, it would seem, is not the answer to our problems.

Friday, January 11, 2013

Green Energy Collapse





This paints the unpleasant picture made by so called green energy investments shored up by federal financing. The lack of a creditable business model caused me to dismiss them a long time ago long before they even happened. They all needed real subsidies to build out. Once built, it is normally possible to operate on a break even basis but little else. And that is the real problem.
The capital has actually been destroyed.

We have exactly the same proposition haunting the fracking business. The initial flush has to pay off the well or the rapid decline will make it impossible. That this decline rate is still controversial is now disturbing because enough time has elapsed to actually know. We may actually be destroying vasts amount of capital while feeding our market with capital subsidized oil and gas.

All this is a set up for a perfect storm of collapsing energy supplies and related disruption globally. What this means is that the flags are red for green energy and amber for fracked fuel. I am not too concerned yet, but am wary.






This Energy Sector is Collapsing

By Keith Kohl

Thursday, January 10th, 2013


We've heard a lot about the promise of so-called "green" energy over the past few years...

And how it will finally lead us all to energy independence.

But let's face it: "Green energy" as we know it is a scandalous rip-off — and a total failure.

After countless big promises (and billions of taxpayer dollars), wind, solar and geothermal provide a mere 9% of America's energy needs.

Just one look at Solyndra, the once-heralded solar company, sums up the whole "green" scam quite nicely...
These guys alone leached $535 million (more than half a billion dollars!) in public funds before going belly-up and undergoing an FBI investigation.\

But they're far from the only culprits in this whole fiasco...

Just a couple of months ago, a company by the name of Himin Solar had their IPO terminated and was suspended from the stock exchange entirely.

Then there's BrightSource Energy, the outfit bailed out by Obama last year despite being $1.8billion in debt.

The scary thing is these are only a few names on a long list of companies just like them...

In just the last year alone, dozens of other solar, wind, and geothermal firms filed for bankruptcy or are on the verge of doing so... after gorging themselves on $90 billion of OUR money.

Take a look at a short list of the biggest "green" scam artists in recent memory:

  • Electric car battery producer A123 hiked executive pay 36% after canning 125 employees...
  • First Solar, one of the world's largest solar companies, slashed 2,000 jobs in April — after increasing executive and CEO pay to $50 million...
  • Willard & Kelsey Solar Group lent its executives $500,000 and paid them $1 million — beforebeginning operations...
  • Beacon Power paid executives $260,000 in bonuses as it collapsed...
The entire "green" disaster has spun so far out of control that even Al Gore's company is dumping its holdings in green energy stocks.

According to the Washington Post, Al Gore is "50 times richer than when he left the vice-presidency in 2001," making him "$100 million partly through investing in alternative energy firms subsidized by the Obama administration."

Funny how it works...

I mean, if renewable energy was anywhere close to being a viable power source, it wouldn't need a penny from taxpayers.

But since 80% of all the "green" subsidies and loans went to generous donors of President Obama, it's plain to see that "green energy" firms are little more than fronts for crooks (and former vice-presidents) to pick your pocket.

And get this: In August it was revealed that the Wall Streeter in charge ofindependently reviewing the loans — and who claimed they all carried "minimal risk" — is also a major donor.

Talk about a conflict of interest...

And as outrageous as all of this, it gets worse. Because instead of giving up on the green energy pipe dream, the U.S. government is doubling down on it.

Just last year the Department of Energy awarded $43 million in grants to 41 wind energy research and development projects.

And in March, President Obama enacted a plan in which the U.S. Army partnered with favored firms to develop renewable energy sources.

The cost of this little program? Only $7 billion.

It makes me sick.

But Here's What Really Disgusts Me...

The U.S. government has fought tooth and nail against letting Americans develop the tried and true energy resources that helped make our country an economic powerhouse.

Whether nixing the Keystone XL Pipeline... blocking deepwater drilling... imposing carbon taxes... or waging war on fracking...

It's clear they are VERY interested in continually doing the wrong thing.

Homeless Handled in Scotland





This needs to be monitored as we have seen this problem emerge over the past twenty years with little but lip service applied. It has been dealt with in the past and can be dealt with easily enough. Yet a combination of political correctness and general political timidity has conspired to produce the present morass.

It has to be ended, even if it is merely paying the person's rent for him and sorting him out as a matter of course. Most certainly no one should be left to their own resources in terms of housing and basic food. A sack of potatoes and a cot go a long way in terms of sustaining a person and both can be cheaply available on a guaranteed basis.

Once that is done, it is possible for anyone to begin reorganizing their lives. It was good enough for the Irish navy in the nineteenth century and no one has to do brutal work these days.

They can also be organized into a floating labor pool on that basis to be easily accessed for temporary work. It is never great, but it gives focus and association which is the beginning.

Scotland Gives ‘Landmark’ Rights to Homeless People

By Alex Johnston



Legislation aiming at effectively ending homelessness across Scotland has come into effect this week.

Any Scot who has become homeless through no fault of their own can receive accommodation, the new law states, according to the Daily Record newspaper. In the past, it was only people with children and other priority groups who had that right.

This is a landmark day in the fight against homelessness,” Scotland Deputy First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said, according to the paper. “I know the heartache and trauma of homelessness from working closely with households faced with the prospect of losing the roof over their head.”

The change, which was passed in December, will give some 3,000 people each year the means to have a roof over their heads.

It is absolutely right to offer this guarantee in a time of crisis for people. It sends the signal that we are there to help, there is hope, and that the state will do what it can,” she said.

The measure is part of a plan that was unveiled around a decade ago to quash homelessness in Scotland.

Now is not the time to pat ourselves on the back. Instead, we need to redouble our efforts and make sure the commitment works in practice across Scotland,” Sturgeon added.

Sturgeon said Scotland has committed around $480,000 over the next two years to provide local authorities with resources to combat homelessness.

With homelessness figures already heading in the right direction, today we have taken a huge step forward for Scotland,” she said.

The BBC reports that official figures in February show that Scotland’s homelessness rate has fallen to its lowest levels in a decade.

Earlier this year, the Scottish government said it is also attempting to use other measures to prevent people from reaching the point where they need to seek government assistance for housing.

Mary Taylor, the head of the Scottish Federation of Housing Association, said in a statement in November that “challenges remain in trying to ensure that an adequate supply of settled accommodation can be realized,” saying that part of the problem lies in the United Kingdom’s welfare reforms