Wednesday, November 30, 2011

What we’ve been waiting for: Miley Cyrus’ musical tribute to Occupy Wall Street

http://hotair.com/archives/2011/11/29/what-weve-been-waiting-for-miley-cyrus-musical-tribute-to-occupy-wall-street/

Redrant:  The fleabaggers get a has been musics star.  I had never heard of Miley Cyrus/Hanna Montana until we had a ticket scalping thing here half a decade ago.  Her local fan base was apparently the pre-teen daughters from relatively affluent families.  Basically, Ticketmaster insiders bought up the best half of the tickets and scapled them.  There was bipartisan anger at Tickemaster which turned out to be effective at least locally.  Basically the well very middle class parents of these pre-teens went to the the defense of their daughters calling politicians about the evil of Ticketmaster.  This was a very potent bipartisan effort.  Minnesota passed a law on preferred customer pre-sales of tickets.  Not big on the grand scale of things but it was a way to teach their children how the political system can be legitimately used.


After Miley Cyrus turned 18 and got out of the Disney contract she did a (gotta say it) "way too gay!"  image change campaign.  "Way too gay" doesn't mean lesbian but way overdone, doubling down or "jumping the shark".  It seemed there was a Miley Cyrus "shocker of the day" where it became obviously that it was an overdone, planned campaign.  Then came the fake pot thing.


I get the sense that Miley Cyrus's star appeal has fallen like a rock.  The song is a techno-mix.  If you have a little money for production almost anyone can sound good.  She has good singing skills so the song sounds good.  That said, have you heard anything in the media about Miley Cyrus/Hanna Montana in the last year?
Greg Lang


What we’ve been waiting for: Miley Cyrus’ musical tribute to Occupy Wall Street

POSTED AT 3:45 PM ON NOVEMBER 29, 2011 BY TINA KORBE

  
Oh, the irony. Thanks to capitalism, she’s filthy rich (estimated earnings of $48 million in 2010!) — as much a part of the 1 percent as Michael Moore and just as ignorant of her membership in it. But never mind all that: The oh-so-desperate-to-be-an-adult Miley Cyrus proves her invincible immaturity with a remixed-song-and-video-tribute to Occupy Wall Street, unaptly named “Liberty Walk.” Doesn’t she realize it’s the Tea Party that proudly and rebelliously says, “Don’t tread on me”? No, of course she doesn’t, any more than Mila Kunis understands Middle America.
If she annoys me so much, why am I posting this? I ask myself that, too. I could say it’s because I want all capitalists everywhere to vote with their dollars against her and other prone-to-pop-off pop stars. But that wouldn’t be entirely true. The truth is, I kinda like the beat. It’s a very danceable song. Then, too, there is the profundity of the lyrics: “Don’t live a lie. This is your one life. Just walk.” Inspiring.



Tuesday, November 22, 2011

PR experts: Occupy movement a self-defeating disaster

http://hotair.com/archives/2011/11/18/pr-experts-occupy-movement-a-self-defeating-disaster/
The Occupy Movement succeeded early in seizing a media narrative, a feat that public-relations experts know is hardly easy to achieve.  These professionals should be impressed by the ability of the movement to get its message across, right?  Well, that’s the real problem, according to PR Daily.  They don’t have one — and the media coverage is exposing the ugliness in the vacuum of a message (via Instapundit):
MORE AT LINK:  http://hotair.com/archives/2011/11/18/pr-experts-occupy-movement-a-self-defeating-disaster/

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Saturday, November 19, 2011

The Twin Cities and Bakken from outer space.

http://www.midwestenergynews.com/2011/11/14/the-bakken-north-dakota-oil-field-from-space/

Redrant:  If the vidcap holds note the size of the light in the Bakken range from gas flaring.  Currently, only 10% of Bakken gas is flared, this picture may be older.  Still, larger light area than the outer beltway of the Twin Cities which is a forty-mile radius.  Greg Lang



Monday, November 14, 2011

WHAT DOES CO2 HAVE TO DO WITH CLIMATE? (Little or nothing)

http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2011/11/what-does-co2-have-to-do-with-climate.php


Little or nothing, if Tim Ball is correct. This post on his web site packs more iconoclasm (and useful information) into a shorter space than just about anything I have read on the subject:
Recently a Japanese Research Institute published a satellite map of sources of CO2 emissions. It was virtually ignored by the mainstream media, but that has become an inverse measure of its significance to the climate debate. It showed a pattern that most would not expect because of the misleading information presented by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) amplified by most media.
Here it is:
North America is a net consumer of CO2. Dr. Ball explains: “The map is only surprising if you believe that humans are the primary source of CO2.” But he is just getting warmed up:
The oceans are the main control of atmospheric CO2 as one of the atmospheric gases in constant flux between the water and the atmosphere. The ocean’s ability to absorb CO2 is a function of its temperature – cold water absorbs more CO2 than warm water.
This is why whenever the Earth’s climate gets warmer, it is followed by an increase in atmospheric CO2.
REST OF STORY AT LINK.  THE CARBONATION EFFECT IS ESTABLISHED SCIENCE.  GREG LANG.

Canadian PM eyes China after US Keystone Pipeline delay

http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=CNG.93c1b5af9b6cb71a17bf389563809eb2.671&show_article=1

Sunday, November 13, 2011

I checked motor vehicle natural gas prices Sunday.


I was driving in South Minneapolis near the one natural gas filling station in the Twin Cites.  It was closed but they had an adjustable sign that said "gasoline equivalent $2.29".  Nearby gasoline was $3.29, I filled today and $3.24.

The local price of unleaded regular dropped forty cents in the last couple of months.  I would doubt that natural gas with road tax dropped much if at all.  Basically, it looks like natural gas as motor fuel is around two third the cost unleaded regular for the same miles driven.


Redrant:  There is a "road tax", at least at the federal level, for natural gas based on BTU equivalent.  Figure your fuel cost per mile will drop one-third with a natural gas vehicle.  I anticipate abundant natural gas for the decades, which should cover the working life of the vehicle.  With my Ford Ranger pickup it would take 60,000 miles at a dollar per gallon savings to cover the basic 3,000 additional cost of a natural gas system.  I expect the "decoupling" of the cost of natural gas and gasoline to continue to be wider so there could be greater savings.

In the last few months the price of gasoline has dropped forty cents here in the Twin Cities.  If we go by stop nat gas prices the nat gas price has dropped a couple of pennies per  gasoline gallon equivalent.

The first, and still only public fueling station in the Twin Cities, MN (population 2,000,000) was established in the mid 1970's and we still only have one.  Natural gas in vehicles has a good safety record in crashes.  The new providers of "home filling stations" show their product in attached garages, which I am a bit wary about.  Perhaps 
they have "sniffers" which would shut the system down if there was a leak.  I still prefer good ventilation.  The historic safety record is good.

If there is a government subsidy I would have it in the form of natural gas filling stations, with an emphasis on those with public access in areas where natural gas filling stations do not currently exist.  In a car conversion, the range is 
reduced by 50% and tank filling takes longer because gaseous gasses heat when compressed.  T Boone Pickens had the right idea using natural gas in garbage trucks.  That said, natural gas has lower pollution than diesel on unleaded gas.  For more than thirty years nat gas garbage trucks have been used in some parts of the Southern California "pollution belt" so there should be lots of data.  Greg Lang

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Sir Conrad Black: My Manifesto For the Occupy Movement

http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/conrad-black/occupy-wall-street_b_1011446.html

Redrant:  Almost a decade ago here in Minneapolis, MN, USA we had an occupation to try to stop the Hiawatha rereoute.  It lasted more than a year.  I used to bicycle past the encampment all the time.  From my house I can make a bicycle ride to the Mississippi and Minnesota river juncture flood plans and return with virtually no traffic.  It can be a twenty-five mile ride all on paved shallow grade trails in the middle of the city.  


I saw the encampment devolve into mostly gutter-punks and homeless.  With the "occupy" fleabaggers" it just seems to be happening sooner.


You should read the article but the "money quote" specific to this blog:  "or to climb aboard the global warming bandwagon now that its wheels have left its axles in all four directions."    Greg Lang

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

UNITED STATES IS GETTING COLDER, NOT WARMER

http://www.powerlineblog.com/archives/2011/11/united-states-is-getting-colder-not-warmer.php


UNITED STATES IS GETTING COLDER, NOT WARMER

At Watts Up With That, data from the National Climatic Data Center are reviewed. The results are quite startling. Every region of the continental United States has shown a cooling trend during the winter from 2001 to the present, and five of the nine regions have also had a cooling trend during the summer. With respect to annual mean temperature, only one of nine regions–the Northeast–has gotten warmer; the other eight have gotten cooler.
This chart shows the overall trend for the period 2001 to 2010:
American data are significant because the U.S. is a large land mass, and because we probably have the world’s best records. But the absence of warming is a worldwide phenomenon. Pat Michaels:
“The last ten years of the BEST [worldwide] data indeed show no statistically significant warming trend, no matter how you slice and dice them”. He adds: “Both records are in reasonable agreement about the length of time without a significant warming trend. In the CRU record it is 15.0 years. In the University of Alabama MSU it is 13.9, and in the Remote Sensing Systems version of the MSU it is 15.6 years.
Finally, these two charts illustrate why no one who pays attention has any faith in the “data” produced by the alarmists. Both were produced by NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, which is run by Jim Hansen, one of the chief alarmists. Both purport to show data for the same area–continental U.S.–over the same period of time, 1880 to 1999. GISS produced the top version in 1999. Notice how the warming trend is subtle, and 1934 is significantly warmer than 1998. GISS produced the bottom chart in 2011. Note that the trend is completely different, and 1998 is now significantly warmer than 1934. Obviously, the data didn’t change between 1999 and 2001. Rather, Hansen and his colleagues continually come up with new ways to slice and dice the data to create the illusion of catastrophic warming when in fact there is none:
The good news is that hardly anyone believes these charlatans anymore.


Saturday, November 5, 2011

too much electricity for the grid to soak up.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/45174002
REDRANT: THE SUBSIDIZED BIRD KILLING MACHINES HAVE A CONTRACT WHERE THEIR POWER MUST BE PURCHASED AT A PREMIUM WEATHER OR NOT IT IS NEEDED. GREG LANG


REDRANT#2   EVEN WITH DISCOUNTS ELECTRICITY FOR HEATING IS FIVE TO TEN TIMES THE CURRENT COST OF NATURAL GAS.  GREG LANG


Taming Unruly Wind Power



Published: Saturday, 5 Nov 2011 | 10:45 AM ET
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By: Matthew L. Wald
The New York Times
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For decades, electric companies have swung into emergency mode when demand soars on blistering hot days, appealing to households to use less power. But with the rise of wind energy, utilities in the Pacific Northwest are sometimes dealing with the opposite: moments when there is too much electricity for the grid to soak up.

Jon Boyes | Photographer's Choice RF | Getty Images


So in a novel pilot project, they have recruited consumers to draw in excess electricity when that happens, storing it in a basement water heater or a space heater outfitted by the utility. The effort is rooted in some brushes with danger.
In June 2010, for example, a violent storm in the Northwest caused a simultaneous surge in wind power and in traditional hydropower, creating an oversupply that threatened to overwhelm the grid and cause a blackout.
As a result, the Bonneville Power Administration, the wholesale supplier to a broad swath of the region, turned this year to a strategy common to regions with hot summers: adjusting volunteers’ home appliances by remote control to balance supply and demand.
When excess supply threatens Bonneville’s grid, an operator in a control room hundreds of miles away will now dial up a volunteer’s water heater, raising the thermostat by 60 more degrees. Ceramic bricks in a nearby electric space heater can be warmed to hundreds of degrees.
The devices then function as thermal batteries, capable of giving back the energy when it is needed. Microchips run both systems, ensuring that tap-water and room temperatures in the home hardly vary.
“It’s a little bit of that Big Brother control, almost,” said Theresa Rothweiler, a teacher’s aide in the Port Angeles, Wash., school system who nonetheless signed up for the program with her husband, Bruce, a teacher.

She said she had been intrigued by an ad that Bonneville placed in the local paper that asked consumers to help enable the grid to absorb more renewable energy, especially wind.
“We’re always looking at ways to save energy, or be more efficient or green, however you want to put it,” said Ms. Rothweiler, who worries about leaving the planet a livable place for her 21-year-old daughter, Gretchen. Bonneville paid for the special technology, which runs around $1,000 per home.
The initial goal of Bonneville’s pilot program is to gain experience in charging and “discharging” the water heaters and space heaters to see how much response operators can count on as the use of these thermal batteries expands.
Mark K. Lauby, director of reliability assessment at the North American Electric Reliability Corporation, which enforces standards on the grid, said that such storage innovations would be “the holy grail” as the nation shifts to greater reliance on renewable energy.
While the threat of excess supply is most severe in the Pacific Northwest, other regions may land in the same situation in coming years because a surplus would threaten to destabilize the electric system as much as a shortage.
California, for example, is committed to getting a third of its electricity from renewable sources by 2020.
That would be harder if it had to turn off the wind machines on their best generating days to prevent the grid from being overwhelmed.

For decades, the Bonneville Power Administration rarely had a problem with excess supply. Its backbone is hydroelectric dams on the Columbia River, and while the operators must often run all of the falling water through its power-producing turbines for environmental reasons, the grid could adjust the supply by turning off fossil fuel plants.
That balance began to shift over the last few years as entrepreneurs built hundreds of wind machines nearby in the Columbia River Gorge, an area that utility executives now call a “wind ghetto.” While the wind turbines produce electricity far below their capacity most hours of the year, they get busy when a storm rolls through, which is when river flows are highest, too.
The agency can simply shut down the wind machines, and it did so intermittently this summer when excess power threatened the grid. But that angered the wind operators, who earn money from the electricity they sell and from tax and other credits based on their production.
This June, several wind companies appealed Bonneville’s policy to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, calling it discriminatory, and in August they filed a federal court challenge that is still pending.
For Bonneville, the full dangers of excess supply first hit home during the June 2010 emergency, when a severe storm whipped through the region. The transmission network had so much power that the agency turned off all its fossil fuel generation, gave electricity away to neighboring networks and even told the system’s only nuclear plant to slash its production by 78 percent, a highly unusual step.
The region squeaked through, but the agency was stretching its resources “to their limits,” said Doug Johnson, a spokesman for Bonneville. At one point the system was running almost entirely on renewable energy.
“This is probably about the only place in the country where that could happen,” said Michael Milstein, another spokesman with the agency.
The problem was complicated by environmental rules involving the hydroelectric dams.
The dams were built with spillways, or paths where operators can divert water without passing it through the power-producing turbines. But when the water goes through the spillways, it picks up nitrogen bubbles that can kill juvenile fish, so there are strict limits on their use.
Operators can usually keep the system in balance without excessive use of spillways, but in the June 2010 case, they were coping with as many as 2,000 megawatts of wind power, roughly double Seattle’s power use or what two nuclear plants can deliver.
Wind installations have grown since then. So Bonneville began advertising for volunteers to accept extra electricity, mainly homeowners with electric heat and with water heaters of recent vintage.
Plumbers install a mixing valve on the water heaters to keep the faucet temperature safe, and new wiring and a small computer keep track of energy flows.
The agency says that some 200 homes will soon have the adapted water heaters, space heaters or both. In hundreds more, it is installing more traditional controls that will allow it to turn water heaters off. Another utility in the region, Portland General Electric, is about to begin a similar program paid for by the federal Energy Department.
For the time being, the storage devices collectively can absorb the output of only a handful of wind turbines.
A 100-gallon home water heater can store about 26 kilowatt-hours, or about a day’s worth of electricity for a typical house, or less if the house relies on electricity for heat.
The ceramic bricks in the space heater can store 40 kilowatt-hours, or more in some larger configurations. The heat can be drawn off by passing air and delivered to living spaces by a fan, with the bricks also functioning as a thermal battery.
Some of this equipment dates from the late 1980s and was originally designed for offering “time of use” rates, so that a homeowner could buy electricity during hours when it was cheaper and store it. But coordination over a broad area by a utility to manage regional flows is new.
One nagging question is who will pay for the installations if they are carried out on a larger scale.
While Bonneville pays for them now, Philip D. Lusk, the power resources manager for the utility department of the city of Port Angeles — the Rothweilers’ retail supplier — said the agency might have to find additional ways of compensating consumers to get the thousands of volunteers it will eventually need to make the system effective.
If the installations are judged to benefit everyone because they improve stability, the cost might be spread among all ratepayers. But if Bonneville decides that they mainly benefit the wind generators because they never have to unplug their turbines, the agency could try to charge that industry.
Either way, said Mr. Johnson, the Bonneville spokesman, the agency will have to come up with a solution to “the cranky nature of wind.”