News Networks
Topics
Stories
People

  • My Networks
  • Popular
  • Recent
  • ABC...XYZ
  • Create New
  • Search
  • Popular
  • Recent
  • Rising Fast
  • ABC...XYZ
  • Popular Today
  • Popular Week
  • Popular Month
  • Rising Fast
  • Hot Discussions
  • My Newsmakers
  • My Followers
  • Recently Active
  • Popular
  • Find
  • Invite Friends
Connect
Sign in using facebook |
Log in |
Sign Up


Hi there. I'm Jason, one of the founders of socialmedian.
socialmedian delivers the news, filtered by your network.
We'd love to have you join in.
You can use facebook connect to sign in.
Connect
OR
Log in 
|
Sign up


Create your socialmedian account
Email
Required

Password
Required

The password must be atleast 6 characters
Username
Required

http://www.socialmedian.com/username
This is same as my twitter ID
Security check

I agree to the terms and conditions and the privacy policy.
Loading...


Already a user? Please Log In
Invalid Login!
Email

Password

Remember me:
Loading...


Forgot Password?

Email:

By
Add News Flash
User-submitted headlines for this story

Loading

0
Clips
Book Review: Blackout
Source: Peak Oil News
Jul 05, 2009


Dislike
 
0%
 
0%

Like

Summary

Domestic Fuel


By Joanna Schroeder


Under the surface we seem to have a lot of it. It’s fairly inexpensive but this is changing as demand rises to meet increased energy needs especially in countries like China. So we have a lot, its cheap, let’s use it, what’s the problem? Right? Wrong!

Author Richard Heinberg writes in Blackout: Coal, Climate and the Last Energy Crisis, “In short: two of the defining trends of the emerging century–the development of the Asian economies and climate change–both center on coal. But coal is finite non-renewable resource. Thus, a discussion of the future of coal must also intersect with a third great trend of the new century: resource depletion.”

In the first part of the book, Heinberg takes the reader through a deep analysis of just how much coal is available throughout the world. Keep in mind, forecasts assume that current energy use stays the same, but it is increasing each year, making coal available for a shorter amount of time. Best estimates are that the world will see Peak Coal by 2025 and many believe that the world has alread

...Read the full article

Comments (0)
Add Your Comment
Please enter your Email Id to get a new password
Forgot your password?
Email:

Add something

Snip
News
Site

Instantly Clip News From Any Website
Clip it! on s|m
Or, Enter News Directly Here
Headline:

URL:
(Optional)

Description:
(Optional)

Adding a News...


Add Snip
Adding a Snip...


Now you can import your favorite sites to your socialmedian page
Loading...

Loading...


Is this you?
Stats

Mood
0% Like

0% Dislike

Share this story

Network
Email
Tweet
Share with the News Network
Email ID's
(multiple Email ID's separated by commas)
Message
Also post this message as a public comment
Don't worry. We won't share the name or email address of the person that you sent the story to.
Loading...

Message
119

bit.ly (short) url will be added to the message.
Link to discuss this story on socialmedian

Link to the original story

Twitter ID

Password

Save my twitter password
Tweet will be sent using   (change)
Topics

peak oil
Add Topics

Comma Separated.
Belongs to News Networks

peak oil (Users: 2)
Stories in 24 hours: 0
Register using your Twitter ID and we'll help you easily connect
your accounts and find people you already know.

We constantly make updates and enhancements based on user feedback. Follow socialmedian on Twitter
Help us out and report a bug or suggest a new feature! Check out our blog for regular company updates, notables, and to see what we're currently working on.
Report a Bug
Suggest a Feature


 Sending...
close
socialmedian Inc. 2008 - 2009
About socialmedian    |        |    Terms of Service    |    Privacy Policy