Sunday 28 December 2014

Yukon’s ‘frackonomist’ presented false oil and gas data

Yukon’s ‘frackonomist’ presented false oil and gas data ( Comment )

Keith Halliday’s Dec. 5 column published locally with the glib title “Love it or hate it, fracking is here to stay” starts off with invented data that hype up fracking:
Whitehorse Star on December 24, 2014
Keith Halliday’s Dec. 5 column published locally with the glib title “Love it or hate it, fracking is here to stay” starts off with invented data that hype up fracking:
“Since 2010, oil and gas production in the U.S. has gone from a bit over four million barrels a day in oil equivalent to 12 million a day as of September. This is according to the Wall Street Journal and U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA), and is largely due to surges in fracked oil and gas production.”
The EIA, in their latest overview report an overall U.S. production, rise since 2010 as follows:
2010 U.S. oil and gas production added roughly up to about daily 20 million barrels of oil equivalent (BOE), not Halliday’s fivefold distortion of four million, comprised of 9.7 million barrels oil daily plus 21.3 trillion cubic feet natural gas annually.
The energy in one BBL, barrel of oil (crude plus other extracted petroleum liquids), also 42 U.S.Gal, also 35 IG (Imperial Gallon), also 159 litres, is equal to 1.7 megawatt hours – one third cord of wood or 6,000 cubic feet of natural gas.
U.S. production of natural gas equated to about 10 mill. BOE daily, which, together with close to 10 mill barrels of oil, added up to 20 million BOE in 2011, and to over 24 million BOE daily for 2013.
Halliday’s tabloid style try with four million BOE in 2010 to hype perception of frack production increase is not a typo. 
He hides that conventional oil and gas production in North America remains the economic feedstock and brittling energy backbone. And that the recently arrived high-intensity fracking standard needs ruinous and ever-increasing subsidies because it has no useful net energy output (similarly debt-increasing and future job-killing as tar sands steam extraction).
“The Middle East, the only large source of low-cost oil, remains at the centre of the longer-term oil outlook” (World Energy Outlook, International Energy Agency, 2013).
Another nice story on a supposed “glut” in his Dec. 5 piece does not check out with the energy availability and affordability problem: 
“The U.S., as well as British Columbia, are now feverishly working on facilities to export North America’s gas glut to other countries where gas prices can be two or three times higher.”
He must have seen but doesn’t mention the EIA’s forecast, which, by 2020, sees U.S. oil production once again decreasing and imports of about 30 per cent as far as they look, which is 2035. Producing frack gas requires expending a lot of oil.
And most of the frack expansion infrastructure such as pipelines, LNG terminals and plants were already stalled out before the oil price drop because of investor pull back.
In terms of Halliday’s LNG export enthusiasm, keep in mind the North American frack sector, as the basis of it, has been plagued with reserve swindles and inflation. 
In 2011 and 2014, it has seen fairly dramatic intervention on behalf of investor protection by government bodies like the USGS (U.S. Geological Survey) as well as EIA, which downgraded shale reserve statements by orders of magnitude.
Where is the export natural gas supposed to come from?
According to 2014, CAPP (Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers) data, Canadian natural gas production, after years of decline, continues to decline until 2021, and, followed by a shallow growth bump, again enters decline in 2027.
Their best-case scenario shows continued production decline until 2017, and after 10 years of shallow sloped growth of about 25 per cent, also decline after 2027.
Under NAFTA Chapter 6, Energy Canada cannot reduce energy exports to the U.S. before 36 months of production decline have been proven for a given sector, which further reduces flexibility and export alternatives.
The global LNG trade and production has stagnated since 2010. It was largely built on conventional gas where the profit margin was allowed to expend a whopping 40 per cent of the resource energy, just on the liquefaction process. The LNG export leader Qatar is not the only example.
Frack fields exhaust fast and are a highly subsidized and very short-term gamble dominated by predatory Wall Street whims.
The investors increasingly stay away because the long-term amortization requirements in the oil and gas industry, including of super-expensive LNG plants, terminals and ship building, don’t match up.
As a consequence of such investor skepticism, the LNG terminal projects in the U.S. have slowed down or are stalled.
In B.C., there is not a single go ahead at this point.
Current Canadian share of global LNG trade is zero per cent; the U.S. has between 0.1 and 0 per cent – a little reality check one does not hear about often.
The fact that the accomplished writer and researcher Gwynne Dyer pushed the fiction of North American oil and gas as being competitive overseas, syndicated on Oct. 23 in the Whitehorse Star as “The price of oil will hit its floor and it will rise again” is no excuse for Halliday.
The centre of Dyer’s argument reiterates a master piece from the big oil spin doctors, supposed OPEC break-even prices of well above $100. Actually, diverse government expenditures may add to any national debt but really are not part of national or private oil producers’ balance sheets, not in Qatar and not in Canada.
Similar to Russia’s or various Middle Eastern countries’ oil and gas production, the all-conventional oil production in Saudi Arabia is into gravy and profits above $25-30/BBL.
No doubt Russian and OPEC oil and gas resource extraction operations appreciate a high oil price but don’t have to worry about the outclassed Canadian and U.S. competition.
And in terms of energy markets, OPEC competes with China’s and India’s explosive renewable energy growth. Wind energy grew about 90-fold since 2005 in China.
In reality, even OPEC policies are influenced by the multinational oil majors as well as by corrupt, so-called free trade deals that give foreign corporations the illegitimate authority to de facto legislate, protection racket-style. 
Also, few countries are oil exporters, and most are importers of what is not a luxury commodity. Around 50 of the poorest countries spend most of their foreign currency reserves on oil imports simply to grow or ship food.
After sinking deeper into debt growing and shipping potatoes, millet, rice or corn for a while, at and beyond a fairly universal pain threshold of $70 oil, at some point, some can’t continue.
Then more oil becomes available, and the price drops like just now or in 2008, after it had gone to $147, resulting in economic contraction paired with oil demand destruction and temporary price collapse.
A new window of availability-affordability starts the cycle over. 
And so it continues, with a deadly fever turned into chronic or structural disease of a jittery, energy-starved world economy.
Specifically because the big oil-controlled North America has fallen behind and fails to grow energy industries significantly where it happens, which is in the diverse renewable community-driven sector.
The source of this dynamic or price cycle is energy scarcity, not surplus or glut, with much of conventional, affordable oil and gas running out quickly now, and for many in North America as well, the problem is being priced out of the market.
In case of a business plan or community co-op plan, the required affordable cost projection may typically run over five years or more, certainly not five weeks or months, sort of along Halliday’s embarrassing glut and low-price nonsense.
Fiona Harvey had this to say or quote on April 1, 2012 on the Guardian global development page: 
“With oil prices likely to remain high, the only answer is for developing countries to move to cleaner renewable sources of energy, Fatih Birol, chief economist at the IEA, told the Guardian.
“If you diversify the sources of energy, that is a good thing, and clean energy means using free, homegrown resources, so that will bring down the import bills,” he said.’
When industrialized economies were developing, oil was the equivalent of $13 a barrel, but now developing countries must pay $120 to $130, noted Birol, which leaves developing countries “hamstrung” – so if more people are to be lifted out of poverty, clean energy must be an imperative.
The data from the IEA (International Energy Agency), widely regarded as the gold standard for energy analysis, rang alarm bells for campaigners, and is likely to be closely examined by donor governments, which have not tended to prioritize clean energy in the past.”
Halliday’s blindness on the energy eye misleads Yukoners and Canadians because wasting resources from crucial conventional oil and gas feedstock into the sinkholes of shales and tarsands only deepens the crisis and threat of energy starvation. Trouble is, should the problem hit on a real crisis or depression level, it might be late fixing it.
Like the Alberta and B.C. petro state governments, Halliday is also an ardent “free” trader as well as carbon price and carbon tax promoter, which he has put forward many times.
More neoliberal magical thinking. The polluter powers benefit by carbon pricing ideolog re-assigning responsibility in a way that exploits energy-saving light bulb campaigns, etc. Acquiring and financializing polluter offsets and permits further entrench and expand polluter rights.
Carbon price and carbon market language falsely describe big oil not as oilygarchy but as market player with a supposedly affordable and therefor adjustable product and provide climate outlaws with a fake image of being relevant solution providers.
“Put a price on carbon” was invented and successfully introduced by big oil and Wall Street in the early ’80s as a fictionalized, alternative proposal to a renewable energy orientation, very much in zero sum opposition.
Countries like Denmark that are far below projected greenhouse gas emission levels or caps, China very much putting the same gears in place, instead have strong renewable energy frameworks as policy lead or driver. With fewer unearned privileges for big oil, coal and nuclear markets work.
There, people are encouraged to participate in electric public and private transportation and other zero tailpipe emission technologies. 
And they’re not cynically penalized and carbon-taxed for living with infrastructure decisions they have not made and for which little alternative is available to them.
Matthias Bichsel, then project and technology director at Shell, summed it up in October 2013 in this way, cited by the Financial Post on Oct. 18, 2013: “The United States oil and gas industry has “overfracked and overdrilled’.”
Seasoned oil and gas industrialists like Art Berman and analysts like Deborah Rogers or petroleum geologists like David Hughes, state clearly fracking is more energy waste and investment fraud than resource production.
Rather than for responsible oil and gas production, the frack bubble aims at fracking pension funds and drilling for media releases, and Halliday delivers.

Saturday 20 September 2014

How do we work to get democracy back?

How do we work to get democracy back?

Democracy has always been a question of trend, of direction, and of movement; not of absolutes or a still picture.
By Whitehorse Star on September 17, 2014
Democracy has always been a question of trend, of direction, and of movement; not of absolutes or a still picture.
The federal government ratified last week the controversial Canada-China Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement (FIPA).
It gives multinational corporations from China the right and power to legislate in Canada by overruling Canadian federal, First Nations’ and territorial laws right down to municipal bylaws.
It happens not nominally but effectively through a NAFTA-like secret arbitration panel process, that is outside of Canadian law, by binding and preventing it.
Attention! Different to legitimate legal processes – these panel decisions cannot be appealed.
Opposition parties, except for the Liberals, had tried to stop FIPA in 2013.
It is wrong to assume that dictatorships typically first reach for power with violence when they actually start by passing crime-enabling laws and regulations that attack constitutional rights.
Why would it be different for Canada’s version of an emerging “totalitarian democracy” (the late Gore Vidal)?
There are good reasons why the Yukon and Nunavut Regulatory Improvement Act, Bill S-6, has been tabled to the unelected Senate but not to Parliament.
The harsh reality is that Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s Bill S-6 amendment of the Yukon Environmental and Socio-economic Assessment Act (YESAA) and the Nunavut Waters Act and Nunavut Surface Rights Tribunal Act rolls back Yukon’s constitutional self-government rights granted under the Devolution Transfer Agreement.
It does that by giving the prime minister and his cabinet rights they did not have, to interfere in the Yukon on behalf of speculators and corporations.
In a throw-back to the 1800s, First Nations are singled out by not living up to contracts with them. Even judges chosen by Stephen Harper have expressed that in a long string of decisions.
Bill S-6 continues with the colonizer stance also by weakening the Umbrella Final Agreement which originated closely interwoven with YESAA.
The Yukon government provides anti-democratic assistance to their masters in Ottawa also by injecting questionable expertise into gas fracking consultations, suggesting a predetermined outcome.
This offers a handy platform to Ottawa to pursue political goals of a postmodern aristocracy hidden behind false economic claims.
In ways different to the First Nations, municipalities also have a venerable grassroots democratic tradition of their own.
The 1998 Yukon Municipal Act had answered to longstanding demands by Yukoners as well as their town and city councils for democratic participation.
When Whitehorse residents used their rights and petitioned city council to hold several referenda, the city turned against them.
In the case of the union-busting Walmart, the petition was a handful of signatures short. At the time, mayor Kathy Watson pushed through a narrow 4-3 vote at city council for the Argus development (Walmart).
In the case of Marianne Darragh’s successful 2008 McLean Lake petition, in an era when city council was very much dominated by the city's managers, the city went to court to escape its duty to hold a referendum.
Perhaps in conventional perception, environmental concerns, before they grew much broader in the face of a climate survival problem, were surrounded by white middle class privilege that did not suffer a serious rights deficiency.
Now, much is to be learned from women’s equality, slavery abolition, aboriginal rights and labour rights struggles.
The finding was that regulating supposedly acceptable degrees of violence and harm against people re-enforces the problem.
Goodwill, information, and general sympathy campaigns were not enough to heal the pestilence of oppression.
It took the claiming, occupying and legislating of rights to make democracy work.
First Nations taught us that rights of the Earth as community rights are not idealism but a practicality proven in a thousand generations.
Should citizens bow to a litigious city hall or corporations in their pursuit or endorsement of fracking-based LNG infrastructure?
Where can citizens go after they have been fed a drumbeat of phoney consultations to the point they want to throw up, being lied to and being denied rightful participation?
When do regulations help the community, and when do they hurt by cajoling people into forgetting to say no to danger and harm?
How do law-making and organizing strategies interact?
What can we learn from other places and fights?
Come to Global Frackdown 2014 and meet the community rights attorneys Mari Margil and Thomas Linzey for a presentation and conversation, 7-9 p.m. Sept. 26 at the Kwanlin Dun Cultural Centre, who will be here on invitation of the Frackfree Yukon Alliance.
Robin Gilson
Peter Becker
Whitehorse

Friday 11 July 2014

Part 1: A frank analysis of Canada’s energy destiny ( Whitehorse Star Comment ) Part 2: Our nation is swiftly becoming an energy loser ( Whitehorse Star Comment )


A frank analysis of Canada’s energy destiny ( Whitehorse Star Comment )

What makes the energy issue hard to grasp is the need for understanding its complexity, not as a fancy but at minimum.
By freelancer on July 22, 2014
What makes the energy issue hard to grasp is the need for understanding its complexity, not as a fancy but at minimum.
It would involve examination of details, yes, but while holding other strands of thought and questioning in reach.
The public education mandate of news outlets, media, academia and government agencies has much degraded to a pushing of information bits. The offered illusions of instantly making complete sense actually stop the public from even getting going and asking questions to build comprehension.
The energy economy and climate survival outlook is not looking good based on problem-solving resources that become narrower and narrower.
A lot of the pushed information does not speak a language that interacts with the need for people and their heritage to know something out of themselves, from their experience, so they are not stuck with spoon-fed messages.
Walter Benjamin writes in The Storyteller (1936): “Information, however, lays claim to prompt verifiability. The prime requirement [which he thinks is wrong] is that it appear ‘understandable in itself’ ” and
“With the [First] World War, a process began to become apparent which has not halted since then. Was it not noticeable at the end of the war that men returned from the battlefield grown silent—not richer in communicable experience?”
1914 Western civilization succumbed to a universe of destruction that choked it in rivers of blood under a “storm of steel” (Ernst Juenger).
And yet the failure of hyper-nationalism and militarism might come to pale against an even deadlier surprise looming now, running out of energy.
It could or would mean scores of people freezing, starving and dying in their homes while other folks or the supplies they need don’t reach workplaces anymore.
A key requirement for an industrial society is and will be affordable transportation. A few short years of fracking for oil and gas (U.S. government Energy Information Agency) fumes are a dead end and a waste, also in this regard.
That’s partly because expensive transportation, logging, mining and farming equipment standards turn over slowly, only in decades.
The remote and vast Yukon’s energy security for long shipping lifelines is super-vulnerable.
Overdue kick starters to electrify those equipment infrastructures matter at any rate of their implementation, as e-technology is here to stay.
Typically, fossil fuel-based power or drive trains cannot compete outside of wasteful monopoly and subsidy regimes. Bringing down the cost of doing business is relevant.
That’s because electric motors produce roughly a sevenfold gas mileage or other physical work advantage over combustion engines from an equivalent energy amount and expense.
Equally to August 1914, catastrophe threatens to be more speedy than any remedy could be, while its causes are hidden by years of denial and jingoism and then cannot be undone.
Current and chronic energy starvation will harden. It will become acute not from a lack of drilling for oil and gas but from drilling too much.
For those who do not understand industrial energy systems, it may sound counterintuitive at first. Herein lies the problem, and in misleading propaganda, of course, by armies of pundits from the CBC to the Sun Media Corp.
The low-hanging fruit, the affordable fossil fuel, the productive conventional resources started to really fatigue a generation ago when oil and gas production peaked in its usable outcome.
The understanding of affordable energy as the low-hanging fruit is important in King Hubbert’s 1956 landmark publication Nuclear Energy and the Fossil Fuels.
And it was refined by Charles Hall as the net energy outcome of energy production.
It also means the analysis of a crude oil production peak is valid today, calculated and timed by the petroleum geologist M. King Hubbert to occur around 2000.
Since then, oil use in the world economy, minus in the oil extraction itself, declines.
Consequently, oil and especially diesel shortages happen the world over, even in Alberta, 2008; supply and affordability fall short of growing structural demand.
Demand destruction and recession see-saw or alternate with price spikes, shortages and price volatility triggered by economic up jitters.
Even though the International Energy Agency (IEA) had consistently predicted global crude oil production to exceed 90 million barrels per day before 2010, production plateaued since 2005, and, to this day, never reached those 90 million.
Partly in response to the widespread shale reserve swindle, the IEA has introduced a new term – “proven-plus-probable oil reserves” – of which they locate 80 per cent in the Middle East (World Energy Outlook, IEA, 2013).
“The Middle East, the only large source of low-cost oil, remains at the centre of the longer-term oil outlook” (World Energy Outlook, IEA, 2013).
Except for the Tengiz oil field in Kazakhstan, through half a century, no new elephant field has come in sight or on line. An all-important one per cent of fields produce over half of the world’s oil.
Most of the oil and gas industry efficiencies and affordability came from these giants; without them, there would probably be very little oil and gas industry at all.
Peak oil is alive and well in a Robert L. Hirsch (long-time U.S. government energy advisor) co-authored 2009 study, picked up by the Christian Science Monitor.
It predicts that creeping and also a steep decline of some time-pressurized and water-injected fields will transition into abrupt exhaustion and failure.
“As the world’s giant fields continue to age and more start to decline, we can therefore expect the annual decline in their rate of production to worsen. ” (Christian Science Monitor online, April 12, 2013 “The decline of the world’s major oil fields”.)
As we shall see, tarsands and shales are a subsidy and financial game with no useful energy production, but still, their gross output is counted as part of the world’s stagnating total oil output.
All of this follows a global reserve discovery peak, also correctly predicted by Hubbert, for 1960.
It is the same year Tommy Douglas advocates for a constitutional Bill of Rights, Marshall McLuhan begins (re) writing Understanding Media, Elvis Presley appears in the movie G.I. Blues and J.F.K. is elected U.S. President, all of it a very long time ago. Too long and too complete of a decline for oil exploration to recover from.
Before that time, significant more new oil and gas was found than was used. Then, less and less was found, and, especially significantly, not a single new super field anymore, except for the said Tengiz Field in 1979.
The opening up of significant new oil and gas prospects collapsed a very long time ago. The petrochemical manufacturing resource has been stolen from a near and far future. Energy has alternative sources, not manufacturing.
Bitumen from tarsands as well as fracking for unconventional shale oil and gas cause some fuss in perception, not useful energy or resource production.
Fracking and tar mining of entire regions of Canada into a resemblance of First World War battlefields even beats those infernal guns in the poisoning of water and air, and, like then, takes away a lot of lives, treasure and energy.
There is confusing frack hype until we deflate it by bringing into the equation Prof. Charles Hall of State University of New York, who specializes in energy economics and ecology.
The energy that can be used, versus the one that is produced, Hall defines as net energy.
Peter Becker is a Whitehorse energy consultant. The second and final part of his commentary will be published Wednesday.
Find out in part two what net energy does re. jobs, economy and climate. Andrew Nikiforuk’s stories in The Tyee might be useful further reading; “Ailing Shale Gas Returns Force a Drilling Treadmill” (June 27).
By Peter Becker


Part 2: Our nation is swiftly becoming an energy loser ( Whitehorse Star Comment )

The first part of this two-part commentary was published Tuesday.
By freelancer on July 23, 2014
The first part of this two-part commentary was published Tuesday.
Details of “net energy” are being discussed or criticized.
However, the principle of a need for a significant enough surplus is hard to refute. Ignoring the dimension probably is dumber than a mouse or any being could afford to be.
Industrial energy production is only affordable or economically viable if for one unit of energy invested in the process, say for one oil barrel of energy equivalents (electricity, natural gas and renewables used also count), there are a minimum of 10 to 15 units return or surplus.
Economists who work in the field refer to net energy also as net energy gain, energy surplus, energy balance (between input and output) or EROI (energy return on energy invested).
Most counter-arguments are poorly thought out and merely variations that under-build the fundamentals – such as financial accounting would be more relevant than net energy, when profitability actually follows the structural energy price and surplus.
Among the examples is Canada, which is quickly becoming an energy loser as it shifts into low-quality unconventional oil and gas extraction, as increasingly expensive make-work, not real jobs.
No amount of creative accounting can take away the bleeding caused by those production costs that are in the ballpark of a long-term global affordability threshold for oil.
And there is no room for profits and royalties.
We know the cycle: when the crude price does go up, it is soon followed by demand destruction with its price dip.
China, Denmark and Germany, even Ontario, Manitoba and Gamesa Corp. in Spain build economic strength, especially with high EROI figures of wind power that is somewhere between 40, 60, perhaps already reaching as high as 80.
Norway’s wealth, as once Alberta’s, was accumulated from conventional crude oil with 20-30 EROI, but the country has now decided to pull back from frack and tarsands investments, all out in favour of renewables.
The distinction between conventional and unconventional is not 100 per cent but perhaps can be judged 99 per cent of the time.
It becomes meaningful and clear along the EROI scale, which is further backed up by conventional reservoir characteristics in the geology, vs. unconventional tight conditions.
Even the latest intensity increases in earth-shattering fracking force (break the bank, all right) break out no more than five per cent – eight per cent of oil and gas locked in the shale rock porosity.
The net energy equation can be compared to useful net income or net revenue vs. income before deductions, which does not buy anything.
If, for example, hourly net wages go down from $30 to 30 cents, it is bad news, and barely affords an unheated cardboard box as a home.
The B.C., Alberta and federal governments are building debt in this way by subsidizing fracking and tarsands toward the economic ruin of generations.
Hall explains that since about 2000, the amount of energy society and economy are provided with from combined conventional and unconventional drilling, including tar sands, is shrinking firmly.
It also means more and more affirmation that the late King Hubbert is right on track with his emblematic peak oil analysis.
Precision of net energy accounting, like all accounting, has a natural wiggle room, but the health and honesty of the figures are vital for survival.
Recently, the Texas government’s Railroad Commission reviewed data submitted by the Texas shale gas producers to the IEA and found they were overstated by 60 per cent. It is unheard of.
In 2009, the Yukon government suppressed the Mt. Sumanik wind power study IR YCS-YEC-1-1 because it showed wind to be competitive.
The study demonstrates wind can produce energy at half the cost of the Mayo B hydro extension and with better base load reliability.
Mt. Sumanik has a shorter interconnection distance to the large power consumption of Whitehorse and to the large Aishihik Lake hydro reservoir, which absorbs and converts wind energy into switchable hydro power.
Old and new renewable energy can work well together in Yukon to meet a growing demand. Wind in Yukon has a record and expectation for a 10 per cent annual variation over hydro, with 30 per cent.
Mid-range and long-range anticipation, in the face of the climate crisis, for wind is also more stable than for hydro reservoir levels.
According to a cross-section of world industry data, conventional oil and gas is down from about a 100 EROI of historical gushers, that built industrial strength and wealth, to a current net energy surplus of about 20, 25 at best (Qatar, Russia, Iran and Norway).
Energy surplus figures for tarsands mining, coalbed and shale fracking are somewhere between two and five, up to six at best; tarsands steam extraction as well as LNG from frack gas data indicate an energy production of around zero net energy units.
All future and half of current tarsands resources that are to be extracted are deep and therefore accessed and only accessible by the bridge to nowhere steam extraction method.
One begins to understand rising indications that potential investors for B.C. LNG terminals, as well as Keystone, Kinder Morgan expansion and Northern Gateway pipelines are running for the hills.
These pipelines and most LNG terminals will never go ahead, but it helps the speculators to cite First Nation and environmental resistance so they can hide economic failure.
Canada and the U.S. have been “over-fracked and over-drilled” (Matthias Bichsel, project and technology director at Shell, who stopped money losing frack investments) to a degree that fortunately other resources like gold, rare earth metals or bauxite are not exhausted.
Obviously, the general political process and especially academic conversation have frozen up in their facilitation of an oil energy fiction.
First Nations (and general public) throughout Canada are increasingly subjected to consultations that are illegal fraud because they have predetermined outcomes.
The judges of many court decisions who have said so are not “activist judges” because they can still read what a dictionary says about “consultation”.
Another massive failure lies in the un-Canadian lack of true diversity that is expressed by the co-opting of environmental and political opposition into some sort of a petrostate conformism or streamlining.
There is discontent with the destruction ravaged on Canadian lands as a prelude to the coming energy starvation. But too few are able to speak up clearly.
The slogan “Put a Price on Carbon” has become the mantra that insults people’s intelligence by getting them to march in lockstep and lull their awareness, and it is not an accident.
It is a left and right wing problem; environmental and conservative ignorance meets neoliberal and neoconservative cynicism.
It works in terms of implemented policy but also as a talking point that either way counteracts energy security and low or no emission strategies.
“Put a Price on Carbon” was introduced as the oil industry’s fighting word against renewable energy reform that was initiated or inspired by Jimmy Carter following the 1973 oil crunch.
The carbon price idea is to think globally and defer action locally, to present a green washed image that locks up policy within fossil fuel concepts and seeks to restrict renewable energy to cosmetics in three ways.
  1. The lie of cheap oil, when fuel expenses really are at and beyond pain thresholds, serves the fiction that carbon taxes and offsets would supposedly nudge people’s GHG behaviour, in a sort of a shopping aisle scenario.
It works nowhere because in reality, filling the heating oil tank in a rental home or driving to work for many is not a luxury choice they would abstain from.
Even more so, not when competitive zero emission infrastructures are artificially suppressed by the elites.
Some confused minds even think allowing independent power producers (IPPs) of renewable energy means privatization, when it is the strategy of big oil affiliates to privatize public utilities.
The Yukon Energy Corp. was attacked in this way 2009, but employees and the Yukon public fought privatization off successfully.
Grid Feed Tariffs, or Feed in Tariffs by which IPPs can sell renewable energy back to the grid, have been adopted in Yukon, on suggestion by the author.
FITs and renewable energy IPPs bring an energy market and democratic trends back, and are a mark of successful industrial countries, not carbon taxing or cap and trade.
  1. “Put a Price on Carbon” says, Big Oil is a market player, and thereby hides it is a militaristically minded cartel. Renewable energy is the currency in a market for growing public utilities and private entities.
Close to 100 per cent of renewable energy industries are incentivized by infrastructure leadership, like building electric truck fast charge station nets, and recognizing energy pricing, not carbon pricing.
Part of the carbon pricing diversion from a practical market is the emission offset speculation which, by design, not by accident, acts beyond community reach for a practical accountability.
The Pacific Carbon Trust uses carbon tax money to fund northern B.C. gas fracking operations (all is revenue neutral, of course, adding a revenue and public benefit zero twist to the carbon tax).
Rainforest clear-cutting is often carbon offset financed in similar ways; one famous example is the European Union biodiesel scheme in Indonesia.
  1. It is well studied and documented that GHG trends and individual energy choices almost completely follow mostly regional and national infrastructure planning, and not the other way around, as “Put a Price on Carbon” falsely suggests.
“Put a Price on Carbon” is a sneaky back door entry of imposing new Margaret Thatcher-style flat taxes on people.
This exploits the climate crisis and diverts from understanding it properly, which prevents effective door-opening to renewable energy in North America and especially Canada more than anywhere else.
The big lie of carbon pricing is, supposedly the economy in general causes climate change, and not fossil fuel monopolies.
In conclusion, from David Suzuki to Exxon Mobile to Barack Obama, none of the carbon price promoters present evidence or serious review on the concept.
However, on the survival issue, they do park their autonomy and responsibility as citizens, similar to the jingoistic leaders sliding into the First World War.
And those with independent analysis on carbon pricing, taxing and offset trading, like the Dag Hammarskjold Foundation and the late renewable energy pioneer, Hermann Scheer, are clear, “Put a Price on Carbon” is oil propaganda, and it is wrong.
Even limited cataclysms, such as 9/11 or the 1970 FLQ crisis, have a nasty habit of producing national front and War Measures Act-style scenarios that are better considered proactively and cautiously than naively left out of sight.
And yet Canada might have a slim chance to recover its wits in time.
Chucking the neoliberal make-belief of “Put a Price on Carbon” could be the icebreaker to clear the way.
Peter Becker is a Whitehorse energy consultant.
By Peter Becker

Saturday 22 March 2014

Frack Tour Checklist

Frack Tour Checklist

A number of distortions on hydraulic fracturing have been presented to the Yukon community and to the MLAs that serve in the Select Committee on fracking. I will enumerate a few that are important to be addressed during and following the fact finding tour in Alberta of the Select Committee commencing this week. The newly released agenda, as the original one, does not show any evidence of balance or respect for science but fortunately, Mr. Heffernan him-self has been put out of the agenda, which is a plus, you’ll see why. 

1. As a key unconventional natural gas industry promoter, Kevin Heffernan stated 28/29 Oct. 2013 in Whitehorse and Watson Lake that the average life expectancy of a frack well is 25 years. This is false as it is the production life of conventional gas wells, frack wells last on average (!) little more than 5 years. Industry data from a cross section of gas fracking companies in the with Yukon shales comparable Texas Barnett shale show an average well life of 7.5 years up to well abandonment. Only eight percent of Barnett frack wells ever made any money and that only over less than five years. Frack generated road damage exceeds all oil and gas revenue in the state and at a seven year boom’s endgame local unemployment is among the highest in Texas.
Source: Natural gas analyst Deborah Rogers and Texas Gov. figures

2. Heffernan referred to studies a known shale development lobby group, the Environmental Defense Fund initiated, funded and contracted with the University of Texas. Among the involved departments are the energy and chemistry institutes. Representative of a wider academic fraud scandal that follows the EDF is the UT energy institute study that claimed fracking supposedly does not pollute ground water. Lead author Prof. Groat and institute director Orbach had to resign after it became known that Groat had received personally 1.5 million dollars from the oil & gas company PXP before and while involved with the 2012 study. Groat had failed to mention this as did Heffernan. UT distanced itself from its energy institute’s water study.
Source: University of Texas

4. Heffernan painted as supposed outlier a 2012 Cornell University study by Ingraffea, Santoro and Howarth that observed higher than other fossil fuel GHG emissions as part of shale gas extraction; When in fact it is part of a growing body of work with similar results including from the University of Colorado, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association, the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences and the National Academy of Sciences.
He claimed in Whitehorse that a 2013 EDF funded UT chemistry institute study that presents low findings on shale drilling related methane emissions was corroborated by other academic studies: “Ah, so it has been looked at by the US National Energy Technology Laboratory, National Resources Canada, the Environmental Protection Agency in the US, Stanford, Canadian Mc Gill University, MIT, University of California L.A., the list goes on and on”. Except for the MIT Energy Initiative with a series of gas frack related studies that were initiated and partly funded by the shale gas lobby group American Clean Skies Foundation, none of these bodies have carried out scientific work on methane emissions of shale gas extraction; Involved MITEI key authors Tony Meggs and Ernest Moniz were on the payroll of Talisman Energy and the oil consulting firm ICF International without declaring it while carrying out the frack gas studies. MITEI is funded to the tune 145 million dollars by the oil & gas industry. Heffernan failed to mention MITEI’s conflict of interest position.
Source: Listed universities and Public Accountability Initiative

5. Heffernan attempted to methodically confuse a well established nomenclature in the industry literature. Some of the firm basics that he mutilates are:
source rock applies to                   - conventional and unconventional
reservoir (rock) to                          - conventional
conventional requires                    - source rock and reservoir
trap, cap or seal characteristic to  - conventional
low, slow permeability to                - unconventional

unconventional reserve               ~ 5% - 10 % of unconventional resource, or less

frack gas well depletion               ~ 60% to 90% in year 1, after 2 years approaching zero
conventional gas well depletion   ~ several decades

These are universal operational parameters of the natural gas (oil) industry involving fundamentally different financial and logistics sets. They don't apply by 100% but close.
Key preparation for hydro fracking involves the use of a perfing gun that deploys explosive shaped charges punching through horizontal steel pipe (production casing) and into rock. Without it hydraulic fracturing fluid wouldn’t have holes to come through the steel casing essentially like water jets through the holes in a monstrous shower head. Hard to believe Heffernan’s omission was an accident, since it follows his strategy of hiding brute force shattering into gravel and mangling of geology and water tables as much as possible behind conventional gas drilling language and imagery.
Source: wide range of literature from oil & gas industry and petroleum engineering

6. Heffernan falsified and shifted the scientific understanding of gas flow in rock by tens to hundreds of times.
A key metrics of oil & gas geology and industry is the darcy scale, which describes permeability of rock for natural gas or water or crude oil. As illustration, a mosquito net would be more permeable for movements of air or water drops than a tent wall but less than an open tent door. Conventional versus unconventional gas is a meaningful distinction not randomly chosen. Conventional gas moves freely when tapped, unconventional gas does not flow without high intensity fracking.
Heffernan positions conventional gas above a permeability of 100 microdarcy (0.1 millidarcy).  
Everybody else in the oil industry and academia defines conventional gas reservoir rock in millidarcy, usually above 10 millidarcy, never less than one millidarcy.
He makes unconventional gas look conventional to say fracking is well established and was done since the 40s to falsely dismiss critics of brute force fracking in this way.
Again Heffernan prepared the ground for a false expectation that geological, hydrological, petroleum engineering, economic and environmental viability of gas fracking would be along the lines of conventional gas drilling architecture.
Sources: Exxon Mobile, Halliburton, Chesapeake Energy, Total and other shale gas players 

7. This kind of parallel universe communication approach by the unconventional oil & gas extraction PR is different to conventional oil & gas tactics and people are not prepared to resist its manipulation. A good example are some of the presentations made to the Select Committee late in 2013.
The Economic Development Department of the Yukon Government in its presentation stated: “The supply of North American natural gas is now largely dependent on unconventional resources.” In fact the opposite is the case and about half of Canadian crude oil production and three quarter of Canada’s natural gas production is conventional. About half of US natural gas and about three quarter of US crude oil production comes from conventional extraction.
Off course net production from conventional petroleum reserves is roughly five to ten times better than from unconventional reserves. Net energy is what counts as it relates to energy production figures in the way net income compares to gross revenue or wages before deductions. It means that unconventional production wastes precious and shrinking conventional reserves, creates mountains of public and environmental debt and derails the economy. The oil majors don’t pursue energy, they are after frack fiction based hand outs to extend an outdated monopoly position. Ecdev failed to mention even the aspect of net energy as it presented hype, not facts, to the Select Committee.
Sources: Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers, US Energy Information Administration, Oil Drum (petroleum economy internet archive) and the presentation of Yukoners Concerned to the Select Committee

8. Yukon Chief Medical Officer Brendan Hanley advised to implement regulations for fracking. His deduction from the regulatory landscape of fracking is false. There is no evidence anywhere that regulations break into the rock hard physics and mechanics that determine frack operation standards are becoming more destructive and even less safe going forward. The trend is to pulverize and crack the depth of entire regions and destroy their geological integrity more and more, not less. The context is further highlighted by the typical but already summed up extraction results in the end game of the Barnett Shale that show wells are abandoned with 8% of gas actually produced.
And there is of course the hope that more might be extracted with at this point staggering increases of force that already exceed the overall intensity of nuclear underground test scenarios.
Source: Colorado Medical Association and other medical associations who have said no to frack regulations because the process defies regulation. The “New Solutions” journal special issue compilation of peer reviewed health impact studies describing health decline and harm in regions with always regulated shale development.

9. The speaking notes of the Yukon Water Board to the Select Committee representatively state : “Further, since Hydraulic Fracturing is but one specific method of a rapidly evolving set of technologies of formation stimulation, the board chose to issue its guidance in a sufficiently general manner allowing for future industrial innovations and government policies.”
The adoption of the word stimulation more than by its out of place sexual possibilities indicates the Water Board has no clue. The meaning core of the word stimulation describes an acceleration or intensification of a reality that would be there without the stimulation. But a horizontal drill hole in shale without fracking is just that a hole in the rock releasing a cow fart. Yes, the Water Board made a joke out of a serious assignment, but what they presented is highly misleading or mislead or both.
Their presentation does not look coherent enough to have considered the Gas Buggy experiment from New Mexico in 1967 that used an atom bomb for shale gas fracking. It is the only other time in history or future conception that a significant release of shale gas entered the stage that is not based on brute force hydraulic fracturing. “ … is but one …” says the Water Board actually believes, along Heffernan style deceptions, there are other methods for shale gas extraction than high intensity hydraulic (or pneumatic, perhaps, but not likely have they heard of it) fracturing from multi well pads; A universal standard that was established for the first time in the North East B.C. 2007. The nuclear test ban treaty from 1973 also bans industrial uses of atom bombs like in the Gas Buggy experiment. The word “ban” might be hint for a Yukon Water Board that wanted to earn their department’s title and wages.

Peter Becker, Whitehorse Energy Consultant

John Streicker Backtracks and Frack Dances

John Streicker Backtracks and Frack Dances

Feb. 28 Jacqueline Ronson reports on an interview of the Yukon News with John Streicker, in which his relentless campaign for moving forward with regulated gas fracking in Yukon attempts damage control but continues (for more evidence google: streicker synergy deception).

In the interview his denial of supporting fracking lacks credibility as an actor’s role does in a badly written theatre plot. One that might re-appear unexplained on stage 20 min after dying a memorable death. The News and Ronson pitched Puff Balls, delivering less than critical thinking. It seems to me Streicker droned on in self reference while shutting out criticism from science and the community, as he has done.

John Streicker, who now tries to say he opposes fracking, in the interview does not come clean on any of his pro-frack positions and well worn industry talking points such as the following ones.
Streicker’s language is seductive, it charms Yukoners into the frack tent to hang themselves. 
Who would push back against nice sounding ideas and who would want: 

- to oppose a "local energy source" (streicker pitch for fracking, Whse Star, Aug. 2, 2013)? 

- to go against “prime alternate energy” (Streicker in a green party blog:
"Our prime alternate energy potential is natural gas.")? 

- to go against "open and informed discussion" (streicker's committee submission implies independent science and citizens as not "open and informed”)? 

- a "polarized debate" (streicker essentially blames frack critics, in his submission, to be an extreme pole)? 

- draw adversarial lines in the sand (Streicker mass email to Yukoners Oct. 4, 2013 “I have never liked making ‘fracking’ the line in the sand.”)? 

- to go against a 0.4% target for frack gas leakage that supposedly helps the climate (submission)? 

- to oppose regulations to manage or minimize “risk” (Streicker uses “risk” in the interview, as before, to hide proven frack harms that are not risk but geological certainties)?

And his most recent cover up for his frack lobby work is as dishonest as the litany of frack industry talking points he again brings forward seamlessly. In the News interview he starts off with the "benefits and risks” advertisement language he introduced to Yukon in 2012. 

Streicker’s false language was adopted in its title by the select committee on the risks and benefits of hydraulic fracturing in 2013. The by him brokered synergy contract from 2012 already attempted with the same words to recruit the community to fracking, in the fine print. (google: synergy yukon contract). We are not splitting hairs as Streicker is known for a clever command of words.

In the first sentence of the Ronson report on the interview he is quoted asserting there are  “benefits of fracking”, as if benefits were a fact. He claims to weigh those unfavourably against “risks”, as if “risks” would be truthful to proved harms. By shifting these aspects Streicker opens the back door further to a YG under fire to come up with a supposed balance in favour of fracking.

In reality there are no credible net benefits, profits or useful energy returns except for falsely presenting geological occurrences of oil & gas in shales as reserves. Hollow energy security and phoney geological reserve claims are fabricated to look worthy of investor commitments and government subsidies. 

The point is made by natural gas industrialists like Art Berman, veteran geologists like David Hughes, and financial analysts specializing on oil & gas like Deborah Rogers.

Consequently Streicker’s hype starts to look like the oil & gas version of salting gold claims. But a false front is advertisement gold as it appears not big oil doing the frack bubble bidding but the green party guy.

Except the investment fraud in the unconventional oil & gas sector, exceeds in scale large crimes like the Bre-X scandal. Streicker’s talk of benefits and conventional/unconventional bait and switch tricks hide the disastrous write down of billions in shale gas assets and investment, but also job and infrastructure losses.

No, with two nearly abandoned conventional wells at Kotaneelee the Yukon does not have an oil & gas industry or possibilities. A dangerous exception are shale and coal bed fracking disasters moved forward by Streicker’s frack regulation advice.

The Yukon News report on the Streicker interview concludes: "Those regulations need to be in place whether or not fracking is allowed in the territory, because methane leaks from conventional gas production pose the exact same risk, he said.”

This is false. Every single study that was not contracted, paid for and controlled by the oil & gas industry determines frack wells and frack fields leak more methane and cause more pollution. Also unconventional oil & gas heavily industrializes communities and landscapes, conventional does not.

Again, Streicker is using the uncertainty language of frack PR, and the word “risk” to great effect. With this method he confuses awareness of proven destruction in order to silence the community and control dialogue.

As with he conclusion of the interview Streicker’s representations are permeated with putting gas fracking in a continuum of conventional drilling. It is also a much repeated gas industry angle we have heard in Whitehorse from Kevin Heffernan (CSUR) and Aaron Miller (CAPP).

When unconventional really is different to conventional oil & gas drilling which is spot development. A steel pipe is inserted into a reservoir essentially like a straw into a cocktail drink. Unconventional drilling is spatial development and involves shattering the geology of entire regions. 

It is seamless spatial saturation and toxic degradation in 3D.
In the interview Streicker does not address these or any specific concerns his critics bring forward, and rather quotes himself instead throughout the interview. This appears arrogant and certainly not trust promoting for an engineer.

Ronson quotes Streicker, without probing or following up:
“If methane leaks, or fugitive emissions, are any higher than 0.4 per cent of production, natural gas is no better than other fossil fuel alternatives, according to Streicker’s Jan. 31 submission to the (YG frack) committee.”

Countless times he has brought up the 0.4 figure that is out of whack with reality. Independent studies by the University of Colorado and others show fugitive frack gas field emissions that are 20, 25 times higher than that.  

The oil funded shale lobby group Environmental Defence Fund (EDF) is the funder and initiator of a bulk of phoney frack studies. It created the fiction of a 0.4% target together with other frack talking points that in broken record fashion come out of Streicker.

High leakage and pollution, resulting in economic and environmental devastation are consistent with unconventional geology. They are not as Streicker claims determined by regulatory regimes.

That is why there are moratoriums and bans in place in many jurisdictions, nationally and internationally, that have extensive regulations or the ability to generate them, like Newfoundland and Labrador, Quebec, Germany, France and most recently and notably, even oil producing Los Angeles. Los Angeles City Council, as most recent high profile case, passed the fracking ban in a 10 to 0 vote (google: list of bans worldwide). 

It is disturbing how Streicker sets up his argument and how he positions the conversation on climate crisis and unconventional oil & gas extraction. 0.4 per cent might not be met but he gets to say it again and again exercising his power of suggestion on people. Especially those folks are exploited with gaps in their understanding of energy technologies and policies.

He continues to pitch climate concerns and even anxiety to counter-act and demobilize as much as possible an effective no-frack position. John Streicker has proven to be formidable in deceptive and slick application of such gas industry tactics.
(google: Newfoundland Bans Unconventional Oil & Gas Extraction yukonblogger) 

However, John Streicker’s misuse of the 0.4 per cent leakage figure is among the finest in trade craft of psychological frack warfare.   

Monday 3 March 2014

4 Nov. Newfoundland Bans Unconventional Oil & Gas Extraction (Whitehorse Star, Dec 2013)

4 Nov. Newfoundland Bans Unconventional Oil & Gas Extraction (Whitehorse Star, Dec 2013)

On 11 Dec. The Whitehorse Star Star syndicated a story by Ezra Levant
"Newfoundlanders aren't getting the fracking truth!”
In the story Mr. Levant, without referring to evidence, presented as fact that with the genuine purpose of critisizing gas fracking a fictional or anonymous Syd Peters made insider revelations in St John’s Telegram. 
There is no record of critics to gas fracking pitching stories as misleading or hidden entities.
Whereas it is day to day practice for the pro frack promoters to not disclose who they are and in fact act as false flag environmental critics. What are they hiding?
There is an entire industry of oil funded organizations without community roots who pretend to be environmentalists, pitching provocations, distorting independent and peer reviewed evidence and stabbing the citizens in the back. 
Just a few weeks ago on invitation of the Yukon Chamber of Commerce’s Darielle Talarico a speaker for the unconventional gas drilling industry, Kevin Heffernan, appeared in Whitehorse and Watson Lake. 
Heffernan has a record as paid and registered lobbyist with the Office of the Commissioner of Lobbying in Canada without mentioning this in his introduction. He tried to beef up the gas frack industry’s limited credibility and substantiate his claims that water and air are supposedly not poisoned by rattling down a reference list of such oil & gas funded false front groups, among them: Environmental Defense Fund, Center for Sustainable Shale Development, Synergy Conservation and Stakeholder Groups, Groundwater Protection Council. According to informed sources Heffernan is also slated as prominent lecturer for the upcoming tour to Alberta and B.C. of the Legislative Frack Research Committee; And no credible science or information will be offered to balance the apparently well choreographed junk science program.
Enlightening us on how these things come about, CNBC provided an investigative report on a closed door training session about how best to lie to people, the: Media & Stakeholder Relations Hydraulic Fracturing Initiative 2011, Oct.31/ Nov.1 Houston/Texas. 
Michel D. Kehs, then Chesapeake Energy Vice President and PR chief spoke to an audience that included Canadian gas fracking outfits like Encana: “Chesapeake has got nearly 100 people whose sole jobs are to deal with community relations. We have got people going out and speaking in the community every night.” and “It does not matter what the facts are!”
In the list of sessions was the PR director for Range Resources, Mat Pitzarella, who had this advice: "We have several former PSYOPs folks (military psychological warfare experts) that work for us at Range because they're very comfortable dealing with localized issues and local governments.”
As we know him and his Sun Media/FoxNorth spin masters Mr. Levant in his story continues not with honest common sense but likewise with deception on the unconventional oil & gas disaster for human and civic rights, ruin for the economy and destruction for the environment. 


Peter Becker