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Monthly Archives: November 2011

Imagine that you never went to college and you have virtually no experience punching the time clock, thanks to the ongoing depression in blue-collar jobs in American manufacturing. Not to worry, though, because there are places in America where men who are willing to put in long hours doing hard work can earn $100,000 or more. There are downsides, like being out in the middle of nowhere and coping with shortages of housing and other amenities such as sleep, but the rewards can be immense for the hardy. And, since this is the oil and gas industry, true stories of ambitious men going from rough-necking to millionaires are anything but unprecedented.

We refer, of course, to the booming Bakken oil fields in America’s high plains, where little towns like Williston, Dickinson and Minot have seen populations and economic growth explode in recent years. There are billions of barrels of oil in the Bakken formation that underlies North Dakota, Montana and Canada’s Saskatchewan region. Bakken oil was previously inaccessible, but, thanks to new technologies like hydraulic fracturing and horizontal drilling, it has become eminently reachable. Read More

The former generation of Democratic legislators would have embraced the energy opportunities before the U.S. now. Whoever is president in 2013 will have a rare chance to transform the energy picture.

By Charles K. EbingerNovember 28, 2011

Let me say upfront that I have always been a Democrat. However, I also vote my conscience and have supported independent candidates. Today, energy policy is one area where I think my party is wrong.

I wasn’t always a disillusioned Democrat. For decades, the party’s policies ensured that the United States had adequate supplies of domestic oil, natural gas, coal, hydroelectric power and uranium to fuel our growing economy while providing good-paying jobs to the men and women who produced our energy and transported it. These policies helped create America’s affluence of the 1950s, 1960s and early 1970s. Read More

OHIO shale oil  energyindependenceforstates.comBy Thomas J. Sheeran

YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio—A rare sight in hard-luck Youngstown, a new industrial plant, has generated hope that a surge in oil and natural gas drilling across a multistate region might jump-start a revival in Rust Belt manufacturing.

The $650 million V&M Star mill, located along a desolate stretch that once was a showcase for American industry, is to open by year’s end and produce seamless steel pipes for tapping shale formations.

It will mean 350 new jobs in Youngstown, a northeast Ohio city that is struggling with 11 percent unemployment.

V&M Star’s parent company Vallourec, based in Boulogne-Billancourt, France, hopes increased interest in shale formations will produce a ready-made market.

Vast stores of natural gas in the Marcellus and Utica shale formations have set off a rush to grab leases and secure permits to drill. Industry estimates show the Marcellus boom could offer robust job numbers for 50 years. Read More

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on “Face the Nation,” November 27, 2011. (CBS)

By Lucy Madison

Former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice says she’s concerned about the economy, the deficit, and the “jaded” nature of American politics – but she says the country’s “biggest single problem” is with the public school system.

Rice, speaking to CBS’ Bob Schieffer on a special Thanksgiving edition of “Face the Nation,” argued that the nation’s educational system is failing crucial populations, and that “it’s gonna drive us into class warfare like we’ve never seen before.”

Responding to a question about the current state of American politics, Rice argued that “we’ve become a bit jaded as a country.”

But she said that wasn’t her biggest concern with the future of America right now.

“I think we’ve got a deeper problem,” she said. “It speaks to the way that, for instance, I and my family got ahead. I think the biggest single problem we’ve got is the K-12 education system.” Read More

By KIM WILMATH

TAMPA | In the next 13 years, the state university system should increase the number of degrees it awards by almost 70 percent, have at least five of its 11 universities ranked in the top 50 nationally, and grow its adult-student enrollment and online courses.

Those are just some of the goals outlined in the new strategic plan for the Florida Board of Governors. With a heavy focus on fields in science, technology, engineering and math — STEM, as the buzzword goes — the plan aims to better position the university system as an economic driver.

It’s an idea that has been in the spotlight lately thanks to Gov. Rick Scott‘s new STEM-heavy jobs agenda. Read More

By Emery Cowan

Tse Chi “Chad” Yen will graduate from Fort Lewis College this December with a degree in psychology and a promising job prospect at a nonprofit in Denver. Yen acknowledges he is in a better place than many in this struggling economy, but not without a cost: about $27,000 in student loans.

But without those loans and some scholarships, “I wouldn’t be here,” Yen said.

The most recent numbers show that college students around the country are taking on more debt in order to finish their degrees. College seniors who graduated with student loans in 2010 owed an average of $25,250 – up 5 percent from last year, according to a report released this month from the Project on Student Debt at the Institute for College Access & Success. At the same time, there are fewer and fewer good-paying jobs awaiting recent graduates:. Read More

GOP debate    energyindependenceforstates.com

Erika Johnsen

Since the Obama administration seems to do everything in its power to stonewall the domestic energy industry, including weak non-decisions like the Keystone pipeline, keeping up a virtual drilling moratorium, and creating-then-promptly-losing “green” jobs, it doesn’t surprise me in the slightest that the President is starting to lose some traction among blue collar workers. From a new CNN/ORC poll: Read More

(CNN)University of California officials said Tuesday they will pay the medical expenses of students who were pepper sprayed during an Occupy Davis protest last week.

Authorities have also decided to drop charges against 10 people who were arrested during the Friday protest on the campus of UC Davis. The university system has also created an advisory panel to look into the incident, University of California President Mark Yudof said.

Bill Bratton, who has led police departments in Los Angeles, Boston and New York, will head the panel, Yudof said.

“My intent,” Yudof said, “is to provide the chancellor and the entire University of California community with an independent, unvarnished report about what happened at Davis.” Read More

Texas Rep. Ted Poe blasted the Obama administration for delaying a final decision on the proposed Keystone XL pipeline at least a year, accusing the administration of being “at war with American energy production.”

Poe, R-Humble, said TransCanada Corp.’s proposed 1,700-mile pipeline for carrying tar-sands oil from Alberta, Canada, to Texas refineries could create thousands of domestic jobs and reduce U.S. oil imports from volatile Mideast nations. By delaying the decision, “we are just continuing down the road of high energy prices,” said Poe, whose district includes the Port Arthur region that has refineries that will receive the crude.

“The people I talk to feel like this administration is at war with American energy production,” Poe told Newsmax TV. “This is a perfect example.” Read More

BY Anya Kamenetz

This afternoon at the newly cleared, heavily patrolled, and sparkling (Christmas lights!) Zuccotti Park, a group of activists dressed in caps and gowns made from garbage bags and draped with paper chains announced the official launch of the Occupy Student Debt Campaign.

Led by NYU professor Andrew Ross, the group is trying to get student loan borrowers to sign a pledge of “debt refusal.” Once they reach one million signatures, everyone stops paying back their loans. The idea is not to pump up the profits of student loan servicers and big banks by creating a new group of defaulters, but to call attention to the spiraling cost of higher education, the mounting pile of student loans ($958 billion as of this writing), and the Dickensian situation many borrowers find themselves in as a result of the lack of basic consumer protections like bankruptcy on student loans, especially private student loans.

“I strongly believe my entire life–and I’m 50 now–was ruined by student loan debt,” said Johanna Clearfield, an organizer of the campaign. Her $20,000 loan is over $50,000 after default. Read More

BY Lydia DishmanMon Nov 21, 2011

Andrew Yang founded Venture for America to tackle unemployment, one aspiring entrepreneur at a time.

Andrew Yang wants to create jobs. Specifically, 100,000 U.S. jobs by 2025.

It’s an ambitious goal, but one that Yang believes is completely attainable just by getting recent college graduates to work at startups rather than take positions in finance, consulting, and law. But not just any startups: Yang wants to recruit young talent to ignite entrepreneurial sparks in such economically depressed areas as Detroit; Providence, Rhode Island; and New Orleans.

So who is this one-man economic stimulus package?

Yang is a 37-year-old serial entrepreneur with experience in just about every industry sector, from health care to fashion retail. This August he founded Venture for America (VFA), a wildly ambitious nonprofit based in New York City that is recruiting its first class of fellows.  Read More

By Kirby Brown, For the Deseret News

On the surface, having a college degree might seem to make getting and keeping a job more difficult in the current employment environment. Armed with a college degree, most people would expect to earn more than someone without a college degree. When jobs appear scarce, the lower-cost worker would seem to have an easier time finding a job.

It’s actually a different story, according to the U.S. Department of Labor‘s Bureau of Labor Statistics. In the U.S., the higher the level of education the lower the unemployment rate.

Job seekers attend a Michigan Works! job fair at the Wayne, Mich., Community Center. The Labor Department said Wednesday Michigan reported the nation's highest unemployment rate at 15.3 percent.

Paul Sancya, Associated Press
Job seekers attend a Michigan Works! job fair at the Wayne, Mich., Community Center. The Labor Department said Wednesday Michigan reported the nation’s highest unemployment rate at 15.3 percent.

In a report issued this November, the Bureau of Labor Statistics said overall unemployment was 9 percent.

For those in the workforce 25 years and older, the aggregate unemployment rate decreases somewhat to 7.8 percent. Digging into the education levels of those unemployed and comprising this aggregate 7.8 percent provides support for the value of education in today’s competitive environment. Read More

Photograph of the Athabasca Tar Sands in Alber...

Image via Wikipedia

 

With Keystone XL delay, America continues its slow economic strangulation

By Charles Campbell

In 1969, three unrelated events occurred that have since been combined with political bungling to slowly strangle the U.S. economy. Moammar Gadhafi overthrew King Idris of Libya. He nationalized Western oil company reserves with no retribution from the U.S. Sensing our weakness, all of the other OPEC nations abrogated their concession agreements with U.S. companies. The Arab producers cut back production and embargoed the U.S. because of our support for Israel. Middle East despots have been in the driver’s seat ever since, and as the Arab Spring seems increasingly likely to empower Islamists, things are unlikely to get better. Read More

By Steve Gates

On the presidential campaign trail, throughout Capitol Hill, and in your neighborhoods there’s been a lot of discussion and debate on how America should move forward with energy policy.  Currently, a lot of those discussions center around whether or not proposed EPA regulations would affect our economic and energy security.

Within that discussion and debate, there have been a lot of myths tossed around about proposed EPA regulations. We want to lay out the facts about how these potential rules would affect Americans. Read More

The GOP debates have had a similar ring to them, with candidates blaming high unemployment on heavy regulation and expensive policies from Washington. After co-moderating the CNBC debate, I turned to Tom Donohue, who as head of the Chamber of Commerce, the pre-eminent pro-business lobbying organization in the U.S., is seen as the voice of Corporate America. I asked him what’s holding back business from hiring. As an example of a major potential for job creation, he pointed to the Keystone XL pipeline, which last week said it may be able to win approval in six to nine months as its parent, TransCanada, negotiates with Nebraska and U.S. officials about a new route. Our conversation below is edited for clarity and length. Read More

Evan McGlinn for The New York Times

Nathaly Lopera in her Passport class, one of several programs she attends to help her get into college. More Photos »

By

BOSTON — There is rarely a minute when Nathaly Lopera, a high school senior, isn’t working to improve herself.

Since second grade, she has taken advantage of a voluntary integration program here, leaving her home in one of the city’s poorer sections before 6:30 a.m. and riding a bus over an hour to Newton, a well-to-do suburb with top-quality schools. Some nights, she has so many activities that she does not get home until 10 p.m.; often she’s up past midnight studying.

“Nathaly gets so mad if she doesn’t make the honor roll,” says Stephanie Serrata, a classmate.

Last Wednesday, Nathaly did it again, with 5 A’s and 2 B’s for the first marking period.

She has excelled at Newton North High, a school with enormous resources, in part by figuring out whom to ask for help.

When she did not get along with her English teacher, she went to her guidance counselor, Michele Kennedy, for support, and found Lyn Montague, a teacher happy to give her after-school help. Math is not her subject, but Janice Lichtman, her math teacher, said she’s never had a student work harder to improve. Fitting in with wealthy white students is not simple, so she often seeks out Paula Diggs, a counselor for Metco, the Boston region’s groundbreaking integration program.

“I wish I had more Nathalys,” Ms. Diggs said. Read More

By Julie Mack

KALAMAZOO — Until recently, a good job evaluation was virtually automatic for U.S. schoolteachers.

For tenured teachers, something on the order of 99 percent were rated as satisfactory, according to “The Widget Effect,” a 2009 report by The New Teacher Project.

Kalamazoo-area educators say that assessment sounds about right.

Now, 33 states are overhauling their teacher evaluation systems, one of the most significant shake-ups in U.S. education in recent years.

In Michigan, most school districts must include test-score data as part of their teacher evaluations starting this school year.

In addition, part of the tenure changes passed in July calls for a gubernatorial commission to develop an assessment model that will be used statewide for teacher evaluations starting in 2013-14. By 2015-16, that measure is to comprise half of a teacher’s evaluation.

Although some see the changes as “teacher bashing,” many — including national union leaders — say revamping the teacher-evaluation process is long overdue. Read More

Dominic Barton, Geena Davis and Debra Lee on why CEOs need to focus more on women

By REBECCA BLUMENSTEIN

Women now graduate from college in greater numbers than men and enter the work force at similar rates. Yet at every career stage, men are more likely to advance than women.

In April, The Wall Street Journal convened a group of leaders to examine the causes of this disparity and identify key steps businesses can take to retain and develop female talent.

The Journal’s Rebecca Blumenstein sat down with three members of the task force for the conference—actor Geena Davis, founder of the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media; Debra Lee, chairman and chief executive of Viacom Inc.‘s BET Networks; and Dominic Barton, global managing director of McKinsey & Co., the research partner—to further discuss the issue of women and economic competitiveness. Here are edited excerpts of their conversation:

CEO Accountability Read More

The administration’s dismissal of new smog rules may show a growing preference for a practical approach to encouraging the economic recovery over progressive priorities

615 obama daley REUTERS Jason Reed 3.jpg

Are we just seeing an election year flip-flop, or is President Obama heeding Republicans’ warnings about job-killing regulation? Although some parts of the administration continue to play down the potential negative effects of regulatory uncertainty on the economy, the president’s recent decision to take a less aggressive approach to new smog rules is telling. Either he worries that the right may be onto something, or he’s trying to show swing voters that he has moved to the center.

The Administration Withdraws Support for New Clean Air Standard

This week, John Broder at the New York Times provides a revealing account of the shift in the White House‘s philosophy. He documents the dismay of EPA officials and environmentalists over the president’s decision to delay implementing more aggressive Clean Air Act standards. According to the article, the president’s Chief of Staff William Daley fought the EPA on stricter rules. The NY Times piece is sprawling and worth a read if you are interested in this subject, but one particular exchange it describes is particularly noteworthy. Read More

Lawrence Hurley, E&E reporter

U.S. EPA‘s former policy chief is accusing the Obama administration of failing to mount a forceful defense of environmental regulations in the face of fierce partisan attacks.

Lisa Heinzerling left EPA after a two-year stint last December, just after the 2010 midterm elections put Republicans in charge of the House of Representatives.

Now back in her teaching job at Georgetown Law Center, Heinzerling — who played a key role in crafting the administration’s greenhouse gas regulations — has leapt back into the fray with a paper written for the American Constitution Society, a left-leaning legal group. The paper is to be officially released Monday.

Heinzerling expressed concern in particular at the language in President Obama’s January 2011 executive order that required agencies to examine regulations and conclude whether any could be “more effective or less burdensome” (Greenwire, Jan. 18). Read More

By Ralph K.M. Haurwitz AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF

State Sen. Judith Zaffirini, D-Laredo, has known Francisco Cigarroa since he was born. His mother is one of her best friends. His father is her physician.

But Cigarroa, the chancellor of the University of Texas System, didn’t alert Zaffirini, who leads the Senate Higher Education Committee, when a controversy erupted early this year over the direction of the system and its governing board.

“And when UT was criticized in particular, you didn’t defend UT,” Zaffirini told Cigarroa at a hearing held Friday by a special House-Senate panel. “Why not?” Read More

We can’t wait. Except for certain exceptions, such as the 1,700-mile trans-USA Keystone XL pipeline, carrying Alberta oil to Texas refineries, that would have created thousands of American jobs and increased our energy independence.

For that, we can wait, it seems. President Obama decreed that any decision must wait 12 to 18 months — postponed, by amazing coincidence, until after next year’s election.

Why? Because the pipeline angered Obama’s environmental constituency. But their complaints are risible. Global warming from the extraction of the Alberta tar sands? Canada will extract the oil anyway. If it doesn’t go to us, it will go to China. Net effect on the climate if we don’t take that oil? Zero.

Danger to a major aquifer, which the pipeline traverses? It is already crisscrossed by 25,000 miles of pipeline, enough to circle the Earth. Moreover, the State Department had subjected Keystone to three years of review — the most exhaustive study of any oil pipeline in U.S. history — and twice concluded in voluminous studies that there would be no significant environmental harm.

So what happened? “The administration,” reported the New York Times, “had in recent days been exploring ways to put off the decision until after the presidential election.” Exploring ways to improve the project? Hardly. Exploring ways to get past the election.

Read more: http://www.620wtmj.com/blogs/charliesykes/134107433.html

Redford in war of words with NDP over anti-Keystone trip to U.S.

OTTAWA — Premier Alison Redford found herself Thursday embroiled in war of words with the federal NDP as she joined her federal Conservative counterparts slamming official Opposition MPs for travelling to Washington to speak to U.S. lawmakers against the Keystone XL pipeline.

In Ottawa, Redford made the comments the same day she sat down with Prime Minister Stephen Harper in their first official meeting to discuss federal-provincial relations.

The two Calgary politicians, who’ve known each other for almost three decades, spoke about issues such as health-care funding, immigration and a new Canadian energy strategy. Read More

Credit Suisse says Marathon Petroleum is its top pick.

Credit Suisse

Today we formalize the cuts to earnings per share flagged in our Seaway What-If Scenario report from last week.

In that note we suggested a 40% cut to 2012 EPS was required on average.

Our actual cut is 42% (we’ve also incorporated slightly weaker West Coast benchmark margins, and narrower Maya [Mexican] and Light Louisiana Sweet crude spreads). Read More

l is being laid to bring oil in an out of the planned GT Omni Port in Port Arthur, Texas. Photo by Mose Buchele.
Mose Buchele

The Obama Administration’s decision to put off construction of  parts of the Keystone XL crude oil pipeline was lauded by environmentalists. The plan is to pipe oil from the Tar Sands of Alberta, Canada, to the Gulf Coast of Texas. But despite that delay, many investors and industry observers in Texas think they already know how the cards will fall.

Go to StateImpact, Texas to see the full story from Mose Buchele.

Shipping our oilsands bitumen to Texas and Oklahoma through the $7 billion Keystone XL pipeline may be in doubt after the U.S. State Department announced an environmental review of alternative routes for the project. This puts the pipeline on temporary hold, jeopardizing thousands of potential U.S. jobs, until well into 2013.
Critics are savaging President Obama over the move, which amounts to shoring up the liberal swing vote in the lead-up to the 2012 presidential election. Read More

By Bradley Olson

Nov. 18 (Bloomberg) — Growth in North American crude production has created sufficient demand for both the Keystone XL pipeline and a competing project to move oil from storage in Oklahoma to the Gulf Coast, TransCanada Chief Executive Officer Russ Girling said.

The plan by Enbridge Inc. and Enterprise Products Partners LP to reverse the Seaway pipeline that flows from the Gulf of Mexico to Cushing, Oklahoma, is “not a competing project” with the Keystone XL, which would bring oil from Canada to Texas refineries, he said. Read More

Stacie Nevadomski Berdan

International Careers Expert & Author, ‘GO GLOBAL!’ and ‘Get Ahead By Going Abroad’

Study abroad is on the rise again with 4% more American students studying abroad than last year.

According to the Open Doors Report on International Educational Exchange (published annually by the Institute of International Education with funding from the U.S. Department of State‘s Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs) 270,604 students studied abroad for credit during the academic year 2009/10, compared to 260,327 the previous year. Read More

TransCanada Corporation (TSX) (TransCanada) recently announced it supports proposed legislation within the State of Nebraska to move the Keystone XL pipeline project forward. This legislation, introduced earlier today in the State legislature, if passed, will ensure a pipeline route will be developed in Nebraska that avoids the Sandhills.

“I am pleased to tell you that the positive conversations we have had with Nebraska leaders have resulted in legislation that respects the concerns of Nebraskans and supports the development of the Keystone XL pipeline,” said Alex Pourbaix, TransCanada’s president, Energy and Oil Pipelines. “I can confirm the route will be changed and Nebraskans will play an important role in determining the final route.” Read More

By Deborah Yedlin

TransCanada Corp. has played the perfect hand in the ongoing game of pipeline poker that is the Keystone XL.

By agreeing to reroute the pipeline within days of the White House announcing it was going to defer a final decision by 15 months, TransCanada called U.S. President Barack Obama’s bluff, not to mention that of environmentalists who are opposing the project.

How’s that? Read More

By COREY BOLES

WASHINGTON—House Republicans said Thursday they want to expand U.S. domestic energy production and use the increased federal royalties to pay for more bridge and highway repairs and construction—a plan that appears aimed at wrestling control of the jobs debate away from Democrats.

The proposed legislation would open up more offshore drilling for oil and natural gas, establish clear rules for the extraction of oil from shale rock and open up a small portion of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to exploratory drilling. Read More

(From left) Newt Gingrich, Rick Perry, Mitt Romney and Herman Cain have been critics of EPA policy. | AP Photo

Gingrich, Perry, Romney and Cain have all been critics of EPA policy. | AP Photo Close

The Environmental Protection Agency is likely to play an unusually prominent role in the 2012 presidential election, reflecting ongoing partisan debate in Congress over the ties between environmental regulations and jobs.

“What we’re going to see in this cycle is a lot of bitterness. … It’s going to be more partisan than it’s ever been,” said GOP environmental strategist Chelsea Maxwell. “So the energy and environment issues will definitely creep into that.” Read More

Keystone XL - energyindependenceforstates.com

By Lee-Anne Goodman

WASHINGTON – American environmentalists admit TransCanada made a major concession by rerouting its proposed Keystone XL pipeline, but insist they’ll keep trying to prevent the controversial oilsands project from ever being built.

After months of standing by the chosen route, Calgary-based TransCanada did a prompt about-face on Monday, offering to skirt the Sandhills area of Nebraska — home of a massive aquifer that provides drinking water to millions on the Great Plains. Read More

Texas Gov. Rick Perry said Tuesday that President Barack Obama’s move to delay a decision on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline puts American lives in danger.

Perry has made energy exploration and drilling for oil a central tenant of his policy for fixing the economy as a Republican presidential candidate.

The Obama administration delayed a decision on the controversial project around the Keystone pipeline until after the 2012 election. Most of the GOP field has embraced the project.

When Sean Hannity asked Perry about the Keystone XL pipeline on the radio Tuesday, Perry blasted Obama. Read More

Malia Spencer Reporter – Pittsburgh Business Times

There is nothing quite like the price of college text books to raise the ire of students (and parents).

Not only are they pricey, but when you sell them back at the end of the quarter/semester you rarely get anywhere close to what you pay.

Enter Bookzingo.com.

Finding cheaper text books online isn’t new. I’ve been out of college for eight years and when I was in school, around 2000, sites were starting to pop up to address the problem. Read More

At a time when the unemployment rate has exceeded 9%, the song gives a voice to so many people that need to be heard. “Cost Of Living” by Ronnie Dunn.

A California oil refinery.

Not long ago, Bill Kerrigan toured Eagle Ford Shale, a string of oil and natural gas fields south of San Antonio, Texas, that stretches across 24 counties and has yielded just shy of five million barrels of oil between January and July of this year. In that time, Eagle Ford has brought tens of thousands of workers to south Texas and turned tiny desert communities into boomtowns.

“That’s one thing about oil,” say Kerrigan, who heads Arkose Energy, an oil exploration firm based in Nashville, It’s good at creating jobs, and it does it quickly. And I don’t know of a minimum-paying job in the oil industry.”

Looking at the activity at Eagle Ford Shale, Kerrigan remembers thinking, “I wish someone from Washington would come see this.” Read More

America has an abundance of natural resources, yet our policies keep them locked up. We can’t drill in the Gulf. ANWAR is off limits. Mining is nearly impossible due to regulations. “Endangered species” threaten existing supplies.

Meanwhile resource discoveries are being made and developed the world over.

Last week, Repsol announced a new discovery in Argentina—estimated to be more than 900 million barrels of oil. The oil shale find is reported to be Repsol’s largest ever. Argentina’s potential has attracted investment from both majors and independents. Argentina’s rising energy consumption and higher prices make Repsol’s success especially welcome, representing a potential windfall for the country. Argentina is not crying.

On October 20, a “giant” gas discovery was announced off the coast of Mozambique. It is reported that the results of the exploration well “exceed pre-drill expectations and confirm the Rovuma Basin as a world-class natural gas province.” Then, one week later, word came out that the find was 50% greater than originally estimated with up to 22.5 trillion cubic feet of gas. Estimates are expected to increase. Infrastructure, including LNG facilities, will have to be built to support the recent exploration successes with the natural gas expected to be brought to the market in 2018.

The day before the original Mozambique “giant” discovery announcement, it was reported that companies such as ExxonMobil would invest $100 billion to develop and upgrade oil fields in Iraq. The investment is expected to up Iraq’s oil production to at least 6.8 million barrels of oil a day by 2017—making Iraq one of the world’s largest producers of crude oil.

Also, on October 19, reports came out saying that the North Sea Statoil discovery is bigger than originally estimated with a potential of 2.6 billion barrels of oil equivalent—which would make it the third-largest find ever made on the Norwegian shelf. Production is expected to begin by 2018.

One day earlier, October 18, service provider Odebrecht announced plans to triple its revenues over the next three years. In support of Brazil’s vast deepwater oilfields, the company is spending $5 billion in equipment, from drilling ships and floating oil platforms to pipeline-laying vessels. Odebrecht says: “This year we should [have] revenues of about $500 million and we are going to double that next year, and be at $1.5 billion by 2013.”

This, all in the past couple of weeks.

In late-December 2010, 16 trillion cubic feet of gas was found off the cost of Israel in what is being called the Leviathan Field. The Julia Field was discovered in 2008 in the Gulf of Mexico and is called one of the greatest discoveries of the Gulf with an estimated 1 billion barrels of oil—but the Interior Department is now fighting ExxonMobil over its control.

Clearly there is no energy shortage.

While Europe is not rich in energy resources, they do understand their importance. They know they need energy.

Last week, on November 8, the Nord Stream Pipeline opened and began delivering Russian gas to Germany. With proposed plans to close their nuclear power plants by 2022, Germany needs the resource from Russia—though it does raise the specter of dependence on Russia/Russian energy control. Work is underway to build pipelines from other sources, which will minimize Russian domination.

Two days later, on November 10, President Obama announced a delay of more than a year to the true-shovel-ready XL Pipeline that would have created thousands of industry-funded jobs and reduced America’s dependence on Middle Eastern oil. The pipeline would have brought both Canadian and northern US oil to refineries in the southern United States. Instead of diversifying our energy supplies and suppliers, we remain reliant on unfriendly countries.

Some might point to the November 8 announcement of a “modest expansion” in offshore leasing to indicate a change in the Obama administration’s attitude—though, in light of his ideological opposition to oil, gas, and coal, the proposed plan is more likely the result of public and industry pressure and the upcoming presidential election. Much like the apparent reverse on the ozone regulations left plenty of onerous, price-elevating regulations in place, this modest expansion still keeps many of America’s most promising energy resources—some the most promising in the world—off limits.

Worldwide, more and more energy resources are being discovered, developed, and delivered. In the United States, not so much. Like public and industry pressure pushed for an increase in offshore leasing and a decrease in the EPA’s economically destructive regulations, we need to keep the pressure on and engage friends, family, and neighbors to do the same. Congress needs to hear from you. We need to be exploring and discovering here.

Marita Noon is the executive director for Energy Makes America Great Inc. and the companion educational organization, the Citizens’ Alliance for Responsible Energy (CARE). Together they work to educate the public and influence policy makers regarding energy, its role in freedom, and the American way of life. Combining energy, news, politics, and, the environment through public events, speaking engagements, and media, the organizations’ combined efforts serve as America’s voice for energy. Marita’s twentieth book, Energy Freedom, has just been released.

BISMARCK – Congress needs to focus next year on a long-term energy plan for the nation, Sen. Kent Conrad, D-N.D., said Monday.

Conrad was one of the featured speakers at the Great Plains and Empower North Dakota Energy Expo in Bismarck. The annual event brings together the energy industry, policymakers, researchers and entrepreneurs to discuss energy issues.

“This expo is really intended to help unlock the opportunities right here in North Dakota, because we can be the energy hub for America,” Conrad said. Read More

By Henry R. Nothhaft

Nov. 15 (Bloomberg) — Given how desperately the U.S. needs jobs, it’s amazing how little effort Congress and the president devote to revitalizing manufacturing, the most potent of all job creators. For more than 30 years now, economists and policy makers have instead worshipped the false God of “comparative advantage,” believing that the U.S. could prosper by specializing in innovation while letting China and other nations do the manufacturing.

But the worshippers of this economic religion, built entirely on the altar of innovation, delude themselves if they think that high-tech manufacturing is of little value today. After all, we still live in a world of things — from cars and cutlery to computers and cell phones — and somebody still has to make them. If the U.S. doesn’t, then obviously it buys them from countries that do.

That explains why the $30 billion trade surplus in high- tech products that the U.S. enjoyed 10 years ago has become a $56 billion deficit. Read More

Take a deep breath, hit the “submit” button and then exhale.

Thousands of students are doing this every day. But, at the same time they are wondering if they really need to be applying to as many colleges as they had originally planned.

September and October produce long lists of dream schools, and right around the beginning of November, reality sets in and students begin revising their list and focusing on their favorites. It’s a lot of work between the application, the essays, personal statement, letters of recommendation, transcripts and testing.

If you’re thinking about narrowing your list, it makes sense to take these things into consideration: Read More

Megan Johnston
"Lectures ... are not a high-value activity for teachers" ... Salman Khan.“Lectures … are not a high-value activity for teachers” … Salman Khan.

SALMAN KHAN is still getting used to being known as the man who flipped the classroom. Seven years ago, the then-Boston hedge fund analyst began to tutor his younger cousin in New Orleans remotely. Her maths marks improved, so Khan uploaded short videos to YouTube, where other students stumbled onto his lessons.

More than 3000 videos later, the Khan Academy is on the way to hitting 100 million views and has the backing of Bill Gates and Google and, increasingly, the attention of professional educators.

In the early days of his venture, Khan received emails from teachers saying they used his videos to ”flip” their lessons. They would assign Khan’s maths and science lectures as homework and conduct exercises and drills – traditional homework activities – the next day at school.

Students could pause and repeat the videos at will, then consolidate their knowledge in the classroom. When Khan mentioned this technique in his TED talk in March, the idea took off around the world.

”That’s what caught on but … we don’t think that’s the full transformation,” Khan says over the phone from the US. ”The real transformation is when you allow kids to work at their own pace and just ‘flipping’ doesn’t allow for that.” Read More

If our great nation is going to begin creating jobs at a faster rate, we must get back in the business of building things.

Project No Project assesses the broad range of energy projects that are being stalled, stopped, or outright killed nationwide due to “Not In My Back Yard” (NIMBY) activism, a broken permitting process and a system that allows limitless challenges by opponents of development.

One of the most surprising findings from the catalog of projects is that it is just as difficult to build a wind farm in the U.S. as it is to build a coal-fired power plant. In fact, roughly 45 percent of the challenged projects that were identified are renewable energy projects.

The Potential Economic Impact Read More

(AP)  WASHINGTON — When it comes to education, the Republican field of presidential candidates has a unified stance: Get the federal government out of schools. How they’d do that varies.

Take the Education Department. Reps. Michele Bachmann and Ron Paul along with Texas Gov. Rick Perry want to shut it down altogether, while Rick Santorum and Newt Gingrich want to shrink it. Offering student loans? Herman Cain says the department should get out of that business.

And then there’s the Bush-era education accountability law, No Child Left Behind. Perry calls it a “direct assault on federalism,” while former Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman has long expressed animosity toward the law.

Although former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney has said “we need to get the federal government out of education,” he has been more willing to praise certain Education Department policies.

While polls show that voters clearly care about education, it hasn’t been a driving issue in the race. Instead, it percolates at times. When it does, the dialogue — like many other issues in the race — has been primarily focused on the general theme of limiting the federal role more than on specific education policies.

Any comments of praise of a federal education policy can lead to accusations that a candidate supports federal overreach, said Frederick Hess, director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute. Read More

It’s hard to miss talk about rising college costs these days. It’s plastered all over newspapers and websites, and has been at the center of much political debate over the past month, especially in response to President Obama announcing a new plan to help grads better cope with student debt. And it’s not a discussion that’s likely to go away soon. Over the past few decades, college tuition has been rising at a breakneck pace, almost three times as fast as inflation. Incomes haven’t kept up with college costs, and that’s made it a challenge for many students to pay their way through school, often accruing tens of thousands of dollars of debt in the process.

The effect these rising costs have had on young adults hasn’t always been predictable, however. Here, we explain some of the more surprising ways higher tuition is affecting the way current students and recent grads work, play, and live.

  1. Enrollment in two-year colleges has risen.Rising college costs haven’t necessarily driven students away from pursuing a degree, but many are chasing that goal in a new ways. Community colleges have seen a steady increase in enrollment as economic troubles and sky-high tuition fees have put traditional schools out of many students’ reach. Two-year colleges are often much cheaper and offer students more flexibility in working while they attend classes. For some, they’re a great way to get basic courses out of the way before moving on to a bigger, more prestigious school. Whatever the reason, community colleges are playing an increasingly large role in higher education, a fact highlighted by President Obama in a 2010 speech on education and an accordant $12 billion dollar program to fund two-year schools. Read More

Rick Bowmer/Associated Press

Police officers in Portland, Ore., pushed people away from a park encampment on Sunday. The protesters were later driven out.

By MALIA WOLLAN and

BERKELEY, Calif. — Goodbye, city park, hello, college green.

As city officials around the country move to disband Occupy Wall Street encampments amid growing concerns over health and public safety, protesters have begun to erect more tents on college campuses.

“We are trying to get mass numbers of students out,” said Natalia Abrams, 31, a graduate of the University of California, Los Angeles, and an organizer with Occupy Colleges, a national group coordinating college-based protesters.

Though only a handful of colleges have encampments, tents went up last week at Harvard in Cambridge, Mass., and here at the University of California, Berkeley. Additionally, protesters in California have vowed to occupy dozens of other campuses in the coming days.

Last Wednesday at Berkeley, about 3,000 people gathered on Sproul Plaza to protest tuition increases, and many then set up a camp. Demonstrators linked arms to protect their tents, but police officers broke through and took down more than a dozen tents, arresting about 40 protesters. Read More

Washington, D.C. – Senator James Inhofe (R-Okla.), Ranking Member of the Senate Committee on Environment and Public Works, spoke today on the Senate floor on the ongoing fight against the Obama Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) “train wreck” regulations. 

He voted in favor of Senator Rand Paul’s bid to use the Congressional Review Act (CRA) to overturn the Cross-State Rule, and an amendment sponsored by Senator John McCain which contains Senator Inhofe’s Energy Tax Prevention Act of 2011.  Originally introduced as a bill in March 2011, the Energy Tax Prevention Act prevents the EPA from regulating greenhouse gases under the Clean Air Act.

“Today the Senate had an important opportunity to debate the largest impediment to job growth and economic recovery facing our nation: President Obama’s EPA,” Senator Inhofe said.  “In the past two years, EPA has issued an unprecedented number of rules – known as the “EPA train wreck” – which are slowing the economy and killing jobs.  Taken together, these regulations could cost upwards of a trillion dollars, destroy hundreds of thousands of jobs, and significantly raise energy prices for families, businesses, and farmers.  In fact, from farm dust to puddles of water on the road, there are few aspects of American life EPA is not planning to regulate, and it is American families who will pay the price.

“Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid is working to protect the President and his Democrat majority – but not American families.  In fact, he won’t allow a debate on many of the challenges we face today because it would expose Obama’s failed policies.  That is why Senator Paul was forced to bring the CRA forward.  The irony is that the Senate stands ready to pass bipartisan legislation reining in EPA on a number of fronts, including the regulation of farm dust and industrial boilers.  But these bills – which could provide real, substantive relief to families and job creators – may never see the light of day.  Our fight against EPA’s job-killing train wreck regulations is ongoing and we will continue to take every opportunity to expose the havoc they will wreak on our economy.”

Read more: http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/42235

Post image for EPA’s Sinister Franken-Regs

This blog has kept a close eye on the Environmental Protection Agency’s aggressive expansion of its own authority (see here and here). The latest such power grab is taking place in the western United States, where the EPA is hybridizing disparate provisions of the Clean Air Act in order to engineer greater regulatory authority for itself. These Franken-regs are being used to trump the states’ rightful authority on visibility-improvement policy and impose billions of dollars of emissions controls for benefits that are literally invisible.

In 1977 and 1990, Congress passed amendments to the Clean Air Act providing that states work together to improve visibility at federal National Parks and Wilderness Areas. Together, these amendments are known as the Regional Haze provision. Notably, this provision accords states a uniquely high degree of control relative to the EPA. According to the EPA’s 2005 Regional Haze implementation guidelines, “[T]he [Clean Air] Act and legislative history indicate that Congress evinced a special concern with insuring that States would be the decision-makers” on visibility-improvement policy making. The courts, too, have interpreted the Clean Air Act such that states have primacy on Regional Haze decision making. In the seminal case American Corn Growers v. EPA (2001), which set boundaries between the states and the EPA on Regional Haze policy, the D.C. Circuit Court remanded the EPA’s 1999 Regional Haze implementation guidelines for encroaching on states’ authority. Read More