Posts Tagged ‘Oil and Gas Industry’

Sustainability could improve national security

February 14th, 2011
By: Dan Davis

If you don't receive the Business Intelligence Brief from Chris Kuehl, the Fabricators and Manufacturers Association's economist, you should sign up. You can do that here.

The Feb. 14 edition included a written piece by Colonel Mark “Puck” Mykleby from the U.S. Marine Corps. His opinions are logical, but likely unpopular. Nonetheless, they should be shared:

"Today, the words 'national security' invoke the specters of our worst fears, anxieties, and angst…Al Qaeda, China, Iran, etc…all threats that must be defended against. And this is the problem. As a product of the Cold War, we have blurred the distinction between defense and national security; so much so that we tend to use the terms interchangeably. The end result is that we are effectively undermining our national security in the name of defense and contributing to the unsustainable nature of our entire national system.

"Simply stated, we are depleting our national resources and bleeding our national strength by seeking to preserve a perceived status quo with an almost obsessive focus on risks and threats.

"In 1961, President Eisenhower presciently warned against such a dynamic in his farewell address to the nation. In his address, he shared his concerns over the 'military industrial complex' and its inherent threat to our nation’s fiscal solvency. Today, we are seeing Eisenhower’s warning come to fruition in front of our eyes. We continue to expend enormous amounts of national resources on a machine whose original purpose, national defense, has been eclipsed by the need for the machine to feed itself even at the expense of the security of our nation. We continue to pour more and more resources into calcified organizations, inflexible institutions, irrelevant processes, and paradigmatic weapon systems without ever challenging the logic or efficacy of our actions.

"All the while, we marginally address the root causes of the most problematic, complex, and very real challenges to our national security: an exorbitant national debt and the real possibility of fiscal insolvency; waning global influence and credibility as a result of our perceived national hubris; the pervasiveness, corrosive synergies, and state-like influence of nefarious non-state networks (terrorist organizations, illicit narcotics industries, organized crime syndicates, etc); suburban sprawl incoherently designed to accommodate cars rather than people; a gluttonous national lifestyle that creates systemic, preventable health problems that cost our nation billions of dollars each year; a food production and distribution system dependent on subsidies, petroleum, and farming techniques that degrade our soil and damage our national health; unsustainable energy policies and infrastructures that disregard the limits of the earth’s energy resources; a general disregard for the environment and the overt rejection of our responsibility to bequeath to our children a world worth living in; and a lackluster educational system that has resulted in a general decline in our national capacity to innovate and compete on a global scale."

 

Fabricating to the rescue yet again

May 5th, 2010
By: Dan Davis

By now everyone has heard about the massive oil spill taking place in the Gulf of Mexico, a result of an explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig April 20. If you haven't, you'll also be shocked to know that bell bottoms have come and gone out of style again and that Abe Vigoda is still alive .

Estimates suggest that 210,000 gallons of crude a day have been released into the gulf for the last two weeks. This puts the disaster on par with the oil spill from the Exxon Valdez in Alaska in 1989.

Being that the three leaks are in deep water, about 5,000 feet below the surface, plugging them has proven difficult. The oil industry hasn't been faced with anything like this before.

So what did they do? They contacted a contractor and put some welders to work. (more...)

Lots of lies? No surprise

April 1st, 2010
By: Eric Lundin

American Metal Market held its Third Annual Steel Tube & Pipe Conference March 22-23 in Houston, and if you’re a steel tube or pipe producer, you might give some thought to attending its fourth annual conference. It held something for everyone—industry overview, industry forecast, and a chance to network with many executives in the tube and pipe industry. While the presentations themselves were firmly rooted in statistics, facts, and sincere predictions, I couldn’t help but notice that two of the speakers threw the spotlight onto two sources of … how can I say it diplomatically? Nonfactual information? Information at variance with the truth? Outright lies? You pick one. (more...)

How 'green' is 'green'?

July 1st, 2009
By: Vicki Bell

This blog post is rooted in a discussion my husband and I had yesterday regarding a news item I ran across about a 'green' race car that runs on vegetable oil and waste chocolate. I get vegetable oil, but where on earth does waste chocolate come from? Godiva, Ghirardelli, Hershey, Fannie May, and other chocolate candy companies? An admitted chocoholic, I don"t understand waste chocolate; waist chocolate makes far more sense to me.

After talking about what a shame it is to use chocolate as fuel, we began talking about 'green' automotive initiatives in general. My husband's comments, courtesy of Bill Nye, the Science Guy, had me googling faster than an SSC Ultimate Aero.

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Hello, summer!

May 28th, 2009
By: Eric Lundin

Well, maybe it"s not quite time to greet the summer. In astronomical terms, it starts at the moment of the summer solstice, which will occur at precisely 5:45 a.m. on June 21 this year (I know it sounds crazy, but it varies). However, one thing doesn"t vary from year to year: the conventional summer that runs from Memorial Day weekend until Labor Day weekend. Boats, beaches, bikinis, cookouts, and long summer evenings are the hallmarks of the season, as well as mosquitoes, picnic ants, sunburn, and rising gasoline prices. I suppose you could put on some mosquito repellent (or eat a lot of garlic), step on the ants, and wear sunscreen to ward off the first three, but I don"t know what we can do about the last one.
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A hunch on the downturn: This time, it"s different

November 4th, 2008
By: Eric Lundin

As I type this, the line at the polling place across the street has finally shown signs of movement. It"s the morning of Nov. 4, and by evening we"ll know who will have the world"s largest bully pulpit for the next four years.

Seeing how the numbers are adding up, I won"t envy the winner. The Institute for Supply Management yesterday released its October numbers on manufacturing, and they weren"t pretty. The organization"s manufacturing index, the PMI, plunged to 38.9 percent, its lowest level in 26 years.
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Big fears, short lines

October 1st, 2008
By: Vicki Bell

Last night, continuing our long-standing tradition of "date night," my husband and I went to our favorite local restaurant, Alpha Soda. A fixture in our community, Alpha Soda—which was established in 1920 and is said to be the oldest standing business in its city—draws crowds. Not so last night. The normally packed parking lot was almost empty, as was the restaurant. The wait at the hostess station was a nanosecond, as was the wait for service. Why?

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Big fears, long lines

September 24th, 2008
By: Vicki Bell

Yesterday, I met a co-worker for lunch. You're thinking ho-hum, big deal. Actually it was a big deal for me, because my employer and almost all of my co-workers are located 624 miles from me. However, two of us telecommute long distances from our homes, which just happen to be in the same general geographic area.

Our lunch was postponed several times because of teleconferences with our on-site co-workers. It almost was postponed yet again because of a crisis the likes of which I personally haven't experienced since 1973. Although this crisis pales next to the financial sector's woes, it's a big issue in certain areas of the country.

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Nuclear energy not going to waste

June 30th, 2008
By: Tim Heston

Reading news of the campaign trail last week, I recalled a park cookout I attended years ago while visiting a friend in West Lafayette, Ind. The conversations there weren"t normal, and not your typical neighborhood get-together talk. These people, including my friend, were nuclear engineering majors at Purdue University, and they were talking about the benefits of, well, their majorand France.

The conversations covered a lot of the same stuff as Sen. John McCain did on the stump last week (albeit with a bit more technical jargon). The French are able to generate 80 percent of their electricity with nuclear power, McCain said, providing the lead for a BusinessWeek report. There"s no reason why America shouldn"t.

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Money in green

June 23rd, 2008
By: Tim Heston

Last week media reported long gas station lines, with motorists grumbling over record prices. That sounded like 1970s oil-crisis America, but that"s not what reporters were writing about on Friday.

They were reporting from Beijing.

There, The Times of London gave reports of long lines outside petrol stations as Chinese motorists attempted to fill up before the government removed fuel subsidies. That action jacked up gas prices by 18 percent. This came on the heels of other Asian countries reducing their own subsidies, including India and Malaysia.

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