Before  Obama says he can do nothing about gas prices, how about he tries to do  something first? Like have open up some of the 97% of OCS where he  doesn’t allow development Herald Times (2/6/11) reports: Pitching  the promise of energy independence, President Barack Obama cautioned  Wednesday that it’s going to be tough to transition from America’s  oil-dependent economy and acknowledged there’s little he can do to lower  gas prices over the short term…“I’m just going to be honest with you.  There’s not much we can do next week or two weeks from now,” the  president told workers at a wind turbine plant. It’s a theme Obama’s  struck before as he tries to show voters he’s attuned to a top economic  concern with gas prices pushing toward $4 a gallon…Obama said he wants  to move toward “a future where America is less dependent on foreign oil,  more reliant on clean energy produced by workers like you.” That will  happen by reducing oil imports, tapping domestic energy sources and  shifting the nation to renewable and less polluting sources of energy,  such as wind, the president says. He has set a goal of reducing oil  imports by one-third by 2025.
Go Anchorage! Anchorage Daily News (2/1/11) reports: Anchorage’s  city power utility made a long-awaited offer this week to buy wind  power from Cook Inlet Region Inc., backers of a proposed wind turbine  project on Fire Island… But CIRI senior vice president Ethan Schutt said  the offer is so low it’s ridiculous and contains unworkable  terms…Municipal Light and Power director Jim Posey held a press  conference Thursday to explain the utility’s offer, which he said  protects ML&P customers from higher costs…CIRI wants to begin  construction of turbines on Fire Island off Anchorage this summer, but  has so far been unable to get any utility companies to sign contracts to  buy the power it would generate, said company spokesman Jim Jager.  “Realistically, the project isn’t going forward until we have  power-purchase agreements,” he said in a recent interview…The  corporation is lined up to get nearly $44 million in federal grants to  help build the turbines, but the money is contingent on starting this  year. The state has approved using $25 million in public funds to build a  transmission line from Fire Island to the mainland…The first phase of  the project — 22 turbines that could provide electricity for 12,000  households — would cost about $135 million, said Schutt.
Shock Study! Wind Farms are inefficient.  Who would have thought? BBC (2/5/11) reports: The  analysis also suggested output was low during the times of highest  demand…The report, supported by conservation charity the John Muir  Trust, concluded turbines “cannot be relied upon” to produce significant  levels of power generation…However, industry representatives said they  had “no confidence” in the data…The research, carried out by Stuart  Young Consulting, analysed electricity generated from UK wind farms  between November 2008 to December 2010…Statements made by the wind  industry and government agencies commonly assert that wind turbines will  generate on average 30% of their rated capacity over a year, it  said….But the research found wind generation was below 20% of capacity  more than half the time and below 10% of capacity over one third of the  time.
Weird — You mean turning food into fuel means there’s less food? New York Times (2/6/11) reports: But  last year, 98 percent of cassava chips exported from Thailand, the  world’s largest cassava exporter, went to just one place and almost all  for one purpose: to China to make biofuel. Driven by new demand, Thai  exports of cassava chips have increased nearly fourfold since 2008, and  the price of cassava has roughly doubled… Each year, an ever larger  portion of the world’s crops — cassava and corn, sugar and palm oil — is  being diverted for biofuels as developed countries pass laws mandating  greater use of nonfossil fuels and as emerging powerhouses like China  seek new sources of energy to keep their cars and industries running.  Cassava is a relatively new entrant in the biofuel stream… But with food  prices rising sharply in recent months, many experts are calling on  countries to scale back their headlong rush into green fuel development,  arguing that the combination of ambitious biofuel targets and mediocre  harvests of some crucial crops is contributing to high prices, hunger  and political instability.