Feeds:
Posts
Comments

cloudssun

17-20 June 


7th Norwegian-Russian Arctic Offshore Workshop

PETROMAKS Workshop, Sponsored by the Research Council Norway.


Program


Vladimir Pavlenko, Arkhangelsk Science Center, Ural Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, opens the program, and I quote him directly: “[We have in attendance] Norwegian representatives from Moscow. That tells us that this is an important and crucial conference, since they are here. This is the 7th conference, the tradition is such that agenda, we take up the most important questions of arctic oil and gas development, questions concerning environment, and how people will work in the environment, traditional agenda. Have been doing this for many years, Siri open the conference from the Norwegian side” (speaks in Russian with translator).

Siri Helle Friedemann, Department of Petroleum, The Research Council of Norway: “Dear governor [etc], Norwegian and Russian cooperation – white paper two years ago, revised strategy for High North the same year, requiring new knowledge in a number of areas, value creation, international research cooperation” (speaking in English). Joint cooperation in Norwegian-Russian. 2005 Moscow, first meeting.

Meeting tomorrow networking event. Enrolled for site seeing and networking.

Pavlenko introduces Governor of the region, as presented by [name]

meetingSpeaks: “On behalf of the governor, allow me to introduce the conference, practical and scientific questions concerning the Arctic, take care of the people working there, and environment, northwestern part of the Arctic, Pechora and Barents gas province, working out at sea, Pechora sea, we have found 6 fields, quite large oil and gas fields, territory of continental shelf, and need to find more fields as well. We are also working with geological studies, rosneft, drilling on Prirazlomnaya. Working with companies and industry, fruitful and get something new and interesting from the conference” [no applause yet].

kormeetSiri introduces the next presenter: Sverre Rustad. Speaking in Russian (!): “The fact that both Norway and Russia have created positions at respected embassies suggest our commitment to [cooperation] . Every 4 years, once every parliamentary term, white paper – white paper 2013 (March). Government announced, in the future, there will be 10-year plans for staking out directions for knowledge, education, priorities in white papers. [Plan] will guide investment, white paper every four years to update the plan. Annual budget defining goals what can be done, but the plan will set clear targets, such as r & d levels, research priorities are the same—industry relevant research in key areas, meeting global challenges, larger theme of energy supply, global warming, environmental protection, the important – internationalization of science, important platform is participation in the EU programs, another program is Nordic countries, and then strategic cooperation with some country partners (including Russia)…

fingersCooperation allows us to do things at the national level for a small country like Norway. Ninety-nine percent of research takes place elsewhere, and we need access to that, global problems require global solutions, getting to know others better, centering on Russia’s position as a neighboring country in the High North, this is important part of this internationalization. In connection with the new white paper, new conversation what takes place national and international level. Not a priority in the previous framework….

timberHigh North strategy is one the of main pillars of Norwegian international policy. Energy environmental protection, cooperation with Russia takes many forms, initiative comes from research itself, dedicated programmes in RCN – as exemplified by this conference today, 7th framework program of the EU Russia is very important. 1500 Russian students in Norway – less than 100 Norwegian students in Russia – we want to see more Norwegian students in Russia. Norwegian University Centre in St. Petersburg.

Wishing you good luck, and although I am not an expert, I look forward to your discussions”.

Up next, William Christensen, Foreign assignments in the US and Brussels. Speaks in English. Dark blue part of the future is prime production, falling off, so we need to add on more production, the light blue represents resources from unopened areas. “Open areas and unopened areas” are the areas of the North. Opening up a new area in Barents, opening up for exploration and production this week. In the disputed area, Barents Sea SE and the areas around Jan Mayan, very important achievement, this area will be 300 million oil equivalent. Statoil cooperating with Rostneft in the upper areas of Barents, quite few challenges, offshore.

Jan Mayen shares with Iceland, reviewing resource potential in Jan Mayen. Outside Lofoten, always a discussion headed debate. All the licenses been issued in the 22nd licensing round, Rosneft cooperation with Statoil, first time Russians on the Norwegian shelf, a good thing. A lot of possibilities and Russian cooperation very important.

beachHighlighting petroleum research, Petromaks 2 covers research until [date]. Demo 2000 conveys demonstration. Government active in the whole chain, what we need in the north, off shore Norway. Research centers for petroleum activities, arctic technology in Tromsø.

Tarjei Malme – been out to US Chad and other places. Coordinator of Petromaks 2 funding opportunities. Introduction to new 10 year program petromaks 2. Relevant for researchers here today. Strategic research for innovation, not down stream activities, covering quite broadly upstream, universities, research institutes, industrial sector, 220 million kroner. Objective of Petromaks 2: knowledge creation and industrial development to promote development and optimal management of Norwegian petroleum resources within an environmentally sustainable framework. Thematic priorities in PETROMAKS 2 – every technology has challenges and priorities to meet these challenges.

woodenEmphasize collaboration and networking among universities research institutes and industrial sector—competence, recruitment, research based education. 320 million kroner available for calls this year. Norwegian institutions must apply, but in collaboration with Russians. Joint call between RCN and Russian FBR – RFBR… Sponsoring program polarprog –

Text will be published in both countries – September 4 for research institutions [CHECK THIS OUT this week!] [applause].

Plenary presentations. Pavlenko: Eight oblasts in Russia in the north, and this is characteristic – good thing that many people are available, we are in total agreement with internationalization of science in the Arctic, this conference is a very good example, shows we want to internationalize things in the two countries, I have talked about this many times, internationalization of science many times, interested in activity, going on in the arctic, result of this conference will be very important, giving a sense of what we are doing here together.

woodenHarald Brekke: mapping the outer parts of the continental shelf, for submission for Norway to United Nations about outer continental shelf. General overview of geology of Barents Sea. Plate. Moscovian set up for the arctic sea. Tectonic photo.

Leopold Lobkovskiy: taking part in many expeditions, not just sitting in his office, has written on methods of monitoring and developing continental shelf in the Arctic – a group of scientists a system to prove the continental shelf in Russia – Abnormal events – methane coming out of the shelf on the eastern part.

helloLionel Camus: Real time monitoring of eco system. Environmental issues; research needs for local knowledge; knowledge gaps, Admusen Center. Ten points of oil drilling challenges in Arctic—Goliat oil field operated by ENI – last week in Shanghai, Chinese wanting to use the NE shipping route for goods, and tourism – 65000 tourists visited 2010 in Svalbard. Risks exists and increasing, border area between Norway and Russia. Two different legislation towards policy harmonization, Barents sea: maritime ecosystem managed by two countries.

Western side – risk based approach.
Easter side – polluter pay principle

Barents sea- Arctic animals not more sensitive to pollution temperate. Barents Sea, a a unique ecosystem with strong regional differences. Different from the North Sea, need to adapt create responses unique to Barents. High abundance of sponges and coral in the south west. Impact assessment of drilling mud on sponges/coral. –

mealCreating an ecosystem model. Integrated modeling framework, computer simulations on maritime activities, all for sustainability. – run them in a supercomputer in Tromsø. Marginal Ice Zone – ice that is coming and going in the Barents sea – see image.

villageNo sensors for dealing with indicating oil spills under the ice. In situ burning, mechanical recovery, chemical dispersants/herders. OGP Joint Industry Project

Gaps of knowledge –
Increasing ship traffic—risk for impact of bunker oil
Toxicity studies at the community/ecosystem – level for ecosystem models
Brackish water/Shallow water
Further developing real time online monitoring technology.

walksRoald Amundsen Petroleum Research Center. Consortium for Arctic Petroleum Activities

Vladimir Masloboev – technogenic affects on the Arctic. Co-chairs and colleagues, thank you for the invitation. Talking about removal of spilled petroleum from various surfaces, water, solid, etc. When it comes to fighting oil spill on land, using bacteria, mushrooms, absorbents – plants absorb oil. Microorganisms on the oil surface, Rhodococcus destroys the oil droplet, properties of the microorganisms destructing petroleum hydrocarbons. Transforming pollutants into nontoxic compliance, ability to inhabit plant’s root system; increase the nutrient status of plants, aboriginal plants. Experimenting, 5 years now, on establishing plots with gas condensate and oil oxidizing bacteria in forest soils. Remediating soils during one vegetation period (90-100) days. Rolled grass plots. Roll out grass on oil. Technogenic barren before planting – Bitumen emulsion against dusting. VIPON – Shows a Pasteur in Paris as last shot – with photo of fellow colleague.

folksValeri Kaminskiy, Director all Russian Scientific Research Institute for Geology and Mineral Resources of the Ocean: They opened the Shtokman field and other fields. Giving the history of the seismic development in the eastern continental shelf. 1995 – concept for the study of the continental shelf, and for licensing rounds. Licensing in the Eastern Arctic. Rosneft and Gazprom are the only companies who can obtain licensing. Shtokman — the project has stopped. Quite a lot of means to develop. Gazprom working these days more oriented towards Yamal. Statoil dumped on Shtokman. So, I decided to go to the Issues of Nature Protection and healthcare of personnel and population in connection to Development of hydrocarbon resources on the arctic shelf.

Serge Cukierman: Chemical dispersant application in the Barents Sea. Total suggesting a petromaks project on dispersant use in the Barents sea. How it could happen and legislation could move forward.

houseVtsybin – Nenets – no translator—someone stepped in to provide ad hoc translation. Companies who come to the shelf are not ready for oil spills. They do not have proven oil spill technologies in ice conditions.

Forecasting in the Barents Sea.
Lars Hole: Weather, waves, currents, and oil spills. Meteorologisk institutt. Outline: Weather forecasting. Oil Drit service at MET Norway. Forecasting atmosphere 6 times a day updating. Polar low. Cold air outbreak over warm stater. Tracking system for polar lows.

Barents Watch portal [GOOGLE THIS]

hutAre Sydnes, Bambulyak, Camus. Coastal Environment, Technologies and innovation in the Arctic. ENPI Kolarctic programme (EU) 2011-2014. Contribute with knowledge innovation and expertise in addressing challenges posed by offshore developments in the sensitive marine environment of the Arctic

Lars Henrik Larsen— scenario of shipping disaster. Shipping in the arctic. See slides. Great talk.

toaskLukin A: Kova river, oil spills, repeat spills affects on 18 species of fish. 3 zones, breeding zones, lake river systems, tributaries systems, Kova river mainstream, spawning area, with each zone having different fish. Population crash of certain species, while other species become more populated and distribution completely changes.

Ivar Singsaas. SINTEF. Oil spill response analysis in arctic waters.

Summing up
bagSalve Dahle:  Environmental session – twelve papers, occupational health, ecological risks associated with oil activities and shipping, those who have questions I hope you can bring them up to the speaker later.

Personal comments: international presentation, joint Norwegian Russian French expertise, pointed to need to think about dispersals for successful oil development in the arctic and need for regulatory framework.

Then Nenets, very often, oil companies are not mentally prepared to deal with oil spill, onshore capacity needs to be developed before going further, from methodological – polar lows are difficult to handle, a lot of observations in order to be prepared for polar low. A polar Arctic, Norway, Russia, Sweden, innovation technologies for oil spill in the arctic, coastal environmental protection, capacity building, — another using bivalves for environmental modeling, main point that environment itself causes a lot of stress for the animals, and natural variation itself causes stress to animals, just think how much oil spill would create. Shipping and transport of containers is important, and there is no preparation at all for handling such an accident, and with more shipping in the North Sea route, this would be also a likely situation. Oil accidents and Shipping accidents require attention. Fish species testing that have been exposed to oil, and the speaker pointed to pronounced change over time, is this irreversible or will it go back to the way it was, finally Sintef and oil spill response and recovery, looking at the type of oil, and its fate. Best strategy for dealing with oil spill. Then, socio economic, environmental sensing, a combination of strategies for monitoring environment and human activity, pointing to one system in Norway and one in Russia.

more dogsVladimir Masloboev responds to Salve Dahle. How to avoid oil spills instead of how to deal with them once they happen. Not only 50 percent of those living in the Arctic are dependent upon how people are living, not just weather, how people coming to the Arctic and how they are living. We should have that for next meeting, and have more time to ask questions, not one question was asked.

Siri now talking about noting the need to have talks about people living in the arctic, and noted that we would like longer panel sessions.

oilMoving on to Panel number 2, chaired by Morten Smelror, Leopold Lobkovskiy. Morten talking now, about geology of arctic sea, concentrated Barents, the deep, the middle and upper part. Deep structure of the crust, shaping tectonics, and determining the way you model the heat flow (thermic field) – basic structure of Barents sea, and going back to plate tectonics, involving important origins of Timan, etc. ways different plates involved, assembled, to become the crust depends on the origins. We had sort of a coalition – Norwegian and Russian work on this issue, agree on their models, but need to have more work done, and identify where crusts actually are. Next talk sedimentary model, … lastly, what happened in the late, since middle miocene, namely the glacial history, very important for Barents sea, because it modified the top – at the mouth of the ice sheet—stability of slopes, sedimentary models, broader application. Ongoing work was also present, ice flows and movements. Ice is a very affective … some of these features are linked to gas leakage so further work to expand the understandings of pressure situations in the subsurface. And migration of hydrocarbons shifting the mass of the situation. Petroleum systems how they move and react. Six presentations all together, covering issues. Also found that we are on the same page on many issues, but need further studies and work together.

olkPanel Three – Kimberly Mayes, Valeriy Kaminskiy: “Very exciting day today, in session three we have heard nine presentations, impacts of sea ice on the offshore field. Drifting of ice berg, can change direction very fast within minutes. Mapping ice bergs, engineering of oil transfer of eastward of Barents sea. Protection of wind erosion and storms, using vegetation protecting the soil of melting of permafrost. Pechora sea, knowledge of soil behavior for construction of offshore structures. Combination of oil terminals and transport pipelines, exciting ways and possibilities for this. Use of traces of drilling mud. Main functions of drilling mud, field test show that samples give good results for ionic composition of water, environmental friendly way of doing it”.

A signing ceremony between Akvaplan Niva and Komi Center.

photoPavlenko – “[A] thank you to everyone who takes part in the conference today, [I want to] thank Norwegian colleagues for taking the time to come here, our northern friends for hosting here at Arkhangelsk- representation from many parts of Russia [are] here, leading institutes representing oil and gas, representatives from eight oblasts of Russia, all parts of the Russia, ecological organizations involved, important for the development of our cooperation, the main aim of the cooperation, to come together and find common solutions. I would also like to say, for the first time, we also were able to conclude that we should publish the results of our work. We in Arkhangelsk will do that, and we ask you to send your materials to us in the next couple weeks, and we will publish it”.

vision“A few words about [the] Arkhangelsk center, doing quite a lot to prepare for the conference today. Actually, there is another big meeting taking place tomorrow, so I thank my colleagues for doing so much in preparation. I think we can say that the conference was a success, also we are going to use the experience in our work, and we will also invite you to other meetings in Arkhangelsk and other parts in Russia. For certain reasons we did not get [the] possibility to have our last session at Severinsk tomorrow, Severinks – geological institute, and we could have used it to look into ecology. I’m very sad [that] we were not able to go there, but maybe possibilities [for] next time. We changed the program for tomorrow, for our Norwegian colleagues [we] have a special meeting, without [wearing a] tie — beer brewery, we think we leave Arkhangelsk – in the morning come to the Arkhangelsk to the [?] center.

stepsPresentations on different technologies for oil and gas, Director institute Vladimir Nikitn will come to do this, and this starts at 11AM, you will hear about our center, then we we will go to the boborova – without a tie, last part of our meeting.

First meeting – leaving 10 AM from Hotel go to presentations, discuss perspectives.

Then, those of you going to Chamber of commerce, OR, others go to Brewery.
wood




6/14: Just heading now to Arkhangelsk for a personal look at participation in the second event of the Norwegian-Russia Arctic Offshore workshops sponsored by the Research Council of Norway (RCN).

It was my good fortune to attend the previous event, now three years ago, in summer 2010. At that time, Paparazzi Ethnography, was just getting up and running and we did not provided any on-time accounting of the first event, though we have plenty of notes. Here, I hope to provide data on many of the talks as well as give a sense of the aesthetics of the event.

See you in Arkhangelsk!
dog

Lecture 6 June 2013, U Helsinki.
island
Aleksanterireading


Aleksanteri6/2Eeva Korteniemi, Planning Officer, was kind enough to show me around the Aleksanteri Institute, Finnish Centre for Russian and Eastern European Studies, independent institute of University of Helsinki, Finland for academic research. With training programmes and custom-made projects, the institute’s website details the offerings for researchers accessible here.

Fall 2010, I presented the annual Aleksanteri ConferenceFueling the Future, focusing on Russian energy politics. Since then I developed an interest in working with Aleksanteri on examining Western Expertise in constructing Russian energy futures.

Aleksanteri’s 2010 conference attracted academics and policy analysts from Russia, Western Europe, the United States, and marked an early experience for StudioPolar‘s PaparazziEthnographic blogging about the fleeting phenomena of events (links,  Day 3Day 2Day 1).

visit galleriaIn preparation for my lecture, Aleksanteri provided accommodation at Tööloö Towers, 20 minute walk from the Institute. Just inside the main entrance of the Institute is a table with Aleksanteri newsletter, copies of books published by Aleksanteri’s Kikimora press and pamphlets relating the goings on in the coming weeks.

doors wide open

talking westermark lectureThe materials provide evidence of scholarly events (upcoming lectures, visitors, exhibits), publications, and visiting researchers. A short informative brochure for visiting scholars details the Institute’s activities on networking within Finland on active cooperation with the international research community with a strong outreach agenda and a full events calendar.

lectureI picked up two books published through Kikimora press as casual reading, titled Business Entry in Eastern Europe, edited by Jan-åke Törnroos and Jarmo Nieminen, and Russian Greens in a Risk Society by Oleg Yanitsky, both weighing in at 300 pages each.

Yanitsky’s argument is illuminating, suggesting that reflexive modernization in Western Europe had existed already for decades in the USSR/Russia.

Screen Shot 2013-06-09 at 7.30.40 AMEeva’s engaging tour kept me on my toes!
mealdinnerlibrary
B & Bdinnerisland hopping

again hopping

map

ferrySpringtalkHelsoutsidereading and lying
I had the opportunity to attend their area studies discussion which took place on the first floor, in a cellar like room, with arched stone ceilings. The entire setting was mundane and yet seemed to be taken directly out of a cold war spy novel.

Imagine: academics meeting in a cellar of an Areas Studies institute in Helsinki to discuss methods on reformulating analysis of the east.Asp
church

Betti

pieIn the cellar, there was lively discussion about the topic, including use of the words imagination, geographical boundary lines, economic and institutions, memories of generations, real/consistent/pragmatic study, the reality of state socialism in the region – the “positive legacy” – high investment in human capital, great transformation from sovietism to capitalism and my favorite, “area studies is an applied science”.
horse meat My immediate feeling was agreement, but then I remembered that all science is applied, in the sense that science (more than peace itself), is simply politics by other means, a war machine.

We were also treated to the Finnish perspective to area studies, the politics of science and how it changes over time, and how institutes change or have a direct impact on research. One of the discussants mentioned three main developments/phases since the 1990s, within Finnish research. First, the economic collapse of the Soviet Union led to lack of market for Finnish goods, and realization of lack of knowledge about Russia and its influence on Finnish domestic politics. What had been Russian-Eastern European studies in the Finnish perspective was mainly about former Soviet Union. So the goal of first academic programs in the 1990s, within Finland, was to generate new scholarship.
meatmeaty A second phase, the mid-1990s, saw Finland joining the European Union (EU), and re-inventing a role for itself as the Russian expert in the EU and for mediating, having a new role, in the form of possessing wide spread knowledge about Russia and even disseminating the idea that Finns know about Russia, that they were the holy grail of Russia. A new attitude toward institutionalization of Russian studies, coordinating scholarship and education on Russian studies and eastern Europe.

Finally, a third turn, European crisis, and industry restructuring.

In the contemporary scholarly discourse, according to our discussion, there are three main agendas: 1-what perspective to take on Russia; 2- what it is worth; 3-how to do it.
soup

eating Here, the discussion became more arcane, with references to Finnlandization, a heated debate concerning scholarship accusations of being left wing, and turning against the transition of Russia with a critical tone, but then, in 2010, a post-Finlandization, where accusations turn upside down, with too mild a critique against Putin’s Russian. Moreover, Europe as a normative power approach, had an important impact on how Finnish scholarship should be interpreted, including the transfer of “our” ideas (human rights) to Russia, seen everywhere through the EU value systems.

A second agenda of contemporary debates revisits the Area Studies concepts themselves, with new words emerging, such as Eurasia (traveling concepts) – East is not only Russia, but more about Caucasian countries, Central Asia, China, an interconnectedness of things and geographies. The East is not just Russia anymore. Also, the North, that there is a Nordic dimension initiative, and how Russia is interconnected with the Northern region and Europe, and Arctic perspective. Reconceptualize Eastern Europe as such – euphemisms, east central, Balkan, Baltic, trying to avoid and maintain discussion – European studies that claims post socialist countries.
pie

What within six weeks…



now water office playa ads beach flight yesterday yesterday
yesmorewithoutenoughvisuals

Commitment of Spring…



“You can watch spring coming”,
Eeva K. proclaimed upon unlocking the door to my new office.

springith

movement

greening

Full
Fullestimage

…visualized embodiments.

Spring


zumJuly mid
window scene
window



27-31 May –

Pan-Arctic Extractive Industries PhD Programme:
An initiative under the Umbrella of the University of the Arctic, led by Jessica Shadian, Florian Stammler (Arctic Centre, U Lapland), Gunhild Hoogenson-Gjorv, U. Tromsø.

PhD Course/Symposium

Course Website/

Course Info

green

5/31: Student Presentations.

Elena Nuikina, U Vienna, Vorkuta, Russia, coal mining — superb talk on her work in Russia, great ethnography, looking at development as a process of expansion through efficiencies of scale.

What makes a mono-industrial town located in North of Russia a viable place? How viability is negotiated? (Fluid process; looking at perceptions, strategies and tactics to make Vorkuta a viable place? Viability for whom?). Chapter 2, How international experts, authorities, companies and ordinary residents envision future existence of the town? What were the projects aimed at future viability of the town? How is viability negotiated in changing context? Development Scenarios for Vorkuta. Whether it should be a workers’ camp or “town”.

Shrinkage — Instead of Restructuring — (Industry shrinking, spatial re-organization of the town down to 5 mines from 12; from 200,000 down to 90,000; outmigration of people (via programs + self-driven) — Consequences: Changing economic life in the town; municipal and social services; ghost towns on the margins of Vorkuta; changing social dynamics in the town (mafia, social activism, leadership, social capital, social cohesion). Possibly a positive movement where “development” from shrinkage could result in “higher living standards” — So development, instead of leading toward largess, the concept of development is Progress, whose telos is efficiency. A playground for World Bank, a laboratory for carrying out processes elsewhere. Strategies of efficiency that are utilized by different actors in different ways. Temporality — short term stays as part of the discourse in labor and out-in migration.

idea

Tara Cater is up next, Dept. Geography, Memorial University, talking about High North Canada. Engaging with Indigenous and non-Indigenous actors involved in mining communities. Piotr Graczyk, PhD student, U Tromsø, up now talking about regime frameworks and the relationships between state’s interests, constructivist approaches involving agent-structure interaction, and foreign policy analysis decision making.

5/30 — after lunch: Russian Nickel Industry: Soviet Industrialism, Russian Capitalism and the Environment, Lars Rowe, Fridtjof Nansen Institute. How nickel industry came to be in Northern Norway. Petsamo/Pechenga region. Finnish Corridor: the Tartu (Dorpat) Peace Treaty (1921) — given to Finland because of the desire for an outlet to the (arctic) ocean; Finnish geological investigations (1921-1934), looking for iron, but found nickel instead; Inco (Canada) vs. IG Farben (Germany), considered the biggest find outside of Canada — but without expertise in the Country to develop the ore, and engaged various companies. Nickel concession settles with Inco, which secures Petsamo in 1934; 1934-39, Company town Kolosjoki (Nickel); Power plant at Jäniskoski. Nickel — steel alloys, makes steel – stainless, stress resistant, munitions, armor plates, secure supplies, deny supply to competing powers.

FlorianThen war comes to the area. Winter war 1939-1940. Moscow Parenthesis 1940-41/ Finland, Germany, and Soviet Union; Molotov’s sudden demand, Finland needs security: Hitler or Stalin? 1941-1944: Germany controls Petsamo; October 1944: Soviet takeover. 3 months after the peace, after Soviet’s give back Petsamo to Finns. But then, they ask the Finns for Petsamo back. In Pechenga: Nickel, Zapolyarnyi (1957); Prirechnyi (1962); Five hydroelectric power plants (1951-1970) – two built by Norwegians, three Finnish, two Russians (a minimum of border crossing by Western personnel); Five new ore deposits; The Norilsk ore [The issue of Western personnel on “Soviet Soil” is something Jonathan Stern disavows in his story of Natural Gas industry technology transfers]

Arn Keeling. Environmental history and extractives. Extractive industries: histories of exploitation, degradation and conflict; Cumulative effects assessment: immanent/future development focus (may include effects of past activities projects on current and future development).

shot5/29: Stuart Robinson,  is up — U Tromsø, Globalisation as the Expression of Social and Political Change: a Pretext— delivering up great job. Hanging on his every word. Okay, here we go:

What Globalization expresses, social and political change on a fundamental level. How things are made and how economic systems function. Using Globalization as a lens for talking about political problems associated with Marxism as a tradition of thought ostracized through sleights of hand. Marxism, as a word and ism, we mean something different when we talk about racism, rationalism, a pathology — a dismissal and straw man effect.

Hi Leena!!!



imagetable

The materialist view — the overstatements of dichotomies of liberalism (voluntary actions) versus materialisms of Marx, given that liberalism itself is a materialist position. Not the things themselves, though those are important themselves, but the process of production, that sustains of lifeworlds, creates all kinds of organizational demands and the shaping of social relationships — which is more material, than the view that the actions of individuals and rational action is somehow the nomos of geographies of life.

legsMaking things and cooperation. The production and distribution of goods, organization of market system for distribution — and more profound and complex than the simplicity of what goes on in a factory. Consumption and production in our lives take up so much of our time, as human beings in world that we live in, dynamics of employment. The normalization on the cultural plane, being a cog within an industrial process: Hannah Arendt.

Subsidiarity — the idea of constellation of heterogenous actors, granted autonomy to do what one does best, coordinated — paradoxical decentralization. Autonomy — a body that would operate independently as a good service provider, as operating as a private company, operated with municipality as having controlling interest, and then giving up the interest, merely a regulatory framework, and then becomes a model of competition. A kind of transnational organization that permeates on the policy level and its replication.

sceneFordism — intensified factory organization (collectivised capital ownership and finance, automation, strengthened hierarchy, scale) combined with political economy of distribution (producer-consumer contract). Changed the dynamic of work, from the natural rhythms of work to the factory assembly line (“not the employer who pays the wages, but the customer who pays the wages”). Marketing — playing on insecurities, worries about aging, worries about being socially accepted; Banking and credit– paying on installments, forms of debt, etc.

handy
PostFordism–
  integrated with Fordist practices, growing concentration of capital, centralization of decision making in larger corporations, typically marketing position in markets — living the usual assumptions of free markets, but the reality of most markets are one or more forms of monopoly and oligopoly relationships and even difficult to understand who the actors are, resulting in an increase in a transnational organization. Global factory and the integration of how things are made through collaboration of intra-industry trade, and the relationships whether competitive or collaborative, and the neoliberal classical model assuming an externalization of rational actors meeting in the market place, which may or may not be the case.

moreThe boundary between firms — disguising the influence of monopoly and monopsony (supplier of a good but dependent on another actor who distributes those goods). High tech system of design, and distribution and networked together with the most disgusting sweatshops, and the externalization of sweatshops — what can we say — that these locations are part of the transnational corporation, the phoenix rising of the centrally planned economy, under the guise freedom of contract, free markets, insertion of free market under a heavily centralized production process and the internal operations of a global corporation vertically integrated.

stuartSteering at a distance – autonomy over process but responsibility over results. Control the outcomes, recording the publications and providing rewards effectively discipling the subject. Geo-political marketing, multi-lateral trade through NAFTA, and other investment regimes.

Praxis: Engineered Autonomy — Division of labor/tasks (differentiate, allocate); coordination (compartmentalise, quantify, time); Tutelage (focus decision making, rationalise lines of command, allocate goals and incentives, monitor).

Fabulous stuff

Thanks Stuart!!!

Okay Q & A…
Florian questioning about the socialist corporation and the company towns of extractive industries. The draconian rules of the gated community for maximizing profit. The issue of trust– marketing and advertising is all about generating feelings of insecurity, that trust has broken down, and a social system of insecurity — a notion that you need to be worried about not socially competitive, about attack….

Industrial transformations — changing the lay of the land — making extractive industries rather cutting edge, and making traditional industries’ cutting edge backward — the need to move into new areas where the networked model of organization is effective — broad church of actors. Product tagging, topography of global economy. The Logic of Capitalism and the logic of society – continuing commodification that stress of society – society. Possibilities of social organization.

Ok. Up now we have Florian Stammler, talking about developments in the Yamburg, working as a consultant for a firm that was given a contract to carry out interviews among community members where oil and gas development is planned to take place.

watching5/28: Second day. Florian up now. Constant state of justification and crisis as a field. Anthropology has been accused by a number of scholars as the handmaiden of colonialism, used to create passive subjects of rule. Processes of verification are not based on verifiable forms common to the quantitative fields.

planeHow do we grant authenticity and credibility to our findings if we cannot do so with hard numbers. Dealing with the pressure of justification — fieldwork is a powerful tool of establishing the real and verifiable. Very material process, we expose our body to the situation. This experience of exposure we ground credibility of our finding.

How do people use resources in the Arctic. How do people make sense of what folks see out in the Arctic. An environment that you cannot ignore. As anthropologists our task in the sense making exercise — we study how people make sense of the resources.

dissWe benefit from the experience of sense making from our informants. Whether geologists looking at the underground reservoir, or herders, who see a field of symbolic and material formations that give them purposeful approaches.

By examining what people do on the land — focus on what people do on the land, with the resource. How are these approaches similar or different. Engaging materially with the environment. Methods of participant-observation, tensions of subjectivity and objectivity. Acquiring skills as a form of credibility and authority. Creating forms of reflexivity in the field among informants for whom we are learning about their lives. Non-verbal ways of communication in the Arctic, versus verbal forms of communication among expertise, e.g., interviews have limitations.

leftArn Keelingprofessor at Memorial University, up now talking about geography methods, activities he employs in constituting knowledge in his field, genealogy, historical research, and important parallels with anthropological methods, but special challenges with investigating the past, mobilizing time and duration. Turning now to students to listen to some of their methodologies and problems in the understanding of extractive industries. Piotr Graczyk, political science graduate student, examining institutions in the Arctic Council, and employing an emersion method of knowing folks, over and over again, following the game. Dealing with the personal role that the fieldworker has when engaging them in authentic representations of what they are doing. Florian, Berit Krisstofersson, talking about how to turn limitations into a problematization of analysis. We are speaking now about issues of fieldwork, when we can get access and when we cannot, the concept of theory and how the empirical could contribute to a notion of theory.

lunchAfter Lunch — Gjert Lage Dyndal, Political challenges to petroleum activity in Svalbard: Extractive Industries, Norway, Canada, Finland, Russia.

Increased Arctic interest from Oil and Gas Industry — largely a political stable and predictable area

A stable region, but still some challenges- Canada-USA delineation; Norway-Russia delineation; common perspective political stable area, all actors adhere to UNCLOS, eager to explore with a positive attitude to the north; waterways, about international straits and control of shipping; Norwegian Greenland delimitation lines were solved in 2006, and the NoRu agreement was signed in 2011.

florianHowever, there might arise new and challenging overlapping claims as all nations have delivered their geological claims for extension of their continental shelves–claims to the commission on the limits of the continental shelf; nations adhere to the UN convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS); still dependent on regional or bi-lateral agreements in the end.

–Predicting the future of international relations–it is about understanding history and social dynamics, understanding when potential conflicts may arise.
–Why are no licenses awarded around Svalbard — In the opened parts of the Barents Sea and the potential Barents North, the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate estimates resources of …
–Licenses to the borders in the south from the Norwegian EEZ, in the West from Greenland and the East from Russia. Svalbard, a special judicial and political case…
–History of Svalbard. Norway had the potential to assert its legitimacy as a sovereign that could enforce the third party rights. Svalbard Fisheries Protection Zone (FPZ).

Hydrocarbon Exploration in the European High North
–The “Soria Moria Declaration” of 2005
–The industry is a powerful political actor
–Norway also has a great tradition for close cooperation and links between industry, unions, and the politicians and bureaucracy (e.g., Seip, Bull, Sejerstad)

  • Statoil, established in 1972 (for cultural influence, and state advisor)
  • Norwegian strong tradition for “rights of reversion”

boatGreater trend of nationalization of the oil and gas industry
–From the Seven Sisters to the NOCs era

  • In the 1970s approx. 80 percent of the oil and gas companies were owned by western private companies. The industry was totally dominated by the so-called Seven Sisters
  • Today, this has turned and national oil companies control approx. 80-90% of market

The Barents and the Disputed Area
The two governments were able to come to agreement — DNV’s Barents 2020 helped to create an agreement for the delineation.

The case of Svalbard and hydrocarbon Exploration: The maritime areas around Svalbard should it be regulated by the Svalbard Treaty — If the maritime areas around Svalbard becomes regarded as part of the Svalbard Treaty — Norway must give the citizens and companies of the signatory nations equal rights to the resources– Norway will most likely not be able to adopt a nondiscrimination petroleum management parallel to the fisheries regime based on historical activity. Taxation cannot be higher than needed to administrative Svalbard. No Norwegian Taxation, no Economic Incentive for the State. Norway as a responsible environmental actor: Svalbard, internal political compromise (Svalbard-Lofoten/Vesteraalen).

The Potential influence of the industry — Does this mean that there are no prospects for hydrocarbon exploration and exploitation at Svalbard and in the maritime areas surrounding the islands…
methodflorian and gunhild5/27: Getting started here, finally operating with an internet connection so that I can jot down notes along the way…. Gunhild Hoogenson-Gjorv, U Tromsø, giving introductory remarks with Florian Stammler, Arctic Centre, Rovaniemi talking soon more about the theme.

Beautiful day in Tromsø.

10.00-12.00 – Introduction to Cumulative Effects of Extractive Industrial Development
Gunhild walking over some logistics issues, requirements for receiving credit, schedule, university priorities, and all those good et ceteras. Florian now up discussing the goals of U Arctic — to promote a northern voice in the globalizing world that reflects a shared regional identity across all eight Arctic states and among all Northern peoples and cultures. A little bit of history, acknowledging Jessica Shadian‘s input in establishing an Extractive industries Course, Bodø, early 2011, and then again an Arctic Dialogue-Greenland workshop, Sept. 2011, and then, Human Resource Issues in Extractive iIndustries, St. John’s NL, Canada, Sept., 2012. Our meeting is the fourth installment.

iiimmmOkay. Introductions: Florian, works in the Russian Arctic, Western Siberia and Northwest Russia, oil and gas extraction in the Arctic, on-shore, western Siberia; Gunhild, multi-actor approach to security issues, its meaning in different contexts — Environmental Security in the Arctic, edited volume coming out on Routledge soon; Heather Clarke, PhD graduate student, Memorial University, St. Johns, looking at migrating communities in the North; Tara Cater, also Memorial University, grad student, looking at mining, Nunavut, Canada; Elena Nuykina, working on the Russian North, coal mining community, PhD topic through Vienna [?], viability of community engagement and in migration flow from new megaprojects; Marina Goloviznina, postdoc, working with Gunhild; Piotr Graczyk, PhD student, U Tromsø, looking at Arctic Council governing frameworks, how interests are structured; Daria Burnasheva, Russia, Yakutia, MA thesis on visual representations of the North; Valeria Zamorshchikova, PhD student looking at industrial development in the north through economic and social perspectives; Mercy Oyet examining community transportation; University of Vienna, Gertrud Eilmsteiner-Saxinger, fly in and fly out, conceptualizing normalities, to develop postdoctoral work; Gordon Cook, faculty at Memorial University, examining urban-rural-remoteness.

Lunch.

13.00-17.00 – Environmental Impacts: data from ecology and ecotoxicology
Geir Gabrielsen – Senior Research Scientist, Norwegian Polar Institute, The effects of industrial pollution on Arctic ecosystems and people. 

Introduction: More industry in Northern Hemisphere than Southern, so more Arctic haze, more industrial activity affecting the Arctic. Contributions to climate change. Arctic climate trends: rising temperatures, increasing precipitation, declining snow cover, rising river flows, thawing permafrost, melting glaciers, retreating summer sea ice, rising sea level, ocean salinity. The most dramatic event, reduced summer ice on the Arctic, linked to black carbon.

playneWith regard to biology. Animals living in multiyear versus annual ice, but very little ice left in the Arctic basin, 10-20 percent. Only in Northern Canada is multiyear life available. Seals will not be up on the ice, which are food for polar bears, ivory gull, some species will thrive others will die. Atlantic species are moving north. Arctic species are dying. Lower quality food moving into the Arctic, which has implications for mammals in the Arctic. Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Program has more reports (see website).

Silent Spring, Rachel Carson (1962); Our Stolen Future, Theo Colborn et al. (1996); Silent Snow: The Slow Poisoning of the Arctic, Marla Cone. “Arctic Paradox” — traditional diet of Inuits has health benefits but exposes them to dangerous levels of pollutants. “Inuit never had a word for pollution and now are subject to toxins”. Chemicals, everywhere in everyday life. 110,000 different types of chemicals on the market. The Reach Program — force companies to determine the impact of chemicals. Making consumers aware of the chemicals they consume, “average of 200 industrial chemicals and pollutants in umbilical cord blood from 10 babies born…in 2004 in US hospitals”.

S. RobinsonNot easy to make a relationship between chemicals and incidence and pattern of diseases in humans– osteoporosis, appears to be related to pollution as with obesity (based on comparisons with seals in the former).Regulation is really helping — Reductions in POPs in breast milk samples from Norwegian woman. “Coming up with findings of bad chemicals affecting animals in the Arctic, which is a hard card on the table to get rid of it from the market”. Consumer info webpages: Kliff.no,  erdetfarlig.no,  gronnhverdag, healthystuff.

Four Aspects of Criteria: Chemicals are accumulating in the food chain, that they are persistent, present in the Arctic, toxic effect. The most difficult part is demonstrating effects on animals (immune system, reproductive system).

Øyvind Ravna, Professor Dr. Juris, U Tromsø – Mining, human rights, and local autonomy in Sápmi
Sami protest against building the dam in the Alta river area, and despite the protests did not manage to stop the dam’s construction. The protests began creating a stir in the Norwegian public sphere. One result is the government began investigating Sami rights. 2005 Finnmark Act– through prolonged use of land and water areas, Sami have collectively and individually acquired rights to land in Finnmark; Act does not interfere with collective and individual rights acquired by Sami through prescription (collective rights results in self determination and individual provides individual rights from the state); a commission should be established to investigate the rights.

imageConvention on Biological Diversity–Article 8(j) commits Norway to: — “respect, preserve and maintain knowledge, innovations and practices of indigenous and local communities embodying traditional lifestyles relevant for the conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity”. Article 15 (2) says that in cases where the State retains the ownership of minerals, which is the case in Norway: “governments shall establish or maintain procedures through which they shall consult these peoples, with a view to ascertaining whether their interests would be prejudiced…”…”shall wherever possible participate in the benefits of such activities”. ICCPR Art. 27 — In those States in which ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities exist, persons belonging to such minorities shall not be denied the right…to enjoy their own culture…

beritUp now is Natalia Loukacheva, First Visiting Nansen Professor of Arctic Studies, U Akureyri, Extractive Industries and Arctic Indigenous Peoples’ rights to land and natural resources: Diversity in economic development, population numbers — we deal great diversity in geographical location and contact with extractive industries. Permanent participants of the Arctic Council.

Berit

5/26: Coming in from the South…w/ wifi en route…
on board

Totenkopf Island

Images from the movie Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow


















Internal Empires

  • Hidden techno-scientific infrastructure
  • Secret charts and maps
  • Sequestered knowledge workers
  • Surrounded by water
  • Local inhabitants unaware
  • Mad scientists


World of Tomorrow #1












Kodiak Island

My first ever glimpse at an island of inland empire occurred while flying over Kodiak Island, Alaska. There, beneath my plane, I saw Terror Lake, a dam built directly at the center of the island to provide hydro electric power to Islanders. In my role as cultural anthropologist, I was interviewing residents about life-ways and history.

When I saw Terror Lake, I realized that that something was going on behind my back. A vast techno-scientific plot, a schema that afforded me the bio-capacity for interviewing informants in winter, in a warm room, with “lights on” and electricity for my recorder.

World of Tomorrow #2
— Kodiak’s Terror Dam

I became aware of the existence of Islands of Inland Empire.
















































T E R I B E R K A

I snapped the photographs below at the Gazprom installation at the St. Petersburg Economic Forum in St. Petersburg, Russia. They depict the proposed Teriberka Liquefied Natural Gas installation, a futuristic techno-scientific off-loading facility for developing the Arctic off-shore Shtokman energy project.

World of Tomorrow #3










































It is a world of tomorrow, an Arctic Inland Empire.

These are images of a modern world hidden at the very center of far away islands. Its technological wonder is remote, especially for villagers living along the shores of these inland empires.








Teriberka is located along the Arctic Barents Sea in Russia. Arriving to the village took us five hours drive from Murmansk. Villagers live amidst modern day ruins.

They also live in expectation that the Shtokman off-shore energy project will bring a new modernity:




















































Toward a new modernity:
The following are a set of maps and charts — a future of development ensures Teriberka’s fate. A village, cast off to the side of the road, will make room for the future.







































































The Future as seen from Space.


















At the center of an international agreement:
















C R A B – K E Y
Island

One of the more famous examples of an Inland Empire derives from the James Bond movie, Doctor No. In this film, a beautiful island paradise, Crab Key Island, is the location for a notoriously sinister Dr. Julius No, Ph.D., who has installed an ultra, ultra modern facility directly in the center of the island.

The Facility of Dr. Julius No located in the center of Crab Key




The entire island is merely a mask for the techno-scientific form.







Crab Key








James Bond arrives to Crab Key Island




























































“Vast Complexity” of inland empires requires they employ many types of knowledge workers — architects important at the design phase, engineers ensuring the facility operates at maximum specification of reliability, less skilled workers responsible for mundane functions which still require sober attitudes.




D R. M O R E A U ‘ S
Island


I would not be surprised if inspiration for 20th century inland empires derives from nineteenth-century novel by H. G. WellsThe Island of Dr. Moreau. In that book, alongside its many film adaptations, another mad scientist tries his hand at god-like creations.




















T E R M I N U S
Island

World of Tomorrow #4








































In the video game titled Skies of Deception the final battle takes place on an Island of Inland Empire. 

Aurelia is a peaceful nation currently under siege from its northern neighbor, Leasath, under the command of strong man, Diego Gaspar Navarro. Leasath’s advanced super weapon – the Gleipnir Flying Fortress has decimated the Aurelian military.

Gryphus Squadron, led by ace fighter pilot Gryphus 1 is Aurelia’s last hope for liberating the country. The final battle takes place at Terminus island.





















Island of Inland Empire


Cobalt Cave
The Aurelian Navy infiltrates the compound to disable the Fenrir Optical Camouflage.

Entrance to Archelon Fortress on Terminus Island






Inside to Archelon Fortress on Terminus Island












Transmitter at Archelon Fortress on Terminus Island










Archelon Fortress
The Leasath Navy reaches land, where they open the electric power transmitter gate, allowing Gryphus 1 to destroy the Fenrir Optical Camouflage. They proceed to the fortress and withdraw when it is close to exploding.

OBJECT

Years ago, when I became aware of the hydropower installation at Terror Lake, on Kodiak Island, Alaska, I became concerned, as if all of a sudden, that the kind of study I was carrying out was in certain respects naive.

There I was, interviewing Islanders who lived in my romanticized ideal as rural folk. But they do have access to electricity. We used electricity to speak with each other. We used electricity to look at one another. We used electricity to hang out together. Without electricity, my interviews would cease.

But all the while, it never occurred to me to think about this peculiar relationship between on the one hand, my idealized image of rural lifestyle and the certainty that this lifestyle was connected to and supported by a powerful scientific-technocratic form that was sitting nearby silently, humming away, at the center of the island. It was only until I flew over it, and saw what spectacle that was there, in the physical form, that I asked: Who put this here? And if such marvel exists, then what is going on here, in the center of the island, a topic on which no one I knew had any clue. My informants and I lived around the perimeter, entirely dependent upon– this ultra, ultra modern techno-scientific form.

This connection between, on the one hand, (self) ignorance of the conditions that support ambient energy, and on the other hand, the actual conditions that create the sense that ambient energy is just that, ambient without actual conditions, came as a surprise.

In Islands of Inland Empire, I examine the curious condition of islands whose physical core has been refashioned into a highly technological and scientific form, and whose functioning depends upon the presence of scientists and technocrats, who do not seem to be affiliated with a university or any surfacially observable network of knowledge. Everything appears to be operating on innovation that is self-enclosed and ideologically self-sufficient.

When does all this construction take place and by whom and who funds it all?

Who are the architects that come up with such ideas?

Russian Energy

St. Petersburg

5/19-25/ Intensive Energy Course


Many thanks to Laura Lakso for her editorial review!

Screen Shot 2013-05-19 at 10.45.53 AM

мост

veli p.
train travel

Just to say — we had such a fabulous time (!) — …



energy profs

boris

exposed wall

Examining the Real and the Authentic (!) — …



findlanski dom

jazz bar

Laura et al.

Allowing the Sun to Fade into Zum (!) — …



Tapani5/20-25: Our session began with an introduction and welcoming remarks by FINEC’s (St. Petersburg State University of Economic and Finance) Rector’s assistant Alexandra Drugova. We then heard from economist, Pavel Metelev, on principles of energy economics, basically, an introduction classical economics and the global energy mix.

brickI refer to his speech verbatim: Neoclassical economics is about scarcity – about how we manage to allocate scarce resources.

All resources are scarce.

International economics is how we allocate scarce resources on the national level. If it is not scarcity it is not economics. Economics is the social science that analyzes the production distribution (transportation) and consumption. General discussion on the economics of John Maynard Keynes.

therePavel proceeded with principles by N. Gregory Mankiw: NeoClassical economics does not work in real life, created in a frictionless world. Not an exact science, more like philosophy. So, social tests do not replicate well.

10 principles.

People face trade-offs (environment vs. high level income or efficiency vs quality); opportunity cost—cost of something is what we give up to get it (building a pipeline vs what could be built); rational people think on the margin; people respond to incentives; trade can make everyone better off; markets are usually a good way to organize economic activity; government can sometimes improve market outcomes; a country standard of living depends on the ability to produce goods and services; prices rise when government prints more money; Friedrich List, infant industry theory. Ideas influence people.

TapaniTurning now to Neo-institutional economics. Keynes – and the first period of natural gas. Regulation. Industries will work efficiently under government control. Competition- second period of natural gas. Transportation is natural monopoly in Russia but not in European Paradigm – public monopoly.
 Paradigm – competition. All ideas are temporary – risk bearing is primary.

Principle. Theory of the firm (transactional costs). Property rights – the most important institution– sets the criterion of efficiency. With competition you can do incredible things.

drinksConstantine Leshenko –
Creating markets for energy – stimulating consumption to get folks hooked on energy (Rockefeller giving out oil lanterns, etc.).
Uses of energy.

Now up is the main instructor, Aleksanteri wizard, Tapani Kaakkuriniemi, giving a history of the object.

blurBaku—1848 first oil wells drilled. First mechanically drilled oil wells in the world, growing demand for paraffin in Russian Empire. USA production started 13 years after Baku. Every day phenomena how to light the room.

Oil lamps were being developed on the basis of paraffin. Tens of years with quite modest oil market to develop.

When the findings were repeated in the same area, and more oil was seen as available, engineers began creating refining industries, in Baku and USA. 1858 first refinery in Canada (oils springs, Ontario). 1861 first paraffin factory in Baku, 1867 15 oil refineries and by 1873 already 50 in the Apsheron oil field, Baku.

T manIn the 1880s oil production in Baku was outstripping the oil industry of  USA moving toward modern capitalist production. 1898 Azerbaijani oil industry exceeded the US production level 8 million tons were produced. 1904 Baku kerosene supplied 47 percent of the needs of Britain and 71 percent of the needs of France. 1884 Council of Baku oil producers –
1) protection of the oil producers interests in government bodies 
2) provision of high profits to the oil magnates
 3) establishment of opposition to labor movement

beerFour main companies in Baku: Branobel (Nobel brothers); Russian General Corporation; Transnational Trust Royal Dutch Shell; financial oil corporation Neft; Caspian-Black Sea Society. Motives of oil production in Baku. –Business opportunities
Development of capitalist mode of production.

Modernization of Russian society
. Tax revenue
 Competitive with American producers, 
Formation of European oil market.

classRussian developments. 1963—Glavtyumenneftegas and Glavtyumenneftegastroy were established
; 1972 the construction of the biggest national oil pipeline Samotlor-Almetyevsk commenced.

1970s focus of energy production moved from the Caspian sea to Central Western Siberia. 
1984 USSR became the number 1 gas producer. 1984 transcontinental gas pipeline Western Siberia Western Europe was opened in the final phase. Its length exceed 20,000km.

Problem 1 necessity to upgrade oil and gas complex by implementation of advanced technologies; Problem 2 social problems onrush growth of local population so social estimation was made. Motives of energy production in Siberia. 
Growing demand at home
. Rapid industrialization. 
Development of technology
. Extensive growth only (no intensive growth or efficiencies)
. Showing expertise in extreme condition. s
Exploration of the effects of permafrost
. Superpower aspirations

also bar[What are my own principles now that the topic arises?

• Alliance between theoretical and structural positions;

• Techniques reduction of complexity to kinds of simplicity that serve the basis of decision making;

• Create forms of communication that facilitate collusion;

• Markets are future oriented while regulation is historically situated]

Barents sea region
 Arctic Wells (website) –Dec. 2012 “Norway’s licensing round has attracted strong interest from the oil industry, with 36 companies bidding for offshore exploration blocks located mainly north of the Arctic circle”.

The Ministry of Petroleum and Energy is due to announce the results before the summer of 2013. Out of 86 blocks to be awarded, 72 are located in the Barents Sea, the most northern of which are between the 74th and the 75th parallel.

Putin 2012 “development work at the field would begin in 2017”

preparationsgroup photoMohammed Zakri– vice president for Total’s upstream activities in Russia, said he had no doubt “an engineering solution to produce it” would be found.

In Yamal, harsh climate conditions have compelled Gazprom to test new solutions. Utilization of integrated production infrastructure for gas extraction; heat insulated pipes for wells construction and operation with a view to preventing the permafrost rocks thawing; reduction in the number of monitoring wells through combined monitoring over development of various deposits in wells; new welding technologies and materials; brand new energy saving equipment with an efficiency coefficient equal to 36-40 percent.

mapShtokman gas field. According to the Ministry of Natural Resources, the resources of Russia’s continental shelf comprise 13 billion tonnes for oil and 20 trillion cubic meters of gas. The Shtokman field is the world biggest undeveloped offshore gas field.

Its reserves are estimated at 3,800 billion cubic meters just over the 2010 global gas demand. Problem of the Russian-Norwegian border was solved 4 years ago. Or was it?

Marina A. Zen’ko – Contemporary Yamal Ethnoecological and ethnosocial problems in anthropology and archaeology of Eurasia, Spring 2004, vol. 42, no 4, pp-7-83.

StatuesHere, Tapani refers to the works of Michael Ross –
1) Developing countries: there is loose money. 
Oil gas and mineral rich states collect great sums of easy money, loose money, the state is the main actor, it is difficult to avoid the temptation to present in security systems and surveillance, tendency to a police state and violence, connection to arms trade.

2) post industrial countries
– state promotes drilling extraction through state-owned companies, or lets private corporations (Norway) to manage the business (USA); Strong global corporations may steer state policies, impact to world trade order and the system of international relations; heterogeneity (cf, Norway, Britain).

3) Economies in transition– resources fueling new welfare, state as the main actor, either through state-owned companies, or letting MNCs to manage the production and gather profits, tendency to strengthen state power (Russia) tendency to authoritarian rule (Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan), Increasing power through networking

LightsPavel Metelev, again, Returns for another lecture. Recommends “free to choose” – economic show on internet. 10 parts. Globalization of gas markets – application of government approach, centralization, free market paradigm. Movie presenting Keynes and Hayak, rap, free market economics – fear of boom versus bust Keynes versus Hayak – rap. “lose the idea, lose the stimulus, you start to drink”— Production behavior. Redistribution or rent seeking behavior. To develop a good country favor an increased production behavior, but in fact Russia there is a rent seeking behavior.

borisCentral planned economics versus economic efficiency. You create the concept of efficiency.

Objective: create, increase, divide pie optimally and efficiently. Globalization – creates a global free market, where countries are actors. Measure of development – GDP that contributes to destroying the world.

Human development index, happiness index; Development – evolution of international trade theory. 
Resource allocation is very dynamic in nature. Endowments of natural factors. Influence of natural factors.

hermThe Tadeusz Rybczynski theorem – developed 1955 – Dutch Disease is the more complicated example of the Rybczynski theorem.

Energy and Government the two most important sectors in Russia. One profitable sector will destroy all other sectors. No incentive, not competition.

flameDiversification. Russia moves in inspiration-idea based strategies
. Modernization, Diversification, [innovation] Clusters.

[Make sure you talk about this. I break in and state: Spaces of intention – that were overlooked in United States, and then overnight you had natural gas production outside of its futures]. Diversification versus this system – collect money and diversification.
 Dutch disease – stuck in the Rot effect. Inherited industries that are not competitive.

the hatbar naughtGas – from German word “Ghosen” ghost.
 From greek word “chaos”. Associated gas – selling gas to Gazprom was cheaper than the infrastructure to sell the gas, easier to flare it than pay the fine. But no longer. Different types of gas. Global exports 80 percent exports. 20 percent LNG exports.

Energy Uncertainty–
Uncertain futures. Nuclear energy; rapid depletion of main world fossil fuel energy deposits; environmental problems, generally related to the use of conventional sources of energy.

singingInability to optimally and efficiently meet the projected global energy demand in coming decades by the means of using conventional sources in energy. “New energy doctrine” – question of time, inevitable transition to new energy doctrine coming 50- 100 years. Transition period – what energy source – the growing uncertainty in the global energy market. Russian theory – during the 1980s developed the idea of a “gas bridge” as a transition period to renewables.

ladiesImprove efficiency of power generation, reduce CO2. “Golden age of Gas IIEA report”. Global Gas Market —Transition to this golden age of gas pushes forward the process of gradual integration of different regional natural gas markets. As the result the integration process should lead to creation of global gas distribution system. Global oil markets exist—free pricing, flexibility of supply and market liquidity. Lower transaction costs. Clean Coal – versus natural gas. LNG – Shale gas.

Indeed only LNG is able to change this regional paradigm mostly based on bulky pipeline projects. Therefore, LNG is the main driving force and the main impetus of globalization of gas markets. 32 percent of LNG – transition from regional to global.

docentUp now, we have the talented Olga Garanina
, economist talking about Dutch Disease (Russian Case) – Theories of resource dependency; 
Energy exports are really important for countries – 66% for Russia even more dramatic for ME exporting countries, Venezuela.

90% for some countries.Imports of oil big for western states are big- 30%
 Dynamics of oil prices are volatile – speculation of financial markets. But predictions are important for export countries.

photosResource dependency – 1950 Hans Singer, terms of trade for primary commodity exporters have a tendency to decline. If a country is exporting raw materials – developing countries have a disadvantage position in world trade, because price of raw materials is declining, so they will have weaker results in growth—but does not work in comparison to oil/gas because the price is not going down.

Dutch disease — 
Discovery of new natural resources a boom in prices leads to negative consequences of other tradable sectors, leads to destruction of other internal industries.

awardsImports start to compete with internal production leading to decline of diversity in production. Longer term affects – resource curse.

Resource curse
 caused by diversions of financial resources. Rybnmjinsky theorem
. Theory which allows us to understand international trade. Country can have in abundance endowment in labor, resources. Depending on what, it will export whatever good that it uses its abundant factor intensively. How changes in country’s endowment will affect its production structure will evolve. Capital, qualified labor, non qualified labor. Dutch disease: (1982 Cordon and Neary).

Manufacture of tradables, energy; Manufactory sector will sink, because of the resource sector; Dutch disease in Russia 
Currency, profitability in sectors in economy.

GroupgroupingUp now we have Tapani – speaking on renewables.
 Renewable energies. And now Pavel Metelev 
on General Questions – Shale gas. Shale gas exploration in Poland. Energy General Concepts. How we count energy – btu = some other equivalents; 1 toe = 41.87 gigajoules. Primary energy, secondary energy. People recognize that we are undergoing a transitions, and that there is a certain inevitability in that. And that folks know and are willing to know, that is the issues.


dom

Olga Garanina is now up talking about 
Russian energy strategy.
 Adopted in 2009. Major problems in the field of energy security (according to energy strategy 2030); High degree of fixed assets depreciation in the fuel and energy complex; Low level of investments in the development of the fuel and energy complex; Sole dependence of the Russian economy and its energy sector on natural gas; (underdevelopment) Failure of the industrial potential of the fuel and energy complex to match the world scientific and technical level, including in terms of environmental standards; Slow development of the energy infrastructure in the Eastern Siberia and Far East; Prepared policy as national strategy – National energy plan. Legislation to make something happen.

blurry[Another thing: When you look at the image of the “pipe timeline forecast”, you can say several things about it—that it is focused on production, that it is not focused on consumption, there are no prices for its consumption. Just that it would get built and people would come. This is really important. You want to interrogate the actual time, and what the time is actually saying! Go back to the original PPTs, and look at them closely. It is a particular kind of path dependency]. Communicating development, communicating futures. Communicating growth. Communicating knowledge of the future. – and the interests that accrue.

Okay. Now up we have Veli-Pekka Tynkkynen, U Helsinki, Geographer. Natural resource use and environmental research and environmental planning. Aleksanteri (Tampere included, international relations) – Finnish center of excellence. 7 years funding mechanism.

barrelsHigh standard project.

Looking at Russian program and academic discussion of modernization. What it means in Russia and how it is built—
Clusters
(1)Diversification of economy. Energy plays a role in diversification of society

(2) How does Russia move to a market society given its pact with society as an authoritarian policy and practices.

(3) Welfare regime – the standard that people ask of the state increases, funding issues and price of oil.

(4) Considers foreign policy, how it wants to be seen on the international arena, condition of soft power. 
(5) rationality and culture – historical roots of Russian thinking—attitudes and stakes.

boris–First cluster—research on energy policy research. Markku Kivinen and Pami Aalto. A model for considering energy policy situation.

Describing the energy policy formation – and does it in a very proficient way, characterizing the framing, structuring and mind set conditions – of looking at a microscopic view of the project. Energy policy formation. – Ends up reproducing the policy process or changes the policy.

Cluster one – energy policy. Veli Pekka’s interest: Can Russia become an environmentally sound position. Environmental issues between EU and Russia, energy trade and dialogue. Social and environmental responsibility issues. Environmentally sound energy transport on the Baltic Sea.

bookRussian electricity energy markets. And the electricity sector. Does Russia suffer from Resource curse or not? Is energy sector the main actor that should modernize Russia. Climate change denial – between Russia and America. Climate doctrine versus policy. How strategy as a tool is understood in Russia. Russian Energy and Security up to 2030 Routledge November 2013.

everyoneEnergy Trade 
Dependencies and interdependencies in EU – Russia energy trade; Strategy: Consumption and export issues.
Goal, substituting domestic consumption of hydrocarbon by increasing the use of coal, nuclear power and RES in order to export hydrocarbons. Enhancing energy efficiency promotes objectives set on exports. 75% of oil (60% of crude exported (production 500 mt/y), 85% to the EU; 30 % of gas exported, 75% to EU
30 % of coal exported, 70% to EU
1.5 % electricity exported, 80% to Finland. Russia’s pricing strategies:
Oil export volume more important than price
–Urals Europe’s primary oil brand during the 1990s and 2000s. again wallest 2010Gas: Export price more important than volume
–Russian gas has become the most expensive baseload energy sources on the European market during the 2000s. Electricity export price more important than volume
–from 2012 — RAQ UES has sold to Finland (RAO Nordic) not the maximum volume but reduced flow during peak hours. Get overall understanding of geopolitical issues related to pipeline policy. EU energy relations— Energy Superpower; Geopolitical objectives. Gazovyi Imperator (2010) – journalist advocating energy superpowerness.

girlsFriday — Veli-Pekka.
 Environment in the EU-Russia energy relations; Environment and EU-Russia energy dialogue. Energy Dialogue started in 2000, legal basis in 1997 “EU-Russia agreement on partnership and cooperation”. Between 2001-2004 the environmental dimension of energy was explicitly on the agenda thematic group on Energy Efficiency and the Environment.

churchAfter 2004 the environment disappears as an explicit agenda thematic group on Energy Efficiency – focus on the economy and climate change mitigation. Energy Sector modernization as an umbrella—gas flaring reduction and promotion of renewable energy as specific tools.

Flaring of gas from space. Russia’s flaring reduction policy; Environmental NGOs— Why research on governmentalities in the Russian energy sector is interesting… from democracy “trap” to modernization and ecological “traps”.

Presentations –

imagePoland
 — Raili Virtanen, Kai Raotsalainen, + : 
Dependency on Russian gas; Finland requires alternatives. Poland, wants to become an independent supplier, energy strategy. Doing business together, bigger role in European market, provide gas and other energy types to energy types and EU. And not dependent on one country. We have approx. 800 billion cubic meters on Shale gas. Since Finland would benefit the most as the first country. Compared to Russian gas, shale gas would be cheaper. Both members of EU. We have a few options. Shale Inc. was evaluated as the best company. Environment was an important part of our decision, and coal is used – and shale gas is dangerous but the shale company is transparent and open and risks. More ecological than coal.

Two questions – export of Poland, what are you plans about building export capacity. Social acceptability of increasing gas production in Poland. Increasing share of gas in Poland energy mix may have some negative consequences for coals consumption – what is your social strategy for unemployment in coal. We are discussing possible energy projects in trade – rapid expansion could increase social risks from reductions in labor.

upstairsGreen Peace
 — Leena Fedotov, Tino Aalto: Ground water contamination – statistics — pPrivate company cannot take care about our drinking water. In the United States that have complained about ground water production – Government must control the groundwater – include that the company requires some kind of technical capacities. Contamination will kill people. Government must have tight control over tax production, and that revenue sharing for local communities. Energy Strategy. Besides energy development – we should be moving toward renewable panels. Solar would be better. So we should start relying on solar panels.

pivoWe have heard that you have an interest in revenue sharing for local communities from production of gas – do you have any specific proposals to promote renewable energy. We are concerned that government use of funds are not the most capable of incentivizing business activity.

diagramRussia — 
We will present the worlds largest exporter of natural gas, Gazprom. Present a long term contract – economic terms of buying our gas. We now have a competitor from Poland, accountability and reliability. Accountability in securing supply and appreciate your past commitments. We have been thinking of creating closer ties to the European Union, perhaps through NATO establishing military installations in Finland, primarily for dealing with threats of ballistic missiles from the middle east.

We wanted to be ensure that Russian government would be committed to accountability in terms of security of supply. How would you ensure to us that you would not use energy as a weapon to discourage our tightened relationship with Western Europe.

ceilingsShale gas Inc — 
Drilling technique without environmental hazards. We implement in 5 areas of rural America – Liberalization of economy, shale law will follow market law, dealing with environmental hazards. Flexibility of contracts. Unfortunately –  a long a cold winter in Finland.
 C02.shot