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Posts Tagged ‘Helsinki’

Attending in Helsinki:

Aleksanteri Conference: Fueling the Future


10/27: Conference registration was quiet for the first hour, but luckily we had a chance for a fascinating one-on-one exchange with geographer Dr. Corey Johnson about distinctions of pipeline politics between the U.S.-Canada grid system and the European network of pipes. I often refer to the North American natural gas pipeline system, a 2 million mile coagulation of steel pipes, as a techno-ontological system.

I use that phrase because, no matter what, those pipes are there, and even after a hundred years, they will still be there in the ground. Just like a Teotihuacan pyramid, pipes have a certain materiality, that remain long after we’re gone, or off to doing something else, but not using those pipes.

An even more interesting fact about our pipeline system —  is that it is constantly being interpreted in different ways. Sometimes the network of pipes is a transportation system, that moves natural gas around. But more recently, it has become a critical system, whose needs, above all, require protection. Thus, there are different ways to think about the materials, as well as the different ways that specialists (e.g., energy analysts), describe its materiality, through the use of graphs, etc.






Pipes.


In contrast to North American pipes, Corey reminds us that in Europe, natural gas pipelines are politicized objects in ways that the very names of pipes are well recognized in the public consciousness. And this doesn’t happen too often in the United States. Sure, some of us can mention TAPS (trans-Alaska pipeline system), but for the most part, ask your neighbor to mention three names of pipelines, or even one natural gas pipeline, and the only thing that will come to mind, is probably the blow-out that burned down several blocks of houses near San Francisco, recently.

If you’re not in the energy business, there’s a strong likelihood that you don’t know the names of natural gas pipes in the United States. And this difference, suggests that in Europe, there is a sort of politico-ontology (my inchoate term). That the materiality is not simply a technical issue, but in fact, a highly political one.

Here is a link for Names of Gas Pipelines in US and Canada.




After speaking with Corey, we scampered over to introduce ourselves to Dr. Ekaterina Novikova, who received her PhD in Finance from Plekhanov Russian Economic University in Moscow and is now affiliated with Northern Dimension Research Centre and currently working on conceptualizing Finland as a hub for intellectual networks and knowledge transmissions between Russia and Scandinavian countries. Fascinating that the topic appears so interesting, and yet, Ekaterina spoke in such an everyday manner, signifying the development has been underway for some time, and a topic that shouldn’t really be surprising to anyone, least of all, us, who have made this kind of research an exploratory endeavor.



















10/26: Opening day tomorrow for Helsinki’s Aleksanteri Conference: Fueling the Future —  Your special correspondents here, Arthur Mason, reprising his role as PaparazzI (PI) ethnographer to the not-so-famous, reporting on events, accompanied by the international talent, Samantha Catalyst, StudioPolar‘s Project CoordinatorPhotographist and International Travelry Specialist. In this special case… we will be following all those involved in Russian natural gas development in the Barents Sea — We plan to have photos, testimony, etc. posted continually….

It is a toss-up, of course, on whether we should have attended Aleksanteri or the Gazprom VNIIGAZ conference in Moscow, taking place at the same time. The thought reminds us of when we traveled recently to Teriberka (Barents Sea coastal village in Russia), proposed off-loading site of the Shtokman natural gas development project. In June, we attended the 5th Norway-Russia Arctic Offshore Workshop in Murmansk, wherein local entrepreneur and German expat to Russia for the past umpteen years, Ulrich Kreuzenbeck, hosted a fabulous picnic for workshop participants at the former Teriberka High School which he’s remodeling into a hotel. Speaking of valuable events we missed out on recently was NUPI’s Russia, Europe and Energy conference, brought to our attention by former Norwegian Consular General to Murmansk, Russia, Dr. Kåre Hauge, who is on the top of StudioPolar‘s list of valuable mentors for this project. Thanks for your continued support Kåre!

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10/26
: Wow. I forgot how tasty Northern European breakfasts can be, esp. when it is so nippy outside. Helsinki is definitely well-known to itself. There are maps everywhere, making me wonder–when does a city become aware of itself as a map? Does size or history matter? How about density. Here, walk a few steps and sure enough you will bump into city maps of all kinds, wall maps in train stations, or map hand-outs for tourists along the boulevards. There are the crazy yokel maps and city maps with light bulbs to locate yourself.

The town appears a lot like other Baltic cities (Tallinn, Oslo, St. Petersburg), but also it is a city of interiors, bookstores, tea shops, but mostly interiors. Winter’s long here, and everyone wants a cozy spot to spend their time indoors, and there is ample evidence of the cozy on display.



Helsinki City Scapes




10/25: Personality Footprint Calculator — Reading Dan Farber’s Case for Climate Change Compensation at breakfast over the North Sea. He mentions facetiously the possibility of capturing histories of high per capita energy consumption, like an on-going carbon footprint made up of “elaborate questionnaires” about past connections with energy companies, home insulation, and the like— and I am wondering if there exists a Personality Footprint Calculator – or better yet, the Personality Bootprint Calculator, where anyone could input all their plausibly questionable interactions (how much of a tip have we failed to leave the barista, and how often, when do we neglect to use our turn signal on the freeway, etc.).

And of course, there needs to be some kind of measuring gauge to judge which actions create more of a foot print over others and a way to measure actions off the chart, leaving nothing less than a crater-print. A foot-to-crater print gauge. At the end, there could be some kind of penance, pennies in a jar or yoga on a mat.

On to travel: we know the trans-Atlantic routine well, and there are no hard feelings over travel more than the replacement of Bay Area nature with steel, glass, advertisement banners, and viewing screens. It rained throughout the evening and during the day before departure. SF has disappeared into the fog. Berkeley, Mill Valley, Tiburon –inside SFO airport, check-in, security, stepping spritely to the gate, a few German newspapers, in-flight preparation and take-off– Munich airport, much the same.


Travel.








10/24: From Berkeley to Mill Valley is a 30 minute drive. The Bus Depot Cafe and the Mill Valley Library are two workstations to keep in check toward SFO airport.

Bus Depot

Mill Valley Library













10/23: Heading tomorrow from SFO to Helsinki via Munich. This is a first for me, posting ethnography en route. Preparing final edits to my conference paper in the office at Energy and Resources Group.

my office desk

Wincing occasionally at the essentials of my trip (passport, wallet, flash drive) now threatening to disappear among the debris of expectation –outlines for articles, summer fieldnotes, sharpened pencils, latte cups– that have already gathered on the table near my computer (silently cheering me on). But where else should such things gather and it does feel good seeing them together again, finally, knowing they will remain inert with potentials. Until my return.

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