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To: Road Walker who wrote (21696)7/10/2010 11:56:30 AM
From: Eric  Respond to of 86356
 
The giant sucking sound is getting louder..
_____________________

China Boosts Net Oil Imports to Record 22.14 Million Metric Tons in June

China, the world’s second-biggest oil consumer, increased net crude-oil imports to a record in June as demand rose and costs fell.

Net purchases climbed to 22.14 million metric tons, or about 5.39 million barrels a day, from 17.65 million tons a month earlier, according to preliminary data released by the General Administration of Customs today. This was more than the previous record of 20.98 million tons in April.

Oil-product demand rises in China between July and September on summer demand for fuels including gasoline and diesel. The country is also increasing purchases to take advantage of lower costs than in May, said Qiu Xiaofeng, chief oil analyst with China Merchants Securities Ltd.

“State refineries would have increased crude purchases as oil costs dropped, also after they reduced imports quite a bit in May,” Qiu said by mobile phone in Shanghai today, “We don’t think the crude imports will sustain such strong growth in the second half as demand is poised to be hurt by the cooling economy.”

China paid an average $77.20 for each barrel of crude in June, down from $82.50 a barrel in May, according to Bloomberg calculations. May purchases dropped 16 percent from April to a four-month low of 17.84 million tons.

Purchases of crude oil in the first half rose 30 percent from a year earlier to 117.97 million tons, according to today’s data.

Storage Tanks

The country may also boost imports for stockpiling, said Standard Charter Bank commodity analyst Judy Zhu. “Crude oil imports remained robust by rising 34 percent year-on-year, in line with our expectation that China will remain active in the global crude-oil market to feed its state oil reserves this year,” Zhu said in an e-mailed noted today.

China last year started building storage tanks of crude reserve in a second phase development. The first phase holds the equivalent of about 16.4 million cubic meters of oil, or about 30 days of net imports, the nation’s top energy administration said last June.

China’s passenger-car sales to dealerships rose at the slowest pace in 15 months in June, adding to signs that the world’s third-largest economy is cooling. June power consumption growth eased “sharply” on a high comparison base last year and as demand from heavy industries showed signs of slowing, Shanghai Securities News said July 5, citing energy authorities it didn’t name. Demand growth in July and August may also slow “significantly,” the newspaper said.

Imports of oil products including gasoline and diesel reached 3.31 million tons, compared with 3.18 million tons in May, while exports totaled 2.15 million tons, from 2.69 million tons. The nation was a net importer of oil products last month.

The world’s biggest producer of coal exported 1.27 million tons of the fuel last month. The customs department didn’t provide coal import numbers in today’s release.

bloomberg.com



To: Road Walker who wrote (21696)7/10/2010 2:42:38 PM
From: Eric  Respond to of 86356
 
More details on the story:

BP Removes Cap From Well, Aiming for a Tighter Fit

NEW ORLEANS -- Technicians on Saturday removed a containment cap atop BP's out of control well in the Gulf of Mexico, beginning an ambitious engineering effort that could fully contain the massive oil leak but will also make matters worse, at least temporarily.

Live video from remotely operated submersibles showed the cap - which had been diverting 15,000 barrels of oil a day to a ship on the surface - being lifted off the failed blowout prevent on the seabed. As the cap was lifted and moved away, oil gushed anew from the top of the well.

Kent Wells, a senior BP vice president in charge of the effort, said at a news conference on Saturday that it could take 4 to 7 days for the new cap to be installed. The current cap was removed shortly after 12:30 p.m. local time.

In the meantime, officials were preparing contingency plans to capture some of the oil on the surface, and readying another containment cap should the new one not work.

“We always have backups for our backups,” Mr. Wells said. “We do have other containment systems, we have another top hat that we’re prepared to put back on.”

After a request from Adm. Thad W. Allen, the retired Coast Guard officer who is leading the response effort, to take advantage of the expected period of good weather and accelerate work to stem the leak, BP agreed to install the new cap as technicians were bringing another collection system into operation. The new cap should allow BP to collect all the oil from the well, 35,000 to 60,000 barrels a day.

“There is going to be a lot of activity going on in this next week,” Mr. Wells said. “We’re ready to do it and we’ve got a very good weather window.”

Work on that new collection system, which would funnel up to 20,000 barrels a day to another ship, the Helix Producer, had been delayed by high winds and rough seas.

. Funneling of oil to the Helix Producer may help reduce the amount of oil that will rush unimpeded from the top of the well when the cap is removed. Another system, which is diverting 8,000 to 9,000 barrels of oil a day to a third vessel, should not be affected by the work.

In a letter Friday responding to Admiral Allen, Robert Dudley, BP’s chief managing director, outlined steps the company would take to cope with any additional oil that leaks into the gulf during the procedure. This includes having more than 40 large or midsize skimmers near the well site, and 14 teams ready to conduct controlled burns.

Removal of the existing cap was expected to be relatively quick. But installation of the new cap is complex, and, as with previous efforts, all the work is being done by remotely operated submersibles. The technician said there were many potential obstacles, including difficulties in removing the stub of riser pipe that is attached by six bolts to the failed blowout preventer, the stack of safety equipment at the top of the well. The new cap will be connected to a flange that will remain once the pipe is removed.

This flange is connected to a flexible joint that was over-stressed in the blowout and sinking of the drill rig in April, and as a result the flange is off horizontal. If that creates problems in connecting the cap, the technician said, crews will have to switch to a different system, which would cause more delays.

nytimes.com



To: Road Walker who wrote (21696)7/10/2010 9:21:48 PM
From: Eric  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 86356
 
July 6, 2010

Rapid ice loss continues through June

Average June ice extent was the lowest in the satellite data record, from 1979 to 2010. Arctic air temperatures were higher than normal, and Arctic sea ice continued to decline at a fast pace. June saw the return of the Arctic dipole anomaly, an atmospheric pressure pattern that contributed to the record sea ice loss in 2007.

Figure 1. Arctic sea ice extent for June 2010 was 10.87 million square kilometers (4.20 million square miles). The magenta line shows the 1979 to 2000 median extent for that month. The black cross indicates the geographic North Pole. Sea Ice Index data. About the data.
—Credit: National Snow and Ice Data Center

High-resolution image Overview of conditions

Arctic sea ice extent averaged 10.87 million square kilometers (4.20 million square miles) for the month of June, 1.29 million square kilometers (498,000 square miles) below the 1979 to 2000 average and 190,000 square kilometers (73,000 square miles) below the previous record low for the month of 11.06 million square kilometers (4.27 million square miles), set in 2006. In June, ice extent declined by 88,000 square kilometers (34,000 square miles) per day, more than 50% greater than the average rate of 53,000 square kilometers (20,000 square miles) per day. This rate of decline is the fastest measured for June.

During June, ice extent was below average everywhere except in the East Greenland Sea, where it was near average.

Figure 2. The graph above shows daily Arctic sea ice extent as of July 5, 2010. The solid light blue line indicates 2010; dashed green shows 2007; solid pink shows 2006, and solid gray indicates average extent from 1979 to 2000. The gray area around the average line shows the two standard deviation range of the data. Sea Ice Index data.
—Credit: National Snow and Ice Data Center

High-resolution image Conditions in context

At the end of May 2010, daily ice extent fell below the previous record low for May, recorded in 2006, and during June continued to track at record low levels. By the 30th of June, the extent was 510,000 square kilometers (197,000 square miles) below the same day in 2006.

Weather conditions, atmospheric patterns, and cloud cover over the next month will play a major role in determining whether the 2010 sea ice decline tracks at a level similar to 2007, or more like 2006. Although ice extent was greater in June 2007 than June 2006, in July 2007 the ice loss rate accelerated. That fast decline led up to the record low ice extent of September 2007.

However, it would not be surprising to see the rate of ice loss slow in coming weeks as the melt process starts to encounter thicker, second and third year ice in the central Arctic Ocean. Loss of ice has already slowed in the Beaufort and Chukchi Seas due to the tongue of thicker, older ice in the region noted in our April update.

Figure 3. Monthly June ice extent for 1979 to 2010 shows a decline of 3.5% per decade.
—Credit: National Snow and Ice Data Center

High-resolution image June 2010 compared to past years
Average ice extent for June 2010 was190,000 square kilometers (73,000 square miles) less than the previous record low for June, observed in 2006; 620,000 square kilometers (240,000 square miles) below that observed in 2007; and 1.29 million square kilometers (498,000 square miles) below the average extent for the month.

The linear rate of monthly decline for June over the 1979 to 2010 period is now 3.5% per decade. This year’s daily June rate of decline was the fastest in the satellite record; the previous record for the fastest rate of June decline was set in 1999. This rapid decline was in part driven by ice loss in Hudson Bay.

Figure 4. This map of sea level pressure for June 2010 shows a return of the Arctic dipole anomaly pattern, with unusually high pressure (yellow and orange) over the northern Beaufort Sea and unusually low pressure (purple and blue) over the Eurasian coast.
—Credit: National Snow and Ice Data Center courtesy NOAA/ESRL Physical Sciences Division

High-resolution image The Arctic dipole anomaly

The record low ice extent of September 2007 was influenced by a persistent atmospheric pressure pattern called the summer Arctic dipole anomaly (DA). The DA features unusually high pressure centered over the northern Beaufort Sea and unusually low pressure centered over the Kara Sea, along the Eurasian coast. In accord with Buys Ballot's Law, this pattern causes winds to blow from the south along the Siberian coast, helping to push ice away from the coast and favoring strong melt. The DA pattern also promotes northerly winds in the Fram Strait region, helping to flush ice out of the Arctic Ocean into the North Atlantic. The DA pattern may also favor the import of warm ocean waters from the North Pacific that hastens ice melt.

June 2010 saw the return of the DA, but with the pressure centers shifted slightly compared to summer 2007. As a result, winds along the Siberian coastal sector are blowing more from the east rather than from the south. Whether or not the DA pattern persists through the rest of summer will bear strongly on whether a new record low in ice extent is set in September 2010.

Figure 5. This satellite image, acquired by the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) aboard the NASA Terra satellite on June 30, 2010, shows that Nares Strait was open and sea ice was flowing through it. Normally Nares Strait remains plugged by an "ice arch" through early July, but this year it was clear by May.
—Credit: National Snow and Ice Data Center courtesy NASA/GSFC MODIS Rapid Response

High-resolution imageNares Strait

Ron Kwok of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) reports that Nares Strait, the narrow passageway between northwest Greenland and Ellesmere Island is clear of the ice “arch" that usually plugs southward transport of the old, thick ice in the Lincoln Sea. Typically the ice arch forms in winter and breaks up in early July. This year the arch formed around March 15th and lasted only 56 days, breaking up in May. In 2007 the ice arch did not form at all, allowing twice as much export through Nares Strait than the annual mean. Although the export of sea ice out of the Arctic Ocean through Nares Strait is very small in comparison to the export through Fram Strait, the Lincoln Sea contains some of the Arctic’s thickest ice. For the ice flux rates out of Nares strait, see Figure 5a.

Figure 6. The graph above shows daily Antarctic sea ice extent as of July 5, 2010. The solid light blue line indicates 2010; dashed green shows 2007, and solid gray indicates average extent from 1979 to 2000. The gray area around the average line shows the two standard deviation range of the data. Sea Ice Index data.
—Credit: National Snow and Ice Data Center

High-resolution image
Meanwhile, in Antarctica
At the end of June, Southern Hemisphere mid-winter, the sea ice surrounding Antarctica was more than two standard deviations greater than normal. On June 30, Antarctic sea ice extent was15.88 million square kilometers (6.13 million square miles), compared to the 1979 to 2000 average of 14.64 million square kilometers (5.65 million square miles) for that day.

While recent studies have shown that wintertime Antarctic sea ice has a weak upward trend, and substantial variability both within a year and from year to year, the differences between Arctic and Antarctic sea ice trends are not unexpected. Climate models consistently project that the Arctic will warm more quickly than the Antarctic, largely due to the strong climate feedbacks in the Arctic. Warming is amplified by the loss of ice cover in the Arctic Ocean in areas that had been ice-covered for decades, and by the warming of Arctic lands as snow cover is lost earlier and returns later than in recent decades.

Moreover, rising levels of greenhouse gases and the loss of stratospheric ozone appear to be affecting wind patterns around Antarctica. Shifts in this circulation are referred to as the Antarctic Oscillation (AAO). As greenhouse gases have increased, and especially when ozone is lost in spring, there is a tendency for these winds to strengthen (a positive AAO index). The net effect is to push sea ice eastward, and northward, increasing the ice extent. As the current sea ice anomaly has developed, the AAO index has been strongly positive. See the NOAA AAO Index Web site. For more information about the differences between sea ice dynamics in the Arctic and Antarctic, see the NSIDC All About Sea Ice Web site.

References

Arblaster, J. M., and G. A. Meehl. 2006. Contributions of External Forcings to Southern Annular Mode Trends. Journal of Climate, 19: 2896-2905.

Hall, A., and M. Visbeck. 2002. Synchronous Variability in the Southern Hemisphere Atmosphere, Sea Ice, and Ocean Resulting from the Annular Mode. Journal of Climate, 15: 3047-3053.

Kwok, R. 2005. Variability of Nares Strait ice flux. Geophys. Res. Lett., 32, L24502, doi:10.1029/2005GL024768

Kwok, R., L. Toudal Pedersen, P. Gudmandsen, and S. S. Pang. 2010. Large sea ice outflow into the Nares Strait in 2007. Geophys. Res. Lett., 37, L03502, doi:10.1029/2009GL041872.

Thompson, W. J., and S. Solomon. 2002. Interpretation of Recent Southern Hemisphere Climate Change. Science. 296, 895-899, doi:10.1126/science.1069270

Wang, J., J. Zhang, E. Watanabe, M. Ikeda, K. Mizobata, J. E. Walsh, X. Bai, and B. Wu. 2009. Is the Dipole Anomaly a major driver to record lows in Arctic summer sea ice extent? Geophys. Res. Lett., 36, L05706, doi:10.1029/2008GL036706.

nsidc.org

(go to link above for the whole story with graphs)