Showing posts with label Energy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Energy. Show all posts

Thursday, May 21, 2020

econlife - The Problem With Cheap Oil by Elaine Schwartz


Perhaps it’s the perfect storm for crude oil prices. Grounded planes, consumer lockdowns, and skyrocketing unemployment all add up to less need for oil. Meanwhile, with the Saudis gushing crude, supply is soaring. So yes, when you combine less demand with more supply, you get lower prices…very low prices.

The price of WTI (West Texas Intermediate–the domestic benchmark) has plunged from $60 a barrel at the end of 2019 to $21.51 last week.



On the bright side, cheap oil lowers the price of the thousands of goods that contain it like surfboards and shag rugs.

However, there is a downside.

The Downside of Cheap Oil

As the price sinks, firms see the market moving closer to their breakeven point. At $21.51, the shale producers (including Bakken) and traditional producers are in negative territory. Below breakeven, firms could shut down.

In each of the drilling areas, none of the existing wells appears to be covering operating expenses:



Meanwhile, as the price of oil plunges so too does the incentive to drill new wells:



The result is massive disruption of the energy sector of the economy. We could wind up with many fewer firms.

Our Bottom Line: Creating Cheap Oil

We can illustrate the WTI price drop with shifts in the demand and supply curves.

The demand curve moves downward to the left because its utility–its usefulness–has decreased. During the coronavirus lockdown, we are driving less, flying less, and moving less cargo. In other words, oil has less utility.

Meanwhile, on the supply side, production has been propelled upward by the clash between Saudi Arabia and Russia.

Below, you can see that the equilibrium price is way down:



Long ago, asked about the price of Standard Oil stock, John D. Rockefeller provided wisdom about all markets, including the price of oil.

“I think it will fluctuate.”

My sources and more: For the entire story, do go to the Dallas Fed. Then, for another downside that we did not discuss, this Washington Post article connects cheap oil to the environment.



Ideal for the classroom, econlife.com reflects Elaine Schwartz’s work as a teacher and a writer. As a teacher at the Kent Place School in Summit, NJ, she’s been an Endowed Chair in Economics and chaired the history department. She’s developed curricula, was a featured teacher in the Annenberg/CPB video project “The Economics Classroom,” and has written several books including Econ 101 ½ (Avon Books/Harper Collins). You can get econlife on a daily basis! Head to econlife.

Tuesday, September 19, 2017

econlife - Lighting Up Our Lives by Elaine Schwartz


Artificial light was once too costly to use. And now, it is so cheap that we barely notice it.
One reason is our illumination infrastructure. But first let’s start with some history.


Costly Light

In one of his farm journals, Thomas Jefferson documented the importance of light.
You can see below how the length of the workday varied with the seasons. During July, more daylight meant they could increase their spinning:

Screenshot_8_8_17__8_06_PM

We depended on natural light because artificial illumination was too expensive. The president of Harvard noted in a 1743 diary entry that it took his household two days to make 78 pounds of tallow candles. Six months later he wrote, “Candles all gone.” Similarly, George Washington calculated that it cost him £8 a year (more than $1,000 today) to burn a spermaceti candle for five hours a night.


Cheaper Light


Like candles, nineteenth century sperm oil, gas, and kerosene lamps were expensive. In 1800, a typical middle class urban household spent approximately 4% of its income on the oil, lamps, matches and candles that illuminated their lives.

Today we spend much less for so much more. A Yale scholar estimated that we use less than 1% of our income for approximately 100 times as much artificial illumination. It is mind boggling to think that the labor that had created close to one hour of quality light several centuries ago now can illuminate us for 52 years.

You can see (below) the lighting price plunge at the beginning of the 20th century:

The_Price_for_Lighting__per_million_lumen-hours__in_the_UK_in_British_Pound__1300-2006

Our Bottom Line: An Illumination Infrastructure

Rather than a revolution that directly boosted the GDP, the illumination that spread across our country became a nationwide network. Similar to our financial and transportation infrastructures, our illumination infrastructure sustains our economy.

The Washington Post mapped the infrastructure that provides the power for our lighting:

U_S_electricity_generation_by_source__Natural_gas_vs_coal_-_Washington_Post

And these are the 160,000 miles of high-voltage electric transmission lines:

Six_maps_that_show_the_anatomy_of_America’s_vast_infrastructure_-_Washington_Post-1
Amazing to think that it all started with a tallow candle.

Sources and resources: This article conveys where the U.S. began while this one is about our current infrastructure. If you want more detail on illumination history and wage inflation, this Nordhaus paper is a classic (and summarized somewhat here). Then switching to the light side, this Tim Harford podcast is wonderful. Please note that I paraphrase several sentences from Tim Harford in this post.

After publication, this post was slightly edited.

Hazlegrove-6763_6bIdeal for the classroom, econlife.com reflects Elaine Schwartz's work as a teacher and a writer. As a teacher at the Kent Place School in Summit, NJ, she’s been an Endowed Chair in Economics and chaired the history department. She’s developed curricula, was a featured teacher in the Annenberg/CPB video project “The Economics Classroom,” and has written several books including Econ 101 ½ (Avon Books/Harper Collins). You can get econlife on a daily basis! Head to econlife.

Thursday, April 21, 2016

24-Hour Earth Day Giveaway - Here's the Code!

24-Hour Earth Day Giveaway!

izzit! has a Bundle of Energy for you to celebrate Earth Day this year! Starting at 12:00 a.m. on April 22nd, Power to the PlanetEnergy Solutions: Who Chooses? and People, Power & Prosperity will be sent to each person who logs in and puts in the code given on the website before midnight the same day. To be eligible for the Earth Day Bundle of Energy you must have an active izzit.org account, or you can create a FREE account first. Shipping is free; offer is only good in the contiguous United States.



Be sure to share this 24-hour special.

If you need to create your FREE account click here.

You can also find the 24-hour code on our Facebook Page, Twitter Page, and Google + Page.

Earth Day Giveaway Coming This Friday!

24-Hour Earth Day Giveaway!

izzit! has a Bundle of Energy for you to celebrate Earth Day this year! Starting at 12:00 a.m. on April 22nd, Power to the PlanetEnergy Solutions: Who Chooses? and People, Power & Prosperity will be sent to each person who logs in and puts in the code given on the website before midnight the same day. To be eligible for the Earth Day Bundle of Energy you must have an active izzit.org account, or you can create a FREE account first. Shipping is free; offer is only good in the contiguous United States.

To be eligible you must have an active izzit.org account, or create a FREE account for this giveaway!

Make sure you follow our social media channels and visit www.izzit.org to locate the 24-hour code!

This code will be available from 12:00 am until 12:00 pm EST on April 22nd! 

Tuesday, April 19, 2016

A Year In Review

We've been really busy at izzit.org headquarters, and we're not slowing down!


We've released 8 new programs for the 2015-2016 school year, created a new streaming page with most of our programs, unveiled a new download feature so viewers can download most of our programs directly to their devices without ad interruption. We enhanced our blogging page so you can see our daily Current Events, izzit.org News, and Teaching Zone blogs in one easy spot. 

New Releases from izzit.org for 2015-2016:


1.  Pups of Liberty: The Dog-claration of Independence. All creatures are created equalAfter the Boston Tea-Bone Party, the Pups of Liberty continue to assert themselves against Catland. But the Royal TomCat refuses their requests for representation in the government and issues orders that make life miserable in the 13 Ameri-canine colonies. We also released a brand new Pups of Liberty activity book! Visit our website to purchase yours now for only $6.95!


2.  RecalculatingCan technology help them prove it's their land? In the national forests of Gujarat, India, the tribal people have been seen as encroachers, thieves who dare to produce food for their families on land claimed by the government. Rama Bhai and his family have worked land in the Sagai village for generations.


3. Energy Solutions: Who Chooses? - "The whole town's gotta go…" Meet the little village of Atterwasch, Germany and the folks who live there. Atterwasch is slated for demolition – the whole town, including the church originally built in the 1200s. It's a casualty of Germany's Energiewende, the most ambitious transformation of a country's energy sector ever attempted. 

4. 4 Ways to Spend Money: The Musical - Only 4 ways to spend money? Olivia’s fallen in love...with economics! She’s fascinated by Milton Friedman’s premise that there are only 4 ways to spend money. In this glee-ful high school musical, she shares the specifics about how people spend money differently, depending on whose money they’re spending, and who they’re spending it on. 


5. Where Did My Money Go? - Taxes, taxes everywhere! Paycheck sticker shock. Anyone who’s ever received a first paycheck remembers that feeling. 





6. What's Taxing About Taxes? - Who pays? Who chooses? What’s fair? April 15 generally brings a scramble for U.S. taxpayers! But who exactly is paying? How much? What’s “fair?” 

7. People, Power & ProsperityDeveloping nations turn on the power! Electricity is so much a part of our daily routine in the developed world that it’s hard to imagine life without it. It’s much more than just lights and television, or the internet...electricity plays a factor in health and well-being. 


8. No Longer OutCastes - Breaking the grip of discrimination! Madhusudana Rao wasn’t going to let the circumstances of his birth limit him.




We launched our 12 Days of Christmas Giveaway Spectacular (You guys loved that one!), attended more teacher conferences and gave away Roku streaming sticks! Oh yeah, we also published our educational channel on Roku...what else?? 


Our new Discount Membership was released. This new membership option allows members to receive a 50% discount off regular webstore prices for most izzit.org products. 12 month membership (from date of purchase). Click here to purchase this now for only $9.95.


Director of Educational Curriculum Susan Gable, was invited to speak at TEDxErie this past year. Watch the video here. She was also interviewed by a number of radio stations, as well as a national segment on Bloomberg News. Most recently, Susan was interviewed on Los Angeles’ #1 talk radio, KNX, about teaching kids about taxes. NBC Newswatch also did a segment on the same subject, using izzit! teaching units. The segment aired on NBC-affiliate stations across the U.S. during tax season.



We joined Pinterest! Everyone can locate our full programs, contest information, izzit.org news, teacher quotes, printable classroom worksheets and SO much more! Follow all of our boards and make sure to pin your favorites.  


We want to launch more social media contests and giveaways but we need your participation. Following our Facebook, Twitter, Google+, Pinterest, YouTube, and Vimeo channels allows you to stay up to date with everything izzit.org, but you get the insider scoop! We like to ask our fans what program titles they like best, what infographics they use in their classrooms, what crafts and activities you are using with your students but most of all, we want to know WHAT YOU LIKE and WHAT YOU NEED! 


Our main purpose is to give educators access to classroom videos and materials, but learning isn't just in the classroom - we want your students and kids to use our student zone, online quizzes, kid zone, and interact with us just as much as teachers do! 


So now is the time - join us, follow us, talk with us...let us know what you like reading by commenting on our social media and blog posts. Tell us what contest and giveaways you liked best and what crazy ideas you would like to see us try in the next few months. Even when students leave for the summer, teachers, parents, and izzit.org does not stop working! What are your plans for the next school year? What are you looking to do over the summer break? How can we keep you entertained and informed throughout the entire year - not just the school year! 


Teachers are a big part of our team. Not only do we need them to write some of our teaching zone blogs, but we also need teachers to join us on the road when we go to education conferences, or even provide us with feedback on new programs, titles, or materials.


Together, we can make an impact on the next generation.



Thursday, March 3, 2016

NEW RELEASE....

We have another NEW RELEASE....

As seen on public television!!!

Developing nations turn on the power! 

Electricity is so much a part of our daily routine in the developed world that it’s hard to imagine life without it. It’s much more than just lights and television, or the internet...electricity plays a factor in health and well-being. 

Travel to Issidan Izdar, a tiny village in the Atlas Mountains in Morocco to see what life is like without power. Then visit the neighboring village of Tamayousst, which connected to a power grid several years ago, to see what a difference electric makes in daily life for those in developing parts of world. 


Some fear this increased demand for energy will harm the planet. But what about the harm to people who live without it? Can we object to the developing world’s rise out of poverty and increased standard of living? 

Click here for instant download or visit our website to learn more here.

Thursday, October 8, 2015

Energy Solutions: Who Chooses? New Release Exploring the Unintended Consequences of Energy Decisions.


It's not a trick for October, it's a treat! We have another new release for you.

Check out Energy Solutions: Who Chooses?

Join Johan Norberg on another exploratory adventure about the unintended consequences of energy decisions like ethanol and fracking around the world, from Germany to the U.S.

Teachers and homeschoolers, you can select this new video as your Free Annual Video. All you need to do is create a FREE account here

Having a FREE membership with izzit.org allows you to receive a FREE DVD each year, which includes Table of Contents, Teacher's Guide, Discussion Questions, Quizzes and more. For each year you teach, all you need to do is provide feedback after using the video. We also provide you with access to our Student Zone, Kid Zone, Online Quizzes, Current Events, Educational Standard Alignments Tool and so much more. 


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Don't forget you can stream MOST of our educational videos directly from our website, our YouTube channel, and our Vimeo channel!



Wednesday, July 22, 2015

New Release: "Power to the Planet"




We need energy for many things, including lighting, cooking , transporting, heating & cooling....But which energy source is the best? What are the trade-offs of each?



Pollution needs to be considered, as well as availability. What else should we factor in as we decide what's best? Is there even such a thing as "the one best source?"


Travel the globe with scholar Johan Norberg, from Morocco to Sweden and throughout the United States, as he explores the pros and cons of the eight main energy sources available to us: coal, oil, natural gas, nuclear, hydroelectric, biomass, wind and solar.




Click here to find out more about this teaching unit.






econlife - Who Will Sacrifice Civil Liberties During a Pandemic? by Elaine Schwartz

  In a new NBER paper, a group of Harvard and Stanford scholars investigated how much of our civil liberties we would trade for better heal...