I am a freelance writer who is interested in the intersection of urban planning, architecture, technology, food, economics, energy and environmental issues. For the last several years I have been researching and writing about the implications of global peak oil.
My work on these topics has been published in Energy Bulletin, Next American City, The Believer Magazine and The Washington Post among other places.
I am also the Vice President of a new small press and Permaculture design company, KP Press Books/KP Permaculture.
I can be reached at neapolis@earthlink.net or at lakis@kppressbooks.com« Where Dark Green Meets Cleantech (Or, Beyond Shades of Green) | Main | Chevron CEO: Affordable Energy Equals Oil, Gas and Coal -- Really? »
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marks a political sea-change that is as significant as any particular proposal Obama may have articulated.
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Posted by: nfl jerseys | July 25, 2011 at 12:28 PM
After a bit of a hiatus, City of the Future Returns! I'm hoping to keep things a little more up-to-date -- a lot is happening in the world that is directly relevant to the issues that this blog has been about for the past 6 odd years: peak oil, urban design, food and everything related.
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opinions or anything else relevant to City of the Future. I welcome your feedback. Lakis Polycarpou
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hat pretty much sums up the broader choice America faces on energy policy. It can listen to the Washington siren song on alternative energy, pouring scarce dollars into green subsidies, driving up the cost of energy, and driving out U.S. manufources, which are cheap and plentiful. "'What I see are people who want affordable energy," says Mr. Watson. "They want strong environmental standards—they want a lot of things—but first and foremost they want affordable energy. A
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