2. Globalization is the new Colonialism!

Now we see a more dangerous, more extensive, more ruthless, more hypocrite, more cynical and brazenly declared colonialization of the world, but humanity behaves dumber than sheep and lemmings.

What is the meaning of “globalization” for You?

Would You understand and reject it if it was called “global colonialism“?

Who wants to “globalize” You?



If You don’t want to be colonized, You should reject to be globalized!

  • Global water is colonialized!
  • Global sunlight is colonialized!
  • Global oxygen is colonialized!
  • Global air is colonized!
  • Global weather is colonized!
  • Global soil is colonialized!
  • Global oceans are colonized!
  • Global food is colonialized!
  • Global mind is colonized!
  • Global faiths are colonized!
  • Global knowledge is colonized!
  • Global health is colonialized!
  • Global forests are colonized!
  • Global life is colonialized!
  • Global energy is colonized!

That is called globalization!

All that is globalized by global engineering, also called geoengineering, terraforming, climate engineering or just “Solar Radiation Management” (SRM)!

Have You ever “voted” or signed a contract to allow Your sunlight be “managed” by global corporations?

Do You want to give up Your natural right to enjoy sunlight?

All over the world land and water resources are grabbed for industrial farming and fracking of oil and gas!

What does “leave in the ground” for coal mean for You, if Your only energy source for heating and cooking is coal?

Do they really want to “leave it in the ground“?

Do You know that coal beds can be totally emptied by Nuclear Fracking and Underground Gasification?

Not a single carbon atom is “left in the underground”. All coal is burned to CO and CO2 by injection of O2 and modified to CH4 (methane) by pyrolyze with H2O, which can further be processed to liquid gas and other synthetic fuels.

Why should anyone else decide about Your energy resources?

The legacy “fossil fuels“, petrol and coal are demonized, but fracking is done all over the world. Where is the logic?

Do You know how fracking is done?

What is “fracked”?

How it is “fracked”?

Would You agree if they would name it earthquaking instead of “fracturing”?

Fracturing sounds more fancy, more harmless, but earthquakes are “inevitable“!

Recognize that manipulation, conditioning, brainwashing is done by words of language! Your neuronal system is “programmed” by defining new notions, redefining the meaning of existing ones!

Do You want to allow a “trustworthy” “central global body” like the “Climate Council” (IPCC) to give You permission for the usage of Your natural resources?

Do You want to accept a “global climate council” as Your master and happily become its serf? Consider “worst enemies of freedom are happy serfs“.

Maybe You sleep yet, others are already waking up, but yet in half delirium of manipulation, at least expressing some suspicion.

Agreeing” with the “assessment” of the colonialist body IPCC makes You a dumb capitulant in the war on resources! Never agree with Your enemies! Enemies are there to resist and fight against!

Hope the West isn’t heading towards climate colonialism

I agree with the assessment of the fifth Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report that increased temperature and increased frequency of extreme weather events will have an impact on economic activities, including agricultural production, infrastructure, and health.

Under globalization, all people become colonized! There won’t be a difference in “developed” and “undeveloped“. Geoengineering is attacking and killing all over the world!

Extreme weather events, health, and material damage are the impact of geoengineering by SRM!

The 2003 heatwave in Europe killed nearly 52,000 people within a fortnight in August. In 2005, Hurricane Katrina devastated the southern US; last year, Hurricane Sandy devastated the eastern US; and the bushfires in Australia and California, are examples that show that even developed countries are vulnerable to the impacts of climate change.

Feeling good by being as dumb as the “developed“!

Climate change [geoengineering/climate engineering[/embed] affects all nations, developed or developing.

A little awakening at the end!

It appears that less scientific evidence and more political motives are behind isolating India and China as the most vulnerable countries in the report. I hope developing countries are not heading towards climate colonialism.

Now let us look at fracking all over the world..

3. North Africa and Arabia

Unsung Heroes of the Shale Gas Revolution
April 6, 2013 by Manzoor Roome

“... a comprehensive report was published by the US Energy of Information (EIA) in 2011 which assessed 48 gas shale basins in 32 countries and reviewed the current state of shale development. This report was called a “key development in the natural gas arena” by Forbes and had been cited in economic reports by prominent firms such as PwC and Ernst & Young. The EIA report was also referenced by the Energy and Climate Change Committee appointed by the House of Commons of the UK Parliament.

However, the report was incomplete. The EIA report studied only 14 regions for shale gas potential while vast landmasses in the Middle-East, Africa and South Asia were not studied due to scarcity of exploration data in the public domain. Since 2011, there have been many new developments in shale gas exploration around the world.

Algeria has been at the forefront of unconventional gas. The Algerian Energy Minister Youcef Yousfi believes that his country’s reserves of shale gas are equal to that of the United States. Algeria’s state energy company, Sonatrach, has signed a cooperation agreement with Italian company Eni SpA, for the development of unconventional gas in Algeria, with a particular focus on shale gas.

What makes this development important in the broader European picture is that Algeria currently supplies 30% of the EU’s natural gas imports, only behind Russia who supplies 40% of the EU market. In the last webinar on the Energy Collective, Mark Caine had touched on this topic and mentioned that Europe is importing one-third of its gas consumption from Russia. Algeria benefits from the trans-Mediterranean pipelines: the ‘Enrico Mattei’ and the ‘Pedro Duran Farell’ which links to Italy and Spain. Thus a boost in gas production in Algeria will give the EU an alternative to Russia’s Gazprom who charges its customers three times the US gas price.

Nearby, Morocco has recently given the green light to five international companies to drill wells for better estimation of shale gas. However, Morocco has fewer natural gas reserves, unlike its neighbors, and so has to rely on imports for internal energy needs. The Tindouf and Tadla basin are targets for exploration. These are Silurian-age shale deposits and they contain an estimated 266 Tcf and 1.5 Tcf of technically recoverable gas reserves.

In Saudi Arabia, the U.S. oilfield services company, Baker Hughes estimates shale gas reserves to be at 645 Tcf, the fifth largest of such reserve in the world. The country’s conventional gas reserves are estimated to be around 279 Tcf. Saudi Aramco has asked Halliburton and Schlumberger to begin carrying out feasibility studies for the production of shale gas. Seismic surveys are currently being carried out in the northern desert area close to the borders of Iraq and Jordan. The Saudi Oil Minister, Al-Naimi has announced a few weeks ago that they will drill seven test wells for shale gas this year.

However, Saudi Arabia’s goal is very different. The country wants its shale gas to replace crude oil being burned by the kingdom’s power plants. Crude oil is a very expensive fuel for the domestic power market. Saudi Arabia burned 766,000 b/d of crude oil to generate electricity in the period between June and August 2012.

Oman is also investigating exploration for shale gas, as the Sultanate looks to alleviate the gas consumption holding back its industrial and petrochemical sectors. A lack of additional natural gas resources has impeded progress in economic diversification, especially in the industrial sector. Although Oman is a net exporter of oil and natural gas, it also imports small volumes of natural gas from Qatar via UAE. The Dolphin Pipeline provides Oman’s only natural gas imports, providing approximately 200 Mcf/d. BP is considering a $20 billion project to produce tight gas reservoirs deep under the Khazzan and Makarem fields in the north-central region. Earlier this month, Dr. Al-Rumhi, Minister of Oil and Gas of Oman, said that the decision will be taken in the coming few weeks.

Total, ADNOC to launch unconventional gas exploration in Abu Dhabi – Oil & Gas Journal.

4. India and Indochina

Please consider that the huge earthquake with the tsunami which killed over 200 thousand people of Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand and around in 2004 and also the endless comparably smaller but still destructive earthquakes and tsunamis in Sumatra and Sulawesi are results of underground nuclear explosions for fracking under the oceanic seabed.

Quoting from the same article.

India has several basins and the Indian Oil Minister, Verrapa Moily, recently said India plans to unveil its shale gas policy within the next two weeks as it seeks to exploit unconventional resources very soon.

The EIA report takes into consideration only four ‘prospective basins’, as they have indicated in the map in Figure 2. However, the Indian government has a larger estimate. Mr. S.K. Srivastava, Director-General of Directorate General of Hydrocarbons, had said, “Six basins have been identified for offering subject to certain legislative changes. The Government is formulating a policy for offering these areas.” These basins are Cambay in Gujarat, Upper Assam-Arakan in the northeast, the Godavari in central India, Krishna Godavari onshore in Andhra Pradesh and the Cauvery onshore and the Indo Gangetic basins.

The Southern-Indus basin of Pakistan, from the organic-rich Sambar and Ranikot formations, has been identified with potential for shale gas. The estimates are that of 51 Tcf technically recoverable.

Another gas-rich country which was not considered in the EIA report is Indonesia. The country already has significant coalbed methane resources, located mainly in the sedimentary basins on the islands of Sumatra and Borneo.

A study by the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation estimated that Indonesia has geologically attractive shale gas resources in the Barito and Kutei basins of Kalimantan (shown above in figure 3) as well as tight gas prospects in the North and South Sumatra basins.

Edy Hermantoro, an upstream oil and gas director at the energy and mineral resources ministry of Indonesia said: “Bandung Technology University estimates that Indonesia holds 1,000 tcf of shale gas reserves”. Indonesia is currently opening up the shale blocks for exploration by foreign companies.

In South-East Asia, Thailand is also a lesser-known among shale potentials. Thailand has four main onshore sedimentary basins and regions with the potential for unconventional gas resources Khorat Plateau, Northern Inter-Montane Basin, Central Plain, and Southern Plains. Based on geological reviews, the shale gas deposits in the Khorat Plateau are said to be the most promising followed by the tight sandstones in the Khorat and Central/Southern Plains and modest size CBM deposits in the Northern Inter-Montane Basin.

In 2011, The Petroleum Authority of Thailand signed an MOU with Statoil to study the unconventional (and conventional) gas resources of Thailand and a small lease block has been awarded for Coal bed Methane exploration in southern Thailand.

Indonesia, Petroleum Geology and Potential

The oil and gas resources potentials are accumulated in 60 sedimentary basins, which are located all over Indonesia. Out of the 60 sedimentary basins, only 38 basins have been explored. The producing basins are 15, of which 11 basins are located in the Western Indonesia Region, and the other 4 are located in the Eastern Indonesia Region.

OIL & GAS in Indonesia. Overview. 2013

Be aware, “yet controversial“, “revolutionary“, “unconventional” means nuclear pulverization of rock formations!

Indonesia Energy: Turning Unconventional With Shale Gas 
by Justin Calderon -Jun 11, 2013

Indonesia is following the US’s footsteps to begin utilizing revolutionary, yet controversial, techniques to exploit large unconventional gas deposits that could wean the country away from dependence on fossil fuels.

Shale gas and coal-bed methane, two forms of hard-to-extract natural gas that require capital-intensive technologies, are replete across the Southeast Asian archipelago.

While half of Indonesia’s current fuel mix derives from coal, with over 20 percent coming from conventional gas, recent commitments to begin exploring unconventional deposits could dramatically alter the country’s energy composition by opening up avenues to potential shale gas reserves of about 574 trillion cubic feet and coal-bed methane reserves of 453.3 trillion cubic feet, compared with proven conventional gas reserves of 153, according to Indonesian geology surveys.

Stunningly, these estimates come close to the US potential shale gas reserves at 665 trillion cubic feet, according to the Washington D.C.-based Energy Information Administration.

An added lure to begin unconventional exploration, the approximately 60 basins that have been located across the country – namely in Sumatra, Kalimantan, Java and West Papua – are just 1,000 to 1,300 feet below the surface, compared to conventional reserves, which average at 6,500.

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4 COMMENTS

  1. Dear Gall,
    there is no separation between “fossil” & “non-fossil” fuels. Methan is the base molecule of the carbon-hydrogen molecules or we could say that all the other carbon-hydrogen-molecules (2CH6, 3CH8, 4CH10, 5CH12 etc) are a chain of methane molecules (CH4).

    Carbon-hydrogen molecules form if the carbon and hydrogen are available and pressure and temperature are suitable. This can be in the digestions system of animals, in the crust and mantle of the Earth, in a laboratory or a factory.

    Methane from Earth crust is the main product which is broken out of the underground rock formations by Nuclear Fracking! So framing this fracking methane as a “renewable energy” is deadly wrong. Yes it is reproduced all the time in all layers of Earth’s crust, but that doesn’t mean it would be available without any danger and pollution.

    If there wasn’t the radioactive contamination, earthquakes and tsunamis, fracking out gas from deep rock formations would be a good solution. The same applies for fracking plus underground gasification of coal beds.

    Currently all this is done without risk avoidance and compensation of death and damage. In some states of the USA and also in Netherlands and Great Britain there are controls and limitations about the earthquakes, but in countries like Haiti and Indonesia, there is no limit and accordingly 200K+ of dead people. But no one cares because all think that these earthquakes and tsunamis as well as the deadly storms were “natural catastrophes”.

  2. Thanks for recommendations Gall.

    In our times the native people all over the world are abused to promote global colonialism and sad to say particularly the people of the pacific island states fall perfectly into this trap. They are bombarded by geophysical technical storms, experience death and damage, but buy the story about the “rising sea level”.

    In climate conferences their politicians are allowed to speak as marionettes and their music and art groups to present their culture of naivety and submission.

    When the corporations get access to their or neighboring shores and start exploding nuclear bombs in the underground for fracking and cause deadly earthquakes and tsunamis, the media is filled with “helping hands” and collecting money, which all lands in the accounts of Clinton Foundation and other perverts.

    I don’t only blame the gruesome imperialists, but also all the people who love to be victims and live in a psychology of victimization.

    Under the conditions of geoengineering, now all people, all animals and plants are in danger. Globalist Colonalinalism/Fascism/Corporatism is not racist. It kills all, without any exception.

  3. Dear Gall,
    please look at the statistics of CERES about fracking, which are quoted in this article.
    I could write more about fracking in the USA. More background knowledge is collected in other articles which also will be published here on VT.

  4. “Fossil Fuel is Nuclear Waste” > CanadaFreePress(.)com
    Hydrocarbons exist throughout the Universe and on Earth, are a fission heat and elemental atoms (nuclide) byproduct. Methane has Specific Gravity of 0.44 and when outgassed has four year half-life in the atmosphere. Responsible capture and use of this renewable resource could be a benefit to all humanity. Capture and misuse by demonic plutocrats is detrimental to humanity.

Comments are closed.