BURNUP - eco thriller on BBC2 this Weds & Fr at 9PM
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Could well have been. You need to watch Dr Iain Stewart's "Earth: The Power of the Planet"Vortex wrote:PS Was that methane hydrate scene real? If so ... eeek ...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sn/tvradio/program ... age1.shtml
Good show tonight. Friday's looks likely to be the peak oil plot, Saudi ain't got no oil left?
- energy-village
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- Location: Yorkshire, UK
Just watched it on the BBC iplayer:
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/
One episode's enough for me though; I put it on a par with ITV's 'Flood'.
It must have the most dimwitted and naive oil company chairman ever portrayed on screen! He seems like a pawn in a game being played by other people. That drive up to the northern ice to see if anything was melting was ridiculous ... followed by the predicatable roll in the sack with his 'Head of Renewables' resulting in an improbable and immediate desire to pull out of the tar sands.
Shame, I was looking forward to it. 3/10 and that's generous.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/
One episode's enough for me though; I put it on a par with ITV's 'Flood'.
It must have the most dimwitted and naive oil company chairman ever portrayed on screen! He seems like a pawn in a game being played by other people. That drive up to the northern ice to see if anything was melting was ridiculous ... followed by the predicatable roll in the sack with his 'Head of Renewables' resulting in an improbable and immediate desire to pull out of the tar sands.
Shame, I was looking forward to it. 3/10 and that's generous.
I found it hilarious: if only because I've been in meetings of earnest environmentalists explaining that what's been done on climate change/solar so far is a complete waste of time, and I too have been voted out of the meeting! I thought they captured the delusion of energy/climate as well as the truth.
Factually good, but I wish they could write a much better screenplay.
My favourite bit:
"I'm surprised that you didn't plant some weapons of mass destruction" (in Iraq).
"We did but we couldn't find them again".
"Yeah, that's believeable".
Factually good, but I wish they could write a much better screenplay.
My favourite bit:
"I'm surprised that you didn't plant some weapons of mass destruction" (in Iraq).
"We did but we couldn't find them again".
"Yeah, that's believeable".
- biffvernon
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- Posts: 1939
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Milton Keynes
Completely off-topic, but that also surprised me, in the real world.mobbsey wrote:My favourite bit:
"I'm surprised that you didn't plant some weapons of mass destruction" (in Iraq).
"We did but we couldn't find them again".
"Yeah, that's believeable".
Is the lack of planting WMD, because:
(a) "They" don't really care what anyone thinks?
(b) Because it would be too difficult to pull it off - someone would blab, they wouldn't stand up to independent scrutiny, etc.?
Peter.
Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the seconds to hours?
Did anyone see the thing on NS oil on BBC4 about half an hour afterwards - very optimistic and somewhat misleading concerning PO, notwithstanding the 2 minutes allocated to Jeremy Leggett. I had to switch it of 5 minutes before the end as it was winding me up too much. 'Oil, Lies and something or other' I think it was called, and the 'lies' related to suggestions about the North Sea running low on supply any time soon as far as I could see. They had Apache on saying how much they had increased recoverable reserves in the Forties region since buying it from BP, and generally went on about the miracle technology that was going to keep the whole thing going. There was also a Dutch(?) chap talking about how we have got 'almost as much oil left to use as we have already'. Anyone else see it?
- RenewableCandy
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Sure - but he was talking about the North Sea.RenewableCandy wrote:erm...isn't that the definition of Peak? When 1/2 of it has gone??some Dutch chap wrote:'almost as much oil left to use as we have already'
Last edited by clv101 on 24 Jul 2008, 11:28, edited 1 time in total.
That was the most striking thing about the programme for me: that they carefully blurred the question of global and NS peak and totally avoided mentioning the implications of a decline in supply. Cleverly done, but totally transparent if the viewer thinks about the implications. The second half focused on the leaps in technology that have been made in Scotland and how Aberdeen will be a major player in future exploration both locally and globally due to this acumen. The 'end of cheap oil' was mentioned by one engineer, but she emphasised that there was still much, much more which was 'economically exploitable' or some such phrase.
Overall, I quite liked it. There were some bits that were quite annoying, and i'm reserving judgement until I've seen part two, and that ruddy sex scene was just silly (though I suppose if you're the BBC and you've managed to get Neve Campbell to be in your drama, you're going to at least try to get her kit off...) but so far it was quite good.
I agree that the oil chair blokey is a bit feckless, but I think that's sort of the point - remember when his friend turns up with the giant car and says how pleased he is etc, Our Brave Hero has a moment of suspicion 'is that why I got the job??' I think he's pretty much been chosen as a malleable chap who won't ask too many questions and looks good in the literature...
I agree that the oil chair blokey is a bit feckless, but I think that's sort of the point - remember when his friend turns up with the giant car and says how pleased he is etc, Our Brave Hero has a moment of suspicion 'is that why I got the job??' I think he's pretty much been chosen as a malleable chap who won't ask too many questions and looks good in the literature...
- Bedrock Barney
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- Location: Midlands
Missed the drama - not my cup of tea. Did watch the BBC4 documentary though. It was one of those programmes that had me shouting at the telly. It bordered on propaganda - I'm surprised the presenter's Mini Cooper was missing a Shell logo down each side.leroy wrote:Did anyone see the thing on NS oil on BBC4 about half an hour afterwards - very optimistic and somewhat misleading concerning PO, notwithstanding the 2 minutes allocated to Jeremy Leggett. I had to switch it of 5 minutes before the end as it was winding me up too much. 'Oil, Lies and something or other' I think it was called, and the 'lies' related to suggestions about the North Sea running low on supply any time soon as far as I could see. They had Apache on saying how much they had increased recoverable reserves in the Forties region since buying it from BP, and generally went on about the miracle technology that was going to keep the whole thing going. There was also a Dutch(?) chap talking about how we have got 'almost as much oil left to use as we have already'. Anyone else see it?
We demand that reality be altered because we don't like it [� oilslick ]