Page added on April 11, 2012

Having fun with trends, an educator and author on his Post Carbon Institute blog, also reveals the absurdity at the end of a drawn-out trend line.
For instance, if technology continues on its course, within 20 years transistors will be the size of an atom, and after another generation or so, he says, they will be the size of an electron! This trend line is based on Moore’s Law, which would support the claim that about every two years the number of transistors that could be placed on an integrated circuit doubles.
Excepting possibly the expansion of the universe, Richard Heinberg, a senior fellow-in-residence, says all trends ultimately reach their limits and either stall or reverse. He suggests a dose of critical thinking and some statistics know-how are neccessary when looking at trends.
For instance, even taking one trend in isolation may not make sense, as some trends work against each other and can end up cancelling each other out.
Taking these business-as-usual assumptions, Heinberg says, may be as much a lack of cognition as a motive-driven action; politicians want certain trends, such as the national economy, to continue to expand forever; transportation planners want traffic to continue to proliferate. But in reality, neither is valid. And so on.
So just like the hottest gadget or all-the-rage clothing fashion, many trends won’t last for long. You can bank on that.
4 Comments on "If Things Keep Going the Way They Are… (Infographic)"
solarity on Wed, 11th Apr 2012 2:37 pm
In 2005, Gordon Moore himself predicted that the end of Moore’s law would be in about 15 years. So micro-processor technology is another resource that has almost peaked and will level-off in the near future.
TIKIMAN on Wed, 11th Apr 2012 2:39 pm
I fail to see how natural gas will be “virtually free” in the US by 2012.
Windmills on Wed, 11th Apr 2012 3:04 pm
Tiki, it’s fun with trends. You take any trend and make a linear projection. If the price of anything is going down, the linear projection is that it will eventually cross the x-axis for cost. This is meant to illustrate the danger, or sometimes absurdity, of careless projections into the future.
BillT on Thu, 12th Apr 2012 1:33 am
This is a great example of today’s deniers. They are all believing that a trend goes on forever…
Remember phonograph records? 33 RPM? 45 RPM? 78 RPM? Steel needles? Remember 8 track tapes? Casset tapes? Tape deck recorders? Silent movies? Black & White TVs? How about steam locomotives?
ALL of these were hot and very popular at one time but gone now except in museums. So will go most of today’s ‘necessities’ and they will not be just an old version of something new, they will be the junk of the age of waste.