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Page added on July 12, 2012

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The Peak Oil Crisis: The Summer of 2012

General Ideas

One has to go back to the 1930’s to find a time when so much of civilization was in turmoil at once. The 30’s ended with World War II, tens of millions dead, and much of the industrialized world in ruins. It is not hard to argue that the array of economic, geopolitical, and climatological problems currently facing the world add up to an even more serious threat than a handful of hyper-aggressive nation-states did 75 years ago. Our current problems – faltering economies, an out-of-control atmosphere, increasing social unrest, and political gridlock in many parts of the world – add up to a very bleak outlook ahead.

Here in America, there is much denial. With weathermen telling of new disasters every day, the annual budget deficit stuck at $1.5 trillion, unemployment increasing every week and not even a hint of rational solutions to these problems anywhere in sight, we are moving towards the November elections in a dead heat. As the Rockies burn, the corn-belt fries, the east coast melts, and the southwest broils, we continue to pump out greenhouse gases as the only way to keep ourselves employed and our economies growing. Our media continues to craft stories telling us that the weather has been bad before and that there is still no “firm” evidence that the aberrant weather is caused by the burning of fossil fuels.

In Europe and Asia, things are not much better. This summer Europe is having floods instead of drought, but that won’t last long and in another year or so their crops will be frying too. A growing number of Europeans are starting to realize that perhaps the new Union has gotten itself into such a big mess that conjuring up loans for bankrupt governments and financial institutions isn’t much of a solution. Getting 27 countries to agree on real political union and accepting the debts of others is unlikely to be doable in the time required. Japan’s economy seems to be tanking and China seems headed for a bout of deflation as there will soon be few trading partners left to buy their prodigious output of stuff in ever increasing amounts.

To wrap up the gloom and doom, it is clear the Middle East is sinking into a quagmire. The Syrian uprising seems destined to drag on interminably; Egypt is starting to simmer again; and the sabre rattling accompanying the Iranian nuclear standoff is on the rise. The EU boycott of Iranian oil exports is now in full effect and unless the Iranians throw in the towel or can find some clever ways around the sanctions, their economy is headed for the pits. The Israelis continue to insist that sanctions never work and that a dose of strategic bombing is the only sure way to prevent nuclear Armageddon in the region.

So where does our oil crisis fit into all of this? First, ignore the stories that have been filling the media of late as to how there is no longer an American energy crisis. The stories say that the genius of American industry has figured out how to frack so much oil and gas out of North Dakota and other shale deposits that the US will soon be energy independent and exporting the stuff all over the world. Needless to say, numerous people who understand the numbers have torn this cornucopian drivel to shreds as most of these stories ignore or gloss over the 3 or 4 million b/d of new production that must found each year to offset the declines from existing fields amongst other fallacious logic.

Fracked tight oil from shale deposits will slow the rate of decline in global oil production a bit but will never offset the loss of production from the world’s giant oil fields currently underway and likely to accelerate. The problems of fracking and difficulty and expense of producing oil and gas from fracked wells that run dry far more quickly than conventional wells simply will not produce enough oil to run civilization as we know it today. We must look for other solutions and the quicker the better for unless there is record-breaking depression in the offing and the Middle East is settled peaceably, we are only a few years away from much higher oil prices and even scarcity.

For much of the past year global oil prices have been caught between threats of potential and in a few cases actual supply disruptions, and the generally slackening economic growth — especially in Europe but also in the US and Asia. Lost in this is the recognition that oil prices ,which have been close to or above $100 a barrel for the past 18 months or roughly five times the selling price of oil ten years ago is doing to the OECD economies. While gasoline prices have fallen considerably in the last two months, largely due to the Iranians agreeing to resume talks about their nuclear program, great damage has and is continuing to be done to most industrial economies by the high price of energy. Few politicians are willing to discuss in public the toll that $100 oil is taking, and will continue to take, on the prospects for economic growth and increasing employment.

At some point, and that day is not far away, it will be recognized that the economic growth as we have come to know it in recent years is no longer possible and the search for other lifestyles will begin in earnest. Some may even come to understand that the peak oil crisis may already be all around us and we are simply not recognizing it for what it is.

Falls Church News Press



7 Comments on "The Peak Oil Crisis: The Summer of 2012"

  1. John Orr on Thu, 12th Jul 2012 9:13 am 

    It’s a nice article pulling a lot of general information together in a good read of doom but typically has not even a small suggestion of what to do for a solution. The short of it is the article didn’t say you need to go to church.

  2. Newfie on Thu, 12th Jul 2012 11:41 am 

    Never ending growth is a fairy tale. But human race prefers fairy tales to reality. People can’t stand too much reality. It took 200 years for people to accept the Copernican Theory. And 150 years after The Theory of Evolution it is still not believed by many people. Most people have never heard of peak oil. Anthropogenic greenhouse warming is denied by many.

    We spent two million years in the Stone Age which made us hopelessly tribal, competitive, short sighted and slow to react to change. History suggests that by the time we recognize the dire situation we are in, it will be far too late to do anything about. Prepare for the worst. It is overwhelmingly likely.

  3. BillT on Thu, 12th Jul 2012 2:43 pm 

    Newfie, I think we have already passed the point of no return and have no real choice of futures. Like a herd of stampeding buffalo, we are driven to the cliff by the shear numbers around us who don’t want to know what is ahead, or don’t care.

  4. SOS on Thu, 12th Jul 2012 4:35 pm 

    If politics would turn to production and efficient use of the vast, generational supplies of oil and gas now coming on line, we would see a much more efficient and cost friendly economy across the spectrum of goods. Our politicians should be supporting this right now.

    Positive political moves would include favorable rules and regulation allowing industry to locate near these new supplies. This would bring jobs home and create huge amounts of wealth for all americans (think 1960s).

    Both large and small scale power generation should be promoted in areas of new natural gas development.

    Iniatives to turn the heavy haul, delivery, public transportation and all other local fleets to natural gas use would be smart.

    Promotion of efficient delivery systems to keep the new oil resources moving to markt efficiently and with far less cost would lower costs for everyone. Warren Buffet if taking about $30/barrel with his trains. If the pipeline were built the transportation cost of the oil would be around $1. You are paying the difference in artifically high energy prices.

    There are a lot of things that could be done that would provide for low cost, abundent energy for everyone. Politics is in the way. Peak politics = peak oil.

  5. BillT on Fri, 13th Jul 2012 3:46 am 

    $$$$$$$$ SOS. All of your ideas cost big bucks at a time where they are not available or not being invested because most intelligent people see the shale plays as bubbles to be burst when the tide turns. No one is going to build a new factory in the Dakotas when there is no guarantee of enough energy to support them profitably.

    That is NET energy. Remember, factories use resources that have to be hauled into the factory from other places. Then their product has to be hauled to warehouse and then trucked to stores.

    The fleets are not going to be converted enmass just because, for a year or two, natural gas is cheap. Talk is also cheap and the dumb investor has decided his/her mattress is safer than the market.

    It appears you have a financial investment in the success of these dreams, but I would be very surprised if any of your suggestions really happened. Sorry!

  6. Jerry McManus on Fri, 13th Jul 2012 8:29 pm 

    When I first learned about peak oil in late 2004 I quickly found out there was a whole spectrum of views on what the near future was likely to hold.

    On one extreme there were predictions of a zombie apocalypse, a sudden and catastrophic collapse of industrial civilization as critical oil supplies reached a sharp peak and rapidly declined dragging everything else down with it.

    On another extreme were predictions of continued and uninterrupted abundance. A glut of ultra cheap oil supplies guaranteeing rapid global economic growth as far as the eye can see.

    Somewhere in between is where we find ourselves today. Economic collapse. Global food riots and social instability. Resource wars. Climate disasters so frequent they have become routine. Increasingly totalitarian police states. Desperate measures by economic and political elite’s to maintain business as usual, no matter what the cost. And, most importantly, critical energy supplies that are rapidly decreasing in quality even as they continue to increase in costs, both environmental as wall as economic.

    How likely is it that these trends will be reversed? Will techno fantasies of so-called “renewable” energy magically ride to the rescue and solve all our problems? Or is it all downhill from here?

  7. MKohnen on Fri, 13th Jul 2012 9:12 pm 

    @ Jerry McManus

    Well put!

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