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Energy and the Mother of Invention

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby MonteQuest » Sat 10 Jun 2006, 21:39:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rwwff', 'I') see that we are simply saying the same thing back and forth, though I think you are missing the point that I think your idea of how things ultimately will fall out is 95% likely to be the way it ends up. Mostly because, as I mentioned, I doubt fusion works on any scale smaller than a star, and I think true geothermal may be beyond the reach of engineering on any scale shorter than a thousand years.

On the other hand, I can't completely discount the possibility that fusion might work. I also can not ignore the fact that the leadership and actions of about 3 billion people have decided to "go for broke", they will either achieve fusion, or take the current biosphere down into a putrid, sooty, carbon swollen hell. There isn't any middle ground, the decision has been made. Right or wrong, its done.

So far, your arguments have demonstrated why you believe that to have been the wrong decision. However, nothing in your arguments have demonstrated anything to rebut the proposition that the decision has already been made to go "all in".



And I wasn't trying to rebutt that proposition. All was was saying was that there just may not be the energy to go "all in". Even if we could develop fusion, it would take decades to develop and distribute it.

I'm talking about ramping up solar, wind, geothermal, etc. The current batch of renewable technologies that could be brought to bear on the energy problem.

Look at it this way: Peak oil will cause us to reduce consumption to meet supply. That is a given.

Let's say we lose 5% instead of being able to add 3%.

That makes for a 8% shortfall. A decline plus an inability to increase it.

So, now we have only 92% of the energy we demand.

Out of that 92% you must take 3% for growth to service the debt and create new jobs, clothe house and feed the newcomers.

Now you have 89%. We must make an 11% cut in economic/energy activity in order to match supply, which results in job loss and business failures.

Now you must re-employ those displaced workers whose jobs were cut due to conservation measures to cut demand on "useless occupations" and superfluous energy consumption taking it from the only remaining source of energy.

Now you have 78%, using 11% to replace the jobs with productive employment and useful purchases.

But now you have cut 11% from the economy again (no where else to get the energy), so you create more job losses and business failures. In other words, it matters not what their occupation is, it requires energy.

When you speak of the market making corrections, yes, this is true, but in the past when the market was making corrections there was an overall net increase in energy consumption as products and occupations were phased out and replaced, not a decline.

"Only with growth do all plants get watered."

Meanwhile, you are trying to wage resource wars and ramp up alternatives energies, taking more from the 78%, causing more job loss and business failures.

Some where, sometime, this loss must be absorbed as a reduction in living standards.

Bottom-line, you cannot grow in a declining energy base. All you can do is lower the standard of living and reduce per capita consumption to free up energy for any kind of necessary expansion.

When you stop to think of the scale of the problem to replace fossil fuels with alternatives, this will take trillions of dollars and terawatts of energy to bring to fruition.

I keep asking where the energy will come from. I'll tell you , from the only place where you can find an abundant supply of fossil fuel energy---The American Standard of Living. Which, by the way , "Is not negotiable."
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby rwwff » Sat 10 Jun 2006, 23:50:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '
')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')So far, your arguments have demonstrated why you believe that to have been the wrong decision. However, nothing in your arguments have demonstrated anything to rebut the proposition that the decision has already been made to go "all in".


And I wasn't trying to rebutt that proposition. All was was saying was that there just may not be the energy to go "all in". Even if we could develop fusion, it would take decades to develop and distribute it.


Then all we are disagreeing about is what all-in means. Even a man with only a penny left to his name can go all in. It just means his wager is just that single penny. In our case as a global organism, we have the lifeblood of 6 billion humans and a few billion other medium and large animals that we can wager. And the wager has been placed.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o, now we have only 92% of the energy we demand.


Change to, "now we have only 92% of the energy we currently demand." Then I'd have absolutely no objection to the statement. "we would otherwise demand" would be ok, but is a bit fuzzy. "we demand" is fuzzy beyond all ability to calculate.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Bottom-line, you cannot grow in a declining energy base. All you can do is lower the standard of living and reduce per capita consumption to free up energy for any kind of necessary expansion.


I think thats exactly what I was saying, though I phrase it differently in terms of the price / demand curve.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')I keep asking where the energy will come from. I'll tell you , from the only place where you can find an abundant supply of fossil fuel energy---The American Standard of Living. Which, by the way , "Is not negotiable."


Why do you people keep listening to what dribbels out of the mouths of politicians. The actions of politicians are the only thing worth any attention at all; and the actions of all the politicians tell us that the current US Standard of living is known to be out of whack and they are deseperately hunting for any and every possible way to lower it gently towards something more closely resembling that of our competitors. No Japanese middle class family drives 20,000 miles per year. No Japanese middle class family lives in a 2500 sq ft house. No Japanese middle class family eats 400 pounds of beef a year. Yet we do all that without a thought. And the Japanese are perhaps the only competitor of ours that even remotely resembles our standard of living; most of the rest are way, way below us.

Politicians are not stupid. They know that they can not speek the truth about the situation and still get elected. They also know that people care most about the show, not the votes and signatures. Show up on TV, scream loud and long about the injuries suffered by American workers at the hands of global corporations; then turn around and place votes and contracts that utilize those same global corporations to move money and tasks around in order to reduce the imbalances in the system. The job of these politicians is to serve us, not necessarily blindly obey; a gentle drop over a few years might make a few people nautious, but we'll still all eat silly amounts of food, watch TV, and more or less remain comfortable. If they drop the ball, by obeying, and there is a struggle upwards, the crash that follows will be unmistakeable and very uncomfortable. At which point we'll fire them for having obeyed us; we'll replace them with folks that can remember how to lie convincingly while doing what needs to be done to make sure we aren't hungry tomorrow.

So, to put it bluntly, of course the American standard of living is totally negotiable; it always has been, is now, and for as long as congress meets, will continue to be.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby TonyPrep » Sun 11 Jun 2006, 01:56:28

I'm not sure that some posters here understand what you're saying, Monte. You make a good point though. If current energy production is x, then that would have to be increased (x+y) in order for y amount of energy to be used to build alternatives, including wind turbines and nuclear fusion plants. If it can't be increased, then either the alternatives don't get built or someone has to give up y from x, and that will result in a reduction in economic activity.

The only mitigating factor may be if that the alternatives result in a net increase in energy available, so that the sacrifices, to get y, pay off in the long run. However, I'm not optimistic that alternatives will increase the size of the energy cake.

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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby MonteQuest » Sun 11 Jun 2006, 02:13:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'I')'m not sure that some posters here understand what you're saying, Monte. You make a good point though. If current energy production is x, then that would have to be increased (x+y) in order for y amount of energy to be used to build alternatives, including wind turbines and nuclear fusion plants. If it can't be increased, then either the alternatives don't get built or someone has to give up y from x, and that will result in a reduction in economic activity.


Precisely. And then someone will have to give up y from x to re-employ those laid off to get y to build the alternatives. And someone will have to give up y from x, to get economic growth for the newcomers. Then someone will have to give up y from x for the waging of resource wars.

Where will the y come from? From your standard of living.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he only mitigating factor may be if that the alternatives result in a net increase in energy available, so that the sacrifices, to get y, pay off in the long run. However, I'm not optimistic that alternatives will increase the size of the energy cake.


Precisely again. Lets' say they will increase the net energy. How do we get people to stop consuming long enough to get them built?

Who will be first to give up their lifestyle while we build wind farms that won't produce anything while under construction and may take years?

Net energy is going to be a big buzzword in the near future.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby MonteQuest » Sun 11 Jun 2006, 02:22:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rwwff', ' ')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')I keep asking where the energy will come from. I'll tell you , from the only place where you can find an abundant supply of fossil fuel energy---The American Standard of Living. Which, by the way , "Is not negotiable."


Why do you people keep listening to what dribbels out of the mouths of politicians.


Who says I am listening? I'm watching. My point was that it isn't going to be the American Standard of Living the neocons plan on using to fuel our transition, it will be where the "other " abundant oil is, in the ME.

So far, it is not working too well. And plan B is ethanol? :lol:
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby rwwff » Sun 11 Jun 2006, 02:56:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('rwwff', ' ')
Why do you people keep listening to what dribbels out of the mouths of politicians.


Who says I am listening? I'm watching. My point was that it isn't going to be the American Standard of Living the neocons plan on using to fuel our transition, it will be where the "other " abundant oil is, in the ME.

So far, it is not working too well. And plan B is ethanol? :lol:


Just seemed like you thought the president's statement had some non propaganda value. But you've got the neocon plan pretty well understood, though your evaluation of success is perhaps tainted by political preference.

Big question of the day becomes: Are Iraqi oil contracts being let in US dollars, or in Euros?

Last time I checked, it was in dollars. That is the pure, unrefined definition of total victory. And to coldly evaluate it, I'd say such a victory alone is well worth a sacrifice on the scale of Vietnam, and we're no where near that particular benchmark.

The fact that we also gain some huge, permanent bases in Iraq from which to advance other international policy objectives is of course a sweet little nibble as well.

As to Ethanol, its sole purpose is to drive up the price of corn, doesn't matter whether they use that fuel in cars or to fuel bonfires in Tehran. The object is to remove some US grown corn from the food market and see that the farmers get a little tip for the trouble. Makes a good babble point though. It is kinda funny that the startup actually caused us to import ethanol! But the corn growers and ethanol cookers will catch up, lots of corn will be removed from the market and the price of the remaining grain on the market will make lots of farmers, both tiny and huge, more profitable.

So to lurch back to the topic exactly, the neocons do in fact plan to use everyone elses standard of living up first, before eating into our own. It is certainly very unfair, and quite heavy handed, but it works, and it is in the self-interest of the United States.

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1) use theirs up first, then use ours.
2) take all you can, give nothing back.
3) real assets in, scribbly green paper out.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby Omnitir » Sun 11 Jun 2006, 09:43:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Monte', '
')I keep asking where the energy will come from. I'll tell you , from the only place where you can find an abundant supply of fossil fuel energy---The American Standard of Living.

The American Standard of living is obviously somewhat large. There is a tremendous amount of energy “in reserve” right there.

Regarding energy and the mother of invention; pre industrial history is full of examples of innovation that came about without the help of easily available energy. Yes cheap energy is good for innovation, but it is not a prerequisite. In fact, cheap energy may be hindering innovation.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby MonteQuest » Sun 11 Jun 2006, 13:01:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Omnitir', ' ')Regarding energy and the mother of invention; pre industrial history is full of examples of innovation that came about without the help of easily available energy. Yes cheap energy is good for innovation, but it is not a prerequisite. In fact, cheap energy may be hindering innovation.


Re-read my first post. You are missing the point. It's not about cost. It's about supply.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby Omnitir » Mon 12 Jun 2006, 01:04:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '
')Re-read my first post. You are missing the point. It's not about cost. It's about supply.


Firstly, your first post argues that $this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', ' ')Cheapness, not necessity, is often the mother of innovation.
.

However it’s irrelevant to my argument, as cost and supply are intimately related. It may have been more accurate for me to say “cheap and abundant energy is good for innovation, but it is not a prerequisite”, but that doesn’t negate the point that innovation occurs with or without plentiful energy.

You argue that innovation won’t occur without plentiful energy. But the strongest incentive for innovation is when it’s urgently needed (such as post peak), not when it’s not necessary (such as the past 50 years).

The necessity of a post peak world to develop ways of reducing energy consumption, reducing capital investment requirements and reducing resource consumption, will be the mother of invention. Necessity is the mother of invention, not energy.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby MonteQuest » Mon 12 Jun 2006, 01:27:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Omnitir', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '
')Re-read my first post. You are missing the point. It's not about cost. It's about supply.


Firstly, your first post argues that $this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', ' ')Cheapness, not necessity, is often the mother of innovation.


Note the use of the word "often." Followed by:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')owever, if we stick with the original premise of necessity, then why isn’t Bangladesh a technological utopia?


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')owever it’s irrelevant to my argument, as cost and supply are intimately related. It may have been more accurate for me to say “cheap and abundant energy is good for innovation, but it is not a prerequisite”, but that doesn’t negate the point that innovation occurs with or without plentiful energy.

Innvovation cannot occur at all without energy. We are not talking about plentiful, we are talking about not here at all. Where do you get y, if you cannot increase x?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')ou argue that innovation won’t occur without plentiful energy. But the strongest incentive for innovation is when it’s urgently needed (such as post peak), not when it’s not necessary (such as the past 50 years).

And where do you get the energy to innovate? Do you think it is not urgently needed in Bangladesh? Incentive does not create energy.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he necessity of a post peak world to develop ways of reducing energy consumption, reducing capital investment requirements and reducing resource consumption, will be the mother of invention.

Not without the consequences clearly laid out here. Where will you get y, if not from x?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')ecessity is the mother of invention, not energy.

I get so tired of boiling the ocean. Some people just never get it.

Never said it was. I said energy was the Father of Invention.

Necessity can do nothing without the energy to do it.

Re-read my first post. You are still missing the point.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby Rufoman » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 08:27:12

Excuse me gentlemen, but I strongly disagree with the statement "Necessity is the mother of invention" people don't seem to invent at all when faced with a crisis, honestly. How many times have people realised they had a problem and invented a solution to it? I would say very seldom without the energy and perhaps a handful of times with it.

For example cars, we need cars now to get from one point to another, trucks to transport our goods, busses to move masses of people etc. But they weren't invented because someone realiesed we needed them, they were invented because someone came up with the idea of a machine that saved time at the cost of a lot of energy and at that stage energy was very easy to get. The idea let people inventers get a lot of money and now we have built our lives around these things.

If, for example, there's a problem people don't go "right we need a solution, all-out research!" they go somehting more like "damn, we have a problem, however we'll spend a decade or two in denial and let the problem get very serious or, hopefully disappear.
Another thing is that people don't always do what's in their best interests, for example a farmer may know that it is in his best interests to stay as a farmer (or he might not) but nonetheless he might realise that he can make a lot more money by say selling his land or turning it into a golf course, both courses of action of bad because he is now "dead weight" as it is, he gives nothing of value. But he is now a lot richer and better able to handle the rising costs of living.

Lastly remember that most jobs would be very badly effected by say, 100$pb or 200$pb oil and many, many people would lose their jobs, say a someone who works in a car-factory, because of oil prices being so high they can no longer afford to get to work and the cars are no longer selling so well, because they cost more to make and operate.
Thus the man would lose his job and become even more dead weight, furthermore it's not like he can just go off and become a farmer or something because...
1. Someone else likely owns any good farming land he might move to and 2. there's no way someone without a proper education could hope to farm effectively without the aid of machines and other tech-marvels that help feed us all. Hell, I'm not even sure if the entire USA were farmers that they could support themselves with the amount of soil-fertility damage being inflicted and the lack of fertilisers and machinery (both of which are already big cramps on many farmers today).

Well that's all I got, if my views are perhaps wrong I would appreciate it if you do not flame me or insult my opinions or any statements I have made, merely point out any errors and correct them with a fitting piece of information from a reliable webpage or other resource.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby rwwff » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 12:04:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Rufoman', '2'). there's no way someone without a proper education could hope to farm effectively without the aid of machines and other tech-marvels that help feed us all.


Before jumping down your throat I'd like for you to clarify what you mean by "proper education".
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby MonteQuest » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 14:13:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Rufoman', 'E')xcuse me gentlemen, but I strongly disagree with the statement "Necessity is the mother of invention" people don't seem to invent at all when faced with a crisis, honestly. How many times have people realised they had a problem and invented a solution to it?


Wll, first off, that is not the topic. The topic is "where will the energy come from to bring to fruition the results of our innovations?"

But to answer your question: We invented the steam engine to pump water out of coal mines. It was a "necessity" to be able to get to the coal. I can think of hundreds of more examples.

Let's please stay on topic.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby highlander » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 16:24:23

Where is the energy for transition coming from?
Monte: you said it, we will lower our standard of living.
Peak oil is not peak energy. It will be a big hit on cheap, easy transportation of commodities. We already have an energy grid. Developoment of fusion power, if it happens, will plug into the existing grid. So will solar and wind. So will the natural gas and coal generating plants. The near future of industrial societies? look at the 1930's US, or present day China. Looks pretty hazy to me.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby Comp_Lex » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 16:56:11

MonteQuest, I think that you're overlooking something. I think that you can shift energy from one "place" to another "place". (Like in Star Trek: "Divert all power to shields!!"))

Let we have some energy*, then the energy is distributed as follows:

95 % invested in "trash", 5% invested in renewables.**

And then we have PO and some years later the "leaders" all scream:

"Damn! We don't have enough energy for business as usual!" and then they "divert" a tremendous amount of energy from "trash" to "renewables". So the situation is going to look as follows:

5 % invested in "trash", 95 % invested in renewables.**

and all the "trash" are going to bust.

*) Amount is irrelevant. Well, one thing is for sure: We don't have as much energy PostPO as we have right now.

**) Percentages are not in comformity with reality. It's about the idea.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby matt21811 » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 18:49:40

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '
')If the pie is cut for six and there are seven, then yes, someone else
must get a smaller piece if the seventh gets any, not a bigger slice.

And where, pray tell do you get the energy to make pies?

In the future, energy will be like a pie that gets smaller every year.

Each year, in order to get a piece of pie, it will have to be smaller.

It is from this shrinking pie that the energy for mitigation will have to come from.

How will we divide a shrinking pie?


Sorry, I've been away for the weekend.

I brought up the pie metaphor to show the way different people think about economic activity.

Energy might become like a pie that gets smaller every year (could happen in a century I guess) but pies aren't the only food I can eat. You seem to think that oil (or is that energy? the goal posts keep moving here) is the only economic game in town when clearly it isn't. So how will we dide up the shrinking pie. I'll leave you to fight over the pie and I'll go bake my own.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n a capitalistic system of supply demand, there is no such thing as wasteful activity. All activity, whether wasteful of not, provides jobs and drives GDP growth. Just because you switch the use of energy from one sector to another does nothing to address net energy.

Energy does not care what it gets used for.


Thats right, energy doesnt care what it is used for. But the economy does, depending on supply. If there is a large supply then the resource can get used for activities that contribute nothing to the economy. If supply is tight then the resource gets directed towards the highest economic return.

There are a few trueisms that you have used that I want to debunk.

I want to point out that all (energy consuming) activity does NOT automatically contribute to the economy. Switching energy from one economic sector to another can in fact address net energy as some sectors are energy positive. Switching energy from one sector to another can be increase economic output because some sectors provide a lot more economic out put for a given energy input. Another falicy is that peak oil is peak energy.

I think this little bit of maths typifies how you are getting it wrong.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')If 50% goes to waste and 50 % goes to "useful stuff" and you make 100% useful, you still use 100 kw. The problem is after the conversion to 100% useful, you now get, let's say, 75% of the required energy to be useful post-peak.

Now out of this 75%, where do you get the energy to grow, re-employ those people who lost their jobs when sales dropp0ed 25%, not to mention the new demand to bring innovations to fruition?


OK, lets plug in some numbers into your equation.
Lets say I'm a letter courier and I earn $500 a week driving around moving letters between companies. On the weekend I drive to the various beaches and go for a swim. Lets say I use 50 litres doing work and 50 litres driving to the beach (the best beaches are way up north.) So for 100 litres we get $500 worth of economic activity.

Now acording to your calculations I can cut out my wastefull trips to the beach and generate a maximum $1000 for 100 litres. Thats it. We are at 100% efficiency. The economy has no more to give. We are all doomed.

Except that I change to my motor cycle which only uses 25 litres to do my weeks work. So now I'm at $2000 per 100 litres. But hey thats 200% efficiency. It is imposible. Surely such a paradim shift required vast investment of our already shrinking energy supply.

Next year the companies are planning on just faxing the letters. I'll be getting a new job as a clerk sending faxes.

The problem is that none of your arguements reflect the reality of the economy. They fall appart time and time again with the simplest counter example. But I dont expect being wrong to stop you arguing.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby rwwff » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 19:39:20

Matt, your courier example is awesome. I wish I'd have thought of it!
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby MonteQuest » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 20:06:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Comp_Lex', 'M')onteQuest, I think that you're overlooking something. I think that you can shift energy from one "place" to another "place".


Hardly, I covered that in spades. Energy doesn't care what it gets used for. How does shifting use from one sector to another reduce net energy use or free up any energy for other uses?

What is this "trash" you speak of? Wasted energy? There is no "wasted" energy that does not create a paycheck for millions.
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby MonteQuest » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 21:27:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('matt21811', ' ')You seem to think that oil (or is that energy? the goal posts keep moving here) is the only economic game in town when clearly it isn't. So how will we dide up the shrinking pie. I'll leave you to fight over the pie and I'll go bake my own.


Hogwash! So, you are going to build nuclear plants with wood? Oil and other fossil fuels are the only game in town.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hats right, energy doesnt care what it is used for. But the economy does, depending on supply. If there is a large supply then the resource can get used for activities that contribute nothing to the economy.


Hogwash! Nobody gets energy for free. All wasted energy gets bought and paid for before it is wasted. People spend money while they are out wasting energy.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') want to point out that all (energy consuming) activity does NOT automatically contribute to the economy.


Hogwash! All physical activity requires energy. People have to pay for the energy they use. Other people count on their activities to make a living.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')witching energy from one economic sector to another can in fact address net energy as some sectors are energy positive. Switching energy from one sector to another can be increase economic output because some sectors provide a lot more economic out put for a given energy input.


Jevon's Paradox. We are not looking to increase economic output. We are looking to find the energy to build nuclear plants, wind farms, solar arrays, etc.

Where will it come from if x + y is needed to produce them and you cannot increase x? To get y, you must take from x.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nother falicy is that peak oil is peak energy.

I never said it was. But since we don't have a replacement for oil at the moment to build renewables, it might as well be.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')K, lets plug in some numbers into your equation.
Lets say I'm a letter courier and I earn $500 a week driving around moving letters between companies. On the weekend I drive to the various beaches and go for a swim. Lets say I use 50 litres doing work and 50 litres driving to the beach (the best beaches are way up north.) So for 100 litres we get $500 worth of economic activity.

Now acording to your calculations I can cut out my wastefull trips to the beach and generate a maximum $1000 for 100 litres. Thats it. We are at 100% efficiency. The economy has no more to give. We are all doomed.

No, for 100 liters you get $500 pay to you, some of that goes to the gas station, some to the tire dealer, some to the insurance guy, some to the places you eat along the way, some to beach toys, some to road taxes, etc, etc.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')xcept that I change to my motor cycle which only uses 25 litres to do my weeks work. So now I'm at $2000 per 100 litres. But hey thats 200% efficiency. It is imposible. Surely such a paradim shift required vast investment of our already shrinking energy supply.

And now you cut revenue to all those who support your car use. 1 in 6 jobs.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he problem is that none of your arguements reflect the reality of the economy. They fall appart time and time again with the simplest counter example. But I dont expect being wrong to stop you arguing.

The problem is you don't think your arguments through. Switching use to more conservative or efficient means just cuts jobs or increases the use. Somebody, somewhere has to absorb the loss.

You can't gain or create energy by taking it away from someone else. You can, but now they must find more. Where do they find more (y) if x is maxed out? It must come from x.
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
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Re: Energy and the Mother of Invention

Postby TonyPrep » Tue 13 Jun 2006, 22:14:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('matt21811', 'E')nergy might become like a pie that gets smaller every year (could happen in a century I guess) but pies aren't the only food I can eat.
So what energy can you use instead of energy? Yes, you can switch (to some degree) between energy sources but you still need energy.$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('matt21811', 'I') want to point out that all (energy consuming) activity does NOT automatically contribute to the economy.
Could you give an example?$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('matt21811', 'N')ow acording to your calculations I can cut out my wastefull trips to the beach and generate a maximum $1000 for 100 litres.
I can't see how you get this figure. Only if you work twice as hard, with no other energy inputs other than your personal fuel. And you are not at 100% efficiency, as you think others would claim. Switching to your motor bike may also not yield a doubling of efficiency. That's a simplistic calculation that first of all assumes that your motor bike will use fuel twice as efficiently, that you are no more likely to have accidents, that you are no more likely to need repairs to it, that you can do your work with the bike, and so on. Whilst your assumptions may be valid for some individuals, they may not be valid generally.$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('matt21811', 'B')ut hey thats 200% efficiency. It is imposible.
200% efficiency is impossible and I doubt anyone here would classify that as 200% efficiency. You can't use nonsense to provide examples.$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('matt21811', 'T')hey fall appart time and time again with the simplest counter example.Except that you haven't provided any. Look at the broader picture. Apart from occasional improvements in efficiency or productivity, increasing economic activity requires more energy.

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