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I have a good question...will someone answer?

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I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby Lifer » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 02:46:50

Hi, I go by lifer, a male 38 year old living in Canada. I'm fairly well read on peak oil theory, but I have a doubt that I would love someone well-informed respond to.

So we're running out of cheap oil. I get that. Production is set to decline at a rate of 2% per year, while demand is expected to increase. OK.

BUT - Look at how much oil the US alone wastes. If the US were to put even a little restraint on their oil energy consumption, something they could do with considerable ease when you look at how much they (we) waste senselessly, can't we more than offset the decrease in oil production?

Furthermore, the notion that demand for oil is expected to increase, isn't that based on current levels of availability of oil? I mean if oil production starts to decline, and the global economy goes into even a minor recession, oil consumption will plumet.

My feeling (please correct me if you have evidence to the contrary) is that oil prices will just yo-yo up and down for decades to come, but never create the catastraphe of total societal breakdown. If that comes, it seems more likely to come from social causes (increased crime, perhaps, or collapse of health care...) than some explosion in food prices due to oil shortages or a collapse of infrastructure due to lack of gas.

Any feedback?

(PS. I am, believe it or not, new to the internet, and I've just found out about the whole idea of forums. It's quite exciting, and I'd be curious to meet people with an intelligent (not pompous) concern for the globe, for the moral American political wasteland, and for friendship. Peak oil is exciting, because it almost gives one a sense of hope in a wierd way. My view and feeling is that the world is a mess as it is, and an impending healing crises may well be the only way to something better - although I am starting to feel pessimistic that any change is possible. Anyone with words on keeping alive one's sense of love in this mess of a world would be quite appreciated...hope this messsage isn't too personal.)

Sincerely,


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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby Micki » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 03:14:10

Welcome to the Internet Lifer, hope it will be around for a while.

The questions raised will probably trigger different kinds of answers and I am somewhat split in my own thinking but let's respond with what I think is possible scenarios.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')UT - Look at how much oil the US alone wastes. If the US were to put even a little restraint on their oil energy consumption, something they could do with considerable ease when you look at how much they (we) waste senselessly, can't we more than offset the decrease in oil production?


On an individual level we don't tend to do much if we aren't forced to and same thing applies to companies.
It all comes down to $$$. We will keep doing what we are doing as long as we can afford it.
Given the slowing of the US economy I also don't think they will impose anything that raises the costs for the companies. In fact I find the opposite more likely - print more money to subsidize failing models just to keep things going a bit longer.
"Voluntary" cut-backs in energy usage will therefore only happen once the economy suffers.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')urthermore, the notion that demand for oil is expected to increase, isn't that based on current levels of availability of oil? I mean if oil production starts to decline, and the global economy goes into even a minor recession, oil consumption will plumet.

Yes...and no...but I agree, mainly yes. It depends on how you define demand.
Population is likely to continue growing and that generates a want or need for energy, especially if we want to continue living in the same standard as today.
My opinion is that demand is relative to the price.
As price goes up, demand goes down.
Businesses close, people don't go on holidays, no need to drive anywhere, can't afford to go shopping etc.

I am however not sure where you are getting this "minor" recession from. But OK, let's say there is just a minor recession, that also means that oil was only saved for a little while and it won't take long to catch up. Just like the early 80s recession most likely pushed PO from round 2000 to 2005.

After that, if we don't invent something very efficient very quickly, we are back to an ever declining energy environment.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')y feeling (please correct me if you have evidence to the contrary) is that oil prices will just yo-yo up and down for decades to come, but never create the catastraphe of total societal breakdown. If that comes, it seems more likely to come from social causes (increased crime, perhaps, or collapse of health care...) than some explosion in food prices due to oil shortages or a collapse of infrastructure due to lack of gas.


We don't have evidence of what will happen in the future, although we have a few who seem to claim to be prophets.
Yes, wild swings in the economy could very well create a yo-yo effect, both in the short and long term.
I however see social breakdown being fuelled by housing and food costs (with lack of income). If the population for instance had free housing and cheap food, I think there would be little rioting as opposed to if they can't afford proper roof over the head and food.
I however see the price bias being to the upside as it becomes common knowledge that oil and later gas, coal and uranium production has peaked. The down swings will be shorter and of less magnitude.

Looks like work came in an interrupted me and I better attend to that while I stil have a job, so we'll continue at another time
Cheers...Micki
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby Narz » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 03:53:22

Welcome Lifer. I'm not qualified to answer your questions but wish you the best and hope you enjoy this weird and wacky world of Internet forums. It's a great resource, I met my GF thru it as well as a number of friends (albeit mostly distant ones).
“Seek simplicity but distrust it”
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby pup55 » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 07:41:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f the US were to put even a little restraint on their oil energy consumption, something they could do with considerable ease when you look at how much they (we) waste senselessly, can't we more than offset the decrease in oil production?


Welcome, Lifer:

You are quite right, a considerable amount of the US energy use is completely wasted.

But, unfortunately, there is an attitude within the US, maybe about 1/3 of the population, that says that people should be able to consume as much of anything as they want, as long as they can afford it. This goes with food, energy, water, or whatever the resource is. I cannot explain exactly how this happened. It's why about 1/3 of the population is obese.

Be that as it may, among this segment of the population, it is a sign of weakness that they should have to sacrifice or show restraint on anything. Also there is no political constituency at all for sacrifice. When Jimmy Carter tried to lay out the problem to us in the 80's, he was criticized not because of the sacrifice, but that it implied weakness.

Similarly, in the last election, when John Kerry suggested that people start car pooling more, the opposition ridiculed this position as "crazy" or "pessimistic".

So, no leader at the top will want to step out on that limb again unless the situation reaches absolute emergency levels.

There is still a substantial percentage of the population, maybe around 75%, that still believes that there is plenty of oil around, and some conspiracy is happening, by some combination of the oil companies or the arabs or the government, to keep from pumping full out and making the price cheap again. There is a substantial percentage of the population that actually believes it is OK to invade some other country to take the oil.

Also a lot of the local political people, and I am talking about the mayors, county commissioners, etc. in the suburban and smaller cities, that are directly involved in either selling cars, building houses or strip malls, or otherwise pouring concrete. As long as this is the case, we will have cars and strip malls. Any reduction in driving has a direct impact on these two activities. So, there is no constituency for any sort of energy reduction at the local level.

Now, this is not to say that the situation is hopeless. At some point, if the emergency is so great, or the price gets so high that some of the hard core 1/3 of the population wakes up and agrees that there is a problem, some action will happen. But, until then, forget it.

The question is: will we be too far gone before this happens.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby dsula » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 07:46:33

I actually agree with Lifer.

I believe we will drop into a recession, mild or not so mild I don't know. However due to limited energy we simply will never get out of it anymore. As soon as we are about to recover we get right hit over the head by high energy prices or oil shortages. That means we will linger in this recession for a whole long time and things will gradually getting a little different. People riding scooters to work instead of SUV, people not going on vacations anymore. People planting their garden with vegtables instead of having a lawn. Using hand powered tools instead of power tools. Turning off lights during the night, wearing double sweaters and set the thermostate to 55 in winter instead of 72. Using a vent instead of AC. Fixing the broken alarm clock instead of throwing it out.
All of a sudden it becomes cheaper again to buy your shoes from the local shoemaker instead of the chineese crap I have to put up with nowadays (I'm looking forward to that one, believe me)

The potential savings are huge without impacting quality of life at all, remember quality of life is not equal the amount of chineese crap you can buy. I argue that life even gets better without all this wastefulness.

On another note I'm totally confused about is this constant oil demand outstrips supply talk. Demand outstripped supply 50 years ago. I know because I remember my grandfather complaining how he cannot afford to buy gas for his tractor and isntead had to use the horses. Price adjusts demand.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby TheTurtle » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 09:49:38

Lifer, since you had already introduced yourself in another thread in the Welcome forum, I moved this thread here to the Open Discussion forum where more people should respond to it.

Welcome to PO.com, by the way.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby Benzin » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 10:44:48

From what I understand, it is all the waste that keeps US economy going. Sad but true.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby grabby » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 11:18:51

The theory sounds good, but it doesn't add up.

We use 83 million barrels of oil a day.

We have 2 trillon barrels available of which we used half already
how many years will it take to burn through the remaining trillion barrels at 83 million barrels a day?


that is 30 billion barrels a year.

Now.

The sweet light thin stuff is changing to thick sludge sour.


Let us assume they lied a lot on the 2 trillion and the 1 trillion left

lets say they lied by half

that is 15 years of thicker oil

put it together and yo get at least 10% downgrade in pump in 5 years.

in 1974 the paralysis causing the oil shortage was 2-3 %

in less than 5 years we are going to get paralyzed.

with nobody able to pump us out of it.

The key is this - when the oil gets SHORT

the people start to pig out.

just as soon as there is an eentsy weentsy shortage and even a POSSIBILITY of not filloling your car tomorrow-

What do people do?
what do you think?
THey grab ALL their gas containers.

I was driving in 1974.

I saw trucks with waterbed mattresses in the back and barrels and 50 gallon drums going to the pumps and loading up

in two days THERE WAS NO GAS AT ALL!

and that was a 2% decrease.

Peak oil is all about pigs over pigging and getting out of control

it makes sense to CONSERVE when there is a shortage but this is guaranteed not to happen.
evveryone will INCREASE their storage.
and a several week long collapse which will never get better.

less than five years you guys will be walking. wait and see, I have estimated.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby PolestaR » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 11:32:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lifer', 'B')UT - Look at how much oil the US alone wastes. If the US were to put even a little restraint on their oil energy consumption, something they could do with considerable ease when you look at how much they (we) waste senselessly, can't we more than offset the decrease in oil production?


As someone briefly touched upon the so called waste is fueling millions of jobs. As long as millions? of new jobs could be created (why aren't they available now???) then there would be no major problem in cutting back consumption across the board. Montequest and others cover this in much more detail in some of their posts. The idea of waste when it comes to energy is a bit of a misnomer because the energy does go somewhere, most of the time into another persons pocket.

Of course the other problem is people don't want to lower their quality of life, which is where most of the "waste" would be cut. So most won't willingly do it.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby OilIsMastery » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 11:54:30

This is all part of Bush's plan muahaha.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby AirlinePilot » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 12:17:14

Welcome Lifer!

Forums are a great resource, but be very careful about what you take away from them. Learn to act as you would in person and try not to hide behind the anonymity of the net as some do. It causes extremism and idiocy.

As to the problem of PO, do some reading here. There are many good pieces by some pretty intelligent folks and you can learn a lot fairly quickly.

I'm 46 and it has taken me two years to come to grips with the fact that the future will not be what I had thought it might be.

There are two main concepts to grasp I believe concerning Peak Oil. One is the timing. Timing of when we reach and pass the Peak and time to mitigate. After you learn of the scale of the problem and what just small decline in production means, you wont be quite so confident about mankinds future.

The other huge thing to come to grips with is what a DECLINE in production forever means to the way we live now. There has been no planning or leadership to address lowering growth and consumption. It is this realization which also may have the potential to truly whack us down the road. If you bring the topic up to folks who dont know about it, or dont WANT to know, watch their reactions. It's a clue to how this is going to go down.

The last thing to take away from these forums is to understand the scale of the problems we face with this production/quality decline. We are beginning to see it right now with refineries. If we have not started some form of conservation and or mitigation by now, we are like the Titannic on that cold night in the North Atlantic. We are racing towards the Iceberg thinking all is well and throwing caution to the wind. There is no time left to avoid it no matter how hard we try.

Once you understand the concepts it's hard not to walk away with ominous feelings of foreboding about the future. I try now to enjoy each day a little more because this time, this paradigm of life as we know it, is most assuredly going to change. Many will fight to save it and mankind won't go queitly into the night.

As GI Joe says, "knowing is half the battle!"
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby Twilight » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 13:32:03

I am not alone in thinking that a 2% decline rate is optimistic. It could be double or triple that. Advances in technology have allowed for higher production rates, but the flipside is higher decline rates, some are into double digits. A number of important producers are or will be seeing decline rates of 7-10%.

A large part of our economies run off the waste. Cut away the fat, and you cut away the livelihoods of a large proportion of people employed in the service economy. Reskilling would mean getting used to working the land, telling that to people who have never performed any physically demanding work, and who have a lifelong sense of entitlement.

Unfortunately demand for oil is not inelastic. Demand destruction without fallout is most often suggested by people who have spent too long looking at GDP numbers to see where the real world dependencies are.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby PolestaR » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 13:43:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Twilight', 'I') am not alone in thinking that a 2% decline rate is optimistic. It could be double or triple that. Advances in technology have allowed for higher production rates, but the flipside is higher decline rates, some are into double digits. A number of important producers are or will be seeing decline rates of 7-10%.


I think 7-10% is the most likely as long as the governments exporting the black gold CONTINUE DOING IT. I mean they won't shut off the oil without a good reason because they rely upon the revenue. However you can easily imagine some accidents/terrorist events/natural event which stops a significant amount which could then trigger riots and infrastructure damage world wide. Which could then stop most of the other exporting nations. It's a big possibility, and god knows what will happen once exports stop dramatically, wars galore.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby Blacksmith » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 14:48:02

While oil is in a definite decline mode and is increasing in price, natural gas also in a decline mode is decreasing in value. I believe this is due in part to the possibility of large scale transportation of LNG (liquified natural gas) from parts of the world where it is either being flared or is just being left in the ground.

LNG of coarse is just a temporary fix, but cars and trucks can be retrofitted quite easily and there is a distribution system for natural gas already in place. I'm not better than anyone else at predicting the future, but my experience has alway taught me to expect the unexpected.
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Re: I have a good question...will someone answer?

Unread postby LateGreatPlanetEarth » Wed 08 Aug 2007, 22:01:02

demand and supply will both decrease. that's why when the industrial world goes into a recession, one of these times when it start to climb out of the recession, the lack of energy will cause the economy to ratchet down even futher. so, non-essential activities will be curtailed. remember when they talk about usa gdp, they are actually measuring consumption.
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