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Low Hanging Fruit

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Low Hanging Fruit

Unread postby JohnDenver » Sat 16 Apr 2005, 20:55:47

A lot of people here are making this argument: "People pick the low hanging fruit first, therefore the costs of harvesting resources must increase over the the long term." Let's call this the Low Hanging Fruit hypothesis.

People here are calling the Low Hanging Fruit hypothesis the "Law of Diminishing Returns" (LDR), but I have found no evidence to back up this usage of the term. Here are some definitions of the LDR, as it is found in economics:

"in economics, law stating that if one factor of production is increased while the others remain constant, the overall returns will relatively decrease after a certain point." http://www.bartleby.com/65/di/diminish.html

"When increasing amounts of one factor of production are employed in production along with a fixed amount of some other production factor, after some point, the resulting increases in output of product become smaller and smaller." http://www.auburn.edu/~johnspm/gloss/di ... rns_law_of

The LDR describes a short-term phenomenon, and does not apply when all the factors of production are increased, or when there are significant changes in technology. My impression is that economists are making a distinct point of not subscribing to the Low Hanging Fruit hypothesis because it isn't true.

Here's one example: According to Low Hanging Fruit, it was easier to catch tuna in the year 1550 than it is now, using sonar and massive nets.

Here's another:
If the extraction of commodities becomes harder and harder by the year, then why do they keep getting cheaper and cheaper?
Image

Here's another from Gillett's nanotech paper (thanks Lorenzo!):
"The extraordinary decrease in the cost of computing over the last few decades has already had a significant effect: the cost of domestic [oil] production since 1984 has dropped from $14 to $4/bbl, largely through information technologies (Paul, 2001)." http://www.foresight.org/impact/GillettWhitePaper.txt

This is backed up by the data. Over the long-term, oil has gotten cheaper to find:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/25opec/img010.gif
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/25opec/sld010.htm

And to lift:
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/finance/hig ... img008.gif
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/finance/hig ... sld008.htm

So let's cut through the crap here. Those of you claiming that the Low Hanging Fruit hypothesis is valid need to provide some studies/citations to support it. It is not the Law of Diminishing Returns which economists adhere to.
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Re: Low Hanging Fruit

Unread postby rerere » Sat 16 Apr 2005, 21:58:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')So let's cut through the crap here.

All the 'crap' is your handwaving creation, if there is 'cutting' to do, its is in your head.



$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', 'A') lot of people here are making this argument:


Who? Provide a list.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')"People pick the low hanging fruit first, therefore the costs of harvesting resources must increase over the the long term."


Such a statement ignores how fruit is not oil, but such ignoring is needed for you to have a straw man eh?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')Let's call this the Low Hanging Fruit hypothesis.


It is your straw man, you can call it whatever you want.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')People here are calling the Low Hanging Fruit hypothesis the "Law of Diminishing Returns"


Make up your own term/definition, then equate it to a more common term/definition.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')(LDR), but I have found no evidence to back up this usage of the term.


Gee, you claimed they are equal, then are shocked when they are not.
Could that be because your setting them equal was wrong?


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')"in economics, law stating that if one factor of production is increased while the others remain constant, the overall returns will relatively decrease after a certain point."
http://www.bartleby.com/65/di/diminish.html

"When increasing amounts of one factor of production are employed in production along with a fixed amount of some other production factor, after some point, the resulting increases in output of product become smaller and smaller."
http://www.auburn.edu/~johnspm/gloss/di ... rns_law_of

The LDR describes a short-term phenomenon, and does not apply when all the factors of production are increased, or when there are significant changes in technology. My impression is that economists are making a distinct point of not subscribing to the Low Hanging Fruit hypothesis because it isn't true.


And you ignore that oil is a finite, non renewing resource.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')Here's one example: According to Low Hanging Fruit, it was easier to catch tuna in the year 1550 than it is now, using sonar and massive nets.


If the law of low hanging fruit == the law of dimishing returns (That is your claim) and the LDR sports "while the others remain constant", exactly HOW is a boat from 1550 the same as a boat with sonar and massive nets? Oh, they are not.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')Here's another:
If the extraction of commodities becomes harder and harder by the year, then why do they keep getting cheaper and cheaper?

Again, "while the others remain constant". The dollar has remained constant? The correct 'value' has been applied to the commodity?

Come back when you've thought your 'argument' thru, because the crap needing to cut thru is your own 'logic'.
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This is how I see it..

Unread postby UIUCstudent01 » Sat 16 Apr 2005, 22:28:41

Just to chime in here...
I thought the low-hanging-fruit hypothesis refers to oil drilling and the fact that oil will be more expensive to drill (by buying more technology). And that will be passed on to the consumers.. I think I heard it on a Canadian oil sands/shale thread.

Yeah. Diminishing returns as an economic definition, probably doesn't apply. But, the general idea of diminishing returns seems to work because..
A. It is harder/more complicated to get the oil.
B. It usually costs more. Note that there is a hidden cost if you go back in time and use examples of the past to examples of the present. That hidden cost is having the supporting civilization and framework to work with... example: You can't build a skyscraper without first having steel mills and the fact that you need to have a source of a ton of energy usually coming from fossil fuels which requires more infrastructure and manufactured need to have it there to operate.
C. The technology required to get the more efficient technology had to take alot of energy and be built up by a need to have it there.

Why do commodities get cheaper? Because we do not need them as much. WE DON'T NEED STUFF AS MUCH. Plus, the infrastructure is already in place to do stuff for cheap because of cheap energy already used. Economics has some kind of rule (which I think is part-nonsense) or something that goes something like this: If you had 20 dollars in your pocket, and you were planning to go out for a movie, then if you lost the 20, then you would still go to the movie because you were willing to pay that price with whatever money you still had.

There's alot things that charts and graphs miss with this "Low-hanging fruit" hypothesis. Here's another example: Coal. At first, coal was relatively easy to extract. Nowadays, we have to blow entire hills and stuff. That dynamite never existed before and was made because energy was cheap. The industrial revolution would never have happened if cheap (easy to get) energy was where it is now.

People like to call it progress. I think its a grand simplification purely based on the exploitation of fossil fuels.

With that said, I like playing computer games and computers in general. But the necessary infrastructure and research that went into them 'cost' alot in terms of energy used.
Last edited by UIUCstudent01 on Sat 16 Apr 2005, 22:43:43, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: This is how I see it..

Unread postby JohnDenver » Sat 16 Apr 2005, 22:35:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('UIUCstudent01', 'J')ust to chime in here...
I thought the low-hanging-fruit hypothesis refers to oil drilling and the fact that oil will be more expensive to drill (by buying more technology). And that will be passed on to the consumers.. I think I heard it on a Canadian oil sands/shale thread.


The Low Hanging Fruit hypothesis doesn't apply to the oil sands either:

"Better yet, recent improvements in mining and extraction techniques have cut heavy oil production costs nearly in half since the 1980s, to about $10 per barrel, with more innovation on the way."
http://wired-vig.wired.com/wired/archive/12.07/oil.html
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Unread postby Andy » Sat 16 Apr 2005, 22:48:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '"')Better yet, recent improvements in mining and extraction techniques have cut heavy oil production costs nearly in half since the 1980s, to about $10 per barrel, with more innovation on the way."


John, don't you realize that that $10 figure will not remain $10 when the overall subsidy from Light, sweet crude starts to diminish. Tar Sand oil will increase in price along with the increase in light oil price. Remember, cheap oil subsidizes all other sources of energy. When we use a greater fraction of expensive energy, that subsidy will diminish. I can predict with absolute certainty that tar sands oil will cost more than $10 per barrel as we go into the future.
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Unread postby Wildwell » Sat 16 Apr 2005, 23:20:25

The Law of diminishing returns is based around catch up. It supposes that the more you have the less incentive there is to work for more, so productivity drops. So on theory, the less you have (say decreasing oil supply) the more productivity improves – if productivity improves supposedly you are holding the price down because you get better at doing something. This is one of the reasons economists argue peak oil theory does not apply, although it depends whether one regards oil in the ground as capital in the normal sense, as the crux of the problem relates to natural production rates rather that a capital/work ratio.

Likewise, with low hanging fruit productivity would be less initially and steadily increasing – which is normally regarded as good, although some economists argue not so.

Applying this whole theory to the earth’s natural resources as well renewable sources of energy is complex because of mix, use, efficiency and so on. Is there an every increasing supply of energy? Well you cannot create energy from nothing, but you can put in systems that give you ‘payback’ after a certain amount of time: Solar, wind, hydro and so on. So in that sense we can create a energy overhead over the set finite resources. So logically, the point of the end of ‘low hanging fruit’ would change depending on renewable input and efficiency of the use of finite resources. Depending on technology, deployment and efficiency you may never get to the end of ‘low hanging fruit’.

To make matters more complex, in terms of economy it depends what the resource is being used for. An oil tankers sinking is a complete waste. A gallon of oil to power the lights of a hospital, where the life of a person that becomes a brilliant scientist, who the goes on to invent a new energy source is an extremely good use.

In conclusion it’s inconclusive that low hanging fruit applies or would ever be reached by luck or judgement.
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Unread postby nero » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 00:57:58

I think this thread might be a response to a discussion John and I were having in another thread. I initially used the term "diminishing returns" when refering to the low hanging fruit phenomena and John assumed I was meaning the Law of Diminishing Returns which is not a Law that I had ever heard of before though it is common sense as is the "law" of low hanging fruit.

The problem I have with John's examples is that he equates monetary cost with difficulty. As others have pointed out, comparing costs in different time periods ignores the improvements in technology and efficiency that have allowed us to get the more "difficult fruit" more cheaply. We still picked the low hanging fruit first but with advances in technology the cost of picking the more difficult fruit that are left has decreased over the long term.

The idea that we can always trust technology to counteract our resource depletion is very common. And for very good reason, our civilization has just lived through a couple of centuries where this has generally been true. However just because it has been true for a very long time does not mean it will always be true. Resource depletion is believed to have caused the collapse of several civilizations (eg. Mayan, Easter Island) Why didn't their technology save them? Yes our technology is alot better than theirs, but that just means the fall would be that much more catastrophic if our technology fails us. It is our hubris that lets us assume that our technology will always be up to the task.
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Unread postby 0mar » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 01:23:09

All 10 oil majors have lost money exploring in the last couple years.

http://www.peakoil.net/WoodMackenzie.html
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Unread postby JohnDenver » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 05:28:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nero', 'T')he problem I have with John's examples is that he equates monetary cost with difficulty.


nero,
Why does difficulty matter, if cost is decreasing? For example, you could equate difficulty with energy expenditure, and the Low Fruit hypothesis would become:

Low Fruit hypothesis (energy version):
"People pick the low hanging fruit first, therefore the energy expended harvesting resources will increase."

I would agree with this is some cases, but not all. Imaging software (3D seismic) used in the oil field doesn't follow this rule. An incredible amount of energy was used in the past to drill dry holes, and that energy was greatly reduced by cheap imaging and computers. Sonar in fishing is a similar example. These innovations made it possible to pick the fruit with less energy -- i.e. the high hanging fruit took less energy to pick than the low hanging fruit.

But lets assume, for the moment, that the energy version of the Low Fruit hypothesis is true. In that case, it has been weakened and doesn't prove that the cost of resources will increase. So why worry? The only case where it would be a worry is if energy gets more expensive. But that's the exact point that the Low Fruit hypothesis is being used to prove. In other words, if you assume that energy prices will go up, then you can use the Low Fruit hypothesis (energy version) to prove that energy prices will go up. The conclusion is being smuggled into the argument as an assumption.

The Low Fruit hypothesis (energy version) simply does not imply that energy will become increasingly scarce. That would only be true if all the fruits are the same size. You haven't ruled out the possibility that the fruits at the top of the tree are bigger than the fruits at the bottom. Certainly that's been true so far. Oil was higher in the tree than coal, but oil was a "bigger" fruit than coal in terms of convenience and value.

(EDIT: To be clearer: It is unknown whether the fruits increase in size as we ascend the tree. This is a matter to be decided by experience, not by some dubious a priori principle like the Low Fruit hypothesis. We shouldn't decide that all the fruits are the same size because that's the way real trees are. We're not really talking about trees. "Common sense" can lead you astray here.)

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')es our technology is alot better than theirs, but that just means the fall would be that much more catastrophic if our technology fails us. It is our hubris that lets us assume that our technology will always be up to the task.


It's certainly possible that technology might fail us. But that does not mean that the Low Fruit hypothesis proves that technology must fail us.
Does Low Fruit imply that resources must become increasingly scarce? No.
Does Low Fruit imply that energy must become more expensive? No.
Does Low Fruit imply that technology will let us down? No.

So why exactly is Low Fruit relevant? What does it really prove?
Last edited by JohnDenver on Sun 17 Apr 2005, 06:18:00, edited 1 time in total.
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Unread postby JohnDenver » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 05:49:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Andy', 'J')ohn, don't you realize that that $10 figure will not remain $10 when the overall subsidy from Light, sweet crude starts to diminish.


Light sweet crude plays a very small role in tar sands mining and processing. Some of the trucking and transport may be running on it, but they can run just as well on the $10 synthetic crude from the operation itself. The price of crude is not an issue for an operation which can produce crude itself for $10 a barrel.
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Unread postby JohnDenver » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 05:58:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('0mar', 'A')ll 10 oil majors have lost money exploring in the last couple years.


The 10 oil majors own less than 5% of the world's oil and gas reserves. Their exploration problems stem from being shut out by drilling restrictions and the national oil companies. The problems are political, not geological. Did the Saudis and the Iranians and the Iraqis lose money exploring in the last couple of years?
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Unread postby Wildwell » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 05:59:40

The other thing is peak oil supposes the end of cheap oil. It may be, although yet unproven, that new technology spurned when oil reaches a certain price means massive increases in other energy source. Eg Through better solar or hydro technology. This is the central crux of peak oil, will it, or won’t it?

One other thing I’d like to point out with regard to energy use is that in Britain and Europe, because of increased disposable income and the growth of private motoring it has meant far more energy use. In turn this has created road congestion, which means less productivity and a loss in time of people doing useful money making tasks. Therefore too much energy can create a counter effect too.
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Unread postby JohnDenver » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 06:41:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Wildwell', 'I')t may be, although yet unproven, that new technology spurned when oil reaches a certain price means massive increases in other energy source. Eg Through better solar or hydro technology. This is the central crux of peak oil, will it, or won’t it?


That is central, and the Low Hanging Fruit hypothesis doesn't settle it, except "by fiat". I.e.: "Of course alternatives cannot work because the next fruit will take more energy to get to, and will return less energy than the current fruit."

The Low Fruit hypothesis is posing as a hard physical principle, but it's not one. No one has ever scientifically investigated it, let alone proved it. The listener is supposed to imagine an orchard of apple trees, with nicely uniform apples, and workers struggling to get to the treetops. That simplistic metaphor is being used to make sweeping, unjustified generalizations about the huge, complex topic of humans' relationship to their energy sources.
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Unread postby mididoctors » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 06:48:50

Is the methodology sound?

you have to compare the different resource bases in different points in time with the same extraction or harvesting technology to be aware if there is a low hanging fruit argument..

you can run it backwards...

I am not saying one way or another if LHF is correct or not

can people get present extraction rates now with harvesting methods used in days gone by?

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Unread postby mididoctors » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 06:54:10

Btw i am a big fan of JD posts as they make you think

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Unread postby Aaron » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 07:56:13

LHF in oil primarily speaks to discovery.

You tend to find the "easy to find" oil first... no mystery there.

The proof is in the pudding as John eludes to.

Despite massive strides in technology to locate and recover oil supplies, we are actually finding and recovering less oil than the prior year.

Why?

Because we found the easy stuff first, and now must work harder to locate smaller fields.
The problem is, of course, that not only is economics bankrupt, but it has always been nothing more than politics in disguise... economics is a form of brain damage.

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Unread postby rerere » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 08:14:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'I')s the methodology sound?


No, the methodology that JohnDenver is applying is not sound, hence his modeling is failing.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', '
')you have to compare the different resource bases in different points in time with the same extraction or harvesting technology to be aware if there is a low hanging fruit argument..


In an ACTUAL fruit model (vs the made up handwaving definition of JohnDenver) you have one tree. And ladders cost money and introduce risk to the user. Same with a fruit picking pole. So you can charge the same for all the apples, no matter the cost of materials and risk
or you can charge a variable amount. OR you can just eat the apples yourself.

In another fruit model, you have a set demand for apples. If the apple producer produces MORE apples than demand, what happens to price? Notice how there is no need for technology to change to effect price, you just need to have more apple trees producing apples than 'the market' needs.

In JohnDenvers universe, it would seem he ignores the idea that prices dropped because more oil was being produced than was needed to support the higher price. As he uses END price as the only variable, of course the modeling is 'off' as how can you model the technology in the middle JUST by looking at price?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', '
')can people get present extraction rates now with harvesting methods used in days gone by?


No. And in fact, Aaron is fond of pointing out that there exists the strong possibility of production rates no longer following the 'classic' production curve under the newer injection technologies.

Another example of new extraction methods being better (and, well HIGHER prices) is some 'old' wells are being pumped from again.
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Unread postby rerere » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 08:26:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Aaron', 'L')HF in oil primarily speaks to discovery.


And discovery, while the 1st step to eventually getting oil to market, has no direct tie to pricing as the charts JohnDenver used to attempt to 'prove' his strawman.
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Unread postby rerere » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 08:53:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')Low Fruit hypothesis (energy version):
"People pick the low hanging fruit first, therefore the energy expended harvesting resources will increase."


Now here is a new name in an attempt to frame 'the debate'. Note how the name is like the old, discredited name. And how, like the past 'low hanging fruit' name, it uses the framing of fruit and tries to apply it to something non-fruit like.

In the case of people fruit picking, ladders and poles represent more energy than standing on the ground and picking a fruit.

In the case where you have a mechanical shaker that grabs the base of the tree and shakes it, while collecting the fallen apples in a bucket, there is not a PERSON *PICKING* a fruit.

Hence, with the framing of people, picking and fruit in mind, JohnDenver tries another straw man.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', ' ')energy will become increasingly scarce.


Energy as used by humans is the taking the remains of stellar bodies and controlling the order from lower entropy to higher entropy. The stellar body that drives most of the Human/Earth system comes from Sol, and fission is the result of old stellar bodies that ceased to exist a long, long time ago.

As humans take old, stored solar power in the form of coal, gas and oil and use it that 'energy source' WILL become more scarce. Energy via wind/solar/biomass/water pressure and flow however has the potentional of being 'not scarce' for as long as the sun shines and doesn't swell up and absorb the Earth. So over the life of any human, 'Energy' won't be scarce at all, as the Sun is the primary driver of the energy systems making sure the systems doing work have a way to have less entropy.

JohnDenver's arguments are based on fiat money and that a watt costs $x and it is not relevant how that watt was created. With that framing, JohnDenver then attempts to 'argue' with people who have a longer term vision.
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Unread postby rerere » Sun 17 Apr 2005, 09:14:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'B')tw i am a big fan of JD posts as they make you think


The way to think about JohnDenver's posts is 'how is what he's presenting wrong'. And be suprised when he's got it right. (Like the electric mining eq)

His offering of the 'solar tractor' - if you look at it, ignoring the lack of motor and pristine paint job, you know it is not a working tractor at all. Any solar panels big enough to power a tractor will act be acted on by wind loading. Soil-working requires energy - a traditional way is a horse, and one horsepower is by convention about 746 watts. A gas tiller - 3 to 10 HP or more. Now, do the math to see what one needs for a direct solar powered tractor per JohnDenver's offering.

If for some reason one has an interest in modeling the effects of 'human think'n' on resource utilization, then normalizing for emergy (eMergy with an M) will show an increase.

Search on Howard Odum and emergy in your prefered search engine....
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