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Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

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

Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby VMarcHart » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 12:47:29

Welcome to the site, Johny.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Johny_Bloggsy', 'I') believe oil reserves will last for a very long time.
That's a possibility. Whereas PO is the end of life as we know, Johny, it's not the main problem; it's the over-population aka over-shooting. Oil, and other things, permitted us to explode the population to levels believed to be beyond the planet's carrying capacity. So, even if we replace oil with "nucuelar" or any other form of abundant and cheap fuel, we're still facing a bigger problem; over-population.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('alokin', 'W')e're maybe a bit too rude.
Indeed.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wisconsin_cur', 'I') would like to encourage everyone to play nice and develop a civil discussion of the issue. Just because some of us (myself included) is feeling a little pessemistic the last few months is no reason to take it out on Bloggsy.
Well said, WI.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Drifter', 'P')lease don't come in here as new member to 'open our eyes' to the technology fairy, because it isn't going to happen.
How close-minded is that?
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby Ludi » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 12:53:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('VMarcHart', 'H')ow close-minded is that?


What about the technology fairy would you like people to be open-minded toward?
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby Duende » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 12:55:19

thuja wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ho wants to feed him the red pill?


We're fresh out. :(

The demand for them has been crazy lately - not enough common sense to go around I'm afraid.
"Where is the man who has so much as to be out of danger?" -Thomas Huxley
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby VMarcHart » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 13:08:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'W')hat about the technology fairy would you like people to be open-minded toward?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Drifter', ''')Isn't going to happen' meaning technology isn't going to save us.

1,000% agreed, we're way past the point of being saved by technology. But as soon I have something, you'll be the second to know. It may come in the form of Voodoo, though. :) In the meantime, me thinks, the open-minded person is the one that can seize opportunities.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby Ludi » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 13:12:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('VMarcHart', ' ')In the meantime, me thinks, the open-minded person is the one that can seize opportunities.


Maybe I'm not sure what you mean by "open-minded" in this context. You already seem to have made up your mind that we won't be "saved by technology," so what exactly are you open-minded about compared to someone else who has made up his mind that we won't be "saved by technology"? Or do you just like to fancy yourself open-minded when you've actually already made up your mind?
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby VMarcHart » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 13:20:41

Hi, Ludi.

I'm not putting too much stock on technology, but open-minded to other stuff. Don't ask me what, I don't even know myself. I'm just "obsessed about a solution", as labeled.

I think, though, I ought to listen to other people, whether dumb, educated, smart, aware, unaware, etc. I don't know when or from who the next good idea will come. Food for thought.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby Ludi » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 13:23:52

So yours was more a general comment about your own approach, being open-minded, rather than a criticism of a specific other person being closed minded.

Thanks for clarifying.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby TheDude » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 13:30:26

Johny - last year we only sold 17 million cars in the US, estimates for 2008 are ca. 14 million and could go lower - and that's without fuel shortages or drastic economic downturns. We have about 135 million commuters in the US - ca. 95 million still drive solo. The initial run for the Volt is 10k in 2010 - same year Nissan were planning to market hundreds (sic) of its PHEV, last I heard. By that point imports of oil from Mexico will have dropped at least 600k barrels per day, and quite possibly much higher. Profits from sale of crude is 60% of Mexican government revenue; you can see where this could lead. The potential for domestic instability there is quite high, there have been provincial rebellions in recent years - you heard about guerillas bombing gas pipelines in the South, perhaps.

All of this aside from the shortfall in US oil imports in the first place. The demand for those electric cars will be so out of control they will only be available to six figure income households, I'd warrant.

Two years ago I'd tell people oil would rise past $100/barrel, or gasoline past $3/gallon, and they'd think I was wholly crackers. You hear the same sorts of stories all over the place, and no one who has given the matter any serious thought thinks electric cars are going to ride into town to save the day anytime soon.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby Hartmann » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 17:13:10

Electric car the final solution ?? yes of course,

you only need a lot of nuclear plants, a very good grid of electrical power distribution to plug millions of cars at the same time, and copper, ( copper prices are very high...perhaps another peak).

And the old cars have to be scrapped, melted and recicled, and it requires energy, and the new cars builded, more energy again.
and you need plastics ....


But don´t worry , politicians say that the situation is always good and you can life without any worry about the future, you only have to buy things in the market until it run out off all.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby Micki » Mon 16 Jun 2008, 19:56:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')aybe I'm not sure what you mean by "open-minded" in this context. You already seem to have made up your mind that we won't be "saved by technology," so what exactly are you open-minded about compared to someone else who has made up his mind that we won't be "saved by technology"? Or do you just like to fancy yourself open-minded when you've actually already made up your mind?


Improvements in extraction technology can probably be rolled out reasonably quickly unless they are very complex to build. Improvements in vehicles or new vehicle technology is however quite a different matter. And especially if the new vehicle technology comes at a premium, the uptake is pretty slow.
Secondly, if the new technology is dependent on electricity it requires the grid to be upgraded as well.
To me this suggests that with oil trending the way it is, new vehicle technologies and grid are way behind in development and that will set us up for pain.

Furthermore, I think it is very risky to assume that certain improvements will be made before there is credible case showing it is feasible. For example I heard some rep. for Exxon state that if we can make technical improvement extracting just another 10% out of each well, we'll be OK.

This is putting hope in something we have not yet seen.
And with that kind of mindset, if successful, we would probably not fix anything just defer the problem a little bit. And as we know, improvement technologies usually results in faster depletion rate once limits are reached, so instead of a gentle depletion rate allowing for adjustment period, we would have a catastrophic sudden drop in production.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby VMarcHart » Tue 17 Jun 2008, 07:47:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Micki', 'I') heard some rep. for Exxon state if we can make technical improvement extracting just another 10% out of each well, we'll be OK.
Oh yeah, just add another 10% CO2 in the atmosphere.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Micki', '.').. if successful, we would probably not fix anything just defer the problem a little bit.
I'd add, defer a bigger problem a little bit.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Micki', '.').. once limits are reached, instead of a gentle depletion rate allowing for adjustment period, we would have a catastrophic sudden drop in production.
Key word being catastrophic.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Tue 17 Jun 2008, 08:33:59

Micki,

I've been a petroleum geologist for over 30 years and spent much of that time working on enhanced extraction. The Exxon rep's comment is the same as saying "if frogs hand wings they wouldn't bump their butts". A 10% increase in recovery fact is HUGE.

More importantly, however much additional recover is gained, all enhanced methods (except one) do much slower than the virgin flow rates.....commonly at a rate 90% or slower than originally. The one exception is horizontal drilling. In some circumstances a new horz well might flow more oil then an original completion. But as a result they'll deplete even faster than the original wells.

But don't misunderstand: enhanced recovery methods these days can be tremedously profitable. Exxon has announced they are cutting back on international exploration and going to hit their old producing fields harder. They will make a lot of profit but not add substantially to the total oil flow in the world.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Tue 17 Jun 2008, 11:12:18

Hartman,

You hit the nail on the head. WhenI chat with folks about PO most don't seem to have a problem with the general concept. But when it comes to "solutions" they have no sense of the scales involved. Recently in Houston there has been a buzz about trying to use the commercial rail lines for commuter traffic. Seems like half the population lives 25 miles or so from downtown.

They loose their wide eyed grins when I explain that to do so (even ignoring the huge volume of commercial trains running the same tracks) would require passenger cars. And since no one builds passenger cars in the US we'll probably have to get them from Germany or Japan. When I further explain what it would take to ramp up those production lines to satisfy our needs they get depressed.

I'm sure other on this thread have had similar experiences with folks flapping their lips about "solutions" which, at best, would take an intolerable length of time to employ, or at worst could never be physically done at a price acceptable to the public.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby jdumars » Tue 17 Jun 2008, 12:18:03

Rockman, you're a great addition to the experts here, and I appreciate your contributions.

You raise and excellent and often-overlooked point: to get "off" petroleum requires HUGE amounts of petroleum. These so-called green solutions or technofixes are going to vastly increase the demand and subsequently cost of oil. So, such endeavors are not only not up to scale, but likely to be abandoned because they cost so much, and increase the cost of everything else.

The answer is consistently that the entire situation is unsustainable. Population, infrastructure, economy, capitalism, even civilization is it is currently designed. If you build something that depends on a resource, and the resource becomes scarce or unavailable, the something cannot continue to exist. Simple as that.
Dismantle globally, renew locally!
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Tue 17 Jun 2008, 12:42:12

So true jdumars. It's ironic (given this is THE oil town in the US) that Houston maybe the poster child for the worst case scenario for PO. The city limits cover more area than many counties in other states. I haven't seen numbers in a while but probably more than 300,000 travel 40 miles or more round trip to work every day. There are a few Park and Ride bus lines but I doubt the carry more than 5% of the load.

Back to the scale issue: someone here said all they have to do is expand P&R. Two big problems with that: the existing lots are nearly at full capacity now. New lots could be built fairly quickly but where do you get the thousands of new buses (and drivers) to haul these folks. And when you overcome those problems there's the question of traffic downtown: it's alreadY jammed at rush hour with the existing buses. Even then you have to work d/t to take advantage of P&R: cross town bus service is terrible now even with low ridership.

We Texans truly love driving in our cars by ourselves. And if we have to kill someone to get the gas we need? Well...ask the Comanches how they faired when we wanted what they had.

The only bright side is that oil company salaries are so good we can probably outbid most cities for what supplies will be available. And I actually live one mile from the largest refinery (Exxon) in the US. I can just have the tankers swing by and top me off.

LIFE IS GOOD!

(But I actually do have great sympathy for the folks getting hit hard now and all the more later)
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby btu2012 » Tue 17 Jun 2008, 12:50:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Johny_Bloggsy', 'T')hank you all flamers and "smartguys". I see there is no room for debate here. You've made up your mind and are totally unwilling to accept a different opinion.


It's just that people around here know a lot more than you do about this issue. Take some time to instruct yourself if you want to avoid this sort of reaction.
only the paranoid survive
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby Ludi » Tue 17 Jun 2008, 13:32:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ROCKMAN', '.').ask the Comanches how they faired when we wanted what they had.


Not all Texans fought the Comanche. See history of Germans in the Hill Country. Fascinating stories. :)
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby VMarcHart » Tue 17 Jun 2008, 13:51:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('btu2012', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Johny_Bloggsy', 'T')hank you all flamers and "smartguys". I see there is no room for debate here. You've made up your mind and are totally unwilling to accept a different opinion.
It's just that people around here know a lot more than you do about this issue. Take some time to instruct yourself if you want to avoid this sort of reaction.
That's not an excuse. To know so much and not share in a civilized manner is fruitless. Food for thought. Peace and Love.
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Re: Peak Oil? What Peak Oil?

Unread postby VMarcHart » Tue 17 Jun 2008, 14:07:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ROCKMAN', 'S')eems like half the population lives 25 miles or so from downtown ... We Texans truly love driving in our cars
I lived in Houston and just one block from work. I was working for a Fortune 50 energy company. I used to walk to work, at $0.98/gallon, and colleagues would look at me like I had a third eye growing in the forehead.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdumars', '.').. to get "off" petroleum requires HUGE amounts of petroleum.
Yes and no. In my case, we moved to within walking distance to work, supermarket, hair dresser, etc. It was a conscious decision to get off petroleum using less petroleum. I know there are very few people like us.
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