by AdamB » Fri 29 Aug 2025, 20:12:35
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR11', 'P')eople are always worried about ... something.
So what happened when production peaked? Demand destruction. The thing that the doomers claimed would derail society and send us all into a Mad Max apocalypse.
As someone who is not an economist...but now plays one on TV sometimes, this game can be played in both directions/ Lack of supply...the peak oil angle...and lack of demand...a perfectly acceptable economic angle.
I just did my first 6 months of EV ownership analysis. Based on my electric costs, EV efficiency, gasoline costs related to the ICE machine the wife would otherwise have driven, here are some numbers. Spent about $11G on a brand new EV, collected a payment of about $210/month because I was required to for like a year to get one of the incentives off MSRP. Fuel costs are about $55 in electons. For 6 months of fuel.
I calculated my costs for driving the ICE machine across that same time period, approx $160/month for the same miles as driven by the EV.
So....a difference indeed. To buy a brand new EV, and drive it and fuel it thousands of miles, costs about $60/month than PUTTING ONLY FUEL IN AN ICE MACHINE. Damn. I'll take that kind of demand destruction in terms of my costs every day of the week and twice on Sunday.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR11', ' ')
Yet what it really did is delete wasteful uses by people of modest means.
Works like a charm. Peakers should have tried to squeeze the BASICS of this graph into their ideas 20 years ago....they wouldn't have come out looking like such dolts.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR11', ' ') Solar, coal, NG, nuclear, hydro, even wind, all combined to produce a complete new landscape in the realm of overall energy.