Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Carlhole » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 09:11:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')arlhole
Knight of the Realm

Posts: 4199
Joined: Mon Jul 05, 2004 5:00 pm


I had actually experienced a bout of PO blues after reading Deffeyes' "Hubbert's Peak" and Heinberg's "The Party's Over". Those books were forecasting that the S would H the F around 2010-11.

Back in 2003-04 for me, the subject of peak oil had more plausibility. But that was because the war in Iraq was just ramping up. The Bush propaganda machine was in full swing. The whole thing seemed trumped up as hell. From Day One, I was pure positive that the buildings in NY had been brought down by controlled demolitions in a false flag op. My strong suspicions had led me to subscribe to Ruppert's "FromTheWilderness" newsletter, which at that time, made lots of sense. I figured growing oil scarcity was the real reason for the illegal invasion.

I would have thought that all those geopolitical events would have become starkly clear to me and everyone else by now. Ha! World events couldn't be more mysterious and murky. I'm left scratching my head about oil. But I'm more sure than ever about 911. Richard Gage has made that obvious to everyone who sees his presentation, "911: Blueprint For Truth"
Carlhole
 

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby JohnDenver » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 09:24:47

I joined a little after you Carlhole, and I agree. The hype which ruled this forum in 2004-2005 was nothing but hot air. In 6 years, peak oil has had no material effect on my surroundings. The roads are still clogged with cars. The 3000 mile salad is going strong. We're still swimming in a sea of salad shooters and other cheap doo-dads. The avalanche of cheap junk from China continues. Food prices and availability are completely normal. Oil is at $75 and dropping. The IEA predicts oversupply of oil until 2015...
Peak oil continues to be a ridiculously over-hyped non-event, and it amazes me how much time people have wasted in this forum over the last 6 years. Peak oil is like Waiting for Godot. It never comes.
JohnDenver
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2145
Joined: Sun 29 Aug 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Cloud9 » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 10:52:23

Funny how when oil got to $147 a barrel everything slid off the rails.
User avatar
Cloud9
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2961
Joined: Wed 26 Jul 2006, 03:00:00

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Roy » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 10:56:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') joined a little after you Carlhole, and I agree. The hype which ruled this forum in 2004-2005 was nothing but hot air. In 6 years, peak oil has had no material effect on my surroundings. The roads are still clogged with cars. The 3000 mile salad is going strong. We're still swimming in a sea of salad shooters and other cheap doo-dads. The avalanche of cheap junk from China continues. Food prices and availability are completely normal. Oil is at $75 and dropping. The IEA predicts oversupply of oil until 2015...
Peak oil continues to be a ridiculously over-hyped non-event, and it amazes me how much time people have wasted in this forum over the last 6 years. Peak oil is like Waiting for Godot. It never comes.


I couldn't disagree more. But I guess we all see what we want to see.

I see businesses closing, people being laid off and unable to find new jobs, government debt exploding, state finances imploding, stock market manipulation, and blatant government corruption that has only increased in the last 6 years. I see the president that promised change continuing the ruinous policies of the Bush administration or even accelerating them. I wager that's not the kind of change Obama voters envisioned when they pulled the lever. However it is exactly what I expected and wrote as much on this site.

The only thing I think that this site had wrong back then was the pace of events. I and many others here thought things would happen faster than they have. Perhaps we didn't give societal inertia enough credit? Or the lying and criminal actions that have been committed to maintain the status quo.

I still think things are bad and getting worse. We live in different bubbles I guess. You live in a bubble that hasn't seen or felt the economic downturn. I on the other hand live in one that started feeling it years ago and it has gotten steadily worse over the last 6 years. Incrementally and slowly enough so that one can sort of 'get used to it', similar to the way a parent doesn't notice their kid growing as much as people like grandma who only sees the kid 1 or 2 times per year.

I don't buy the infinite growth on a finite planet with finite resources meme. Many people still do. Some of us closer to the front lines see more than rear echelon mf'ers that are safely ensconced from any and all signs of the ongoing depression. Or those who have willfully chosen to ignore those signs.

Our politicians in DC are the ultimate example of bubble-residing REMFs.
A nations military should only be used in a nations self defense, not to entertain liberal cravings for shaping poor nations into images of themselves by force. -- Eastbay

Shooting the messenger is typical when you are incapable of arguing against them. -- Airline Pilot
Roy
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 1359
Joined: Fri 18 Jun 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Getting in touch with my Inner Redneck

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby drgoodword » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 11:13:42

At the start of the Iraq war, seven years ago, oil was $28 a barrel. For the last two years the price of oil has held the $60-$80 range steadily, after reaching a record high of $147 in 2008.

A more than 100% increase in oil over a seven year period--a period during which wages have been nearly stagnant--is, to me, a tremendously significant development and a strong validation of peak oil theory.
drgoodword
 

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Pops » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 12:47:56

I'm glad you guys aren't effected (or affected). Did you notice anything in the news recently about economic troubles, high unemployment, foreclosures, bankruptcies? Don't think energy prices had anything to do with that?

Image

Sorry about that chart, it shows inflation adjusted consumer energy costs and all that volitility on the right is the oughts. Better charts here

I know it's more enjoyable ridiculing your favorite survivalist strawman than poking fun at people who think higher energy prices will seriously hurt many in the J6p category but the majority here have always said po will be more like a Steinbeck novel than Mad Max.

At any rate, things moved much faster than I thought. I was pretty close to right in my assessment of the economy:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('In early '04 I', 'M')y short-term concerns are primarily the precarious conditions of the economy. Bubbles, bubbles everywhere, real estate over exuberance, weak dollar, current account deficit, huge federal, state and personal debts, jobless recovery. A short-term political or terrorist induced oil crunch could be devastating to this house of cards.


But I sure didn't see how close was the effective supply ceiling and the speed at which pinstriped gamblers would jump from RE to commodities and upset the apple cart:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('In the same post in '04 I optimistically', 'L')ong term I’m still worried about the economy and my non-expert energy outlook is flat and even declining prices for maybe 5-8 years, then at first gradual then accelerating increases thereafter.


So yea, things are pretty much the same, just double the energy cost, double the unemployment, the government and public are how much more in debt? And oh yea:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')ven with the [recent stock market] gain, Americans' net worth would have to rise an additional 21 percent to get back to its pre-recession peak of $65.9 trillion. That shows the vast loss of wealth people have suffered from the worst downturn since the 1930s.
That's Average and we all know where the majority of the wealth is, so J6p's net worth probably down at least half from '04 - but that's just a guess.CBS News

Ho Hum...
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
User avatar
Pops
Elite
Elite
 
Posts: 19746
Joined: Sat 03 Apr 2004, 04:00:00
Location: QuikSac for a 6-Pac
Top

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby timmac » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 13:34:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roy', '
')I couldn't disagree more. But I guess we all see what we want to see.

I see businesses closing, people being laid off and unable to find new jobs, government debt exploding, state finances imploding, stock market manipulation, and blatant government corruption that has only increased in the last 6 years. I see the president that promised change continuing the ruinous policies of the Bush administration or even accelerating them. I wager that's not the kind of change Obama voters envisioned when they pulled the lever. However it is exactly what I expected and wrote as much on this site.

I still think things are bad and getting worse. We live in different bubbles I


+1 :shock:
User avatar
timmac
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 1901
Joined: Thu 27 Mar 2008, 03:00:00
Location: Las Vegas
Top

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Sixstrings » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 15:47:25

I dunno, everything sure isn't the same in the Gulf of Mexico. We're only drilling that deep because we have to now, and sure enough there's a blowout that can't be fixed because the it's so damn deep.

The crisis even has TV news reading The Oil Drum posts verbatim (DougR's posts).
User avatar
Sixstrings
Fusion
Fusion
 
Posts: 15160
Joined: Tue 08 Jul 2008, 03:00:00

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Carlhole » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 16:16:08

It's "Carlhole", dammit. Are you trying to offend me or something?

Look, I've always had a concern about oil supply. I always thought that the oil majors and intelligence agencies knew enough about the problems associated with oil depletion to factor it in to major foreign policy decisions -- well in advance of any actual peak. In 2004, I surmised that the government probably knew that peak oil would occur in the 2010 - 2015 timeframe, and so the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan took place a decade or so before.

I should say that in 2010, I'm still interested and concerned about peak oil -- but I'm not scared about it like I had been at once. I'm with JD in that I think the world has oodles of room to reduce its energy consumption and make all sorts of adaptations in response to increasing energy prices. And I, like him, don't see much knock-on effect from 2008's high prices. During that price run-up, Peak Oil Theory got all sorts of press as people tuned in to find out if our oil armageddon were really true. Well, you know, the peak oil story simply hasn't caught on and stuck. People are generally aware that we have energy problems. But most of the world tends to see these problems as solvable while those on this site tend to see dire straits at every turn.

I think our economic troubles have been mostly caused by policies which promoted decades of debt-binging, nationally and globally. I've lived through several "severe" economic downturns in my time, and this one isn't any more difficult than the others. I think the world's economies have been extremely imbalanced for a long time and we are living through a time where these imbalances are unwinding.

Also, I'm much more interested in science & technology than the average PO.com member. I'm really, really interested in what sort of results NIF is going produce this year and next -- not from any corny "cornucopian" standpoint, but simply because it's a huge, potentially game-changing energy experiment. Such a thing ought to be interesting to anyone. But the strongest impression I've ever gotten from POers is that they are all HOPING for a failure with fingers and toes crossed.

I remember seeing a MonteQuest post once titled: "Why a successful fusion energy breakthrough would be the worst thing that could happen". Man, who could have any respect for such an attitude?
Carlhole
 

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Plantagenet » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 16:39:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', 'P')eople are generally aware that we have energy problems. But most of the world tends to see these problems as solvable while those on this site tend to see dire straits at every turn.


These two positions aren't necessarily mutually exclusive.

In the short run energy problems can be accommodated by demand reductions due to prices increases and economic contraction. Thats what has been going on since 2005.

But in the longer term continued global population growth and global economic expansion will become increasingly problematical as global oil production starts declining by 3-7% each year.
Never underestimate the ability of Joe Biden to f#@% things up---Barack Obama
-----------------------------------------------------------
Keep running between the raindrops.
User avatar
Plantagenet
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 26765
Joined: Mon 09 Apr 2007, 03:00:00
Location: Alaska (its much bigger than Texas).
Top

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Comp_Lex » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 18:04:21

@TS:

what is your definition of "everything"? Does it include "me still having my job"?
User avatar
Comp_Lex
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 116
Joined: Wed 02 Nov 2005, 04:00:00
Location: The Netherlands

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby americandream » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 18:14:29

The last three sources of surpus on this planet are tied up in the energy, in oil (EROEI) and, labour (China and India) as well as any further rights that can be added to the existing asset pools worldwide, aka derivatives (classes of assets increasingly removed form the source asset).

Of all the above three sources of surplus, asset formation is the most lucrative. The process of securitisation by which these derivatives are created, (with the application of common law principles on rights and intangibles), can take this asset creating process to the nth degree. However, the resulting creation is essentially a house of cards awaiting a disaster as the arrangement revolves around faith (trust need not be present but there must be faith in the chains of ownership.)

If one element in these three sources breaks down, the whole house crumbles. China and India have ample surplus to carry us over the next 5 decades. The weak links are oil and the credit bubbles that sustain securitisation. Both can severely damage the faith thats necessary for it to function and expand.

edit. In essence, much of the wealth creation and ownership on this planet is occurring at the derivatives level with oil and labour as collateral.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GASMON', 'S')ix years and everything's pretty much still the same ???

Wrong.

All the worlds banks are insolvent, All the world is in hock to the aforesaid banks
The amount of (fictional) money tied up in derivatives etc, is more than the net worth of this planet. Can someone explain that - I can't.

Yet, the books will have to balance, worldwide.

Yes, peak oil has probably, silently, recently passed. The shitstorm is on the horizon, a 360 degree field of view. Energy, resources, commodities, water, food.

Batten down the hatches.

Gasmon
americandream
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 8650
Joined: Mon 18 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Tami » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 18:55:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roy', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') joined a little after you Carlhole, and I agree. The hype which ruled this forum in 2004-2005 was nothing but hot air. In 6 years, peak oil has had no material effect on my surroundings. The roads are still clogged with cars. The 3000 mile salad is going strong. We're still swimming in a sea of salad shooters and other cheap doo-dads. The avalanche of cheap junk from China continues. Food prices and availability are completely normal. Oil is at $75 and dropping. The IEA predicts oversupply of oil until 2015...
Peak oil continues to be a ridiculously over-hyped non-event, and it amazes me how much time people have wasted in this forum over the last 6 years. Peak oil is like Waiting for Godot. It never comes.


I couldn't disagree more. But I guess we all see what we want to see.


It seemed to me like that was Johns point.
Tami
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 17
Joined: Thu 10 Jun 2010, 00:37:59
Top

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby americandream » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 19:11:10

I've been on this forum for years and opinions on the effects of peak oil have been rather varied I have to say. There are those like me who felt and continue to believe that the process will be more drawn out whereas others had and still have a more imminent view (I am less sure these days with the increasingly monumental cockups we are seeing from private wealth such as the Gulf but thats a whole 'nother can of worms).

At then end of the day, this site's objective is to warn us of the risks in living beyond our means. Whether those risks materialise tomorrow or in a few decades (as I generally believe), it still plays, in my opinion, a valuable role.

If however, you feel that it has added nothing to your awareness as a political animal, why, there is a whole world of the web to sift through.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tami', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Roy', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') joined a little after you Carlhole, and I agree. The hype which ruled this forum in 2004-2005 was nothing but hot air. In 6 years, peak oil has had no material effect on my surroundings. The roads are still clogged with cars. The 3000 mile salad is going strong. We're still swimming in a sea of salad shooters and other cheap doo-dads. The avalanche of cheap junk from China continues. Food prices and availability are completely normal. Oil is at $75 and dropping. The IEA predicts oversupply of oil until 2015...
Peak oil continues to be a ridiculously over-hyped non-event, and it amazes me how much time people have wasted in this forum over the last 6 years. Peak oil is like Waiting for Godot. It never comes.


I couldn't disagree more. But I guess we all see what we want to see.


It seemed to me like that was Johns point.
americandream
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 8650
Joined: Mon 18 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Newfie » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 19:19:07

The point I see is that, from one perspective everything IS pretty much the same in that JSP has not awoken to the problems.

That does not mean that nothing has changed, it just means that most people are still in denial.

The changes are that GW is now a more proven fact, we have done nothing to solve the overpopulation problem, the US and World economy is in the tank and unlikely to get better.

I feel like I am watching a B horror movie. The heroine is running and hiding from this or that foe. But as the dramatic tension builds, the screen cuts get faster and faster and more frenetic. The music gets louder, more sinister, the heart beat rhythm quickens. Nothing has changed, she is still a beautiful young blond........for now.
User avatar
Newfie
Forum Moderator
Forum Moderator
 
Posts: 18651
Joined: Thu 15 Nov 2007, 04:00:00
Location: Between Canada and Carribean

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby JohnDenver » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 20:50:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'b')ut the majority here have always said po will be more like a Steinbeck novel than Mad Max.


Right, but none of the PEAK OIL related effects are happening.
No skyrocketing oil prices.
No shortage of oil.
No shortage of plastic.
No skyrocketing food prices.
No shortage of food.
No end to the 3000 mile salad.
No reduction in traffic volume.
No 6% per year cliff in oil production.
No exponentially increasing crisis due to the ELM model.
No relocalization of manufacturing and agriculture...

In short, what we have is something that looks like BAU with a 1980s-style recession, but doesn't look at all like peak oil -- at least the way its been hyped.
JohnDenver
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2145
Joined: Sun 29 Aug 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby americandream » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 21:03:08

I'll reiterate a point made consistently on here. What we have are a convergence of oil inflation and China/India generated consumer deflation. In other words, Chinese and Indians are generating sufficient surplus to counter oil's gradual increase. It's a balancing act at the moment as once the Western consumer is no longer able to fund his/her purchases of Chindian goods and services, one significant root of the global tree of capitalism withers. With the increase in casual, self and multi-employment in the West, this couild go on for quite a while unless oil prices shoot off the radar and overwhelm the surplus generated by low cost zone labour. It's a very fragile picture I can tell you and much more precarious than you realise, especially with deep water drilling in turmoil.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'b')ut the majority here have always said po will be more like a Steinbeck novel than Mad Max.


Right, but none of the PEAK OIL related effects are happening.
No skyrocketing oil prices.
No shortage of oil.
No shortage of plastic.
No skyrocketing food prices.
No shortage of food.
No end to the 3000 mile salad.
No reduction in traffic volume.
No 6% per year cliff in oil production.
No exponentially increasing crisis due to the ELM model.
No relocalization of manufacturing and agriculture...

In short, what we have is something that looks like BAU with a 1980s-style recession, but doesn't look at all like peak oil -- at least the way its been hyped.
americandream
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 8650
Joined: Mon 18 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Six years and everything's pretty much still the same

Unread postby Tami » Mon 05 Jul 2010, 21:16:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('americandream', '
')
At then end of the day, this site's objective is to warn us of the risks in living beyond our means. Whether those risks materialise tomorrow or in a few decades (as I generally believe), it still plays, in my opinion, a valuable role.


When people claim things about a site objective, its relatively easy to check.

From the About Us section of this site.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Peak Oil WebSite About Us', 'T')he web is full of diversions, distractions, fluff, and filth, but there are few rare places on the web where you can discuss the things that actually matter to our lives, our families, and to future generations.

Our site’s mission has been “exploring the issue of hydrocarbon depletion” AKA Peak Oil, undoubtedly the most serious economic and cultural crossroads in several generations.


Perhaps everyone automatically equates peak oil with "living beyond our means", I certainly don't, and if the website owners thought the same thing, maybe they should have said so?
Tami
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 17
Joined: Thu 10 Jun 2010, 00:37:59
Top

Next

Return to Open Topic Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron