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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby Lumpy » Fri 18 Feb 2011, 21:23:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '
')It seems logical that inflating prices in basic commodities will generally hurt people on the low end of the ladder more than at the top and those living week to week sooner than those living below their means.


However, how much money does one have to have to keep "living below their means" if hyperinflation sets in?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '
')On the other hand, I'm not sure having a larger income alone is a sure bet or even a high net worth if the income goes away and the assets evaporate, like lots of people's have with the RE bust and market gyrations the last decade.


I am not a major DOOOOOOMER. But I am a MAJOR preparer. Because, frankly, I can't see how any segment of society/any socioeconomic class is NOT going to be hit. Well, maybe if a person is living in a Yurt in Mongolia with zero contact with the outside world. (I made up that scenario ... maybe THEY all have contact with the outside world ... so fill in a scenario that fits better ... maybe living permanently LOST on an island, per that popular series.)

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Why didn't everyone do that [hedge oil] instead of complaining?
Your employees earn enough to speculate on commodities?

I am not liberal in my politics. But I have to give Pops an "Amen, brother" on this one. (Not saying he is liberal either ... just saying he's RIGHT. MOST people don't have $$ to put into speculation.)

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')its hard to see "doooom" when everything is improving in your personal life


I am trying to speak politely here. But, seriously, since when is the status of one's own personal life the criteria for how things are going overall? My brother died a year ago today. This is NOT my favorite day of the year. But I can't extrapolate that to how everyone else is affected by 2/18. (Yes, that was a simplistic -- albeit true -- example. But I'm sure you get the drift.)

I think you are taking a rather narrow view of things, Queaks. It seems as though your opinion is, if it hasn't impacted you directly yet in a painful/difficult way ... and/or if things in your personal world are going well, then there is no train coming down the track. Maybe that train is just around a few more curves before it will get to you, personally. But we will all be affected.

Respectfully,
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby Keith_McClary » Fri 18 Feb 2011, 23:06:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Queaks', 'M')ad magazine from my childhood " what , me worry?"

Image
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Queaks', 'I')t is the use of that energy and the possible failure to find substitutes that will cause us issues, but I just don't see the impact affecting my life to a great extent.
Investors wont put money into substitutes until they see a protracted oil shortage. After that, there are usually delays and cost over-runs with new technology. It's not like we will simply find some previously unknown mineral we can dig up and pop in our gas tanks.

Even if you believe tech will save you, you really have to be optimistic to think it will happen fast enough to avoid a period of worldwide economic problems which will erode your investments and professional income.
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby Ayoob » Fri 18 Feb 2011, 23:12:27

I don't care whether you buy into it or not. Frankly, I kind of hope you don't.

I don't have to outrun the bear, I just have to outrun YOU.
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby Lumpy » Sat 19 Feb 2011, 11:23:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ayoob', 'I') don't care whether you buy into it or not. Frankly, I kind of hope you don't.

I don't have to outrun the bear, I just have to outrun YOU.


If there was a thumbs up here, Ayoob, (like on Facebook), I'd give you one.
One less bear IS one less bear to worry about.

Made me laugh.

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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby Queaks » Sat 19 Feb 2011, 12:29:32

Thanks for all of you who have answered so thoughtfully. I wasn't trying to paint the whole world with rose colored glasses, just that in my own corner of the world things seem to be alright, even good. Of course, should the economics/politics dictate that the supply is limited and even those with money to purchase would not be allowed to it would cramp my style as well. I live well, but am saving every month and plan to retire in a few years in a near off the grid mode as I can yet remain "connected". By this I mean I hope to spend the money for providing for my base power and utilities needs should the grid not be operational, but not planning for a survivalist mode, just a "be prepared" for power failures and etc. Kinda like having that whole house generator tied to the gas line today, but a bit more independent with off grid power sources as much as I can do with reasonable economics...

Yes I want others to do well and I am not wishing ill for anyone, and hope that society as a whole does well, but I guess my feelings are that at least for my remaining lifetime things will probably "muddle through" alright and normal life preparedness will allow a decent life for almost everyone (at least in the west). Do many of you actually see things declining quickly? yes I see the mid-east unrest , but I remember the American hostages in Iran many years ago too and several pundits painted that as the end of the "good times" too. Yet here we are. Somehow I think that things 30 years from now will not be materially different economically. I see no "doom" that is worse than the "doom" from years ago. Things will change, but change brings opportunity as well as strife for those who look for the patterns and new "order".

To answer the query of a couple posts, yes, most of my employees are paid well enough to trade commodities if they choose, certainly equities, and oil ETF's like the USO. Most make a decent six figure pay. The particular employee who was boycotting his gas purchase on a particular "gas out day" to protest has two BMWs; a series 7 and a 5. He is single and has more disposable income than I do, so he certainly could have bought the oil stocks and futures when I did if he chose to. But even someone not in his income bracket could have bought an oil equity as a "hedge", unless they were totally living hand to mouth, and that is a situation none of my employees are in.

I enjoy the banter here and many of you have perspectives that are unique and illuminating. thank you.
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby lper100km » Sat 19 Feb 2011, 16:47:56

Q: Your comments about all is well in your corner of the world is illuminating. You are obviously well off financially and feel secure that it will mitigate your personal inconveniences when tshtf. What you are really saying is that you are monetarily insulated and don’t give a damn. Either that or, more probably, that your lifestyle is so insulated from reality that you cannot see a problem if you fell over it or understand the consequences if you did.

Extending that analogy to the kind of lifestyle of those who run governments, the ‘establishment’, and the economy is scary. Are they so insulated from and blind to the inevitability of PO that it does not register at all? This would certainly explain a lot of the absence of PO news in the MSM and in government planning and the continuing attempts to dispel anxieties and maintain bau. Complacency in leaders is not a good thing as the consequences are ruinous for all. The UK is the only gov. that so far, has made any attempt to get to grips with the issue. Is the UK closer to an energy crisis than anyone cares to admit?

Monetary wealth may not buy you immunity from the effects of civil disruption resulting from sustained economic failure. Ostentation would almost certainly mark a person as a target. Prep now and you may make your wealth work for you in the long run. Take a tip from trading as an analogy – sell into a good market.
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby americandream » Sat 19 Feb 2011, 17:00:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Adelaidewonderer', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Queaks', 'M')aybe I have optimistic glasses on, but why would the government intervene when the free markets do it better?


Governments intervene all the time to protect individuals. A rich man doesnt have a police force, and a poor man not. At the point that governments start to intervene in resource allocation, I suspect we will be at the point that it doesnt matter if government intervention makes the process less economical. It will come down to protecting individuals, and ensuring everyman is created equally. Surely you cant look at the world now, and say that if the basics in life (food, shelter etc), then the poor are going to sit back and take it.

Its not about saying your rich, you can have what you want, its about saying, if i dont share with those less fortunate, they will just take it.


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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby Questionmark » Sat 19 Feb 2011, 17:23:47

On the topic of potential peak oil related disasters: It's simple economics; our economy runs on oil and as the price rises due to a supply squeeze then the economy declines until either reaching a sustainable level or a new primary energy source is discovered. I believe that the biggest risk to the U.S. is a USSR style collapse and fracturing. In all likelihood oil production peaked in 2005 and most credible sources expect terminal production decline to begin in the next few years (2012 is a popular estimate).

On the topic of free markets vs government intervention: Free markets tend to redistribute resources and wealth into the hands of a select privileged few. Why this happens is a hotly debated topic but the fact that it does occur is undeniable. This has drastic implications when it comes to energy and this is directly due to our dependence on oil as a nation. The market rations energy better so long as you believe that a privileged minority should be allowed to live in excess while millions of people starve and suffer. When it comes to declining oil supplies it's obvious that we can use it much more efficiently if we rationed and planned our use out beforehand, the real question is whose interests is our government likely to protect? I personally don't believe the government will be willing to ration energy and for this reason I consider a USSR style economic collapse all the more likely.

So assuming you agree with my assessment you have to consider how your business and livelihood would be affected by large amounts of civil unrest and a weakening federal government. And that's before you even consider a devaluing currency and the unsustainable ponzi scheme that is our current economic system.
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby americandream » Sat 19 Feb 2011, 19:52:21

The comparison with the USSR isn't a valid one. The collapse there was brought on by a prolonged war of ideologies between steady state modernity which is invariably less surplus endowed and capitalist modernity which had the surplus to see out the war. So to the extent that the USSR failed, it is becasue it was not as in surplus as the West. It's collapse was followed by a capitulation to free markets.

The USSR's failure was less one of compulsion and more one of defeat. The differences are subtle and it is here that dialectic materialism plays out.
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby evilgenius » Sun 20 Feb 2011, 12:59:20

You are right. For now your situation will not change much. In fact it actually has more opportunity, as you say, for creating wealth. The crises are playing out where people are less fortunate. Food prices rock poorer countries,we all cross our fingers and hold our breath, and their governments fall. Energy shortages brought on by a litany of reasons cause rolling blackouts and brownouts across the jungles of less economically fortunate climes. Overall uncertainty increases in the investment world, however, and you have to respond by increasing your diversity. An investor could be jacked if they don't diversify, but it does not have the same impact as a Molotov cocktail across the front of a tank or a bullet upside the brain.

I am not against you. Please don't interpret this as condemnation. I can see that your position does not come with only opportunity like a bushel of wheat in one hand, but also with responsibility like an anvil's weight in the other. The markets are cruel masters to them that think they can impose philosophical will upon them and just as tyrannical to those who didn't try to do that all the same over time.
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby Queaks » Sun 20 Feb 2011, 14:52:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('evilgenius', 'Y')ou are right. For now your situation will not change much. In fact it actually has more opportunity, as you say, for creating wealth. The crises are playing out where people are less fortunate. Food prices rock poorer countries,we all cross our fingers and hold our breath, and their governments fall. Energy shortages brought on by a litany of reasons cause rolling blackouts and brownouts across the jungles of less economically fortunate climes. Overall uncertainty increases in the investment world, however, and you have to respond by increasing your diversity. An investor could be jacked if they don't diversify, but it does not have the same impact as a Molotov cocktail across the front of a tank or a bullet upside the brain.

I am not against you. Please don't interpret this as condemnation. I can see that your position does not come with only opportunity like a bushel of wheat in one hand, but also with responsibility like an anvil's weight in the other. The markets are cruel masters to them that think they can impose philosophical will upon them and just as tyrannical to those who didn't try to do that all the same over time.


You have some good points and my view is much as you espouse. I am not trying to abdicate the need for being civic minded, and I contribute to charity both in goods and cash, and with my time. That being said, I also try to make money from the chaos. I don't see an issue with trying to do that. I actually get better prepared for living in the future by living fully today. The next home will be more "off grid" and include acreage for light farming (grew up on a farm so not all is alien). Just as one should have water and "flashlights" for a power outage, I prepare to retire in a way that it will be more as an "independent" in terms of infrastructure. Still, it doesn't change my position that most issues will "muddle on" much as they have for the last 30 years. I don't see the situation materially different now than it was in the Carter years, and that was period with institutionalized doom and gloom complete with sweater in the oval office. Again, while I prepare to be more independent in my retirement period and feel that is better in terms of economics (if you have your own power sources an outage doesn't impact you as much), I do feel that generally the situation in the near term (30 years) will be much as it has been in the last. I don't see the catalyst that will have a disruptive change in the 50-60 yr old's lifestyle (assuming an appropriate nest egg), at least for our lifetimes. Do you?
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby Nano » Sun 20 Feb 2011, 15:42:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Queaks', 'I') don't see the catalyst that will have a disruptive change in the 50-60 yr old's lifestyle (assuming an appropriate nest egg), at least for our lifetimes. Do you?


I do see it. Here's one way to describe the situation, noting multiple likely catalysts for catastrophic catabolic collapse.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')Tough trade-offs will increasingly be needed between energy, food and water in terms of resource allocation and planning,” the WEF said in its latest global risks report, published last month.

"The key challenge is to incorporate the complex interconnections of this nexus of risks into response strategies that are integrated and take into account the many relevant stakeholders … Unintended consequences abound.”


From a recent pocom newslink: http://www.thenational.ae/thenationalco ... ageCount=1
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby Pops » Mon 21 Feb 2011, 13:59:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Queaks', 'I') don't see the catalyst that will have a disruptive change in the 50-60 yr old's lifestyle (assuming an appropriate nest egg), at least for our lifetimes. Do you?

Makes me think of what JMG said last week:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t’s not uncommon, when I give public talks about the end of the industrial age, for people to ask me whether I can offer them any hope. Now of course people mean many different things by the very indefinite word at the end of that utterance; some want me to tell them that I was only joking and industrial civilization isn’t really careening headfirst into hard planetary limits, others want me to tell them that when the crash is over and the dust settles, some kindly power or other will hand them an even shinier society than the one we’ve got, and still others will settle for being told that our civilization won’t drop dead until at least a few moments after they do.
Link

If the theory that an oil "burden" above 5% of world GDP causes recession is correct, we are likely going to bump down one more step this year or next since the Brent benchmark is already there.

I'd guess that means the next rung up the vulnerability scale is going to be cut and a new crop of 99er's will emerge – although this time we won't be calling them "99er's" will we? They'll be lucky to be called 49er's the next time.

Nonetheless, our "structural unemployment" number will likely move above the current level of, what, 7 or 8% to maybe 10-12%? And the under-employment figure to what, 22-25%? I suppose things can just keep going that way, basically the way people around here have theorized since we started theorizing.
At least as long as Joe-Six-Pack can afford a six-pack that is.

After which time old retired guys might see some disruptive change, or, like someone around here once said:
Don't fear peak oil, fear people's reaction.
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New Peak Oiler in Pittsburgh

Unread postby otter_17 » Mon 21 Feb 2011, 16:25:45

Hey guys,

I want to learn more about peak oil, refine my production model, and maybe speak my mind every once in a while.

One tool that I would like to bring to the discussion is a production spreadsheet that I made from the EIA International Petroleum Monthly 2010 figures. The user can extrapolate the production curve for each country based on recent trends, estimated reserves, or whatever. The user can put in the expected production for 2015, 2020, 2030, 2040 and 2050 for two cases: high estimate and low estimate. All these countries are added up and a curve is produced for planet Earth. I'm sure somebody has developed something similar already, but creating my own spreadsheet was something that allowed me to learn about the data myself. The next step is to learn more about the Hubbert curve and how Dr. Hubbert used it to model his projections. For now, I use a reserves estimate and form the future projection based on how the curve eats into the reserves and possible new discoveries over time.

I have looked at several gov't reports (such as the US military JOE report 2010, Hirsch Report, etc) as well as peak oil articles that have been springing up more recently.

I'm a new electrical engineer that has looked at this stuff about as objectively as I could. I'm a big renewable energy proponent, and I will do what it takes to help make my president's challenge of 80% renewables by 2035 a reality. I'm preparing for the worst, but at the same time I'll do my part to ensure that electric cars become better than gas cars and wind turbines better than coal plants. In my future, green tech will kick the crap out of our current fossil fuel tech, based on cost, clean air, everything.

Time to get to work...
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Re: New member wonders if all the hype is worth it?

Unread postby mos6507 » Mon 21 Feb 2011, 16:52:58

One thing Monte started talking about in his waning days (he does check in here it seems once a year or two) is that employment is itself a factor of our high-energy consumptive lifestyle. So as we're forced to conserve and powerdown, the jobs will be gone forever. You know, mechanics, car salesmen (like my dad), the Geek Squad at Best Buy, etc...

What that means is that energy acts as a form of welfare. It is what provides jobs for people to make things people don't need, provide services that people don't need, etc....

So what is left when we strip away all the nonessential economic activity?

We saw huge unemployment during the Great Depression, for instance. How many jobs does a society really _need_ in order to function at some basic level of subsistence?

Not a heck of a lot, apparently. Not a lot back during the depression, and perhaps even fewer now thanks to all this automation we now enjoy.

This to me is as much an argument as one can make to reruralize and focus on primary production and the informal economy. But the primary refuge from astronomical unemployment people will seek out is to live a ghetto-like existence in a pillbox apartment the city. Sure, the jobs may be clustered around the city, but think of all the cut-throat competition. You'll be sweeping floors and serving fries for a living and sleeping 20 to a room.

You'd really need to forge a whole new informal economy to escape that sort of trap, which I don't see happening many places.

As long as we rely on big business for our jobs, there's no end to the downsizing.
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Re: New Peak Oiler in Pittsburgh

Unread postby Sixstrings » Mon 21 Feb 2011, 22:44:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('otter_17', 'I')n my future, green tech will kick the crap out of our current fossil fuel tech, based on cost, clean air, everything.


You sound enthusiastic and hopeful about renewable energy. The old argument with renewables is EROEI -- energy returned on energy invested. Once peak oil really gets into gear, TS is going to HTF worldwide. Solar panels can't feed anybody -- that takes oil and petrochemicals. Cheap oil props up our entire civilization and way of life.. I just can't see how you counter peak oil with something like solar, I mean are we going to run farms on electricity? How are we going to move the 3,000 mile caesar salads around? Certainly not with corn ethanol or nat gas.. heck the southwest just had a nat gas shortage for regular old home heating.

I agree some renewables make more sense than others. Sugar is great for ethanol, so Brazil is smart to use so much of it. Our corn ethanol is inferior though, plus we're just burning our food there.

Others on the forum can argue this better than me.. my sense though is that all the "renewable energy" is just as dependent on cheap oil as the rest of everything else is. Sort of a catch-22.. as in how many barrels of oil does it take to make a solar panel.

Anyhow whether it works out or not we've got to try of course. Welcome to the forum.
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Re: New Peak Oiler in Pittsburgh

Unread postby otter_17 » Mon 21 Feb 2011, 23:23:15

Yeah, I hear you on the pessimism with renewables. That's why I preceded my statement with "in my future". Half of me knows that we don't have enough time, while the other half knows that I have to go down swinging. Hell, even if I'm completely wrong and everything turns out fine, I will have devoted my time to providing energy for a modern civilization that can last for hundreds of years. We will have to move to a sustainable society someday, though we may have squandered far too much time.

And I hear you on the agriculture end as well. I grew up on a farm in Ohio, and I have seen firsthand how reliant we are on petroleum to do nearly all of our agriculture in the United States. On our dairy farm, we didn't use a lot of chemical fertilizers, since we had enough animals to fertilize the fields via manure spreading, but many large scale farms in the breadbasket use a substantial amount. Plus, there is absolutely no way to do large scale farming without running a tractor or some other equipment. There are no electric tractors that I know of, so if diesel fuel supplies become scarce enough that farmers scale back their production nationwide, we have a substantial problem for folks living in the cities.

I also agree that food-based biofuels are not the answer. There was promising research during the Carter administration for bio-diesel based on algae production. Unfortunately, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) is just now revisiting some of that work, and has found that some of the work has been lost. The problem is scaling up the production and the time to do the engineering.

Thanks for the welcome, if I may ask a few questions...

Can someone point me to a thread on the forum that gives projections for oil production in million bbl per day for the oil producing countries (for 2015, 2020, etc)? Plus, I would be willing to share my spreadsheet with others who want toy with it to create their own projections. Are there peak oil spreadsheets available for download somewhere?
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Re: New Peak Oiler in Pittsburgh

Unread postby Plantagenet » Mon 21 Feb 2011, 23:33:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('otter_17', '
')I'm a new electrical engineer that has looked at this stuff about as objectively as I could. I'm a big renewable energy proponent, and I will do what it takes to help make my president's challenge of 80% renewables by 2035 a reality. I'm preparing for the worst, but at the same time I'll do my part to ensure that electric cars become better than gas cars and wind turbines better than coal plants. In my future, green tech will kick the crap out of our current fossil fuel tech, based on cost, clean air, everything.

Time to get to work...


Sounds great. And don't forget our President's campaign promise to get the USA off foreign oil by 2018. Its time to get working on that too!
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Re: New Peak Oiler in Pittsburgh

Unread postby Sixstrings » Tue 22 Feb 2011, 09:06:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('otter_17', '[')b]Half of me knows that we don't have enough time, while the other half knows that I have to go down swinging.


Well it's more than just whether we "have enough time," what I wonder about is whether it's even possible to do the square miles of solar panels and wind farms *without* cheap oil. The green tech stuff is all value-added, it's at the top of a big pyramid that's supported by cheap oil. Food is going to be a problem. Since you're interested in the farm angle, have a look at this doc Ludi posted if you have time:

http://cdn.static.viddler.com/flash/pub%20...%20y=ce56603d

The documentary focuses on the UK, but it's food for thought. They're a food importer. They have some farms, but nobody wants to farm anymore -- average farmer age is like 60 years old. When the peak oil decline gets in gear, and if global shipping sputters, people on that island are going to go hungry no way around that.

And when there's not enough food, everything else comes to a screeching halt. Starving people don't build solar panels and nuclear plants -- that's high tech stuff that requires a global supply chain running smoothly to support it. For example.. can we even build green tech in the US if globalism breaks down? We depend on China now, and many other countries. Globalism requires container ships and you can't run those on sunshine.

Someone would have to do the numbers to get to the bottom of this debate.. the essential question is whether or not we *can* transition from cheap oil to very intensive and supply chain dependent sources of energy like tar sands, massive solar panel farms, wind farms, and as yet to be perfected far out tech like tidal power. The feeling I keep getting with the green tech is that it's like using even more energy to make energy so there's some diminishing returns there. Or at the least life would be very different -- not even enough electricity to have the lights on more than a few hours in the evening much less a nation of 340 million buzzing around in EV's.

But I could be wrong. On the hopeful side, it's high prices that drive alternatives -- necessity being the mother of invention and all that. But still the oil *is* running out. Mos posted an article about Saudi Arabia planning to transition to solar panel farms so that after peak oil they can export electricity. But as oil gets more scarce, is all that Jetsons stuff even possible?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')an someone point me to a thread on the forum that gives projections for oil production in million bbl per day for the oil producing countries (for 2015, 2020, etc)? Plus, I would be willing to share my spreadsheet with others who want toy with it to create their own projections. Are there peak oil spreadsheets available for download somewhere?


I've seen those charts posted around here, gosh can't think of where to find one. You could have a look at the peak oil subforums, it's in there somewhere. If you don't get an answer in this thread try posting your question with a new thread in the peak oil discussion subforum.
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Re: New Peak Oiler in Pittsburgh

Unread postby Pops » Tue 22 Feb 2011, 09:31:11

Hi Otter, welcome.

If you cared to you could share your spreadsheet via google docs.
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Posts: 19746
Joined: Sat 03 Apr 2004, 04:00:00
Location: QuikSac for a 6-Pac

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