by Aaron » Mon 30 May 2005, 09:07:57
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'K')id, you're fucked. Just get used to it. Your life is going to consist of a daily regimen of increasing poverty and depression.
I suggest joining up with some kind of armed militia that will use you for cannon fodder. Get laid while you can, because your short and miserable life will hold no joy at all starting in 2008.
LOL!!!
It's difficult to know what to believe isn't it?
Ayoob thinks you're doomed, Bigg thinks it's a minor roadblock, with Pops in between.
If Simmons is wrong, I agree with Pops... hydrocarbon depletion is a decades long process transitioning into an era of more expensive energy.
Not a party, but no brain munching zombie biker gangs either.
If Simmons is correct, and the major producers have grossly misrepresented their reserve numbers, then it's a Kuntsler clusterfuck.
This argument hinges on the decline rate, offset by new energy sources.
The stage is set, actors in place, audience waiting, in a process which began 150 years ago.
There is an axiom which goes "Past trends dictate future occurrences."
Which means that the momentum of the past has a direct effect on what's possible in the future.
If the detractors are correct, and our world experiences a nice gentle 2-3% depletion rate over decades... then we are probably good to go.
So this pretty much boils down to how much confidence you have that OPEC, and specifically SA, have provided realistic data on their oil reserves in place, and how quickly these giant wells will deplete.
The faster the depletion, the less likely humanity will avoid the worse parts of peak oil.
My take is that OPEC is full of crap, depletion will be rapid, and we are in trouble.
Is peak oil a return to an idealized version of the good old days?
No.
The good old days were never really that good anyway.
Will nations fight over a shrinking resource base?
Always have in the past.
So what will it be?
A generous helping of zombies, or a remake of "It's a Wonderful Life"?
Pick your fantasy and enjoy...
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.
Hazel Henderson