I think the part that died was the Overnight Armageddon part, people thought (some hoped) that Mad Max was just around the corner and soon all the stuff that hacks them off would be washed away leaving a clean slate to redraw the world, in their image.
Matt Simmons (and lots of others) didn't help by spouting that oil was going to some crazy high number overnight and stay there. How a banker could think that a quick rise to $500 or $1,000/bbl could be sustained for any amount of time is beyond me. Who reading this could pay $30/gal ($1,000/bbl/42gal/bbl + something for Oh&P) next week and simply continue without making dramatic change?
I said one time way back that by the time oil can stay at $500/bbl it won't matter to most of us because, one way or another, we'll be out of the market anyway.
It is pretty clear that in the short run, demand is amazingly inflexible to smaller spikes. We have after all, tens and hundreds of trillions invested in a system based on liquid fuels that touches every part of our lives. We'll cut back on nearly everything else before we do fuel. But after some magic number is reached, and we cut back on enough other stuff in order to keep the tank full, demand finally drops – mainly because the jobs related to the stuff we cut back on are pruned. Looks like $100-120/bbl might be that number right now but it could be a GDP percentage or some other magic formula. Everything is relative though and someday the price may seem amazingly high - just like I imagine $3.50/gallon for unleaded does today for those folks we once called 99ers and who we now don't call anything because they have been pruned. Eventually we are able to reshuffle our routine and eliminate the most wasteful habits, those of us who waste the most.
I think the idea of overnight armageddon, via oil price, happening to everyone all at once was just the latest in the long line of end of the world scenarios people like to fantasize about. When IT "didn't happen", EOTW hobbyist types lost interest – what fun is TEOTW if it is only the end as I Know It? Or, The End Of The World As The Guy Down The Street Who Lost His Job Knows It? If we aren't all going down to the Thunder Dome together it isn't really Armageddon is it?
The thing is, peak oil is happening. It is happening to the guy down the street, to the Greeks and Brits and looks like maybe to the Chinese. If it weren't for governments inventing money, how many more would be in "official" recession? The US surely would.
We're are on the undulating plateau as expected, the only surprise at this point is the length to which the people with access to government money have gone go to throw it at Chesapeake & Co. The whole fracking frenzy and ongoing, breathless commentary on the amazing revolutionary glut indicates to me just how desperate we are to come up with a liquid solution. But declining returns mean we are using the last of the cheap oil to frack/pound sand/cook asphalt/crack corn to fill up and cruise down the road with our eyes closed yelling LALALALA at the top of our lungs pretending everything is copacetic – or better.
My thought is by the time we cruise off the $20/bbl conventional oil plateau that we've been on for the last 5 or 6 years, the proverbial chickens will be well into the evening commute and throwing the kitchen sink won't scare them away.
This IS peak oil, folks. It is happening all around you. If the end of unlimited fossil fueled growth has left you with an intact income and growing net worth count yourself lucky. And if you have truly have no worries about your kids' future, then Brother, pass that thing down my way 'cuz it's gotta be good!
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