Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Gail: Energy Supply, Population, and the Economy

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby Lore » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 10:26:22

As dissident wrote, this is another one of those wishful thinking scenarios that disregards the science behind what we know about greenhouse gases. Even if we stopped emitting all the human side of CO2 tomorrow, not gonna happen, we still have centuries of warming from feed backs to look forward to before the planet stabilizes at what will likely be a higher new normal.
The things that will destroy America are prosperity-at-any-price, peace-at-any-price, safety-first instead of duty-first, the love of soft living, and the get-rich-quick theory of life.
... Theodore Roosevelt
User avatar
Lore
Fission
Fission
 
Posts: 9021
Joined: Fri 26 Aug 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Fear Of A Blank Planet

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby dissident » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 10:51:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Subjectivist', '
')Do you have any links to the papers by Dr. Archer? I have watched some o his online lectures, he seems to know what he is talking about.


http://geosci.uchicago.edu/%7Earcher/re ... v_tail.pdf

He has a lots of papers linked at his website: http://geosci.uchicago.edu/directory/david-archer
dissident
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 6458
Joined: Sat 08 Apr 2006, 03:00:00

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby dissident » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 10:54:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GHung', 'W')hat happens to global temps when/if humans slow/stop adding gigatons of particulates to the air? It's been posited that a feedback loop of warming will occur due to a clearer atmosphere, while the greenhouse gasses remain. Do particulate emissions help hold global warming in check to some extent?


There will be extra warming. But I believe the effect will be less than in the past when the OECD countries cleaned up their act. Chinese coal plants are cleaner thanks to technological improvements initiated in the 1970s and both China and India are at low latitudes where the wet removal of particulates is more efficient than in Europe or North America.
dissident
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 6458
Joined: Sat 08 Apr 2006, 03:00:00

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby dissident » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 10:58:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dissident', 'T')he IPCC is grossly underestimating CH4 emissions from natural sources induced by warming. So far there is no indication of CO2 emissions decline and in fact it has accelerated in the last several years. Even if peak fossil fuels is sharp and severe, it will take centuries for the CO2 levels in the atmosphere to decline. So there will not be any sustained cooling before 2100 and the locked-in warming from existing CO2 levels (which are still increasing) will continue. The e-folding rate for CO2 often thrown around as being 100 years is BS (It is not a simple exponential since the sinks are functions of the temperature history, see David Archer's papers for more.)

And, as ROCKMAN points out, coal burning is not going to stop any time soon.


I missed the main part: There will be enough warming from the current fossil fuel reserves to release polar CH4 reserves. So the warming will be self-sustaining. Right now it is not clear that the warming will stop before the oceans warm up enough to start melting clathrates. So we have a high probability of entering one of the major global warming regimes the planet has experienced in the past.
dissident
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 6458
Joined: Sat 08 Apr 2006, 03:00:00

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby dohboi » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 11:04:00

I have seen these charts before. Whatever year they are produced is predicted to be the year of the peak of all energy resources. When I saw the title, I assumed that was the meaning--the shark-fin-looking charts have gotten so common over the years that they've eaten themselves.

Or maybe that PO has finally jumped the shark? :roll:

Look, even if all burning of ff's stopped today, CO2 levels and global temperatures would likely increase for a long time just because of feedbacks that are already kicking in and the general inertia of the system.

There are huge quantities of ever-dirtier and ever-lower-EROEI fossil fuels out there that some one will always try to exploit one way or the other, no matter the cost to local or global viability. Surely this should have been the lesson to all PO-ers when the main event everyone was waiting for--the peak of conventional, land-based, light sweet crude in the oughts--happened and mostly the world just kept on rolling, spewing ever more CO2 from ever more extracted carbon.

Waiting for PO to get us out of AGW is lazy, is a gross miscalculation, and is I suspect in some cases disingenuous.

ETA: This has to be the first time that dor has brought up the threat of clathrates before I did! :lol: :razz: I must be getting old and slow on the draw. :cry:
User avatar
dohboi
Harmless Drudge
Harmless Drudge
 
Posts: 19990
Joined: Mon 05 Dec 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby evilgenius » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 12:55:05

I think the chart is more borne out of a pervasive fear that, should the weak economic recovery succumb to a recession, the world will go right back to where it was in 2008 than it is of some secret knowledge of natural resource conditions. The bad news is that we are headed for a recession. The news out of China demonstrates that. The potentially good news is that it should be just a business cycle determined event.

The fly in the ointment is deflation. When too much investment has been placed in the financial sector, and not into the real economy, then people lose their ability to react to changes brought about by recessions. When they cannot react in ways that address economic uncertainty and circumstances because of onerous independent contractor wage death or pervasive wage theft through paycheck cards and overtime reclassification etc., then the pool of money available to the economy by means of those affected people's collective actions is lost. All by itself these poorest of people are not, even collectively, enough to tip the scales, though. The problem is that those who own small businesses for whom those people are a percentage of their clientele and those whose jobs are therefore related to their plight have also not had the level of investment occur directed at them, and their local economies, sufficiently enough to raise their prospects for success in the face of economic trouble. What they would count on normally, compelling them in new creative directions, to fill the gap may not be there. The second line may not hold in the coming recession. When, if, it doesn't the faith of the people will be challenged.

The faith of the people is what counts when dealing with recessions. If people fear they reduce spending. If those reductions last too long or are aimed at the wrong targets because people don't have the options available to them to aim their cutbacks at the right targets, just look at how corporations protect themselves by lobbying for protections society ought not to give them, then the changes brought about by a recession can become counter-productive rather than creatively destructive. This disconnect has the ability to throw a lot of people out of work very quickly, like the shoe drop that occurred when upwards of $5.00 per gallon gas suddenly throttled the economy. People fought to pay those high prices and keep their things going for a while, they had few other choices, but at a certain point it all fell apart. Collectively they could no longer pay to keep every rich guy going as well as themselves. The poorest of them let their mortgages slide. They comprised enough of a group to make a difference that reverberated throughout the economy, taking down those above them quickly. Oh, at first no pundit looking at it was willing to say that the sub-prime defaults were going to be that serious, but within a few months they all changed their tune.

Given this history many don't believe that a new recession can be tolerated. Too much of the recovery investment spent has gone into financial institutions they say. Too many people are locked into serving this or that master, and won't be able to change their economic behavior in the event of a downturn. What I don't get is how these same people fear inflation. Sure, fear of inflation was pretty much all pervasive for much of the 20th Century, but you need appreciable growth to sustain it, or some corresponding communal lack of faith, such as that wrought against the currency of Zimbabwe. Armed with this attitude they excoriate the Fed for providing stimulus. Little do they realize that without that stimulus their broader fears would become reality. Instead they argue here and there that the opposite would happen, and that the Fed is actually causing the problems. This causes them to climb onto the backs of those who condemn the Fed and call loudly for an end to QE this and that. These people could find themselves walking seemingly quite happily into renewed deflation, all the while blind to it as they continue to harp endlessly about the dangers of hyperinflation.

Yeah, the graph is possible, if the wrong things happen. It's possible because under a deflationary economic environment energy companies are locked into capital investment that occurred under prior period conditions. The value of those prior investments becomes leveraged against them when new money is suddenly worth more than old money. They have a choice to find new investment, enough to overcome the leverage, or to quit. History tells us that often times companies in this situation do elect to quit.
User avatar
evilgenius
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3730
Joined: Tue 06 Dec 2005, 04:00:00
Location: Stopped at the Border.

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 14:18:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '[')wish.
Linear thinking. Try system thinking. Coal is not a transport fuel. [/quote] Really?
http://www.historyinsidepictures.com/siteimages/R46.JPG
User avatar
vtsnowedin
Fusion
Fusion
 
Posts: 14897
Joined: Fri 11 Jul 2008, 03:00:00

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby Lore » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 14:53:34

I'd like to get my hands on those nascent nicads to do that, if you get my drift!
The things that will destroy America are prosperity-at-any-price, peace-at-any-price, safety-first instead of duty-first, the love of soft living, and the get-rich-quick theory of life.
... Theodore Roosevelt
User avatar
Lore
Fission
Fission
 
Posts: 9021
Joined: Fri 26 Aug 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Fear Of A Blank Planet

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 14:54:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vtsnowedin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '[')wish.
Linear thinking. Try system thinking. Coal is not a transport fuel. Really?
http://www.historyinsidepictures.com/siteimages/R46.JPG


Maybe in your hippie-dippie world coal is a transport fuel. :razz:
Image
Try running this operation on a nicad battery.

Me? VTsnowedin a "Hippi-dippie"? Surely you jest!
Coal was once the major transportation fuel for both rail and ocean going ships and there is no reason why it could not be again. Also all your cranes shovels and excavators had steam /coal powered versions in that era and today's modern versions could be converted but with huge efficiency losses. Not saying that is a good or likely plan for the future but it is possible.
User avatar
vtsnowedin
Fusion
Fusion
 
Posts: 14897
Joined: Fri 11 Jul 2008, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby Subjectivist » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 14:55:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vtsnowedin', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '[')wish.
Linear thinking. Try system thinking. Coal is not a transport fuel. Really?
http://www.historyinsidepictures.com/siteimages/R46.JPG


Maybe in your hippie-dippie world coal is a transport fuel. :razz:
Image
Try running this operation on a nicad battery.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steam_shovel

Those ran on coal and dug the panama canal, ships until after World War I were predominantly steam ships burning coal, coal burning steam locomotives travled all over the railroad network until the 1950's.
II Chronicles 7:14 if my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and I will forgive their sin and will heal their land.
Subjectivist
Volunteer
Volunteer
 
Posts: 4705
Joined: Sat 28 Aug 2010, 07:38:26
Location: Northwest Ohio
Top

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 16:22:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '.') No more nervous striving. Zen. Buddha. Navel gazing. Epicurious delights. Art. Sex. Drugs. Staying still.
Those two will be the very last to go. Either one will make a cold winter night beside a dieing wood or coal fire much more pleasant.
User avatar
vtsnowedin
Fusion
Fusion
 
Posts: 14897
Joined: Fri 11 Jul 2008, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 16:26:00

pstarr - "Coal is not a transport fuel." Not to any meaningful level today. But some think e-cars will be the solution to PO. Gotta burn something to make that e-. In Texas well have a fair bit of nuke, NG and wind e-. Even without e-cars the Texas demand for e- is expected to increase by 30% in the next couple of decades. We are also the biggest coal burning state today and have plans to stay so. About to do one of the biggest sequestering projects in the country pulling CO2 from the second largest single source of GHG in the country.
User avatar
ROCKMAN
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 11397
Joined: Tue 27 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: TEXAS

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby Ibon » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 16:29:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '
')
Another critical point is that our consumer society is a waste society. We really don't need the jobs that virtually everyone is engaged. Driving to offices, pounding keyboards, talking on the phone, selling stuff at the mall. Flying off to face-to-face meeting. Shopping at the mall, going to movies. Fun stuff. Is not necessary. We will learn how to live on warmth, food, and security . . . mostly supplied by few hardy men/women working in hardy places. While the rest of us sit still. Not moving. No more nervous striving. Zen. Buddha. Navel gazing. Epicurious delights. Art. Sex. Drugs. Staying still.


I was thinking about this as well. A steady state economy presents a real challenge psychologically. We modern humans are goal oriented. We don’t like anything steady state as it sounds like a hamster running in place. What motivates and drives is the perspective of advancement toward some goal. Steady state is boredom and means breaking even. No storing of nuts. No sacrifice or delayed gratification. No instant gratification either really.

We all become a society of maintenance. Steady as she goes. No ups and downs. Just maintaining and recycling. Maintaining and recycling. How do we reconcile this with the great motivation force that the dream of progress has instilled in us up to now. What is glorious or sexy about being a maintenance man?

Restoration does have some glamour. Bringing back to life something worn and run down. Restoring an old house. Oiling a squeaky wheel. Restoration has honor and requires creativity. Future generations seeing marine habitats restored, the biosphere restored, a reversal of biodiversity loss. These are all lofty goals. Feel good goals. Could hold a society as a new story.

It could be the birth of less restlessness. More meditation quality. More tuning into the local flora and fauna for your entertainment.

More being.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
blog: http://blog.mounttotumas.com/
website: http://www.mounttotumas.com
User avatar
Ibon
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 9572
Joined: Fri 03 Dec 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Volcan, Panama
Top

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby Paulo1 » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 18:48:39

What? And back to steam powered locis to haul logs? Oxen? I live about 6 km from a dryland sort. They have loaders so big they can lift the entire log load from a 16' bunk off-highway truck, in one shot. They then back up with the load at 10-15 km/hr, and quickly spread them out where two 988s descend on the load like bees and sort them to bundlers where they are dropped into the chuck and boomed up for transport by tug. All diesel. It takes minutes. I suppose the tug could coal up, but nothing else could in this operation. Fallers go back to hand saws and axes? Without affordable diesel most industry that must be portable will simply stop, and wage earners now making a good living will go back to hand-to-mouth existence. The good old days wern't as good as these days if you work with your muscles to make a living. It could take an entire day for two people to drop a large west coast tree. Now, one man can do it in twenty minutes....and that's doing it safely.

I don't think Gail is correct in her level of doom, to get back to the original post. I understand her reasoning, but choose to believe that we will simply get poorer. As more and more become disenfranchised there will be more and more unrest....upheavel. People will wonder what the hell is going on and be caught up in individual stories and events, and fail to see the downward trend. Politicians will be blamed and there will be a lot of one termers. I will be interested to see the transition to smaller stores. I buy a lot of building materials and tools. I wonder if the large lumber yards will morph down to the smaller neighbourhood yards that were around when I was a kid. In 1980 we had one lumber yard. It closed on Sundays and Mondays so employees would have two days off and yet saturdays were still available for the customers who worked mon-fri. Now there are huge 7 day per week operations like Home Depot. One day I expect to see them sell cans of tuna and toilet paper. And one day I expect to see them close.

PO limiting global warming? Maybe, but before that we will have coal to liquids, peat and wood pellets for more heating applications, and garbage and bio waste electrical generation. There will be lots of smoke and bad air and poor people. People will turn their lights off and forgo the toys. Not seeing it yet, though. I still see kids from families on welfare with smart phones and gaming stations. Everyone seems to have a big tv and electric stove. Conveniences are still considered to be necessities and entitlements.

When a Miami is washed away we might see some action, but until then no one in power will be brave enough to speak the truth. They will choose to remain ignorant in order to keep feathering their nest.

Paulo
Paulo1
Coal
Coal
 
Posts: 425
Joined: Sun 07 Apr 2013, 15:50:35
Location: East Coast Vancouver Island

Re: Gail: The Shark That Ate CC

Unread postby Plantagenet » Sun 13 Apr 2014, 20:17:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'G')ail, being the PO doomer that we all know and love, has a new post which argues that GW will not exceed the IPCCs lowest estimate simply because collapse, in the form of the sharkfin plot below, will provide the ultimate carbon reduction program.
Image


Economic theory says when the supply of a commodity runs short, it will be replaced by another commodity.

When oil runs short it will be replaced by natural gas, coal, or some other energy source. We can already see this process starting. My bet is on NG---especially after the discovery of new chemical process that converts NG into a liquid fuel that is can be used just like gasoline.

Image
User avatar
Plantagenet
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 26765
Joined: Mon 09 Apr 2007, 03:00:00
Location: Alaska (its much bigger than Texas).
Top

PreviousNext

Return to Peak Oil Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron