by Paulo1 » Sun 26 Oct 2014, 10:36:43
Hi Desumaiden,
It might be better to do more research on topics, on this site and others, before you continually post assertions on topics you don't understand or know much about. If you were one of my past students I would advise you to listen and wait and your questions may be answered before raising your hand. I would do this privately, but in this circumstance I can't.
We can all find links and news stories to quickly jump on and post, but most seasoned P Oilers wait and see what arises on topic, and also wait for other opinions to surface.
Coping with the understanding of PO is a process. It is also dynamic. It takes many years to appreciate the psychological impacts this understanding has on people, and often many years to develop a new paradigm in order to remain healthy and strong enough to go forward with a new way of living. For if this knowledge does not change us and change us for the better, why bother? As you meld your knowledge and understanding of PO into a grouping we think of as a 'personal point of view', and if this POV is based on life experience and accurate data then over time you have an opinion that others want to hear.
There are a few general assertions that come up all the time on this site, and I will list a few examples.
PO will cause economic collapse and/or economic collapse will cause PO.
Renewables will save us all and/or renewables will not work without oil.
Electric cars will solve all transportation issues and/or they won't because of range limits.
Oil Sands are evil, ineffiecient...and/or they have a role and are delaying the effects of PO.
Fracking is a new and evil technology destroying eco-systems, and/or fracking is old technology and has been used safely for decades.
Take your pick. There are scores of articles and links that quite effectively argue each assertion. There are post after post of individuals that passionately assert one view or another, or somewhere in between.
I will return to your headline, "Tar Sands are Uneconomical for Oil Production." Okay, and you say this because.....? While I no longer have family members who work there, I do know there are hundreds of thousands of Canadians who do. I know at least 100 people who work in Alberta, and appreciate it is one of the few sources of revenue that is keeping our Federal Govt. somewhat solvent. Without the 'Oil Sands' money, many facets of our society would not exist and on this list are many things we take for granted, cherish, and define us as Canadian. I submit to you, if any activity is uneconomical it is called a 'charity', and the last time I looked the multi-national oil companies operating in 'The Sands' are far from being charitable organizations. When a 'project' becomes uneconomical as per required revenues, it will be mothballed or shut down permanently as is the pulp mill where I used to live. Those projects would not exist, pure and simple.
As a 59 year old who has worked in three different industries, raised a family, has a few university degrees, one trade, and one technical profession under my belt (all obtained by distance learning and night school long before online course offerings were common place), and as someone who has lost jobs due to economic declines, recessions, and had to work away for months at a time to maintain family and mortgage, I have learned to be more forgiving about folks who work in industries I don't agree with. There are damn good reasons why someone from Newfoundland runs a machine in a Ft Mac Oil sand operation. It is called survival. They are there for the same reasons a migrant worker picks berries in the Fraser Valley, or why my neighbour falls trees in a remote coastal logging camp. Unless one is on the public teat, or has independent means, people have to work and that means going to where the work is.
Headlines are about people. I urge you (someone who is very young) and has yet to forge ahead in life to maintain this perspective.
This is a time for someone who is young, and PO aware, to establish themselves in life in a mindful and deliberate manner. You don't want to be the 'leaf floating downstream' as events propel us forward as it seems most likely to do. Pick a career that can adapt to energy constraints and will make the world a better place.
regards...paulo