I forgot this one:$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')igh oil prices, painful enough to encourage changes in behavior but not so high as to preclude those changes are the only mitigation for the effects of peak FFs. But quick increases to the very high prices levels peakers like Simmons warned of can't be maintained for any length of time so can't "Collapse" the economy down to some stone-age bug-eating level.
Simmons and others predicted overnight expensive oil due to rapid depletion. The only way I can see that happening is in a "cliff" scenario: high prices and stubborn demand resulting from the inertia of the old, cheap oil economy "pull forward" difficult to extract oil - like fraced, deep, arctic oil, causing the initial period of decline to be the steepest period, rather than the later, mid-downslope period - a higher peak but a steep cliff. But even then I don't think extremely high prices could be maintained long.
Think of it like this, the uses for oil are distributed along a continuum of utility, with many uses of oil today mere convenience at best and simple habit at worst. A high oil price can change those wasteful behaviors if the price stays high long enough. So at $100 oil, is the trip to the quick sac in the 4x4 to get a bottle of water worth $3 in unleaded?
Sure, we'd "like" to drive down for an Evian and we probably continue to do so at $3 if the high price appears to be temporary. But after some period, even the $3 cost for the Evian trip becomes less tolerable as it cuts into other, more important purchases, maybe baby's new shoes for an example. So for a while we drink tap water instead of driving for the Evian. After some time with no prospect of oil prices falling, we decide it would be better to trade in the 4x for an old Beetle or even better, move within walking distance of the Quik Sac. That is real mitigation.