by Outcast_Searcher » Fri 10 Apr 2015, 17:34:58
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Good EIA chart, pops.
This is the one I keep going back to that certainly seems to imply we'll keep muddling along, energy wise, much like we are, for quite some time. (And the planet can just watch out for itself, apparently).
What I find surprising is, given all the alarm about climate change, how little the composition seems to move toward green/renewable energy in context of overall electricity consumption.
1). Coal is an environmental disaster and the regulatory hits to coal production in the US keep on coming (with many coal companies headed toward bankruptcy), and yet the overall coal usage looks flat to 2040. Yes, this makes me scratch my head.
2). I know renewables are expensive and that solar is a small slice of renewables compared to hydro, but this sure means burning an awful lot of hydrocarbons, and of course specifically natural gas which looks like it is trending upward the fastest through 2040.
Oh, and this of course hardly considers transpo fuel, given how slowly BEV's are likely to go mainstream.
In the face of this data, it's amazing that on any green energy related article discussion on the internet how frequently the posts along the lines of "in just a few years, we'll use all solar and drive only electric cars, and that nasty dirty old oil can just stay in the ground where it belongs" appear. Yeah, if only physics had no role to play.

I guess these folks play the "glass is half full" role to counteract the abundance of pessimism on sites like this.
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.