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Why do doomers censor hope?

Discussions related to the physiological and psychological effects of peak oil on our members and future generations.

Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby eclipse » Sun 26 Feb 2017, 02:44:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ralfy', '
')From what I know, sea harvests have been on a downward trend the last four decades.


Of course! Fisheries are in trouble. We're not discussing over-fishing here, but kelp farming to such a vast extend that it also increases the shellfish we can harvest, and stimulates the bottom of the food chain for many fish species as well. (I gather some of the kelp is lost to fish nibbling it for the increase in fisheries and associated habitats).

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'V')ery likely, not will not be able to make up for what's needed to avoid doom, i.e., a global economic collapse.

You have not explained why, just asserted that it is not likely.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ill require extensive cooperation in a world which operates in the opposite direction because most think that there will be no "doom" because technofixes will allow for "business as usual."

This company have open sourced their kelp farming business technologies and business practices.
http://greenwave.org/

It just won a prestigious environmental award. It is a system that can be scaled up to utilise the world's 2% of oceans that are nutrient rich, and then there are nutrient recycling systems that can grow it out to the other 7% which will focus less on food production, more on energy production. The kelp is drawn in from 6km around into big biodigester bags that compost the kelp down deep underwater, and when it is ready after about a third of a year, methane and CO2 are siphoned off the top. The methane can be used to backup wind and solar or converted into a liquid fuel to replace oil, and the CO2 can be sequestered in big bladders underground.
It's all here "Negative carbon via Ocean Afforestation". Just register, and download it for free.
http://www.psep.ichemejournals.com/arti ... 57-5820(12)00120-6/abstract

(OR another option I'm open to, but they don't discuss in the paper above, is all the kelp could get dragged onto a big biochar cooker on a super-tanker, which would then sell both energy and biochar when it returned to shore).

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')bsorbing CO2 while using methane is also inevitable, but will not allow for "business as usual," which is what most want (and which explains why they are in denial when it comes to "doom"). For them, a "silver bullet" is what will allow for the equivalent of one more earth.

If we 1/ PROVIDE ALL THE ENERGY WE NEED FROM CLEAN SOURCES and
2/ CLEAN UP ALL CLIMATE DAMAGE BY BRINGING CO2 DOWN TO 350PPM,
then haven't we given them a fresh new planet to live on? This is the one planet living footprint map. See what happens if we just solve our energy and climate crisis in one hit?
Image

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')ood to know how "big bladders" work and what bright ideas people will do with them in exchange for profit.

Yup, people can invent all manner of workable technologies when it comes to saving civilisation! So a little carbon tax might be necessary to fund this. So what? Do you want a healthy climate for your children and grandchildren or not?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Which is exactly what I am arguing can happen as we move forward in so many areas. Carbon neutral energy from nukes or a combination of renewables + kelp biogas backup can give us everything we need.
(YES, TO SCALE, YES, I've seen "End of suburbia" and read Heinberg's The Party's Over and Powerdown and seen those guys saying "But there isn't enough land!" They forgot about the ocean, didn't they?)


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')ronically, even doomers point out that we "can" do this or that, but the question is, Have they taken place? I recall one documentary stating that policies dealing with global warming and peak oil should have been implemented at least two decades ago. Another study argues that a global transition to using other sources of energy may take up to a century:
http://www.businessinsider.com/131-year ... il-2010-11

1. France built 3/4 of their grid out in nuclear power plants in 15 years.
2. The vehicle fleet turns over every 16 years.
3. We can replace gasoline with EV's. If a nation ruled that ALL light trucks and family cars HAD to be electric from now on and put serious money into scaling it up, the fleet would turn over in 16 years!
4. NREL Study in my signature shows that 86% of light trucks and family cars could run on today's grid, with no new power plants! Let that sink in for a minute. You'd only have to build extra grid + power for the last 14% of the gasoline replacement: EV's!
5. That's NOT diesel or jet fuel to replace airline fuels and heavy trucking. Diesel for long haul heavy trucking is a different challenge with a different solution: seawater!Synthetic diesel from seawater - or "Blue Crude" - is now cost effective, including the nuclear powered electricity to run it. That means that the cost to build the nuclear power plants to manufacture "Blue Crude" is already factored into the price of the diesel. As the Blue Crude scales up, the nukes will as well.
https://eclipsenow.wordpress.com/synthetic-diesel/

BTW, that requires NO change to the trucks or jets. NONE! It just works.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think the problem is that you see the world as some computer simulation, where if one pushes a few buttons then whole societies will quickly act in tandem and ensure that policies or technologies are implemented easily. In order to remedy that, you need to see these crises raised in light of the following realities:

Not at all, but I like to discuss the technologies we COULD turn to in an emergency, and get them out there. Get them known, so that people can start to think it through, respond and invest.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-') the global economy as well as various resources are funded and controlled by a financial elite; their goal is to get a better return on their investments each time, and that means continuous economic growth and increasing consumption not just of energy but of material resources;
Governments can bust open arrangements like this in an emergency. Sure you're entitled to be cynical right now with Trump in charge. But don't forget, America also produced idealists like Elon Musk who have FORCED the big car companies to take electric vehicles seriously. City councils are now learning that while electric garbage trucks cost more to buy up front, they'll save more money over time! Same with buses.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-') the "silver bullets" you presented become viable only if it leads to more sales of cell phones, tablets, electric cars, etc. In short, a global middle class:
What's wrong with that if the materials are infinitely recyclable and the energy is renewable!?(I call nuclear 'renewable' because we may end up burning uranium from seawater which is 'topped up' by geological drift and continental erosion. If we'll never run out of uranium, we may as well call it renewable).

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'w')hich in turn requires exceeding planetary limitations
Not if the materials are infinitely recyclable and the energy is renewable!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '-') not just the financial elite but the military, the middle class, and most of the population expect not just basic needs but middle class conveniences, more and better armaments, etc; in short, not just continuous but accelerating growth, and in a short span of time.
Partly true. We expect a modern, convenient lifestyle, but many cultures are starting to react to drowning in too much 'stuff' and are valuing simpler apartment lifestyles and emphasising experience. Sure they want the TV and smart phones etc, but cars don't even enter the top 20 coolest brands in European surveys of young people. They've reached 'peak car'.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')ompletely the opposite. Those are not "economic memes" but realities, and not based on "ecological economics" but on the simple fact that all of those numbers in hard drives are backed by a combination of energy and material resources, and that both are in turn limited by the biosphere.
Not if the materials are infinitely recyclable and the energy is renewable!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')ow, it turns out that some are beginning to realize that the fact that human ingenuity cannot ultimately outwit limitations of the biosphere. Which is what we are now seeing.
Not if the materials are infinitely recyclable and the energy is renewable!
I'm not saying we have infinitely recyclable materials yet, in every single area, but we're increasing our ability to substitute rare resources for more plentiful ones every day. Once they crack electronics from carbon nanotubes, we're away.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')eanwhile, population boomed, leading to incredible strains on ecosystems.
(Pssst: we can feed the entire planet from under 1% of the world's oceans, without using a single ounce of fertiliser or land. This then frees us to grow MORE kelp to fertilise the land we do use for dairy farms, etc).


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')t the same time, corporations controlled more of food systems worldwide, together with shipping, etc. The financial corporations that financed them also funded mechanized armies and increased arms production to "protect" not just food sources but also those for oil and minerals. Meanwhile, the same large population that experienced unprecedented health thanks to availability of food and medicine now want even more:
http://www.bbc.com/news/business-22956470
Understood, and yes, I've seen "The Corporation". Some of the stuff corporations get up to amazes and inspires me, but also the flipside can be quite sickening! I guess I'm more of a fan of super-sized worker's co-ops, like the Mondragon out of Kim Stanley Robinson's novels.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hose are the same corporations who will be funding your "silver bullets." Guess what they want in return?
People to eat their kelp, eat their oysters and shellfish, eat their beef grown on grass fertilised by kelp, buy their iphones grown in bio-organic chemical soups largely supplied with feedstock by kelp or even other algal farms, and maybe even buy some of their non-animal vat grown beef, again supplied with feedstock by kelp? Vat grown stem-cell hamburger patties are REAL MEAT out of a tank, not off an animal. If you go to this article you'll see my question there: "What could the feedstock be? Would gigantic kelp farms produce be processed into the feedstock to grow vat-grown meat? In that case, the whole process could be land-neutral, freeing vast areas for wilderness, and yet we'd still get meat and chicken!"
http://www.nextbigfuture.com/2017/02/la ... opped.html
Dr James Hansen recommends breeder reactors that convert nuclear 'waste' into 1000 years of clean energy for America, and can charge all our light vehicles and generate "Blue Crude" for heavy vehicles.
https://eclipsenow.wordpress.com/recharge/
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby Newfie » Sun 26 Feb 2017, 20:31:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cog', 'C')an always count on ralfy to give us the socialist/Marxist talking points. Straight from the BBC.

It's not socialist/Marxist. It's science. And common sense.

OK, let's try a different approach.

How about you explain how infinite growth is possible.
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby Newfie » Sun 26 Feb 2017, 20:40:44

So Eclipse, how many humans you gonna grow on this rock with a seaweed diet?

40, 80, 5,000 billion?

You see there is your problem, it's not one of having enough food, it's having too many mouths.

Proof? The Green Revolution. Added more food to the petro bowl and guess what, the culture multiplied. Imagine that!

So FIRST you gotta put a cap on the human population, which means first you gotta figure out how many humans you want. THEN you feed them.

Did you ever plan a diner party? First thing you ask, how many.
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby eclipse » Sun 26 Feb 2017, 22:37:05

The population targets by mid century when the worldwide demographic transition take place should be easily and sustainably maintained by the measures we have already discussed.
Feed people, and give them what they need where they live, and less people will turn up to hassle you at your dinner party.
Demographic Transition: it's a thing.
https://eclipsenow.wordpress.com/reduce/
Dr James Hansen recommends breeder reactors that convert nuclear 'waste' into 1000 years of clean energy for America, and can charge all our light vehicles and generate "Blue Crude" for heavy vehicles.
https://eclipsenow.wordpress.com/recharge/
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby onlooker » Sun 26 Feb 2017, 23:10:46

Doomers do not censor hope but shine a bright light on the most serious problems
"We are mortal beings doomed to die
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby ralfy » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 00:14:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('eclipse', '
')Of course! Fisheries are in trouble. We're not discussing over-fishing here, but kelp farming to such a vast extend that it also increases the shellfish we can harvest, and stimulates the bottom of the food chain for many fish species as well. (I gather some of the kelp is lost to fish nibbling it for the increase in fisheries and associated habitats).

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'V')ery likely, not will not be able to make up for what's needed to avoid doom, i.e., a global economic collapse.

You have not explained why, just asserted that it is not likely.


They were explained very clearly in my previous posts, as seen in references to ecological footprint, control of the global economy by a few, etc. In fact, that same economy uses more than just kelp.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')This company have open sourced their kelp farming business technologies and business practices.
http://greenwave.org/

It just won a prestigious environmental award. It is a system that can be scaled up to utilise the world's 2% of oceans that are nutrient rich, and then there are nutrient recycling systems that can grow it out to the other 7% which will focus less on food production, more on energy production. The kelp is drawn in from 6km around into big biodigester bags that compost the kelp down deep underwater, and when it is ready after about a third of a year, methane and CO2 are siphoned off the top. The methane can be used to backup wind and solar or converted into a liquid fuel to replace oil, and the CO2 can be sequestered in big bladders underground.
It's all here "Negative carbon via Ocean Afforestation". Just register, and download it for free.
http://www.psep.ichemejournals.com/arti ... 57-5820(12)00120-6/abstract

(OR another option I'm open to, but they don't discuss in the paper above, is all the kelp could get dragged onto a big biochar cooker on a super-tanker, which would then sell both energy and biochar when it returned to shore).



The problem isn't whether or not projects are open source. It's who controls the means of production and how returns in investment are achieved through them. Second, the consumers who are expected to purchase these goods and services are expected to purchase more (and more "innovative" goods and services) to ensure more profits, better ROIs, and continuation of business cycles (which means the next "silver bullet" after kelp has to show up, promising even more profits). Ironically, the expect the same as their salaries, benefits, and even investments are dependent on the same. Finally, the world does not operate on kelp alone but on that plus copper, iron, oil, etc. That's because those "super-tankers," among others, will require extensive oil inputs, just as what we saw for many decades that allowed us to prove neo-Malthusians wrong.

Unfortunately, all of these are part of the same biosphere that is limited. With that, no amount of "game changers" can reverse diminishing returns.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')If we 1/ PROVIDE ALL THE ENERGY WE NEED FROM CLEAN SOURCES and
2/ CLEAN UP ALL CLIMATE DAMAGE BY BRINGING CO2 DOWN TO 350PPM,
then haven't we given them a fresh new planet to live on? This is the one planet living footprint map. See what happens if we just solve our energy and climate crisis in one hit?
Image


Who's "we"? The governments that expect to grow thanks to revenues from taxes and investors, both in turn dependent on increasing sales of goods and services worldwide? The private sector, which expects increasing profits and returns on investment, both dependent on reversing diminishing returns? Households, which expect middle class conveniences from varieties of food (not just kelp) to all sorts of electronic gadgets, appliances, personal vehicles, and more (and from which the private sector earns through expanding consumer markets)? Military forces, which expect increasing arms sales, deployment, and "innovation" as they compete with each other? The global population, most of which expect higher footprints per capita to meet both basic needs and middle class wants?

Why do you think that footprint kept rising?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Yup, people can invent all manner of workable technologies when it comes to saving civilisation! So a little carbon tax might be necessary to fund this. So what? Do you want a healthy climate for your children and grandchildren or not?

The point, especially for a global economy controlled by capitalists, isn't inventing them but profiting from them, which means competition and increasing production and sales of goods and services. In short, kelp production combined with renewable energy, etc., won't be enough, especially for those who will be investing in them and consumers who expect more.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Which is exactly what I am arguing can happen as we move forward in so many areas. Carbon neutral energy from nukes or a combination of renewables + kelp biogas backup can give us everything we need.
(YES, TO SCALE, YES, I've seen "End of suburbia" and read Heinberg's The Party's Over and Powerdown and seen those guys saying "But there isn't enough land!" They forgot about the ocean, didn't they?)


Perhaps you mean "should happen." For some doomers, the question is whether it
can happen." The way I see it, that will require extensive cooperation between societies of the world.

As I explained earlier, the world population can survive on one to two global hectares per capita. However, that will also require a massive and quick transition (not several decades) from the use of oil, dismantling of large military and police forces, a complete disenfranchisement of the richest people and largest multinational corporations (especially those in the financial sector), forcing the world's middle class (around a quarter of the world's population) to cut down their resource and energy use by at least 75 pct, and more. It's only then will your technofixes be implemented properly.

I don't think these are going to take place. Rather, economies will fall apart, groups will go to war, and more societies will be thrown into poverty. If you want to see any current proof of that, take a look at what's happening for the majority of the world's population.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')1. France built 3/4 of their grid out in nuclear power plants in 15 years.
2. The vehicle fleet turns over every 16 years.
3. We can replace gasoline with EV's. If a nation ruled that ALL light trucks and family cars HAD to be electric from now on and put serious money into scaling it up, the fleet would turn over in 16 years!
4. NREL Study in my signature shows that 86% of light trucks and family cars could run on today's grid, with no new power plants! Let that sink in for a minute. You'd only have to build extra grid + power for the last 14% of the gasoline replacement: EV's!
5. That's NOT diesel or jet fuel to replace airline fuels and heavy trucking. Diesel for long haul heavy trucking is a different challenge with a different solution: seawater!Synthetic diesel from seawater - or "Blue Crude" - is now cost effective, including the nuclear powered electricity to run it. That means that the cost to build the nuclear power plants to manufacture "Blue Crude" is already factored into the price of the diesel. As the Blue Crude scales up, the nukes will as well.
https://eclipsenow.wordpress.com/synthetic-diesel/

BTW, that requires NO change to the trucks or jets. NONE! It just works.



France <> most of the world.

In fact, most of the world's population barely have access to trucks, jets, or even nuclear power plants. In fact, most economies have barely reached a stage of industrialization, which means most don't even have access to family cars and light trucks, let alone public transport!

You're living in a fantasy world, where most places in the world resemble those in developed countries.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Not at all, but I like to discuss the technologies we COULD turn to in an emergency, and get them out there. Get them known, so that people can start to think it through, respond and invest.

Indeed, but how does that negate the realities that I have been raised, and which you insisted earlier are "memes"?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Governments can bust open arrangements like this in an emergency. Sure you're entitled to be cynical right now with Trump in charge. But don't forget, America also produced idealists like Elon Musk who have FORCED the big car companies to take electric vehicles seriously. City councils are now learning that while electric garbage trucks cost more to buy up front, they'll save more money over time! Same with buses.

How is that even possible when most governments are dependent on financiers?

Trump? You actually thought Obama and the previous Reagan clones were different?

Elon Musk? Electric garbage trucks? You're kidding, right?

Finally, keep in mind that the U.S. <> most of the world. This is very important.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')What's wrong with that if the materials are infinitely recyclable and the energy is renewable!?(I call nuclear 'renewable' because we may end up burning uranium from seawater which is 'topped up' by geological drift and continental erosion. If we'll never run out of uranium, we may as well call it renewable).

Because in capitalist systems, the goal is not conservation but maximization of profit through increased productivity. That means increasing utilization and access to more resources and energy.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Not if the materials are infinitely recyclable and the energy is renewable!

Recycling and renewable energy do not increase availability of energy and material resources in the long term. A global capitalist economy needs that in order to ensure continuous economic growth.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Partly true. We expect a modern, convenient lifestyle, but many cultures are starting to react to drowning in too much 'stuff' and are valuing simpler apartment lifestyles and emphasising experience. Sure they want the TV and smart phones etc, but cars don't even enter the top 20 coolest brands in European surveys of young people. They've reached 'peak car'.

What you're describing are developed economies. For "many cultures", societies have only started with middle class conveniences:

http://www.bbc.com/news/business-22956470

To meet them, at least one more planet will be needed. Definitely more than "silver bullets."

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Not if the materials are infinitely recyclable and the energy is renewable!

Recycling and RE do not increase material resource and energy production in the long run. To meet middle class conveniences of the world's population (which includes family cars, light trucks, etc.) we will need at least one more earth. Is that why you mentioned Musk?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SpaceX

Which makes me question the title of this thread. The way I see it, the mainstream view is that doom doesn't censor hope. Rather, technofix fantasists censor doom by insisting that "the next game changer" is on the way.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Not if the materials are infinitely recyclable and the energy is renewable!

I'm not saying we have infinitely recyclable materials yet, in every single area, but we're increasing our ability to substitute rare resources for more plentiful ones every day. Once they crack electronics from carbon nanotubes, we're away.



What you want are "silver bullets" to increase production, not recycling or renewing. For capitalist systems, what you want are "silver bullets" to reverse diminishing returns. Get it right.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')(Pssst: we can feed the entire planet from under 1% of the world's oceans, without using a single ounce of fertiliser or land. This then frees us to grow MORE kelp to fertilise the land we do use for dairy farms, etc).

Psst: who's "we"? See above and your point below.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'U')nderstood, and yes, I've seen "The Corporation". Some of the stuff corporations get up to amazes and inspires me, but also the flipside can be quite sickening! I guess I'm more of a fan of super-sized worker's co-ops, like the Mondragon out of Kim Stanley Robinson's novels.

That's my point: do you see a worldwide movement towards worker cooperatives? I don't. Instead, I see hope based on "silver bullets" which ensure family cars and light trucks for all, nuclear power, and all the goodies that can be seen in France and the U.S. provided by corporations like those of Musk.

Are you beginning to see another aspect of "doom"?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')People to eat their kelp, eat their oysters and shellfish, eat their beef grown on grass fertilised by kelp, buy their iphones grown in bio-organic chemical soups largely supplied with feedstock by kelp or even other algal farms, and maybe even buy some of their non-animal vat grown beef, again supplied with feedstock by kelp? Vat grown stem-cell hamburger patties are REAL MEAT out of a tank, not off an animal. If you go to this article you'll see my question there: "What could the feedstock be? Would gigantic kelp farms produce be processed into the feedstock to grow vat-grown meat? In that case, the whole process could be land-neutral, freeing vast areas for wilderness, and yet we'd still get meat and chicken!"
http://www.nextbigfuture.com/2017/02/la ... opped.html

Actually, to do that, and then more of that, and then more than just eating kelp, using iPhones, etc.

To give you an idea what I mean, consider the point about price for lab-grown meat. If the price has dropped, then that means people should eat more of it. That way, businesses maintain profits. But since they are in competition with each other, then they have to produce more meat each time, after which they have to expand markets (especially given more young people entering the work force) and in time convince more people to buy and eat even more meat.

The same goes for kelp, iPhones, family cars, light trucks, and more. Production, sales, and consumption has to keep rising each time to ensure more profits and ROI. That ultimately means a growing ecological footprint and not the opposite.

Finally, given the fact that you are now referring to "bio-chemical organic soups" to make smart phones, perhaps that was your point all along? These "organic soups" can be eaten, used as phones, turned into family cars, and then recycled and used again. If that's the case, then why not just envision something like the

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shmoo
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby AdamB » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 00:26:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onlooker', 'D')oomers do not censor hope but shine a bright light on the most serious problems


.....by making up stories about their impact and timing to....scare people into compliance? How the end of the age of iron, claimed in the late 1800's because...you know...we were running out of iron? Pretty serious problem, amazing the amounts that still exist to put into things like cars, roads, buildings and whatnot....
Plant Thu 27 Jul 2023 "Personally I think the IEA is exactly right when they predict peak oil in the 2020s, especially because it matches my own predictions."

Plant Wed 11 Apr 2007 "I think Deffeyes might have nailed it, and we are just past the overall peak in oil production. (Thanksgiving 2005)"
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby eclipse » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 00:57:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Finally, the world does not operate on kelp alone but on that plus copper, iron, oil, etc.

And copper, iron, other metals etc are all infinitely recyclable, aren’t they?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')s I explained earlier, the world population can survive on one to two global hectares per capita.

Hectares of what, land or sea? You know I’m not just talking about eating only kelp, but the seafood and other land-based food that kelp can grow. Fish fingers are nice though: I wouldn’t find eating fish & chips on a regular basis a real chore. Especially if I knew the potatos were fertilised sustainably through seaweed fertilisers and grown with renewable and nuclear energy.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')owever, that will also require a massive and quick transition (not several decades) from the use of oil

I wish! But, for the sake of argument, IF this seaweed scheme can be scaled up to 9% of the world’s oceans it WILL sequester ALL our CO2 emissions and provide ALL our ener
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')“dismantling of large military and police forces”

Well, it might be nice to see some dismantling but I think that’s more of a political view and getting away from the discussion about core technologies that can save our ecology and civilisation.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'c')omplete disenfranchisement of the richest people and largest multinational corporations (especially those in the financial sector), forcing the world's middle class (around a quarter of the world's population) to cut down their resource and energy use by at least 75 pct, and more. It's only then will your technofixes be implemented properly.
Assertion without evidence. The technologies I’m discussing are scalable to a world of 10 billion living a convenient modern lifestyle.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')lectric garbage trucks? You're kidding, right?
Not at all! Garbage trucks and city buses, and they save the city council money. Check it out.
https://eclipsenow.wordpress.com/recharge/

And I'm seriously over your 'all economies must expand or collapse' routine. Just look at Japan's GDP for long periods.

Also, even if an economy goes into a recession, that's hardly Mad Max!
Last edited by eclipse on Mon 27 Feb 2017, 01:06:04, edited 1 time in total.
Dr James Hansen recommends breeder reactors that convert nuclear 'waste' into 1000 years of clean energy for America, and can charge all our light vehicles and generate "Blue Crude" for heavy vehicles.
https://eclipsenow.wordpress.com/recharge/
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby Plantagenet » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 01:03:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('eclipse', 'I')F this seaweed scheme can be scaled up to 9% of the world’s oceans it WILL sequester ALL our CO2 emissions


You sure are a committed advocate for destroying large areas of the ocean to grow kelp.

So please explain---how does growing lots and lots of seaweed sequester "ALL our CO2 emissions"?
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby onlooker » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 07:55:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AdamB', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onlooker', 'D')oomers do not censor hope but shine a bright light on the most serious problems


.....by making up stories about their impact and timing to....scare people into compliance? How the end of the age of iron, claimed in the late 1800's because...you know...we were running out of iron? Pretty serious problem, amazing the amounts that still exist to put into things like cars, roads, buildings and whatnot....

I see your not one of the few
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby Newfie » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 09:30:38

And also the tragedy of the commons thing.

To fix the world you fist need to fix humans.

None of these hopium agendas address that. They are all outward looking.

The real problem lies within. And I do t know how to fix our DNA.

BUT I'm positive someone will tell me. Just a little tweak here, a nudge there and we will all be as happy a chickens in a coup.
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby Cog » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 10:31:18

It will sort itself out Newfie. Be patient.
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 12:11:16

Didn't want to waste timing checking to see if anyone actually answered the question. So no, doomers don't "censor" hope. They don't have that capability as witnessed by the many optimistic posts here. They might vehemently disagree but that isn't censorship.

And if that wasn't the correct theme this post was meant to delve into I would suggest using straightforward phrases instead of try for such and inflammatory hook. It tends to start the conversation off on the wrong foot IMHO. LOL.
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby GoghGoner » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 12:19:23

Like Rock says, doomers generally don't censor. Some doomers may censor information because they need to believe that this world must fail. They are alienated by current the cultural and economic systems and their only hope is that it collapses.

My personality type is one of an outcast and I will always be a small percentage of the population -- that being said, alienation is not something that bothers me and I don't worry too much about the systems around me succeeding or failing. I did at one time but that was before LTO. Haha!
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby Tanada » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 12:26:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onlooker', 'D')oomers do not censor hope but shine a bright light on the most serious problems


I shine a bright light on the problems I see all the time. However I do not then proclaim those problems are so grand we are all gonna die, civilization is about to collapse, the economy is falling apart never to recover, oil will soon be so worthless nobody will bother pumping it out of the ground or any of the half dozen other doomer theme scenarios that get pumped around this place constantly.
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To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby onlooker » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 12:42:06

I am not saying for sure these doom scenarios will happen only that the procrastination evident on a worldwide basis and in turn the trajectory we continue is increasing the likelihood of said consequences to occur
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby KaiserJeep » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 14:11:13

I'm going to go out on a limb here and make a few brief statements that have guided my thinking about Peak Oil.

1) Firstly, the oil peak and decline is the major problem, not Climate Change. We can and will adapt to CC, reducing CC to the status of a distraction.

2) The First World countries are MORE resilient to Peak Oil than are the vast majority of people living in the Third World. If due to the lack of petroleum-fuelled farm machinery, the food supply steeply increases in cost, US citizens and other prosperous countries will still be eating, but without any disposable income. The Third World will starve.

3) Adapting to these anticipated changes will be much easier today than it would be after the petroleum price begins it's last escalation before it pretty much is gone. Of course, the USA and the other prosperous countries will buy almost all the remaining oil, and grow food as we transition to an energy-constrained future.

4) IMHO you need to be living in a place where you can produce at least half of your own food on your own homestead, and cook and keep yourself warm in the Winter, without oil, without gas, and without coal-derived electrical power from the grid.

5) Burning wood is not any kind of answer. Once oil and gas are gone, a few simple calculations will show that we will reach "peak wood" in 3-4 years after the gas and oil are too expensive to burn. Because the wood peak occurs at 3-4 years, most people will not be able to afford wood in the 5th year, and there won't be any burnable wood at any price in the 6th year, and if you believe yourself to be immune, recall that this "wood peak" happened in Greece within the last decade, and all the wood disappeared from national and private forests in less than 3 years. Today in Greece there are farmers with shotguns guarding century-old olive groves from urban wood thieves.

6) Think solar, think wind turbine, but only after super-insulation. Else think living in a house all Winter that is "heated" to 40 degrees F or less.

7) Think about completing this transition in 5-10 years, and no longer.

Lastly, the cause of all our grief is the World's overshoot population. The die back will take care of that, but in the aftermath, those countries that preserve some semblance of the energy-intensive lifestyle will still be powerful magnets for poor immigrants from the shattered Third World.

Trump's Wall, offensive to most, must become a reality going forward. Trump didn't cause this, but he is the bearer of bad news - news that all of you understand, but are not willing to address, preferring to deny. The rest of us are not going to allow you to deny the perfectly obvious any longer.
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby Plantagenet » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 15:42:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', ' ')the oil peak and decline is the major problem


Its certainly a big problem but its significance is less then many people feared a decade ago. We're 10 years past peak "conventional oil" and we're doing just fine. The US has brought on 5 million bbls/day of unconventional TOS and we're in a global oil glut, necessatiating oil production cut backs.

Yes, more conventional fields will peak in coming years, but there are huge untapped TOS deposits around the world that haven't been tapped yet either.

IMHO Peak Oil, right now, is maybe a 7 to 8 out of 10 on the scale of "major problems."

CHEERS!

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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby Newfie » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 15:46:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cog', 'I')t will sort itself out Newfie. Be patient.


That's a dodge.

It may work for that think "It's all in Gods hands." But even then there is the concept of stewardship of Gods creation. Did he just put it here for us to trash, like a ghetto playground?
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Re: Why do doomers censor hope?

Unread postby KaiserJeep » Mon 27 Feb 2017, 16:55:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('KaiserJeep', ' ')the oil peak and decline is the major problem


Its certainly a big problem but its significance is less then many people feared a decade ago. We're 10 years past peak "conventional oil" and we're doing just fine. The US has brought on 5 million bbls/day of unconventional TOS and we're in a global oil glut, necessatiating oil production cut backs.

Yes, more conventional fields will peak in coming years, but there are huge untapped TOS deposits around the world that haven't been tapped yet either.

IMHO Peak Oil, right now, is maybe a 7 to 8 out of 10 on the scale of "major problems."

CHEERS!
-snip-


Not to put too fine a point on this, but Standard Oil was founded in 1911, and the oil boom began a good 25 years before that.

Accepting for a moment your statement that conventional oil peaked a decade ago (which actually is pretty close to my own date of Q2'08) then the "up side" of the curve was over a century long, meaning that there will be oil for at least another half century - and the inflection point where most US citizens cannot afford it, at least is 20 and probably about 50 years away. The rather large range is because more and more people will figure this out as time passes, and at some point a panic will occur.

That's why I said you need to act within 5-10 years. Because I think a price panic over oil is very unlikely before 2027, probability ~0.1.
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I think the probability of an oil panic before 2037 is about 0.5, and the probability of an oil panic before 2057 is about 0.9. This is problem #1 for me, because lack of cheap energy will prevent us from solving all the other problems we have, including every environmental problem, plus overpopulation - the root cause of all our other problems.
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