This was triggered by the National Geographic Cover thread.
Firstly, I'm of the opinion (and firming) that Peak Oil will be primarily an economic problem (of massive magnitude) rather than an energy availability issue per se.
Notwithstanding an awful lot of very important side issues, like transportability and energy density, here are some figures - I'd appreciate it if, in the first instance at least, responders either (a) point out where the math is significantly wrong, or (b) acknowledge the figures before pointing out all the other problems with what's presented.
OK, here goes.
1) ASPO predictions are for a loss of some 27 million barrels of oil per day between 2005 and 2030, following a fairly straight trend line. source
2) 1 barrel of oil provides 1.6 MWh raw, or typically about 0.6 MWh of generated electrical power. Someone can probably state what the factor is for typical transport use, but I've used 1 MWh in my calculations as being close to reasonable and easy. source 1.6MWh 600kWh equivalent
3) I've assumed that half the lost oil energy 'could' be provided by wind, and half by other sources, be they nuclear, increased efficiency, coal, whatever.
4) 27M bbl / 2 / 25 years * 365 = 195 million bbl to be replaced by wind each year = 195 million MWh / annum
5) Big offshore turbines can produce 5 MW thread
6) Assuming average six hours generation per day per turbine - not sure of my facts here, but supported by souce bottom page 2
7) 5MW x 6 x 365 = 10,900 MWh per turbine per annum
8] 197,000,000 MWh / 10,900 MWh per turbine = 18,000 new massive turbines (or equivalent) per year deployed required
Alternativly
9) 2003 additional global additional wind generating capacity deployed 8133 MW source
10) 8133 MW x 6 h x 365 = 17,800,000 MWh wind power per annum deployed 2003
11) 197,000,000 MWh required / 17,800,000 MWh extra 2003 = 11.07
To hold steady for the next 25 years, replacing half of lost oil energy with wind, and half by other means, each year post peak, requires deployment of wind energy at a rate only eleven times what was achieved in 2003.
Difficult, very.
Impossible, hardly.
Again, a plea - If i've gone wrong with the math, please show me where - I won't be that surprised to find I've dropped a zero or three and gone out by an order of magnitude somewhere. If you want to attack the thesis on other grounds (like, we've got to transport the energy somehow, and fuel cells are no where near ready), then please at least acknowledge the figures first.
Finally, I totally accept there is just no way that wind will eventually replace all our cheap fossil fuel energy. We will never deploy three million 5 MW monster turbines... But I feel like if we can get through the first 25 years following peak, humanity is plenty innovative enough to come up with more answers, incremental or revolutionary, technical or perhaps societal.
--J



There are certain issues with windmills. The first is it cannot supply more then 20% of the electrical demand or at least not economically. That is b/c the unpredictability of wind speeds becomes too huge of a factor when you have that many windmills. In fact a good example is Denmark. Sometimes the windmills produce more electricity then demand so they export this electricity at rock bottom prices to their neighbors. Not very practical. Because of this they are scaling back a little on their wind program.
