by theluckycountry » Mon 14 Apr 2025, 17:03:55
Peak Oil Demand
What's that? It's a meaningless attempt to try and convince people that we don't need oil, that electricity (electric cars basically) will supplant it. It's obfuscation, a serious attempt to ignore the fact that the world as we know it simply cannot function without a steady supply of oil and coal. Coal? Yes, that stuff that's burnt every day all across the planet to generate electricity. Your home is no doubt full of Chinese product and the bulk of it was made in factories powered by coal burning plants.
Why Japan is struggling to kick its coal dependency
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')ay 10, 2024
If a wealthy, advanced economy is having a hard time getting off coal, what does it mean for the rest of the world?
https://www.vox.com/climate/24152942/g7 ... -emissionsMany lies are told about 2035, when we are supposed to be "off" coal and oil. But any thinking person can see that's not going to happen. Japan, India, China, all burning mountains of coal and oil so we can buy cheap solar panels and ev and go "Green". Peak oil demand is basically saying we don't need oil now and as we transition into the StarTrek future we'll leave it behind. The truth is demand for oil long ago surpassed production of oil. Millions of people in Africa and South America, all across Asia and the rest of the world have been "Demanding" better lifestyles. They want to drive big fat SUV as well, but the cheap oil isn't there to give them the life they expected. Demand will always exceed supply, demand is an psychological thing, a want. Production is a REAL thing. The demand for owning houses always exceeds production of houses because many people can't afford them. So it is with oil and what it brings.
Back in the 1970's another lie was prevalent, that the third world would rise out of the mud and those people would share our lifestyles. This was of course impossible because our very lifestyles exist by exploiting those third worlders. Why was this Lie told? So they would keep peacefully toiling in their factories and fields and so that the rising social justice movement in the West would be silenced. That was the Greenpeace era, the anti-exploitation movement, much more practical than the woke social justice BS of today.
But we needed them to stay in the mud, they provide the cheap labor and the toxic waste sites for all our "Stuff." It's why we have cheap rice and cheap coco, cheap cloths and all else. If they had risen to our standard we wouldn't be able to afford their produce. The average Australian construction worker earns $6000 a month, drives a decent car to work and probably has bought a house. The average construction worker in China walks or catches a bus to work and probably lives in a shanty town or low cost rental, they make about $1000 a month (aussie). To put that in perspective just imagine you had to pay 6x what you currently pay for Gasoline or electricity, or a car, or Food! It's why they all eat rice or pulse (beans). They can't afford steak and peas.
"Peak oil demand" refers to the point when global oil consumption (Not Production) reaches its maximum and begins to decline, driven by factors like increased electric vehicle adoption, improved energy efficiency, and a shift towards renewable energy sources. Several organizations and analysts predict that global oil demand will peak in the coming years, with some forecasts suggesting a peak as early as 2029. However, other organizations and analysts anticipate a longer period of oil demand growth, with peaks potentially occurring in the 2030s or even later
Key Factors Influencing Peak Oil Demand:$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
') Electric Vehicle (EV) Adoption:
The increasing adoption of EVs is expected to reduce demand for gasoline and diesel.
Energy Efficiency Improvements: Better fuel efficiency in vehicles and other equipment can also lower oil consumption.
Renewable Energy Transition: The transition to renewable energy sources like solar and wind power can reduce the need for oil in electricity generation.
Policy Changes: Policies that promote energy efficiency, renewable energy, and discourage oil consumption can accelerate the decline in demand.
Economic Growth: Economic growth, particularly in developing countries, can drive oil demand, but the extent of this growth can be influenced by factors like the pace of the energy transition.
Just a big bowl of tripe, just the sort of stuff cub and adam feed on. Swill, fed to the unthinking masses to keep them oblivious to the threat to their lifestyles, to their very lives in some cases. The Gaza peoples are being exterminated because Israel want's exclusive access to the offshore Gas and oil there. That's the real story. Iraqis live in poverty now, their nation covered in depleted uranium because we needed the oil more than they did. Likewise Libya, the Sudan, on and on and on. Venezuela has been isolated and crippled because it's massive oil reserves were not made available to the West as they once were. If we can't have it, neither can they. If oil demand is declining then why is all this going on?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')RAWFORD, Texas — The angry mother of a fallen U.S. soldier staged a protest near President Bush's ranch yesterday, demanding an accounting from the president of how he has conducted the war in Iraq.
Supported by more than 50 shouting demonstrators, Cindy Sheehan, 48, told reporters, ''I want to ask George Bush: Why did my son die?''
Sheehan said she decided to come to Crawford a few days ago after Bush said that fallen U.S. troops had died for a noble cause and that the mission must be completed. Sheehan said Bush administration officials ''don't have a mission and they don't even ever plan on completing it.'' She said she fears that the United States plans to keep a U.S. military presence in Iraq indefinitely.
Sheehan's bus pulled up at a house run by peace activists a few hundred feet from the town's only stoplight. There, she met up with other demonstrators and then led a caravan of about 20 vehicles down a winding road toward Bush's ranch. The group stopped along the wa sheriff's deputies in McLennan County advised them that if they wanted to go farther toward the ranch, they would have to walk in a ditch along the road.
The marchers walked about half a mile until the deputies stopped them, saying that they had violated their instructions by walking on the road itself instead of staying in the adjacent ditch. Sheehan protested, saying she had not walked on the road. The deputies refused to let her go farther.