http://www.hermes-press.com/oil_looting.htm
here are some interesting figures.............
I think there are viable alternatives. Economies of scale and infrastructure are simply a question of consumer uptake. 20 years ago the computer I am using would have cost more than a million dollars and would have needed an entire office building to house it. If the computer industry behaved like the Oil companies then we'd still be using type writers and punch cards, though I suspect that the same thing is happening with technology to a certain extent, they can't hold it back that much because they all compete so voraciously. It is seen as an expanding resource rather than a declining one. In a few short years the internet went from something available only to universites, military and hackers to being a vast high speed network. DSL connection in Egypt, India etc. not a problem..... infrastructure and viability is simply a question of making the product available and creating demand for it, rather than strangling it out of the market. From 1985, 20 years ago, to today, we basically have millions of people all hooked up over a high speed network that in theory should cost thousands of dollars per day for each individual to connect to, whilst using computers that in theory should cost at least a million bucks a piece and occupy an entire building..........and not just in the first world. India, China even Egypt one of the poorest countries is stuffed with computers and broadband. Not bad for technology that even 15 years ago was totally unviable, extremely cumbersome, not really scalable and outrageously expensive.
A friend of mine did a PHD and designed a petrol engine made of ceramics instead of metal. It did 250mpg. Some people in dark suits paid him a visit with a check for $25M and gave him two alternatives. Let's just say the second one wasn't a viable option so he took the check. Because he did the research at a university people were able to monitor it. He regretted not doing the research privately, because he could have floated it before the pressure was applied.
Another friend of mine is the great great grand daughter of one of the scientists that first refined gasoiline. He left behind all sorts of research papers and work that provided ways of using aditives to literally water down the gasoline at least 50/50. So this combined with the engines that are available give you 500mpg. She was doing a chemitry degree at the time and she tried to release these things, have them investigated in the university, talk to the professors about it, no one had bothered with them previously because they were unpublished research and gasoline was cheap. People broke into her house, she had all kinds of threats and finally she just backed off.
If Oil was really running short, these things would be rolled out in an instant, to perpetuate the oil situation, before other alternatives creep in. The oil companies have certainly surpressed alternatives many patents like high capactiy batteries, super power low light solar, cold fusion and hydrogen / solid fuels, have all been taken off the market. There are definitely engines that run on aluminium which is one of the most common elements on the planet. Expensive to refine, but none the less very available. You could just as easily be fueling up with a bar of aluminum than 10 gallons of gas.
If the supplies of Oil are really running scarce then it would be in their interests to roll out new and more efficient gasoline technologies to keep oil viable. But they don't, they keep it ticking just enough to keep people happy and the price high. Governments certainly think only of the next election, which is the flaw in the system. Corporations however are in it for the long run. Shell, BP, Exxon etc. have been going for 100+ years in one form or another.
They did the same thing with coal in the 1800s. There were constant scares, fears and shortages. Yet today we have more coal than we know what to do with. Infact there are technologies that can convert coal into gasoline, so really the chances of running out of liquid hydrocarbons are pretty much zero.
Really I can only discount peak oil as part of the same sham of keeping people scared and forcing the prices higher and higher. The hybrid is basically a sham. Gasoline efficiency hasn't improved much in 20 years.
I suspect that there might be a burst of more efficent engines coming out soon after the recent crisies. But really if Oil was actually in short supply, rather than production being manipulated to be slightly less than demand, to create a false sense of shortage, then the oil companies would be doing something to migrate the peak and lower the useage..................after all why sell 10M barrels for $10 when you can just sell 3M for $35 ???
The oil market has always been very volatile with price and I suspect that this is simply a way of keeping smaller interests and alternatives constantly struggling. The point I was trying to bring out is that you run the price high, you get everyone interested in exploration and alternatives. Then you slam the price down, right when no one expects it and all the new little guys go out of business. You buy up the new oil finds and alternatives and you are off again for another 20-30 years.
If oil collapses back to $30-$35, suddenly biodiesel, solar, hyrdogen, etc etc all fly out of the window, the companies pack up, investors get burned and everyone turns back again to good old oil.
Sure there is a grab it and run ethos, but corporations have things planned out for 20-30 years at a time. Don't think that everyone is just in it for profits. There is also the maintainence of power and influence. Corporations do plot and hatch schemes to keep competitors out. That is exactly what executives get paid huge salaries to do all day..........to the point where they simply dump whatever politician suits them into power.
BMW has roadtested a hydrogen powered 7 series, which has some slight modifications to the injectors. In 2007 they are releasing a production model that takes both hydrogen and gasoline. You can bet that by 2007 oil is real cheap again and there's no need for it. BMW have many alternative engines and designs and so do the Japanese, but they are in the hands of the oil strangle hold. As soon as oil becomes cheap again all these great new ideas vanish as unviable.
After 20 years of cheap oil, all the alternatives that people came up with in the 60s and 70s have been burried. But enough time has passed to make people inquisitive again. Run the price of oil really high, get everyone out of the wood work. Dump oil, burry the new ideas, burn the investors etc etc. In 2030 we'll be having the same peak oil crisis whilst anti gravity engines and flying solar powered cars etc etc all get brought out of the wood work, oil shortages, $200 a barrel, oil is scarce, then woof oil price collapse............all burried again for another 25-30 years.
It's very interesting to see how suddenly when there is a crisis and oil has reached to unsustainable level that suddenly everyone has supply. It's all there capped off and waiting to be tapped. The Saudis don't keep the numbers secret because they are running low, they keep them secret because if we new they had lakes of oil, we'd be falling about laughing and paying them 50cents a barrel not $50.
Peak Oil in the US proves the theory right that supplies are declining right ?
But how easy is it to decrease local production in favor of overseas production for a while ?? It's all the same companies pumping the shit out, from Venezeula to Saudi Arabia, it's all the same. You make those countries rich for a few decades, whilst keeping local supplies looking like they are declining. Then you ramp it up again locally and cut pumping overseas, causing economic chaos in those countries, so you can renegoitate the royalties and contracts............
I think there are much more devicisive games going on than anyone realises......