I went to
Congressman Roscoe Bartlett's town hall meeting this week about peak oil. The three panelists who talked about the problem (the usual suspects - Defeyes, Simmons, and Heinberg) all said the same thing. The three people talking about solutions were so divergent that they may as well have been talking about different planets.
The first panelist Donald Wulfinghoff gave a very convincing speech about energy efficiency. A very holistic and well researched approach, I was impressed. It kind of made me feel good because one of the cornerstones of his statements was that we all have to learn to live locally in small walkable communities where we don't need a car to go to work, school, the market, parks. That made me feel good because I live in such a "new urbanist" neighborhood right now. However, there's no easy way to retrofit the millions of acres of sprawl to new urbanism. Sure, refurbish a few city blocks or start with a greenfield and you can build a nice urbanist town, but what do you do with what we're stuck with?
The second panelist John Spears came across to me as just plain clueless. He said once that fossil fuel depletion is not far away, it's something that
our children and our grandchildren will have to deal with. He repeated that later that it's something that our grandchildren will have to deal with. Um, hello! It's something we need to deal with RIGHT EFFING NOW!!!! A lot of the stuff that he promoted was completely the opposite of Mr. Wulfinghoff's suggestions. He promoted hydrogen and fuel cells, in addition to realistic renewable energy solutions.
The third panelist
John Howeimpressed the hell out of me. Basically he very eloquently and non-insultingly blasted both the previous presenters' ideas as ridiculous, derided "fool cells" and the "hydrogen economy" much to the delight of the well educated audience. He related that the more research you do, the more closely you look into the problems the more you realize that we are completely f**ked (he didn't use that exact terminology) and there's no hope at all whatsoever for any kind of soft landing.
Mr. Howe's arguments were the most complelling of all despite that they aren't what I wanted to hear.
Nobody has a clue what to do, there is no solution, dark days are coming. That's why there aren't a lot of threads on solutions... There are no solutions. Hopefully we can limp along with efficiency and renewables as we downconvert to a simpler way of life. .....But who the hell am I fooling? I'm about the most gloomy doomer here, though I usually don't try to let it get to me too much.....