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PeakOil is You

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Peak Oil - A Conspiracy Theory?

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Unread postby davidyson » Mon 20 Sep 2004, 11:47:39

JD,

it is a bit tiring to repeatedly read this sort of impolite, largely unqualified accusations.

Basic test:

Do you believe in the absoluteness of physical laws?
If not, then its no point in discussing any further, because then you seem to be living in a distant parallel universe or be a troll.

If yes, please outline, based on the well-known physical laws of thermodynamics, energy, matter and gravitation a plausibility calculation of how much people and equipment you want to move where into space, how much of world's energy production you want to invest, how energy will be transmitted back to earth and how this would affect the biosphere.

If you can't even sketch the basics, shut up.

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Unread postby mididoctors » Mon 20 Sep 2004, 13:44:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('davidyson', 'J')D,

it is a bit tiring to repeatedly read this sort of impolite, largely unqualified accusations.

Basic test:

Do you believe in the absoluteness of physical laws?
If not, then its no point in discussing any further, because then you seem to be living in a distant parallel universe or be a troll.

If yes, please outline, based on the well-known physical laws of thermodynamics, energy, matter and gravitation a plausibility calculation of how much people and equipment you want to move where into space, how much of world's energy production you want to invest, how energy will be transmitted back to earth and how this would affect the biosphere.

If you can't even sketch the basics, shut up.

Davidyson



this is not an unreasonable request

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Unread postby JohnDenver » Mon 20 Sep 2004, 14:21:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('davidyson', '
')If yes, please outline, based on the well-known physical laws of thermodynamics, energy, matter and gravitation a plausibility calculation of how much people and equipment you want to move where into space, how much of world's energy production you want to invest, how energy will be transmitted back to earth and how this would affect the biosphere.


Davidyson, I don't have the technical specifications of the solution to peak oil. But then again, neither do you, so why don't *you* shut up?

Pass your own test. If you, with all your science, can't sketch a way to more energy, what do we need you for? What good is your science? If you can't deliver the energy, you're just another useless fool shooting your mouth off.
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Unread postby Aaron » Mon 20 Sep 2004, 14:44:23

As Dr. Smalley reiterated to me from his on line presentation, it may well be that mother nature may have played a terrible trick on us, and hydrocarbon energy sources are simply the best we will ever discover.

This comes from a person who has dedicated his professional life to physics.

But his point is well made. Oil is by far the best source of energy we have ever found. And unless we can develop something at least as good to replace the missing oil in our future, we have almost certainly overshot carrying capacity.

He also noted that our worst problems other than energy, would all improve as a result of finding a suitable replacement for oil.

Space is almost certainly mankind's destiny...

But we must find solutions to our energy dilemma first... & the clock is ticking.

Saying that we will use other energy sources to replace oil is a trite truism. Of course we will... we will have to.

Therein lies our challenge. Finding oil alternatives which are at least as good as oil.

I see the entropy issue as a footrace between depletion, and science.

Having grown "too big for our britches" as we say in Texas, if we can't find a bigger pair before the dance is over, we pay the consequences.

Science wins, and I guess we forestall chaotic breakdown until the next threshold.

As Matt Simmons has pointed out, oil is greatly undervalued today.
The consumption of millions of years in stored energy in a few generations is... tragic.

It's easy to point to a site named dieoff, and conclude that PO is a conspiracy theory right along with the rest, but it's also myopic.

I felt exactly the same way when I first googled this topic. Internet crank nonsense.

But then I found that behind the "dieoff" stuff, a growing number of serious scientists and academics were publishing on the topic.

So sure, when somebody I have never heard of proposes that we are all doomed, my eyes get glassy. But when I hear the same arguments from Nobel Laureates, industry leaders, geophysicists and the like, I'm all ears.

I also asked Dr. Smalley what he thought the consequences were if we failed to find a suitable replacement for oil in time... economic depression? social unrest? war?

His reply I found chilling...

"Yes... all of those"

On the upside, he also believes we must try. That finding the next oil, is the moral obligation of our generation. We owe it to future generations.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

I promise promise promise we will publish the transcript from this interview soon. (It's in transcription now)
The problem is, of course, that not only is economics bankrupt, but it has always been nothing more than politics in disguise... economics is a form of brain damage.

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Unread postby davidyson » Tue 21 Sep 2004, 03:53:22

JD,

don't you think that proving or at least providing evidence that we indeed will have an inevitable energy peak is at least as useful as showing there might be another energy source far, far away?

Also, you didn't answer the question if you believe in the absoluteness of physical laws.

Aaron, space is not humankind's destiny, it's humankind's last folly.

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Unread postby davidyson » Tue 21 Sep 2004, 04:00:23

The space shuttle with a crew of 4-6 weighs 2,041 metric tons at liftoff.

The potential energy to be built up alone is more than the little web tool I linked earlier can even express.

Using Excel, I end up with 2 Gigawatthours.

Now calculate rocket motor efficiency, air friction etc.

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Unread postby JohnDenver » Tue 21 Sep 2004, 08:17:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('davidyson', 'T')he space shuttle with a crew of 4-6 weighs 2,041 metric tons at liftoff.

The potential energy to be built up alone is more than the little web tool I linked earlier can even express.

Using Excel, I end up with 2 Gigawatthours.

Now calculate rocket motor efficiency, air friction etc.

Davidyson


Davidyson, I thought that Aaron summed things up nicely, and I was planning to let this thread rest in peace. I think I said pretty much every thing I wanted to. But you don't seem to want to let it go. It's almost like you want to "exorcise" the whole idea of space development. Maybe you are advocating that we dismantle all of the various national space programs and stop thinking about space?? Perhaps I misunderstand you, but your position seems almost Luddite. Are you opposed to other research which aims to develop new sources of energy? Do you think we should just quit trying to find new energy?
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Unread postby davidyson » Tue 21 Sep 2004, 08:29:35

Space programs are good for shooting unmanned sattelites into orbit.

Of course we should do research to find new energy sources. But not in space. It's lunatic (literally :D )!

No, I don't want to exorcise, but just to bring in some facts into a discussion about wishful thinking.

Davidyson

(Sorry that I answered again but seemed you were asking a question)
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Unread postby davidyson » Tue 21 Sep 2004, 08:32:01

JD,

you are persistently avaiding a statement whether you belive in the absoluteness of physical laws. That tells a lot. Chicken! :razz:

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Unread postby JohnDenver » Tue 21 Sep 2004, 09:03:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('davidyson', 'J')D,

you are persistently avaiding a statement whether you belive in the absoluteness of physical laws. That tells a lot. Chicken! :razz:

Davidyson


No, I'm not avoiding it. I'm just lazy.
Of course I believe in the absoluteness of physical laws, to the degree that they are absolute. After all, particles sometimes travel faster than light on quantum scales etc.
I just don't believe that physical law is the main constraint. I think the main constraint is the power of the human imagination. We use physical laws to bend nature to our purposes; we are in the driver's seat to a much greater degree than they are. It's a little like the hardware and software in a computer. The hardware follows rigid, absolute rules, but that doesn't constrain the software. In fact, the software uses those very rules to control the hardware.
Anyway, that's my view.
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Unread postby Green Guest » Wed 22 Sep 2004, 19:22:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')We will expand into space and feed off its energy sources. There are incredibly powerful sources there and we must go to them and work them.

snip

Of course the die-off people have nothing but bile for the idea of humans colonizing space. It's wasteful, too risky, complicated, not pastoral enough, too expensive, and impossible,and even if it were possible, we'd just be spreading the evil cancer of "growth" into the pristine "environment" of the universe. The best approach is clearly to not even try to grow, or even think seriously about it. Growth is the problem, not the solution, and we have to put a stop to it NOW. It's better to just relax and accept the fact that billions of people have to die because we're genetically stupid.


I'm both Green voter (in Finland) and space enthusiast, and not only such person. Perhaps that might help to alleviate some of your prejudiced generalizations against Greens :).

I'm all for colonizing space and spreading life and human cultures further, but surely you realize how mind-bogginbly difficult that is from every point of view. I'm also sure you realize that lifting meaningfully large segments of human population to space is totally unrealistic in the peak-oil time frame. And fact is, we (who stay in the gravity well) have to deal with limited resources one way or unother. So philosophy of market fundamentalism that is based on eternal growth is not sustainable, we'll have to find ways to understand complex systems as organic wholes that we are part of, and to live in balance with ourselves and our enviroment.

Thus I acknowledge that in search for effective humane means for survival when facing the effects of peak oil, we need to move to some form of collective ownership of basic means of production, not because I'm ideologically in favour of socialist means of production contra market based, but because that is only realistic means to apply humanistic policies that don't lead to the survivalist Mad Max scenarios of DieOff etc. Simply said, when the cake is growing, market economics work best, when the cake is shrinking, you need at least minimum level of democratic collectivism to guarantee equalitiy for means of basic survival.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Really, at bottom, I think this is all about lifestyle issues. Peak oil celebrities (like Kunstler and Darley) or people in here (like Laurasia etc.) simply don't like the way people live, and want to fix it. Well, it's a democracy... If their way is so much better, why don't they just run for office? You know, "Friends, we're all living like a bunch of wasteful, obese idiots, so we all need to go back to the land and live small, like in the 1840s". Needless to say, this isn't going to be very popular. Hence they need Peak Oil as their Deus ex Machina, so they can do an endrun around democracy. In fact, they can't stand democracy, because people are greedy and stupid, and if we left it all up to them, they would desiccate the planet by breeding goats, or cover it with suburbs etc. This is just another manifestation of their general elitism and misanthropy.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')
It's not a democracy, it's representative democracy, system that is inherently bent on electing corrupted psychopaths to take care of things (not only, but mostly). I wan't more democracy, better democracy, participatory and inclusive democracy (details on how outside scope here) exactly because people can be greedy and stupid as long as they can blame the scape-goat of the day and deny their own responsibility. We may turn out to be too greedy and stupid for our own good even with the most perfect democratic system, but that is the risk we must face. With tyrannies, oligarcies, plutocracies etc. we have much slimmer chanses of getting through the future challenges with as humanely as possibly.
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Unread postby backstop » Wed 22 Sep 2004, 19:57:44

Dear 'green guest', can you identify those to whom you refer as 'we' and 'them,' and clarify just why you find it necessary to abuse those who hold views that differ from your own ?

Am I right in thinking that you don't believe in collective ownership but you do think it the appropriate system to meet the conditions that the free market has generated ?

And that you do believe in democracy but you don't think it is capable of electing the politics of sustainability ?

Could you also explain why you consider yourself 'green' ?

Do you have anything constructive to contribute to this website ?


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Unread postby JohnDenver » Thu 23 Sep 2004, 08:49:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Green Guest', ' ')I'm both Green voter (in Finland) and space enthusiast, and not only such person. Perhaps that might help to alleviate some of your prejudiced generalizations against Greens :).


Hi Green. Glad to know there are people like you out there.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hus I acknowledge that in search for effective humane means for survival when facing the effects of peak oil, we need to move to some form of collective ownership of basic means of production, not because I'm ideologically in favour of socialist means of production contra market based, but because that is only realistic means to apply humanistic policies that don't lead to the survivalist Mad Max scenarios of DieOff etc. Simply said, when the cake is growing, market economics work best, when the cake is shrinking, you need at least minimum level of democratic collectivism to guarantee equalitiy for means of basic survival.


I'm not sure about all that. Even in the short time I've been in this forum, I've found that a lot of people are using Peak Oil to advance their agendas. Some are claiming we will need to suspend the bill of rights. Some say we'll have to prohibit childbirth and force people to stop consuming. Some say it may even come to the ovens. You seem to be proposing a return to the USSR.

Personally, I believe that we can handle peak oil within our existing framework of democracy and human rights. We may need some innovative new forms of economics and policy (maybe negative interest rates?), but I don't think we need a big shake-up of the economic system. I really do not want to see P.O. become a pretext that let's a bunch of enviro-nazis seize the levers of dictatorial power, and take us back to "Year Zero" like the Khmer Rouge.
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Unread postby trespam » Thu 23 Sep 2004, 11:31:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', 'I')'m not sure about all that. Even in the short time I've been in this forum, I've found that a lot of people are using Peak Oil to advance their agendas. Some are claiming we will need to suspend the bill of rights. Some say we'll have to prohibit childbirth and force people to stop consuming. Some say it may even come to the ovens. You seem to be proposing a return to the USSR.

Personally, I believe that we can handle peak oil within our existing framework of democracy and human rights. We may need some innovative new forms of economics and policy (maybe negative interest rates?), but I don't think we need a big shake-up of the economic system. I really do not want to see P.O. become a pretext that let's a bunch of enviro-nazis seize the levers of dictatorial power, and take us back to "Year Zero" like the Khmer Rouge.


I assume you also don't want to see P.O become a pretext for corporatist-nazis to seize the levers of dictarorial power and take us back to feudalism. I mean really. Do environmentalists really deserve the enviro-nazi label? That is low, demeaning, and on the order of a Rush Limbaugh. Libertarian conservatives love to demean environmentalist and their policies until they discover chemical pollutants in their drinking water.

Skeptics are not automatically luddites. Skeptics sometimes point out that it is too cold to launch the space shuttle. And that tiles are potentially damaged catastrophically. Skeptics arguments must be given due diligence.

Space exploration should continue. But there is little or no reason for long-term human occupancy of space. For example, the current international space station is a waste of resources. It does nothing. It will soon enough be abandoned. It is a 6 motel in the sky that serves no interest except the directing of pork into congressional districts.
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Unread postby Guest » Thu 23 Sep 2004, 13:55:07

Here's a recent quote from an enviro-nazi:

"What is now plain is that the emission of greenhouse gases, associated with industrialisation and strong economic growth from a world population that has increased sixfold in 200 years, is causing global warming at a rate that began as significant, has become alarming and is simply unsustainable in the long-term. And by long-term I do not mean centuries ahead. I mean within the lifetime of my children certainly; and possibly within my own. And by unsustainable, I do not mean a phenomenon causing problems of adjustment. I mean a challenge so far-reaching in its impact and irreversible in its destructive power, that it alters radically human existence." -Tony Blair

I'm not sure how anyone can believe that our current 'advanced' society isn't headed for a multi faceted disaster. I believe Peak Oil WILL be upon us SOON. I believe the sudden surge in oil prices is proof that investors are starting to believe in supply side constraints. Less available oil will reduce food output, increase unemployment and will certainly be the underlying reason for more war.

As Aaron and others have been stating, even if we had a technology that could replace oil on a one-for-one basis, we could not build it fast enough or create the infrastructure to support it fast enough to offset the decline in oil. There currently isn't a such a technology and putting ALL your hopes in the speedy development of one seems a lot more foolish than trying to prepare for a more probable future.

I've been frequenting this site because I want to learn as much as I can about preparing for a peak. I'm also here to keep up with peak oil related news in the hopes that I will spot the 'dead canary in the mine shaft'.

Why have you been hanging here, JD?
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Unread postby clv101 » Thu 23 Sep 2004, 14:08:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('davidyson', 'I')t's almost like you want to "exorcise" the whole idea of space development. Maybe you are advocating that we dismantle all of the various national space programs and stop thinking about space??

The problem with anything to do with space is that it is incredibly energy intensive, more so than pretty much anything we as a species does. I believe the challenges ahead of us are to do with lack of energy supply and excessive energy demand. The last thing we should be perusing is something as energy intensive as space science. Especially as there isn't even a hypothesis how energy spent on space science today moves us any closer to an improved energy position in the future.

Space science has a lot of positives going for it, but assisting with out impending energy crises isn't one of them and frankly the approaching challenge is so great we can't afford to embark on anything that doesn't contribute positively to making things better.

The time, capital and energy invested in space science would benefit the world far more if it was directed to wind, solar, tidal technologies and structural reorganisation of society.

Space science is just the wrong tool for the job.
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Unread postby clv101 » Thu 23 Sep 2004, 14:10:25

Apologies for my misquote above! The quote is JD's rather than davidyson's! :oops:
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Unread postby JohnDenver » Fri 24 Sep 2004, 09:34:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('clv101', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', 'I')t's almost like you want to "exorcise" the whole idea of space development. Maybe you are advocating that we dismantle all of the various national space programs and stop thinking about space??

The problem with anything to do with space is that it is incredibly energy intensive, more so than pretty much anything we as a species does.


More energy intensive than NASCAR?? Or lawn-mowing?
The balancing point about space is that it is also the location of the hugest energy sources we are likely to find. Titan may very well be a hydrocarbon deposit which makes Ghawar look like a mud puddle. The sun is a stable, functioning fusion reactor producing 4 x 10^26 joules/sec. Clearly, there have got to be ways to invest, and derive positive energy returns from these gargantuan energy sources.

But you are right about one thing: NASA and the other space agencies must meet the energy bottom line. They need to become an energy source, not a sink, because they are one of the few areas of human endeavor with that potential.
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Unread postby fastbike » Sun 26 Sep 2004, 00:19:40

DuckNCover wrote
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o, he not only predicted the invasion of Iraq, and the rest, but the election of GWB in 2000 back in 1997?


The actual text is
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')nce global oil peaks, and we NEED to start pumping Saddam's oil, I expect Americans to invade and OCCUPY Iraq. Moreover, profits will flow to friends of George Bush -- not some wild-eyed, gun-waving crackpot like Saddam.


So you can see George Bush refers to Daddy Bush - the Oilman.
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Unread postby MrBean » Mon 27 Sep 2004, 11:14:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('backstop', 'D')ear 'green guest', can you identify those to whom you refer as 'we' and 'them,' and clarify just why you find it necessary to abuse those who hold views that differ from your own ?


By 'we' I refer to humanity, AFAIK I don't refer to any 'them' nor abuse anybody in my post, and can't understand where do you get such ideas. I mixed up quotes and penultimate paragraph is not my writing, if that is what made you spill your beans.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
') Am I right in thinking that you don't believe in collective ownership but you do think it the appropriate system to meet the conditions that the free market has generated ?


I think that the so called "free" (it's not) market" ideology leads to increasing inequality that is not socially sustainable under future reality of negative growth, and that political (democratic) control (which IMO by necessity means some form of collective ownership) of basic productive means is the best guarantee for population to be able to satisfy their basic material needs (food, clothes and shelter) and to participate in political life on more equal basis.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
') And that you do believe in democracy but you don't think it is capable of electing the politics of sustainability ?


I believe the more democracy, the better chances of choosing "politics of sustainability". Representativity is only one aspect of a well functioning democracy (which would include also aspects of participatory and direct democracy), and has some inherent problems that I would think are quite obvious when democracy is defined narrowly only as representative system.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
') Could you also explain why you consider yourself 'green' ?


The Green party in Finland is closest to my own political views, and I've been voting their candidates in every election. Green ideology is socially liberal, economically it is not defined by ideological preference on private or collective ownership and role of state, but takes a pragmatic view on these question, what ever model works best in a given context for the benefit of the society as whole and ultimately life on Earth. Finnish Green party is one the European "realo" parties, and has gathered support from both Liberals (European defintion) and leftist critics of capitalism. It has support of about 10% on national level and is the second biggest party in the capital, with realistic hopes of becoming the biggest in the next election, due next month. One thing I've slowly come to disagreement with the majority of Green party of Finland (after finding about Peak Oil and possibility of Gulf Stream going of line) is their strong ideologically coloured opposition to nuclear energy and preference for NG for the basic energy needs.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
') Do you have anything constructive to contribute to this website ?


Hopefully something, but let the others be judge of that. :)
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