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For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjust?

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjust?

Unread postby Daryl » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 12:05:23

This discussion is for cornucopian/soft landing peak oilers. Wanted to throw out some ideas about how a slow transformation would play out.

Was thinking about Kunstler critiques of suburbia. How could a city like Dallas adjust to expensive, scarce gas? Employment is decentralized over large suburban areas with no public transportation. Could they build a skeletal rail transit system and combine it with a large flexible hydrogen bus system? A hydrogen bus system wouldn't have the same supply infrastructure issues that an auto-based hydrogen system would have. It could also could be implemented quickly and cheaply. Could government and businessess cooperate to rationalize the employment market? For example, get all the secretaries who live in South Dallas and commute to North Dallas to switch jobs with the secretaries who live in North Dallas and commute to South Dallas. Could suburbanites buy mopeds to do grocery shopping with? Would small local delis/grocery stores boom? Kunstler makes it sound like if WalMart and Target go out of business, we won't be able to buy anything anymore. They put the locals out of business very quickly, why couldn't the locals reopen about as quickly as they closed?
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Heineken » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 12:49:22

You need to educate yourself about the realities behind hydrogen. Hydrogen isn't the answer. So much fuel is needed to generate hydrogen that you might as well burn the fuel directly and not bother with the hydrogen "carrier." Hydrogen is going nowhere, buddy.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby EnergySpin » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 13:59:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Heineken', 'Y')ou need to educate yourself about the realities behind hydrogen. Hydrogen isn't the answer. So much fuel is needed to generate hydrogen that you might as well burn the fuel directly and not bother with the hydrogen "carrier." Hydrogen is going nowhere, buddy.

I disrespectfully disagree Heineken ... not because I believe the H2 economy is going anywhere soon (it will eventually with the Type III+/TypeIV nuclear power reactors), but because within the context of a public transit system H2 makes sense now. I acknowledhe the fact that H2 is only a carrier which requires electricity to be made; this means that it might be way too expensive to power the whole auto-fleet in Dalas, TX but for a few tens of buses is doable. There are projects in both the US and EU in real cities which have demonstrated that it works.
Daryl ... as far as secretarial swapping ... sounds more like an idea for a swingers club corporate night theme but I do not see it working as a Peak Oil solution.
Stick with the buses and the rail system :roll:
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby GrizzAdams » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 17:34:34

And don't for get about the cheaply built houses. Most newer suburbs around here, build houses using the cheapest and fewest materials as possible, but it appears luxurious. Under-built and over-rated. But I think these houses won't last very long at all, even if our so called economy keeps cruising along somehow.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby jaws » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 19:48:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_code('', 'City of Chicago
Population by year
1840 4,470
1850 29,963
1860 112,172
1870 298,977
1880 503,185
1890 1,099,850
1900 1,698,575
1910 2,185,283
1920 2,701,705
1930 3,376,438
')
Between 1890 and 1910 Chicago added one million people to its population. Cheap construction and relaxed urban zoning can allow very rapid transformation of an urban area. Just by building over parking lots a suburban city can make itself urban (and fit for mass transit systems) in the span of a couple of years. The only problems are the regulation and the political will to change them.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby 0mar » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 19:51:53

Now if people like you populated the city, county, state and federal boards we'd see some semblance of a soft crash.

Asset inertia alone will fuck us in the ass hard and long.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Daryl » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 20:27:17

We need a crisis. In that case, I think change could come quickly. Both political parties will make a mad dash to own the issue. (The Republicans will get slaughtered). I'm a good example. Even though I became aware of most of these issues in 1980, I've had my head in the sand for 25 years. I was amazed that the gas stations were closed in my town for 3 full days after Katrina, and we didn't even have a real supply interruption. That was just a little nervous hoarding. It got me thinking about the grocery stores and the distribution system. Then a friend of mine sent me a link to Kunstler's site and here I am.

Hillary will be der OilFuehrer!
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Concerned » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 20:53:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daryl', 'T')his discussion is for cornucopian/soft landing peak oilers. Wanted to throw out some ideas about how a slow transformation would play out.

Was thinking about Kunstler critiques of suburbia. How could a city like Dallas adjust to expensive, scarce gas? Employment is decentralized over large suburban areas with no public transportation. Could they build a skeletal rail transit system and combine it with a large flexible hydrogen bus system? A hydrogen bus system wouldn't have the same supply infrastructure issues that an auto-based hydrogen system would have. It could also could be implemented quickly and cheaply. Could government and businessess cooperate to rationalize the employment market? For example, get all the secretaries who live in South Dallas and commute to North Dallas to switch jobs with the secretaries who live in North Dallas and commute to South Dallas. Could suburbanites buy mopeds to do grocery shopping with? Would small local delis/grocery stores boom? Kunstler makes it sound like if WalMart and Target go out of business, we won't be able to buy anything anymore. They put the locals out of business very quickly, why couldn't the locals reopen about as quickly as they closed?


The soft landing will most likely happen for the wealthiest in society and globally.

People with access to money will continue to drive their SUV's and Hummers long after people with more fuel efficient cars are unable to fill them at the bowser.

The 1st world will best prepared if any die off in population is to happen, you might not be able to drive however on the bright side picking up weekly or monthly rations of food is far more likely in the 1st world than the 3rd.

The nuclear option is very promising in regards providing almost limitless energy. The biggest challenges in my estimation being
1. Where is the money coming from? Private / Public? Impacts if there is an economic meltdown/depression.
2. How long to build long term capacity and scale it up FAST? (We should be starting NOW)
3. Training and attracting "qualified" technical professionals in a global environment of demand for their skills.
4. Moving the technoligically advanced breeder reactors from theory/test/pilot stages to actual commercial products and get going on this NOW.

Summary the wealthier you are and less debt you have the softer you landing will be. ;)
"Once the game is over, the king and the pawn go back in the same box."
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Liamj » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 21:38:14

Worth reading David Holmgren on this problem, see
http://www.energybulletin.net/5104.html
for the text or orig pdf http://www.bml.csiro.au/susnetnl/netwl49E.pdf
for some interesting pics too.

Instant summary:
Food security based on gardening
Better health through a culture of home food consumption
Economy through home food production and food preservation
Firewood for sustainable and ethical energy
Passive solar design combined with thermally efficient natural materials
Retrofitting attached greenhouses to existing homes
Water harvesting and natural wastewater treatment
Animals in productive garden ecosystems
Reclaiming the streets
Creative recycling
City farms and community gardens
New ways of trading
New ways of sharing land
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby jaws » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 21:42:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Concerned', 'T')he soft landing will most likely happen for the wealthiest in society and globally.

People with access to money will continue to drive their SUV's and Hummers long after people with more fuel efficient cars are unable to fill them at the bowser.

What constitutes wealth is changing rapidly. Many fortunes will be made from peak oil, and many more will be lost. The Walmart heirs may not be the richest family in the world much longer, but some entrepreneur working in the darkness today will take their place.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby GoIllini » Sat 15 Oct 2005, 23:49:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Concerned', 'T')he soft landing will most likely happen for the wealthiest in society and globally.

People with access to money will continue to drive their SUV's and Hummers long after people with more fuel efficient cars are unable to fill them at the bowser.

What constitutes wealth is changing rapidly. Many fortunes will be made from peak oil, and many more will be lost. The Walmart heirs may not be the richest family in the world much longer, but some entrepreneur working in the darkness today will take their place.


Yup. You'll notice how we sort of have a new industrial revolution every time we change prevalent energy technologies. We'll have a nice long one with CTL transitioning into Fission/Hydrogen, and we'll see several revolutions with the various incarnations of fusion.

At some point, the fifth chapter of Revelation's gonna open and put an end to all of this. Then, in a sense, some of the doomers might get their wish.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby jmacdaddio » Sun 16 Oct 2005, 00:18:16

Today I'm wearing my optimist hat.

I foresee zoning changes - already new developments in some areas require mixed use zoning in addition to mixed housing types. I rented an apartment in one such subdivision where you could *gasp* walk to a grocery store if you wanted.

Suburb to suburb commuting is the norm now rather than taking the 7.28 train in to a city center each day, so adjustments will need to happen. Since new railroads will take decades, we don't have time: what will probably happen is that companies will find ways to move their sites closer to what mass transit remains and individuals in greater numbers will choose a smaller house closer to work rather than the 5000 sf monster 50 miles away.

More people will rediscover gardening as a way to supplement their pantries. Community greenhouses can flourish in areas where there is a sense of community.

When I put on my pessimist hat I realize that so many sheeple don't know what's coming and they don't know that this is only the beginning.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Concerned » Sun 16 Oct 2005, 00:45:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Concerned', 'T')he soft landing will most likely happen for the wealthiest in society and globally.

People with access to money will continue to drive their SUV's and Hummers long after people with more fuel efficient cars are unable to fill them at the bowser.

What constitutes wealth is changing rapidly. Many fortunes will be made from peak oil, and many more will be lost. The Walmart heirs may not be the richest family in the world much longer, but some entrepreneur working in the darkness today will take their place.


Of course fortunes will be lost and made.

I'd be fairly confident that the Walmart heirs should they choose to, would be one of the last members of 1st world society that would be forced to give up their SUV's and Hummers should they choose to drive them.
"Once the game is over, the king and the pawn go back in the same box."
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby katkinkate » Sun 16 Oct 2005, 02:38:08

I see many suburbanites migrating closer to established public transport corridors and the city centre and businesses migrating out of the centre towards the workforce. Small stores, light industry and farmers markets opening where people live. Suburbs developing back into sateite towns that eventually will establish their own local leadership. Suburbs too far away from public transport will eventually be deserted and maybe revert back to local farmland to feed the small towns and larger city nearby.

This would be gradual, like over decades and I have no doubt those decades will be full of economic hardship, riots, some death, some martial law, hunger, loss of services, etc. But I don't think the big cities will die off totally (unless hit by nuclear weapons :shock: ). As water and electricity service dies, the sky scrapers will be deserted above the 4th or 5th floor, then as they get dangerous will be abandoned totally and the businesses will migrate to the outskirts of the centre. New buildings will probably be built from materials scavenged from the sky scrapers.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Ibon » Sun 16 Oct 2005, 14:35:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('katkinkate', '
')This would be gradual, like over decades and I have no doubt those decades will be full of economic hardship, riots, some death, some martial law, hunger, loss of services, etc.


Remember we do not have an energy crisis, we have a liquid fuel crisis and transition from cheap to more expensive energy but still abundant energy. I notice how many former doomers are slowly realizing that there will not be this great collapse unless of course nature as in global warming or bird flu throw us some nasty parties. This is more likely a source of collapse than energy depletion.

Expensive energy is already shaping our future of suburbia. Not only peak oilers are talking about the grim future of the outer rings of exurbia, those locations sometimes 50-60 miles from city centers where developers have set up suburban communities during the past 15 years. Look at what realtors are discussing on their national realtor sites

http://realtytimes.com/rtapages/20051010_tsunami.htm

High energy costs will create foreclosures on a signifigant percentage of people who have overextended their debt. This may facilitate a pop in the housing market and this will start moving developers even faster toward sustainable designs, smaller square footage higher density housing closer to city centers. The US will slowly move toward a living density and mass transit like you see in Europe. There are no alternatives.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby Macsporan » Sun 16 Oct 2005, 20:08:58

I expect suburbs will wither and be dug up for market-gardens.

High-density housing will return and transport will be increasingly by rail.

SUVs will be melted down to make railway tracks.

It will require a lot of money and effort. No doubt some people will become rich doing it while others will see their fortunes go down the drain. It is the way of the world. After all, who weeps for the trilobites?

The Late Roman Empire was the same. As the cities decayed people stopped spending money on baths and forums and started building Churches and monastaries instead.

At least we'll be getting value for money with our railways.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby rogerhb » Sun 16 Oct 2005, 20:11:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Macsporan', 'S')UVs will be melted down to make railway tracks.


Nah, these will be the new share-croppers cottages.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby MonteQuest » Sun 16 Oct 2005, 23:29:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', ' ')Remember we do not have an energy crisis, we have a liquid fuel crisis and transition from cheap to more expensive energy but still abundant energy. I notice how many former doomers are slowly realizing that there will not be this great collapse unless of course nature as in global warming or bird flu throw us some nasty parties. This is more likely a source of collapse than energy depletion.


Pfft! I guess we can just ignore the huge debt we piled up with cheap energy. It will be easy to service the cheap debt with expensive debt. :roll:

We have a end of cheap energy crisis, not an energy crisis. We have an end of readily available energy propblem. We have an end to a readily portable energy problem. We have an end to a high density energy problem. We have a scalability problem. All of this adds up to an economic crisis that has no solution short of a powerdown and a reduction in the standard of living.

We must learn to live within our means, and within the limits of the environment.

Why is it that so few get this? All I hear are solutions in isolation.

How will you service the debt?
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby GoIllini » Sun 16 Oct 2005, 23:52:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', 'P')fft! I guess we can just ignore the huge debt we piled up with cheap energy. It will be easy to service the cheap debt with expensive debt. :roll:

Ironic how doomers complain about bankruptcies in the U.S. and then complain about debt.

Aren't bankruptcies a good thing, then? And my experience is showing that Americans are starting to learn to save.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')e have a end of cheap energy crisis, not an energy crisis. We have an end of readily available energy propblem. We have an end to a readily portable energy problem. We have an end to a high density energy problem. We have a scalability problem. All of this adds up to an economic crisis that has no solution short of a powerdown and a reduction in the standard of living.

Again: Nuclear
Again: Coal.

You complain about massive debts in this country, then conveniently forget that, by your own words, the U.S. has 28% of the world's coal supply. Apparently, when the cost of energy skyrockets, as you claim, American coal is somehow going to be cheap and not be used to pay off the country's trade debts.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')e must learn to live within our means, and within the limits of the environment.

The only limit that the environment imposes on nuclear is nature's ability to deal with waste heat. And some of our newer reactors are getting better thermal to electric efficiency, thus reducing some of the waste heat.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hy is it that so few get this? All I hear are solutions in isolation.

How will you service the debt?

Again, coal. When $75 Million buys a quad of energy, coal is an excellent deal. I've already got enough bought up to cover the 60 BOE/year I figure I'll need for the next 30 years- and I'm just a college student!

The government has proven in the past that it can get away with windfall energy taxes. Stick a 65% windfall tax on U.S. coal production after peak oil hits, and the government will be out of debt in two years.

Meanwhile, China's in deep trouble. The country:

1) Depends on worldwide demand for electronics, toys, and trinkets. I can assure you those'll be the first to go in any kind of recession.

2) Uses more than twice as much energy per GDP produced than the U.S.

Our "massive" trade debt to China will be enough to keep China plugging along for a year or two after peak oil hits, at most. And assuming we manage to revalue the Yuan sooner, that might get reduced to six to twelve months.

Dire predictions about peak oil are almost always predicated on energy and food getting more expensive. If that happens, America is in great shape, because we've got 25-30% of the world's coal and around 30-40% of the world's sustainable cropland.
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Re: For Slow Transformationists - How Will the Suburbs Adjus

Unread postby jtmorgan61 » Sun 16 Oct 2005, 23:55:37

What I see for the suburbs of San Diego...

First, the suburbs are going to stop growing. Property prices in the most distant suburbs will fall, not catastrophically but enough to hurt the economy some.

People will start to move closer to work. Areas with a lot of businesses will get drastically built up and densified. Areas where you have to drive 20 minutes to shop may be rezoned (and thanks to last year's supreme court ruling, the land grab will be easy.)

More people will buy bikes and motorcycles, or walk to work. More people will take the bus. Rails will be built but are going to lag demand in a big way.

People are still going to live in more distant houses, they're going to be wealthy people and retired people who don't have anywhere to go most days. A good portion of power will be generated locally by renewables. And some of the small scale farming stuff might go on in places, but frankly I think that the landing just isn't going to be hard enough that everyone needs to become a subsistence farmer when they get home from work.

I also think the landing isn't going to be hard enough (between alternate oil generation keeping supply reductions moderate and hybrid/plugin hybrid/battery/hydrogen transitions keeping demand moderate) that 5-20 mile commutes are going to become totally uneconomic. So I expect many suburban areas to get along pretty well.
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