Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

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

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby azreal60 » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 02:46:32

But that's incorrect. The idea that we are different from bacteria and can ignore natural laws is the entire reason we are in this mess in the first place. We thought technology would allow us to ignore natural laws, and so we stopped obeying them. The ouch when we get that smack on the behind is going to be loud and long.
Azreal60
azreal60
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1107
Joined: Sat 26 Jun 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Madison,Wisconsin

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Omnitir » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 02:49:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('orz', '
')3) The brain thing wasn't there as a soultion for peak. It was just meant to say that the pardigm of what is human can, and probably will change in the future. From research done so far on the human brain, it just seems to be a bunch of electrical signals shooting around, not some separation of mind and body as the religious might make you believe. If this is true, then there's nothing inconcievable about transferring your memory(conciousness) to a computer, which then of course would be able to move across all electrical conduits wireless or not.

Careful Orz, you’ll get accused of spending too much time on the internet and playing video games. :roll: Nothing at all from science fiction can possibly ever make it’s way to the real world don’t you know? Apparently some doomers have crystal balls, so they know this for a fact.

I wonder if you told someone in 1929 that in 40 years humans will walk on the moon, would they say that you read too many comic books and fail to notice that society is heading for a depression?

TEOTWAWKI isn’t a certainty.
"Mother Nature is a psychopathic bitch, and she is out to get you. You have to adapt, change or die." - Tihamer Toth-Fejel, nanotech researcher/engineer.
User avatar
Omnitir
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 894
Joined: Sat 02 Apr 2005, 04:00:00
Location: Down Under

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Gorm » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 02:57:44

TEOTWAWKI was the ony thing I thougt was a sure bet in this.

For better or worse, things gonna change a lot. But who can tell how?
User avatar
Gorm
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 324
Joined: Sat 15 Oct 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Trollhättan, Sweden

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby orz » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 03:07:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ut that's incorrect. The idea that we are different from bacteria and can ignore natural laws is the entire reason we are in this mess in the first place. We thought technology would allow us to ignore natural laws, and so we stopped obeying them. The ouch when we get that smack on the behind is going to be loud and long.



It's cause we squandered that gift on things like SUVs instead of escaping the confines of the Earth. Talking about visions of future here. People in 1969 probably thought that the moon landing was just the beginning. How many visions have you seen of people in the 1970s thinking of colonies on the moon and missions to Mars by 2000? 2001: A space odyssey. Of course, I'm not complaining. The internet revolution was amazing, but it was nothing comparable to being able to step off the planet permanently and ensure the survival of the species in the long run without having to worry about things like Global Warming and Ice Ages, and of course peak oil.

It never ceases to amaze me how so many smart people can live such inane lives, driving back and forth from work to their faceless homes, taking their 2.3 kids to soccer practice and music lessons so they can go to a good college and perpuate this cycle of boredom. Only a handful of people really change the way the world moves. Which is why I never really understood democracy. Democracy seems to be just a defense against a malevolent fascism. It presumes that people will vote for what's good for them, but people only care about what they want, and rarely do the two meet. I've always fancied something where the smart people ruled, like a council of elders or something similarly(fantasyish)

I'm sure we're going to get smacked around by Earth like the spoiled 20something kid we are who's been mooching off his parents for too long and is going to learn how it feels to be cut off. How low we will fall before we pick ourselves back up is the big question.

I had a point I was going to make, but I've long since lost it. :roll:

I'm sure Monte will come in, toss around a few physical and ecological laws and put us no good dreamers in our place soon enough. Have no fear.
User avatar
orz
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 117
Joined: Sat 05 Nov 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Flow » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 03:12:20

I have to agree with JD about what he says about Matt Savinar and his website LATOC.net. The example he illustrated is but one of hundreds (if not thousands) of statements made on that website that lack a source or are completely biased and unfounded. For example:

a) The first two pages of LATOC.net contains about 155 links to external websites as a way to "prove the point being discussed." Of these links, 56% are linked to websites whose main purpose is to make people aware of the ramifications of Peak Oil (i.e. From the Wilderness, Energy Bulletin, etc). The other 44% of the links consist of either (a) cherry picked articles from across the web used to prove a point (without any kind of rebuttal posted in the article) or articles that have nothing to do with Peak Oil but Matt uses to relate to a Peak Oil point he is trying to make.

b) Many of the quotes taken from "politicians" are taken completely out of context. For example, there is a quote from Dick Cheney, when he was CEO of Halliburton, in a speech to some people in energy from London, where he is making a statement about meeting future demand of oil and makes a prediction about how much oil we will need in 2010. Matt interprets this as Cheney’s acknowledgement that he not only knows about Peak Oil but he is pointing out how screwed we are. There is a link that references this statement; however it is not the entire speech. I would think that as the CEO of a major energy company in the USA talking to a group of energy people in London the theme of his speak was not “we are running out of the cheapest energy source on the planet, here is how much we will need and there is no way possible we can meet that demand.” Despite this fact, this is such a powerful statement by Cheney; Matt quotes it twice on his website. This is just an example of the many statements taken out of context not only from politicians, but from bankers and businessmen alike.

c) Matt goes into many detailed explanations about why certain alternative will not work, quoting EROEI as the main reason why several will not work. He even provides a link to EROEI.com to show were he got those EROEI numbers from and by briefly browsing over the site, it looks convincing enough. Then you take a closer look at it and realize those EROEI figures are from 1984 – that’s right, they are over 20 years old. It is not secret that technology can improve EROEI and I have to believe that technology has improved just a tad bit since 1984.

I could keep going on and on forever if I had the time but I do have a point. When most people first hear about Peak Oil their natural reaction is to go to the web and search for websites about Peak Oil to learn more. When you do a Google search for Peak Oil, the first link that comes up is LATOC.net. Most people don’t have time to spend hours each day researching it so they read that website, think the world is going to end, 4 billion people are going to die and it is going to happen within the next 5 years. When I first read that website that was my first reaction until I did a bit of research of my own and figured out Matt is just trying to sell books. What some people fail to realize is the website if full of data that is either taken completely out of context, cherry picked to show one side of the argument completely, or just pulled out of thin air without a reference at all.

JD’s website is a very comprehensive and well thought out site that offers an opposing view to LATOC.net. It’s just too bad that JD’s website isn’t second on the Google list right after LATOC.net so people don’t have to freak out quite so badly. JD says several times that he does believe that Peak Oil is going to happen, but not as soon as many Doomers say and chances are we are not going to die off like many Doomers are always preaching.

The best part is when Doomers are trying to discredit JD, they are quick to point out articles about Space/Teleportation and new solar cells but are not inclined to talk about many of the past Peak Oil predictions that have been made by “experts” that have failed to come true so they are pushed back time and time again or about unconventional oils, coal to oil, etc extending Peak Oil for many years. Maybe if somebody could explain the errors in this type of article, you would have a bit more of a leg to stand on than go for the obvious stuff to pick on. The argument of “this one stupid statement/article discredits everything said/written” just doesn’t hold water. It’s just a nice, easy way to not have to do a lot of research to disprove the things said on that website that make a lot of sense and are based on fact rather than fantasy. It’s almost like saying “you raise some great points about ethanol and they are hard to refute but you spelled it “ethanal” so why should I listen to you” – now that is a great argument and goes a long way to disprove us optimists!
User avatar
Flow
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 166
Joined: Sat 05 Nov 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby SarahC1975 » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 03:50:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'J')ohnDenver got kicked off these forums because he is haughty and angry. He thinks he knows more than anyone and refuses to hear opinions that do not parrot his own. He goes off easily into rages and belittles his opponents. He has attacked people unrelentingly. He has got to be the angriest vegetarian bike rider I have even at the displeasure of meeting. Actually I don't think he is a vegetarian or a bikerider, rather I believe he likes to parade these attributes to win arguments. I understand that he really drives a Hummer. Bye JD :P


Like I said, I think he needs professional help.

Sarah C.
User avatar
SarahC1975
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 45
Joined: Thu 10 Feb 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Omnitir » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 06:36:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('killJoy', '
')I've said it before, and I'll say it again: he's a complacency-monger.

Funny, I’ve found that often people who believe that the sky is about to fall are far less likely to be active conservationists then people who think there is a light at the end of the tunnel.

If we managed to convince the mass public that conservation efforts would merely evoke Jevon’s paradox ensuring doom and destruction, then why would they want to conserve? Doom mongering will encourage complacency. Warning people about peak oil but drawing attention to possible optimistic outcomes, is far more likely to have a positive effect.
"Mother Nature is a psychopathic bitch, and she is out to get you. You have to adapt, change or die." - Tihamer Toth-Fejel, nanotech researcher/engineer.
User avatar
Omnitir
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 894
Joined: Sat 02 Apr 2005, 04:00:00
Location: Down Under

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Falconoffury » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 07:03:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') have to agree with JD about what he says about Matt Savinar and his website LATOC.net. The example he illustrated is but one of hundreds (if not thousands) of statements made on that website that lack a source or are completely biased and unfounded.


I think you are describing John Denvers site. He likes to suggest all sorts of solutions without the needed details and sources. He just has a mish-mash of ideas taken from his own imagination. He seems to think that replacing one power source with another is as simple as swapping out lego blocks.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he other 44% of the links consist of either (a) cherry picked articles from across the web used to prove a point (without any kind of rebuttal posted in the article) or articles that have nothing to do with Peak Oil but Matt uses to relate to a Peak Oil point he is trying to make.


First of all, there is no rebuttal to facts, and his arguments are supported by facts in those links. Secondly, you can find ties to peak oil in places that seem to have nothing to do with it on the surface. It just shows you how far reaching the effects of peak oil are.

This is the Cheney quote you mentioned.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')y some estimates, there will be an average of two-percent annual growth in global oil demand over the years ahead, along with, conservatively, a three-percent natural decline in production from existing reserves.That means by 2010 we will need on the order of anadditional 50 million barrels a day.


I don't see how this could be out of context to me. He is saying that we will have two percent growth, three percent decline. Do the math. It comes out to be an overall decline.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') would think that as the CEO of a major energy company in the USA talking to a group of energy people in London the theme of his speak was not “we are running out of the cheapest energy source on the planet, here is how much we will need and there is no way possible we can meet that demand.”


All Matt is saying is that politicians are aware of peak oil. He isn't saying that Cheney thinks we are doomed. He's just saying that Cheney is aware of some estimates on oil production and depletion, and that they don't look good. I think you took the point of the quote out of context.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hen you take a closer look at it and realize those EROEI figures are from 1984 – that’s right, they are over 20 years old. It is not secret that technology can improve EROEI and I have to believe that technology has improved just a tad bit since 1984.

Maybe technology has improved. Can you prove that Matt is intentionally using old data to better support his claims? If you provide him with facts and sources with more up to date EROEIs, he will probably update his site accordingly.

If you are trying to prove that Matt is cherry picking sources that only support his claims, then I think you are doing a poor job. Matt doesn't resort to red herrings or ad hominem attacks like John Denver does. Those are tactics of desperation. Matt doesn't need to get desperate because the facts speak for themselves.

I also don't buy into the alternatives that John Denver proposes because he doesn't explain in detail what would be required to scale them up. Like I said before, you can't just swap energy sources like lego blocks. It would take some very detailed research to cover all the variables involved in large scale energy projects. Show me a source that details initial costs, raw materials, manpower, risk analysis, locations, energy production, maintenance, and timelines. Any fool can sit back and go on and on about how we will build new nuclear plants and get by on coal liquification and biodesiel, but you have to get into the details before you start to see the challenges involved.

One more thing, saying that one does not know the future is not an argument for someone who is making his own set of predictions. It sounds to me like just another desperate tactic of someone who knows deep down that he is losing the argument.
"If humans don't control their numbers, nature will." -Pimentel
"There is not enough trash to go around for everyone," said Banrel, one of the participants in the cattle massacre.
"Bush, Bush, listen well: Two shoes on your head," the protesters chant
User avatar
Falconoffury
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 1395
Joined: Tue 25 May 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Leanan » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 08:36:13

I used to believe that technology would save us. If the Green Revolution could avert Malthus' Doom, surely human ingenuity could solve the oil depletion problem, and all of mankind's other problems, too.

The problem, of course, is that it takes a lot of energy to support ever more complicated technology. Example: today's cars may be more fuel-efficent than anything they made in the '50s, but it's also made them a lot more complex. Teenagers can no longer lift the hood and start tinkering. Everything's run by microprocessor. You have to plug into the manufacturer's computer system to read the codes. Automechanics specialize in certain makes, attending special schools. At first blush, it may look like a modern car "saves energy." But if you have to consider everything - manufacturing the microprocessors, making the special materials, training all the people it takes to make and maintain all this stuff - you gotta wonder how much energy is really saved.

Complexity has an energy cost. It also requires specialization. One person can't know enough to build a car. It's cheap energy that has allowed us this kind of specialization. This is why I don't think our more complex technologies will long survive peak oil. "The more complicated the plumbing, the easier it is to stop up the drain." Low-tech, that one person can understand and build and use, is going to be the trend of the future.
User avatar
Leanan
News Editor
News Editor
 
Posts: 4582
Joined: Thu 20 May 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Wildwell » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 08:51:39

Funny, I thought the alternative the driving cars over short distances (most car journeys are less than 5 miles) was walking - that's scalable.

Similar things were said of course about replacing the pre-war coal based infrastructure with oil based one and it happened.

Let's go over what oil is used for again:

In the main: A small portion of home heating and electricty, transportation, plastics and lubricants.

Well lubricants can come from other sources, plastics replaced more traditional materials and can be substituted, there's huge waste in transport (both vehicles and use) - hardly any doomers seem to know anything about it - the home heating and electricty generation part is so small it's fairly insignificant.

Of course, that's not to say that none of this stuff is a 'non issue' but doomers rely on traditional models, when history shows that the world is in a constant state of evolution. For example, computer technology may mean in future less need to travel and so on.

IMHO the teleportation and sci-fi stuff is a bit silly because of the way we are wired up (read fear, paranoia, greed) but then people are entitled to their views. For example the internet is a wonderful tool in some people's hands; in others it's downright dangerous. We are after all a very immature race. That said, so is the notion that people will all join eco villages is plain daft as well because people will always try to improve their lot and the agricultural lifestyle was no nirvana. Fists won over knowledge.

I do agree with doomers about technology although I'm not a luddite. I just happen to think 'keep it simple stupid' is a good message to bare in mind with technology. Complexity may appear clever, but that compexity can make simple things even more complex, which requires more people/energy to support it. We seem to want to re-invent the wheel all the time and you have to ask why? And the simple answer a lot of the time is because its just another way to make money.
User avatar
Wildwell
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1962
Joined: Thu 03 Feb 2005, 04:00:00
Location: UK

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Battle_Scarred_Galactico » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 09:14:22

"Any fool can sit back and go on and on about how we will build new nuclear plants and get by on coal liquification and biodesiel, but you have to get into the details before you start to see the challenges involved."


Agree 100% with that, great post falcon.

It's this complete lack of understanding that will lead people to taking the wrong path, or doing just plain nothing (which is probably worse IMO). Unfortunatley Denver is far from alone, and even worse, he's a lot better than most (with his anti-car views).
---
Battle_Scarred_Galactico
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 935
Joined: Thu 07 Apr 2005, 03:00:00

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Dukat_Reloaded » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 09:43:37

looks likes JD has just put up another one of his "Back From The Future" posts.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'J')ust as the First Industrial Revolution got 200 times more productivity out of each worker, the Second Industrial Revolution will get 200 times more efficiency out of its raw materials. It will view waste as a profit-leaching evil, and appreciate the true value of Natural Capital and the free services that nature provides, reconciling the interests of environmentalism and business.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')anotechnology will revolutionise manufacturing by using nano-factories like this, which can assemble products at the molecular level from a small range of raw materials. The cheap, widespread affordable use of such machines, coupled with extremely cheap energy, would mean that manufactured products basically cease to have monetary value, and the only use of money would be for 'unique' commodities like real estate, antiques or human services.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')dvances in neuroscience will allow a person to be scanned and transferred into a computer. There will be two intelligent and conscious species on Earth, one evolving faster than the other. Meanwhile, lifespan could be drastically extended by using medical nanobots to fix bits of your body as they deteriorate. Ultimately, the human body could become obsolete altogether as we transfer our consciousnesses into computers where our intelligence could be augmented thousandfold and we could travel independent of physical matter. We could actually "be" a spacecraft or other vehicle, or imbue physical matter with intelligence. Aliens have probably done this already, which would support the old ants vs. humans argument for the current failure of SETI (that aliens are on as different a plane of existence to us as we are to the ants).


That wasn't written by JD thou, it was written by someone called roland.
User avatar
Dukat_Reloaded
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 953
Joined: Sun 31 Jul 2005, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby wilburke » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 09:57:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wilburke', 'A')ctually, there are not ANY noted Peak Oil authors who would claim that fertilizers are made from oil, nor are there any who would claim that electricity mostly comes from oil.


Really? How about this quote, from the endlessly quoted peak oil standard "The Oil We Eat":
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')oday we do the same, only now when the vault is empty we fill it again with new energy in the form of oil-rich fertilizers.

http://www.harpers.org/TheOilWeEat.html

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he term they usually use is "fossil fuels", which includes natural gas (the primary source for fertilizer) and coal (the primary source for electricity in the US).


That right there shoots down the peak oil food crisis theory. NG and coal won't be peaking for quite some time, so fertilizer is a non-issue, for at least the next 50 years. Pesticides are also a non-issue because the amounts used world-wide account for an infinitesimal fraction of oil use, and pesticides too can be manufactured from NG, coal, tar sands etc.

NONE of the noted peak oil authors are pointing out these simple facts. Why is that Wilburke?


JD, who the hell is Richard Manning? This is not a noted Peak Oil author, sorry.....you need to read more carefully.

Natural gas is running out in North America, which you might be aware of.....worldwide, we have a supposedly reasonable supply.....just as long as we don't ramp up production to cover for a short-fall in oil. By the way, if you READ CAREFULLY what I wrote, I wasn't making the "peak oil food crisis" straw argument that you then decided to "shoot down." Any discussion of the agricultural practices of this civilization includes many more levels than idiotic, reductionist nonsense such as "NG and coal won't be peaking for quite some time, so fertilizer is a non-issue, for at least the next 50 years." This is absolutely a great example of why reading your stuff is complete waste of time.
User avatar
wilburke
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 51
Joined: Mon 09 May 2005, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Leanan » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 10:36:09

I am concerned about food. Even without peak oil, there's serious doubt about how much longer we can continue to feed the world's population...or even just the U.S. population. The population is growing. Farmland is exhausted, if not paved over. Weather is growing more extreme and unpredictable (and it really doesn't matter if it's a natural cycle or global warming/deforestation, it still sucks for the farmers). Water tables are dropping at alarming rates. If the trendlines continue, by 2020, the U.S. and Canada, the last major food exporters, instead of being the bread basket of the world, will be consuming all they produce domestically. And our populations will still be growing rapidly.

Peak oil will only add to the problem. It really doesn't matter whether they're using crude oil or diesel or coal or natural gas. As we've seen, all fossil fuel costs are linked, because they are interchangeable for many uses. Farmers are severely hurting these days, due to high fertilizer costs and high diesel costs.

Food is really the reason why I think peak oil is going to force major changes in the way we live. I think it's going to force us away from the agribusiness model. We are going to end up the way were a hundred years ago, with 97% of us working in farming. Which will leave a lot fewer of us to work in high-tech.

As it is, we're facing diminishing returns in science and technology. The collapse could be fairly sudden when we can no longer afford to keep throwing money and resources at R&D.
User avatar
Leanan
News Editor
News Editor
 
Posts: 4582
Joined: Thu 20 May 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby JohnDenver » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 10:55:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wilburke', 'A')ny discussion of the agricultural practices of this civilization includes many more levels than idiotic, reductionist nonsense such as "NG and coal won't be peaking for quite some time, so fertilizer is a non-issue, for at least the next 50 years."


Well, it's a solution. What's yours Wilburke? Do you have a better way? How do you suggest that we feed the masses?
JohnDenver
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2145
Joined: Sun 29 Aug 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby EnergySpin » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 11:24:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Flow', '
')
c) Matt goes into many detailed explanations about why certain alternative will not work, quoting EROEI as the main reason why several will not work. He even provides a link to EROEI.com to show were he got those EROEI numbers from and by briefly browsing over the site, it looks convincing enough. Then you take a closer look at it and realize those EROEI figures are from 1984 – that’s right, they are over 20 years old. It is not secret that technology can improve EROEI and I have to believe that technology has improved just a tad bit since 1984.

Heinberg was the one who applied the trick first. In addition either because of misunderstanding OR deliberation Heinberg is using emergy (not energy) calculations from 30 years ago to prove that no alternatives will work. If one was conducting a medical research it would be like comparing quality-adjuested life years based on the subjective valuations of lets say cancer survivors in 1975 to the QALYs of arthritis patients in 1984 to actual survival measured in years during 2005.
Recent LCAs of wind give an EROIE of 35-50 (Vestas V3.0 W onshore-offshore), nuclear more than 50 and solar in the 6-8 ......
And this is high quality energy i.e. electricity .....
But people do not read the fine print .... and the aforementioned sites are scaremongering portals.
In reference to the personal attacks to Heinberg ... I'm sorry to say that JD is right. Prof H is in bed with rascists like Pimentel and Abernathy ..... Calling the reality as it is, is not an ad hominen attack IMHO
"Nuclear power has long been to the Left what embryonic-stem-cell research is to the Right--irredeemably wrong and a signifier of moral weakness."Esquire Magazine,12/05
The genetic code is commaless and so are my posts.
User avatar
EnergySpin
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2248
Joined: Sat 25 Jun 2005, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby some_guy282 » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 12:28:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Wildwell', 'F')unny, I thought the alternative the driving cars over short distances (most car journeys are less than 5 miles) was walking - that's scalable.


It certainly is. But is it realistic to expect that to happen peacefully and orderly in a rapid transition where oil prices spiral out of control quickly? That would be the kind of simple and workable solution we need to help alleviate this problem if we addressed it in a rational and orderly way. If the public was educated and informed about Peak Oil, they would see the stakes, and how their individual actions affect consumption. I think the average person would be all too happy to walk distances of 5 miles (or ride a bike) instead of walking. But we're not addressing the problem rationally right now. We're not addressing it at all really. Peak Oil has only recently become a minor blip on the radar of the mainstream media, and Joe Sixpack still has no clue.

Peak Oil wont become a major issue until a major oil shock hits home and affects everyone. How is the average person likely to respond then? Will we collectively recognize the problem and address it correctly? Possibly, but I'm not optimistic. I think it's much more likely that the average person will be very, very angry. They will think they have been cheated by someone (like the oil companies), and if our politician's behavior stays the same, the politicians will be all too happy to try and provide any scape goat they can other than themselves. How many politicians are going to be willing to give the public the bad news that life as they knew it is over for good? How many will advocate taking those five mile walks? The way things are looking now, I'd say not enough.

Our present culture is another important thing to consider. What is required to solve this crisis is a complete 180 degree turn around from what we are doing now. Conservation instead of consumption. But consumption is considered great now. Cars are the end all and be all of transportation here in the US. Riding a bike or walking to places is considered laughable. How many individuals are going to be willing to give up that SUV for a bicycle? With a lot of time and a huge public education effort, probably quite a few. But all of a sudden when prices are sky rocketing? People will turn to bicycles for sure when they're forced to due to prices. But that doesn't mean they'll like it. They'll still hold the old values they've internalized during the age of consumption we're living in, and they'll be livid. They'll want the scape goats, and they'll find them. They'll probably listen to any insane scheme to bring things back to the way they were in the good old days, like space mirrors, or a solution that can't be scaled up enough like biodiesal.
In individuals, insanity is rare; but in groups, parties, nations, and epochs it is the rule. – Nietzsche

Time makes more converts than reason. – Thomas Paine

History is a set of lies agreed upon. – Napoleon Bonaparte
User avatar
some_guy282
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 651
Joined: Sun 18 Jul 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby Leanan » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 12:47:09

Just look at those e-mail chain letters asking people to boycott gas stations until they lower their prices. That's most people's idea of "doing something" about high energy prices.

It was like that during the '70s energy crisis, too. Rumors went around that there were trees in Brazil that had diesel for sap. That someone had invented a way to beam solar energy from satellites in space back to earth for a fraction of the cost of hydroelectric power. That someone had discovered Tesla's secret, and created a car engine that was cheap, silent, clean, and generated energy from nothing.

All of these wondrous discoveries were bought up by Big Oil, of course, then buried, in order to keep energy prices high.
User avatar
Leanan
News Editor
News Editor
 
Posts: 4582
Joined: Thu 20 May 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Peakoildebunked.com - your comments and ideas?

Unread postby johnmarkos » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 12:52:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('wilburke', 'J')D, who the hell is Richard Manning? This is not a noted Peak Oil author, sorry.....you need to read more carefully.

The Harper's article, "The Oil We Eat," by Richard Manning, is featured prominently in the sidebar of ASPO's site.
User avatar
johnmarkos
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 866
Joined: Wed 19 May 2004, 03:00:00
Location: San Francisco, California
Top

PreviousNext

Return to Open Topic Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests