The British Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli once said “There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.” If ever there were a more suitable topic of debate that encompasses the spirit of the quote then it surely must be the current issue of declining oil.
From my short time here at peakoil.com, I had become overwhelmingly aware that there are plenty of lies, plenty of damned lies but more importantly an overkill of
Statistics. Whether it be in pie chart, column graph or spreadsheet from the many "reliable" and "authoratative" sources. This all being well and good and serves a purpose, but to a point.
As stated I had not been here for as long as many but I found myself increasingly frustrated by the statistical mountainI had to climb trying to understand the significance of Peak Oil. I'm sure a main part of this frustration came from a desire for the substantial, yet none was forthcoming simply because no two sources were alike, even if they supported the same point of view.
Then whilst trawling through the melee of countless websites I came across a link pointing me towards a wmv download of a lecture given by
Dr Albert Bartlett. Initially I thought that a lecture given by a retired Prof in physics would be complicated in its context, bearing in mind I work as a fine artist and maths was never my strongest subject. I was astounded how a simple equation given in the lecture could have such devastating effects.
In principle
everyone should download and watch this wmv. Yes the Hubbert Peak is important, but Bartlett's lecture should be upheld as a work of genius.
Armed with the equation I was renewed with new vigour to find subtantial results as to when oil will run out and more importantly when declining oil would start to take effect. Now admittedly the latter is hypothetical, but the results from using the simple equation more or less pointed me to a frightening future.
Taking an average of known oil reserves at being 1000gb left in the world from various websites, using that as my start point I took global usage statistics (yes that word) from
http://www.eia.doe.gov going back over the years finding that the world increases its usage by 1.6% per year. with exeception of 2004 when it shot up by 3.5% but with these statistics the increase has continued at 1.6%. In 2005 our average daily usage works out at 84mbd (rounded up from an average of 83.78mbd). Naturally multiply this by 365 for a yearly amount and it works out at 30.5 bbpy increase this by 1.6% for 2006 etc
We get a chart like this
2005 = 30.5
2006 = 31.1
2007 = 31.7
2008 = 32.1
2009 = 32.6
Total = 158gb
Its plain to see that within 5 years we can remove close to 160gb barrels of oil from the 1000gb.
This doesn't seem a lot, but when you add a further 5 years increase to that we are getting close to 400gb
By 2015 we will have used close to half of the worlds amount, thats in
10 years time.
I know this appears all very simplistic and will probably be scoffed at by those that have lived on the site for an age, but thats the whole point of simplicity. It workst because it is so brutal in its honesty.
Since working this out needless to say my life has changed to the point now where my friends tell me to shut up, purely because I know the either cannot comprehend the ramifications of what I am saying or blatantly flat out refuse to believe that the status quo can change in such a dramatic fashion.
I can't predict the future, but I believe the figures given by the simplicity of percentage growth indicate two circumstances:
1) Mankind faces serious issues that we are refusing to face, simply because we are
not reducing our use of a finite resource.
2) the very real possibilty that Hubbert was correct in predicting an Oil Peak, but more importantly his bell curve may not have had the beautiful symetry, that we have already hit peak and are on our way down at an very sharp decline.
Now I wouldn't be surprised if people argue against my simplicity, but hopefully I can persuade people into stripping away a lot of information that hinders people seeing the real truth about Peak Oil.