by backstop » Sun 10 Oct 2004, 18:49:13
Aaron - Maybe we're looking at quantum energy-politics here.
We're in a state of uncertainty over reserves' extractable volumes, but know that they may be high enough merely to make waves to souse market confidence, or perhaps low enough to crumble that confidence into particulate matter.
Yet to explore reserves by force will further destabilize oil production in the ME and elsewhere, thus providing the lower potential supply as a consequence, and foreclosing on the possibility of the higher potential supply. Not undertaking that adventure leaves both outcomes as potentials.
The present uncertainty is proposed as a serious hindrance to the West's addressing the issue of peak oil. Yet the West has for decades resisted any change to expanding fossil fuel dependence on whatever grounds were expedient at the time, but most particularly on grounds of feigned incompetence, that more information is needed before any relevant action is taken.
If we look at the choice from the perspective of where we want to get to asap, then suppose J Kerry is one day faced with signing one of two cheques:
one is for a $100Bn Global Oil Reserves' Investigation Force [GORI-Force] for the first couple of years of its meanders;
the other is for $100Bn of R, D & Deployment of, say, Passive Solar, Offshore Wave, and Coppice Forestry for Methanol Fuel-Cell Vehicles, and to purchase, say, two years worth of extra Tradable Emission-Allocations (from low per-capita emissions countries).
In terms of likely productivity, his signing the latter cheque appears to me preferable from diplomatic, political, industrial, economic, societal and ecological perspectives.
In this light, while espionage on reserve capacities may well intensify, given the neocons' aggression to date it may be that we've already passed Peak Data on the global reserves' extractable capacity.
I guess Healey's dictum is relevant here :
"When your in a hole, stop digging."
regards,
Backstop