by Starvid » Sun 26 Feb 2006, 12:46:43
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Novus', 'J')ames Schlesinger is right to a point that peak oil is only a liquid fuels crisis. The problem is that so much of our world is dependent on liquid fuels that Peak oil is going to be a huge disaster. The prevailing economic theory of our time is Global Capitalism and it is entirely dependent on cheap and abundent liquid fuels. Locally our economies are almost entirely liquid fuel dependent. Suburbia will be completely untenable in the face peak oil.
Putting things in perspective, if we were to switch over to power our cars and trucks with nuclear electricty every suburban neighborehood would need it's own nuclear power plant. If cars were to be powered by wind every car would need to come with a 200 foot wind mill to put in your back yard. If cars were powered by solar you would need four acres of solar panals to fit in your back yard. The alternatives just arn't scaleable the way oil is or was.
In 1920 there were inter-urbarn street car lines that went from Boston to Washington DC and from Pittsburg to Chicago. Along the street car lines were strings of small towns surounded by farmland that could grow most of the their own food. If they were still operational peak oil would not be much of a problem. Instead we live in a world warped by the pervese visions of GM and Wal-Mart.
It's always nice reading your posts. I much agree that building street cars is very important. I am pestering the local politicians about it every time I see one of them, and the local paper is promoting the idea. We had street cars in Uppsala until the 50's when they were torn up. Hopefully we will get them back in the foreseeable future.
Considering the amount of power needed to run electric cars I think you are a bit off. Let's look at the energy flow diagram posted by jimk.
As you can see transportation is almost entirely powered by petroleum and NGPL. Transportation is 26,5 quads out of which only 5,3 quads are converted to useful energy (ie propelling cars and trains, the rest is waste heat) mirroring the roughly 20 % efficiency of the infernal combustion engine (5,3/26,5=0,2).
Ok, transportation require 5,3 quads of useful energy. Let's say batteries become good enough for electric cars. Then we need 5,3 quads of useful energy to power these cars. Since an electric car has an efficiency of roughly 75 % we will need 5,3/0,75= 7,1 quads of electricity, and since a nclear power plant has an efficieny of roughly 33 % we will need 7,1/0,33= 21,4 quads of nuclear energy.
The current production of nuclear energy in the US is 8,1 quads, so we need roughly 21,4/8,1= 2,64 times as much nuclear energy to supply the electric cars with power.
Since nuclear power supplies 20 % of the US power needs, this would equal a total increase in power generation capacity of 20 %*2,64= 52 %.
A big increase yes, but not at all impossible.