by MonteQuest » Tue 09 May 2006, 18:26:36
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('grabby', '
')Biofuels are a non-event. They mean and will mean absolutely NOTHING at all.
Considering that biofuels used to supply mankind's energy needs before fossil fuels, I think they do mean something.
We never powered any society on moonshine and grease. We used wood and whale oil.
And we had quite a few billion less "mankind."
A Saudi saying, "My father rode a camel. I drive a car. My son flies a jet-plane. His son will ride a camel."
by grabby » Tue 09 May 2006, 23:29:29
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('grabby', '
')Biofuels are a non-event. They mean and will mean absolutely NOTHING at all.
Considering that biofuels used to supply mankind's energy needs before fossil fuels, I think they do mean something.
We never powered any society on moonshine and grease. We used wood and whale oil.
And we had quite a few billion less "mankind."
Calculators are cheap.
Buy one.
Use one.
Hey, ok now lets learn something.
1 cord of wood equals four barrels.
1 747 idling from the loading ramp to get READY for takeoff burns 500 gallons or about 11 barrels of oil or two cords of wood.
there are 70,000 flights a day.
this is why we cannot live on cords of wood any more.
we have planes, trains and automobiles and all the trees would disappear.
Amrica uses 21 millon barrels per day. that is 5 million cords of wood per day.
P E R D A Y !
how tall is a cord of wood?
Hmmmmm?
Full Face Cord approx 220 - 280 4 Feet High X 8 Feet Wide
Full Cord approx 440 - 560 2 Full Face Cords
8x5=40 million feet long at 4 feet wide.
7,575 miles long by 4 feet wide and 8 feet high to supply the world for one day.
3,700 miles long by 8 feet wide and 8 feet high.
from LA to NEW york PER DAY
or a solid wooden stack 1/2 mile wide and 8 feet high from san Francisco to newyork then down to Florida a year.
how many years can you last like this?
Not even ONE YEAR.
If you go back to WOOD and WATER, you will take 99/100 people and remove all power from them.
No, you just don't understand it.
there are no alternate useable fuels once this oil is gone.
if you burn this much COAL every year we will all choke to death.
by jdmartin » Fri 12 May 2006, 13:39:32
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('max_power29', 'A')lso, do not forget, people often think of how they will deal with the extra expenses from a consumer point of view. Many businesses are highly competetive and have small margins of profit. they will become insolvent eventually and lay off their workers. The end result is that people that once had good paying jobs may not have any income at all and the ones that still do have jobs, will experience major downward pressure on their wages and benefits because of the endless supply of labor. For a real life example, I have an extra part time job in the armored transport industry. These trucks are literally behemoth armored personell carriers that suck down diesel like there is no tomorrow. The industry began becoming dysfunciontal at like $1.80 a gallon. Managers are stressing big time. There is massive pressure from above to cut costs. the industry is like the airlines in the sense that they can not raise prices because of too much competition. The industry is doomed. Armored transport is one of the "canaries in the coal mines" In the end it doesnt matter if you think prices are going to be affordable or not if you suddenly have ZERO income. I can't believe so many americans don't think about these problems from a business perspective, only a consumeris perspective. People at my work are like I can afford gas at 4,5, 10 bucks a gallon no problem I'm taking my new boat out with my excursion and driving thousands of miles to disneyland NO PROBLEMO. And I'm thinking what if this place shuts down? people just cant grasp the point at all
This point needs to be hammered home! Few people who work have access to the financial component of things; most just punch in their 8 hours in the cubicle or factory floor and go home. If you see the numbers in the business world, they're pretty shocking. We have watched plastic pipe prices increase by a factor of 100% in 2 years. Copper has done the same thing. I'm budgeting 25% more for fuel this year than I was two years ago. I have to start looking at cost-sharing health care premiums with the employees (currently company pays 100% of premiums for employees), because we cannot absorb 20% increases every year and pass them along to the customer. I have posted this before - people think things are humming along because the end-user businesses have been sucking up the cost increases and eating up what's left of their profit margin, because they're terrified of raising prices and losing (or going out of) business. They won't be able to do this forever, though. When prices go up high enough, demand destruction will start to set in. Will this cause a full-blown recession or just a bunch of poorer schelps? I don't know. It will be worse, IMO, than most people are making it out to be (other than die-off doomers, that is).
Just because you, John Doe, can pay 5 bucks for gasoline doesn't mean that your employer can afford the multitudes of expenses that have come down the pike with it. And if you don't have a job, you won't be buying $5 gasoline or $5 worth of milk or a $5 Blockbuster DVD.
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.
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