by Anthrobus » Fri 09 Jun 2006, 17:14:26
prospects for the future
I think, pe-jay's and doly's scenarios point in some probable directions. Of course, its extremly hard to imagine changes of our lifestyle in the future, or the disappearance of luxuries we have got used to. Think of the old sketches of balloons with boats as gondolas, probably supposed to steer with their rudders in the air. Or how early sifi-fantasies mirror the age they were created. You can even roughly tell from the peoples hairstyles the time of the film's making.
Nevertheless, i will try to lay down some thougts about our prospects, (maybe somewhat incoherent), mainly from the perspective of my country
Obviously, we often enjoy to hike or travel in our leisure-time in a simpler style than we actually live (walk by foot, sleep in a bunkhouse, carry a heavy sack, use the outhouse ...). We call it fun and have the feeling of temporarily being relieved of some burden.
On the other hand either and to the contrary, a simple and rural life may not at all be romantic. Not so long ago, in my country people (kids) ran around in shoes made of wood in winter, little kids died by the scores of maladies, which i was not unhappy to get because i had not go to school and could play all day.
When i was a kid, the garbage was just dumped into the next landfill and set on fire. Today, a good percentage or our refuse is going to be collected seperate and recycled. It has become quite normal. So, some habits will continue to change with peak oil and the necessity of the changes will not be put into question. Life will mostly continue to be regarded as normal.
Maybe in several years, products, waste and raw materials will circulate within small areas (counties) while only the deficits will be covered by trading. Luxuries will become even more luxurious and rare, probably only the rich will be able to pay for and use goods, that have to travel far. Maybe the society will split in a mass of poorer people and a minority of rich (no more broad and wealthy middle class) who still do travel and enjoy pleasures as the wealthy do today. The lacking of masses of imported goods may lead to a phenomenon, already known in germany, when the country was suffering a blockade during the wars. Everything had to become “Ersatz”. The use of raw materials was controlled by the state. Gasoline was made out of coal, tissue of nettles, people had to eat turnips in winter, sawdust was baked in the bread, etc.
Yet the continuously lowered standard of living of the majority of people will change the world of economics fundamentally. No more mass consumer markets mean lesser efforts and means for R&D. So in a lot of areas, technological advancement may come to a standstill. Contrary to sectors of “state interest”: defense, developing means for a sustainable communities, police.
I started to think this through in a moderate way, but at this point, lots of tings suddenly seem to become unsustainable rather sooner than later. International companies may break up into their local divisions; Air travel may be severely reduced. Sea transport ist usually very cheap and big ships can run on very heavy oil, but i imagine the seaways becoming more dangerous due to failed states and piracy (Imagine some fundamentalists blocking the suez canal). Lots of people with white collar jobs will have to change to jobs like collecting recyclable stuff from the conveyor belt or plucking weeds or at least overlook the poor wretches who do this. The few wealthy will provoke a lot of envy and will possibly have to retreat in safe areas, emploing lots of security forces.
Where this all will lead further down the timeline, that means, the prospects for the civilisation itself, i have no idea. Surely not to cities on the mars or the moon.
Of course, in every country and region, the effects will be different. Generally, there may be less communication between distant countries, there may extremely different lifestyles coexist. Living will mostly take place in your hometown. (That was normal here for centuries, nearly everyone belonged to a farm). Some technology is made up mostly of knowlede and thus may be maintained or even advanced (breeding, building, crafts). Other technologies rely heavily on a network of other technologies (like building a particle collider ring or a complex vehicle) and will eventually cease to be pursued.
The country which succeeds to keep up its technological and industrial basis seem so be in an enormous advantage over countries that plunge back into some stage of primitive farming. So the states will continue their efforts to keep up schools and universities, probably for an elite.
Developments to watch out for:
creation of agencies for the distribution of certain goods (=rationing imminent)
People and Supermarkets changing to homegrown / made products (goods from overseas no longer massivly cheaper)
creation of agencies to supply work to the poor (labour camps / houses)
Big investors buying rural land, woods or investing in farming
Money but no goods to buy
Unusally long or frequent power cuts or shortages
“Optimisations” in infrastructures announced (=thinned out)
appearence of people and communites trying to live totally independent (from goods, state)
Nato declaring “ability to figth at 8 fronts simultainously” a strategy fit for the 21th century
The US imposing mandatory use of renewables whereever possible (=TSHTF)
Thats just a rough scetch of my thoughts which i think over when i lay awake. It is easy to thing the extreme possibilities, but difficult to identify the point, at which the new developments, the business as usual and new thinking get into balance.
thanks for reading, i hope, this discussion will continue in this or another thread.
The mouse, i`ve been sure for years, limps home from the site of the burning ferris wheel with a brand new, airtight plan for killing the cat.
J. D. Salinger