by MrBill » Thu 10 Aug 2006, 10:54:11
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mrobert', 'I')t doesn't matter if we need 134 or 269 or 412 time more land ... we need more, which we don't have ... so we are screwed

No, the argument becomes how much energy do you need to run the bare bones of your economy to provide food, clothing, shelter and warmth for the majority even if it means sacrafice and a level of falling living standards which may be politically unpallatable today, but necessary tomorrow? Could the skeleton of the world economy run on less energy?
How much can be supplied by stationary energy such as coal, hydro-electric, nuclear, solar, wind, geothermal, etc.? Obviously high geographic dependent and not without energy demands of their own.
And how much transport fuel can be supplied via coal to liquids via bio-fuels for transport fuel, supplemented by declining volumes of petroleum and natural gas, and let us say, hydrogen via nuclear energy? Also not without their own energy demands and specific limitations.
How much arable land can we set aside for turning trees and switchgrass into cellulosic ethanol given that we also need high quality farmland for food production as well?
Then the key question becomes how to organize the transition, so that it resembles anything orderly? Will there be disruptions? Resource wars & riots? Given I assume a population overshoot to unsustainable levels given less arable land, less energy, less fresh water, climate change, environmental degradation.
What becomes the sustainable population level of a functioning economy to meet basic needs without consumption for the sake of consumption, and how much stationary and transport energy is needed to support that economy?
If we cannot figure that out, then you're probably right, and we are screwed!
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.