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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

The 'Miki' Poll

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

What to do with Miki?

Poll ended at Thu 28 Sep 2006, 18:16:47

Give her a separate sub-forum?
10
No votes
Ban her ass...
14
No votes
Ask her to keep posts to 5000 words or less?
6
No votes
Give her a Congressional Medal of Honor?
18
No votes
Cave in like PMS?
2
No votes
Thank her for giving us hell...
16
No votes
 
Total votes : 66

Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby mekrob » Sun 10 Sep 2006, 12:36:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') could understand it if the actual catastrophe was to come in 200 years. People usually don't care if they'll be dead when the consequences actually take place. But you're talking about decades. If that is the case, either those alive today or their sons and daughters will be the direct victims.


Americans are selfish pigs, have you not learned this by now?!?! They don't care about others, many not even about their children's futures. They have been told over and over about global warming, depletion, etc. What is their response? "It won't affect me". They don't even think about it affecting their children.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') mean, it is obviously better to go through some inconvenience today than to starve tomorrow, right?


It was obviously better to prepare better national security before 9/11 wasn't it? It was obviously better to prevent Hitler from gaining full control of Germany, wasn't it? It was obviously better to build better levees in New Orleans, wasn't it?

But guess what? We didn't do shit and we won't do shit again with this because it would be an inconvenience to the present, which is all America cares about.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') doubt Carter talked about the emergency in the terms you guys are using here. Otherwise it would have been all over the news.


Let's see what Carter said in 1979:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he energy crisis is real. It is worldwide. It is a clear and present danger to our Nation. These are facts and we simply must face them.


I can't find the other quote, but he also warned that at the current trend, all known oil reserves would have been used up by 1990 because we were still going on an exponential growth curve.

What was America's reaction? Voting Carter out, voting Reagan in, and the end to the "suffering" by getting rid of regulations and so forth. We had a clear warning almost 30 years ago and we squandered it. It was better to go full speed into a brick wall than to take a little pain now so that in the future we'd have none. We pussied out. Simple as that. We in effect knew what was happening and we decided to ignore it. It was labelled a conspiracy to steal from Americans, etc etc.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ush is currently curtailing civil rights that are much more important than the "right to posess an SUV". If that can be done for security reasons, why can't much less be done to prevent starvation? [/qutoe]

They still don't see it happening to Americans, but instead to terrorists. They're willing to give up freedoms, as long as they don't have to give them up, but instead, someone else.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')'m still not getting it. According to you guys, the economy will be wrecked anyway and it will happen quite soon.


Well the American people don't know this, so if the government instituted it, they would see it as an infringment upon their freedoms, and so forth. America can't see into the future, only the present is what they care about.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'h')ow can it be "uneconomical" when starvation is the alternative option?


1) It first reaches a point where it is uneconomical to the companies. Companies are designed to make money, not be good citizens and help people out.

2) It will eventually reach a point where it takes more energy to produce than what you get out of it, so it's like digging your own hole.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')his makes sense if you are offering some palliative options. But if there was very little that could be done to alleviate the consequences, wouldn't it be a bit sadistic/masochistic to endulge in discussion of these tragic events? I mean, what is the need to start suffering today when one will suffer inevitably tomorrow. It just increases the amount of time one spends suffering while not achieving anything else in the process. You know what I mean?


If we can get the people to stop their idiotic behaviors, then we buy more time. Continue on such paths and so forth and we alleviate alot of pain in the future because then the extra oil that we save by not burning it now can be used for the future for necessities so that future catastrophes either won't exist or will exist in lesser degrees.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ell, for many reasons: out of indignation, out of frustration, in the effort to achieve some justice, in the effort to raise awareness of the truth, in the effort to move people to do something, in the effort to prevent future abuses,...It is also a matter of integrity to me, etc


How is that any different than from what we're trying to do? It seems like you answered exactly what most of us feel with PO and its awareness spreading.
I want to put out the fires of Hell, and burn down the rewards of Paradise. They block the way to God. I do not want to worship from fear of punishment or for the promise of reward, but simply for the love of God. - Rabia
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby lorenzo » Sun 10 Sep 2006, 12:43:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lorenzo', 'I')F this Peak Oil crisis were to have any significance, then it would show by the attempts to mitigate it and to do something about it. (What Miki says). But not very much of that happens here at this forum.

Ummm...this logic seems to me...well...flawed. So a problem is only significant if it can be fixed? By that logic, metastatic cancer is no big deal.


You exactly prove my point. What do we read in any medical research institute's list of priorities: research into fighting cancer. It's a huge problem, hence the huge number of scientists working on it. Millions of peer-reviewed articles on it.

Global warming. Huge problem. Huge multinational mitigation effort (UNFCCC, Kyoto, EU ETS, etc...), huge number of articles, science institutes, experiments, satellites, etc... working on this.

"Peak Oil" supposedly is a huge problem too: "we're all going to die", "mass die-off soon", "life in the cosmos will go extinct", etc... I consider these to be big problems. But what do we see? Not a single scientist has ever written an article about Peak Oil. Not one.

Hence the suspicion that it's a fantasy construct.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', 'T')he reality is that sometimes problems are just so big that they defy any sort of significant mitigation. Sometimes the best you can do is pray to whomever it is you pray to and hold on tight.


See, I don't know where you're from, but in my world, when a group of people has a case that shows that "life in the cosmos will go extinct because we're running out of oil" (etcetera), then there will be other people who look at this. If the claim is credible, scientists, engineers, governments and intellectuals open a public debate and get together to study things. They then look at options for mitigation. Then a whole process gets underway to get things moving on a political, social, economic and cultural level. Of course, they only do this for "big" problems. "Life in the cosmos, etcetera" is a big problem.

And you seriously think that all rational people in the real world out there are going to do is "pray"?

This proves to me that you have no case from the start. Your conclusion proves the weakness of your case.


The only thing that really interests me in the Peak Oil myth, is that it's a good way to think about big systems and big global problems. It's a creative hobby. It can even be used by foresight institutes, futurists and scenario-writers. But I think it's best for some of you to begin to realise that it's merely a fictitious effort. When you start to confuse fantasy with reality, you have to be careful that you don't take it too far. Some people here have actually sold their house to buy a piece of land to plant their own food, etc... So the Peak Oil myth can be dangerous if you believe in it too much.

If more people start acting this way, based on bestselling fantasy books, written by people who can be rationally called macchiavellistic freaks preying on insecure people, then I seriously consider sueing those authors. They are a danger to the public good and to public sanity. These guys could fall under the "sect act" (in Europe). They indoctrinate people only to get money out of them.
Last edited by lorenzo on Sun 10 Sep 2006, 13:01:42, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby smallpoxgirl » Sun 10 Sep 2006, 12:59:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Miki', '1')-Being in a democracy doesn't mean lawlessness. Just like there are laws that curtail unlimited freedom in order to prevent people from abusing each other, there are other special situations in which a nation needs to sacrifice freedom in order to prevent an even worse damage to their rights. I mean, it is obviously better to go through some inconvenience today than to starve tomorrow, right?


Certainly this is true. The problem is that the most reasonable policy isn't always what wins votes in a democracy. Some times groundless optimism and flatery win the day. US domestic oil supply peaked in '71. Prior to that, we imported very little oil. Once our oil supply started to drop off and we became dependent on imported oil, the Arab Oil Embargo happened in 73-74. In '76, Carter took office and made energy independence a big priority. Our national speed limit was dropped from 70mph to 55mph to improve gas milage. People started insulating their houses, building energy effecient designs, installing wood stoves, exploring solar, etc. Great strides were made, but the idea of conservation fundamentally conflicted with "the American Dream" and the Gospel of Capitalism. Our country is deeply imbedded with the idea of "more". Use more, spend more, buy more. It really is the American way. People were grudgingly willing to accept the idea of using less as a temporary fix, but not as a lasting one. Reagan swept to power on a tide of popularity with basically the philosophy of "We're Americans and we're bad asses. We just need to build up our military and we'll take oil from whomever we want." All the progress that was made under Carter was quickly washed away. If you go out today looking for books about efficient home design, most of what you will find was authored in the late 70's and early 80's.

So yeah...When Bush talks about "The American way of life is not negotiable," that's what he means. We are not going to use less. We are not going to buy less. We are not going to spend less. And we have lots of bombs, so you better not argue.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Miki', 'I') doubt Carter talked about the emergency in the terms you guys are using here. Otherwise it would have been all over the news.


It was. It definitely was. He made speaches on live TV imploring talking about the energy crisis and imploring people to conserve energy. I'm not old enough to remember, but I bet it was on the news most nights in the late 70's. It was a big deal. People were spending hours in line at gas stations to get gas. Gas stations were running out of gas.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Miki', '3')-Bush is currently curtailing civil rights that are much more important than the "right to posess an SUV". If that can be done for security reasons, why can't much less be done to prevent starvation?

Because Americans really don't care if the Gestapo watches their every move. As long as they can keep shopping and driving, they're happy.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Miki', 'I')'m still not getting it. According to you guys, the economy will be wrecked anyway and it will happen quite soon. What's with the Carpe Diem philosophy when the situation is this severe and impending (ie, an emergency)?

This is another central feature of big business and big government in the US. Tommorow DOES NOT MATTER. All that matters is showing good voter/shareholder approval today. Bush is desperately trying to get the oil price down so that his approval ratings will go up. That's really all he cares about. The future is a problem for the next president. If people starve under the next president, Bush will just go on sixty minutes and say "See! When I was president nobody starved."

I think you also have to understand that these guys gather around them "experts" that will tell them what they want to hear. Any advisor that tells Bush that peak oil is going to hit in the next 5 years is going to get canned. It's sort of like the Iraq weapons of mass destruction thing. You decide what the story is going to be, then you find an "expert" that will tell you that. The story is that everything is going to be fine through 2008. The USGS tells Bush that, and he doesn't think any more about it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Miki', 'A')nd back to my main question, how can it be "uneconomical" when starvation is the alternative option?
You didn't read the wolf at the door site yet did you? :-D If can be uneconomical if it takes more energy to extract it than what the product provides. Extraction of oil sands uses tremendous amounts of natural gas to do the processing. Currently about 100 BTUs of natural gas is used to produce 150 BTUs of oil from the sands. It's a god awful ecological disaster and really produces very little energy in the process.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Miki', 'A')nd I'm not saying you guys are not doing something laudable in spreading the word to alleviate future suffering. I'm just confused about whether such alleviation is possible. Some of you seem to imply it isn't.

Well...you will find a lot of disagreement about how much alleviation is possible. Personally I think that the US made it's choice in the 1980 election. If we had continued on the course that Carter started, we'd have been ok. It would have been hard, but achievable. At this point I think the changes are so dramatic and so anathema to the American mindset that I just don't think there is any possibility of making them in time. Others, notably Lorenzo, disagree with me.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Miki', 'A')nd that's why I start wondering what's the purpose. You know what I mean?
Save yourself, and those you love?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')o to planning for the future in which there are plenty of discussions about the aftermath and how to deal with it; agriculture, poultry, trees, cows, etc. I don't imagine you've explored this site that much outside of the open discussion.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('miki', 'B')ut again, many of you also seem to imply that no planning will result in meaningful gains for most of the world (even most of the rich nations), and that is what I find confusing.
Well, I think the answer to that pretty simply is that there are over 6 billion people currently living on a planet that can sustainably support MAYBE 2 billion. The rest are there because of artificial life support systems maintained by oil energy. Typically when a species exceeds its carrying capacity and then has a population drop, then population drops well below the sustainable population because their environment is so depleted. So it seems to me pretty unavoidable that 5 out of every 6 humans alive today are going to have to die off as we move back to a sustainable population.

IMHO the most important thing that any human can do to prepare for peak-oil and alleviate the amount of suffering that happens is to have themselves sterilized. For some reason we're able to accept and deal with population problems when it's cats and dogs, but nobody wants to deal with rampant overbreeding by humans.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby mekrob » Sun 10 Sep 2006, 14:46:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')Peak Oil" supposedly is a huge problem too: "we're all going to die", "mass die-off soon", "life in the cosmos will go extinct", etc... I consider these to be big problems. But what do we see? Not a single scientist has ever written an article about Peak Oil. Not one.

Hence the suspicion that it's a fantasy construct.


Not a single scientist? By whose count? What makes someone a scientist? Do they have to do all of their work in a lab, which is generally considered to be a scientist?

If that is the case, and it seems so, then no, there aren't and their shouldn't be any reports from scientists about it. Why is that? Because Peak Oil deals with geology and that is almost always done out in the field. If those are included in scientists, then you are obviously missing Deffeyes, Campbell, King, etc. All of those are geologists or engineers and they have written or talked about it extensively

What about the Hirsch report? That was done by the US government of all organizations!

There have been plenty of credible persons who have written on the subject as well as a key organization that would not likely have published it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f the claim is credible, scientists, engineers, governments and intellectuals open a public debate and get together to study things.


The US army and the US government have both opened their ears and eyes to the subject and have both commissioned reports on it, both of which weren't too great.

Let's not forget ASPO, which has Campbell at the head and he is a geologist/scientist.

Seems like there is some discussion. I don't see why you say there isn't any.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')f course, they only do this for "big" problems.


They tend to do anything about 'big' problems that they and their buddies can exploit, ie. make a shit load of money off of. Cancer leads to tons of research dollars. Even gloomy global warming is generally regarded by most as being decades off before any major effects will be felt and even then they are still able to push for more consumerism: hybrid vehicles, biofuels, solar panels, etc. It's not the end of the world for those discussions because there is profit in it.

But for Peak Oil, there is nothing that can be exploited from it since the main message is DON'T overeat, DON'T turn on the AC/heat too much, DON'T drive, DON'T shop, DON'T travel, etc. All that leads to is less consumerism and thus less money for businesses. Not even Global Warming is that big of a scaretactic.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby lorenzo » Sun 10 Sep 2006, 15:34:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mekrob', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '"')Peak Oil" supposedly is a huge problem too: "we're all going to die", "mass die-off soon", "life in the cosmos will go extinct", etc... I consider these to be big problems. But what do we see? Not a single scientist has ever written an article about Peak Oil. Not one.

Hence the suspicion that it's a fantasy construct.


Not a single scientist? By whose count? What makes someone a scientist? Do they have to do all of their work in a lab, which is generally considered to be a scientist?


Tut tut, don't dodge the point. A scientist is someone who has published scientific articles in science journals that are peer-reviewed by the scientific community. It's a rather straightforward concept and process.

Show me one Peak Oil author who has ever got one of his articles through the peer-review process of a scientific journal. One will suffice. Thx.

If PO were the crisis some of you make it to be, then there would be more than one scientist writing about it. Many more than one. Scientists. You know.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby smallpoxgirl » Sun 10 Sep 2006, 15:35:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lorenzo', 'Y')ou exactly prove my point. What do we read in any medical research institute's list of priorities: research into fighting cancer. It's a huge problem, hence the huge number of scientists working on it. Millions of peer-reviewed articles on it.

And we have what to show for all that? Butkiss. Nothing. More people every year dying from it. Now they get the choice of dying quickly and somewhat painfully vs. dying slowly, really painfully, and expensively.

I think I'm getting your angle though. You wouldn't by any chance be bucking to run this new government bureau of really expensive research into useless unworkable solutions to peak oil would you?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lorenzo', 'G')lobal warming. Huge problem. Huge multinational mitigation effort (UNFCCC, Kyoto, EU ETS, etc...), huge number of articles, science institutes, experiments, satellites, etc... working on this.

Net end result? Earth in a toaster oven. Lots of people researching, but nobody doing anything. The scale of the problem defies a workable solution. Heck Kyoto was a token gesture and we couldn't even agree on that.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lorenzo', 'S')ee, I don't know where you're from, but in my world, when a group of people has a case that shows that "life in the cosmos will go extinct because we're running out of oil" (etcetera), then there will be other people who look at this.


Actually you do know where I'm from...I am from the section of North America currently under occupation by the US government. And around here we don't do things that way. If the government gets such a report it classifies it Top Secret and only lets a few corporate CEO's know about it. Those guys figure out a way to make a billion dollars off the catastrophe. They then move all the money into numbered Swiss bank accounts, declare bankruptcy, and move to the Cayman Islands.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lorenzo', '"')Life in the cosmos, etcetera" is a big problem.

Ohh come on. Generations of Europeans and expatriate Europeans have devoted their lives to exterminating life in the cosmos and they haven't succeeded yet.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby pedalling_faster » Sun 10 Sep 2006, 18:32:42

are we officially off-topic ? i don't want to hijack the thread.

i voted "Give her a Congressional Medal of Honor", although, maybe, make it from the Swedish or Canadian parliament - the US congress that has been supporting Bush has not been behaving honorably, so a medal from them might not have much meaning.

might have some metal value though !

So, how about a Rachel Corrie someone-who-actually-gives-a-damn award, for Miki.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby mekrob » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 10:11:29

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')ut tut, don't dodge the point. A scientist is someone who has published scientific articles in science journals that are peer-reviewed by the scientific community. It's a rather straightforward concept and process.

Show me one Peak Oil author who has ever got one of his articles through the peer-review process of a scientific journal. One will suffice. Thx.

If PO were the crisis some of you make it to be, then there would be more than one scientist writing about it. Many more than one. Scientists. You know.


Why would they need to go through a scientific journal? It is COMMON SENSE among geologists and petroleum engineers that oil production goes up, then comes back down. That's PetroEng. 101! There is no need for any discussion about it. No need for articles about it. Why? Because everyone KNOWS it.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby PenultimateManStanding » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 11:59:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mekrob', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')ut tut, don't dodge the point. A scientist is someone who has published scientific articles in science journals that are peer-reviewed by the scientific community. It's a rather straightforward concept and process.

Show me one Peak Oil author who has ever got one of his articles through the peer-review process of a scientific journal. One will suffice. Thx.

If PO were the crisis some of you make it to be, then there would be more than one scientist writing about it. Many more than one. Scientists. You know.


Why would they need to go through a scientific journal? It is COMMON SENSE among geologists and petroleum engineers that oil production goes up, then comes back down. That's PetroEng. 101! There is no need for any discussion about it. No need for articles about it. Why? Because everyone KNOWS it.
come on now, mekrob, don't be obtuse. There aren't any peer reviewed articles in Anthropology Today, so oil production just keeps going up. Duh!
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby venky » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 13:02:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mekrob', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')ut tut, don't dodge the point. A scientist is someone who has published scientific articles in science journals that are peer-reviewed by the scientific community. It's a rather straightforward concept and process.

Show me one Peak Oil author who has ever got one of his articles through the peer-review process of a scientific journal. One will suffice. Thx.

If PO were the crisis some of you make it to be, then there would be more than one scientist writing about it. Many more than one. Scientists. You know.


Why would they need to go through a scientific journal? It is COMMON SENSE among geologists and petroleum engineers that oil production goes up, then comes back down. That's PetroEng. 101! There is no need for any discussion about it. No need for articles about it. Why? Because everyone KNOWS it.


Actually, Lorenzo does have a point that the amount of basic research done on Peak Oil is pretty much limited; compared to something like global warming it is nothing!!. I did explain some of the reasons for that in my post and I think your point is valid too; depletion is conventional wisdom amongst Petroleum industry. There was this guy from Schlumberger who came recruiting to our university last year. I asked him point blank when he thought oil production would peak. He answered quite calmly 2015 and said that we would $100 before we saw $40 once again.

But still, while it might seem that Peak Oil is perfectly logical and widespread to us as we spend a lot of time on this forum and reading such articles, but outside we are a minuscule minority. There is no one with whom I interact in real life who had any idea of Peak Oil before I explained it to them. And regarding Lorenzo's claim, this is what a search of Peak oil on google scholar came up with. 429,000 pages.

http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=Pea ... tnG=Search

There are some peak oil articles that made it past peer review

And suprising global warming gave me only 145,000 pages
http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en ... tnG=Search

But I think that is because Peak and Oil are rather common terms :)
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby Miki » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 15:58:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('venky', 'A')ctually, Lorenzo does have a point that the amount of basic research done on Peak Oil is pretty much limited; compared to something like global warming it is nothing!!.


I agree that this is a valid claim. I have access to some search engines for scientific databases that are much better than Google search. I'll try running a search to see what comes up. The only problem is that I'm not knowledgeable in the topic and the secret of a good search is using the right databases and keywords. Could anyone give me some ideas on the areas that have to do with this topic (eg, geology), as well as some possible keywords? I don't know if everyone refers to this phenomenon as "peak oil".

That said, let's not over-rate scientific research either. Unfortunately, scientific research in the US has become yet another "commercial" matter. To conduct an ambitious study one needs a LOT of money. The more sophisticated the study, the more money needed. And where do you think the money comes from? From the business companies of course, and they get to decide what gets studied and what doesn't. Take the example of Psychiatry: most of the studies are about drugs because the drug companies fund most of the research. Studies on psychotherapy are way less common, and even those are mainly short-term quick therapies, because those are the ones insurance companies like.

When science becomes a matter of power and money...But that's not to say that we have not learned from scientific research. Far from that--we have learned plenty. But a lot of important things are understudied because of the power/money dynamics, and the abundance of studies in certain areas (eg, drugs) may give the erroneous impression that some things are more important or effective than others.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby venky » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 16:19:23

Actually, there has been a certain amount of study on the subject of oil depletion and the impact of a peak in worldwide oil production, atleast in the past few years, but relatively speaking it is limited, has been restricted to a few groups and organizations like ASPO (Association for the Study of Peak Oil). A search on google might bring up millions of hits, but a lot of the articles just repeat the claims of the relatively few original research stories by such groups.

This is a good site, it contains a lot of journal type articles on Peak Oil and depletion; even the original paper by M King Hubbert dated 1949. Though I am not sure how many of them have been peer reviewed

http://www.oilcrisis.com/campbell/

Also, you might find a lot of technical articles in petroleum journals about the problems faced in extracting oil; problems on pressure flows, water cuts etc in ageging oil wells to maintain production levels. Like for example Matt Simmons the author of 'Twilight in the desert - The coming Saudi Oil shock and the world economy' who claims that Saudi oil fields risk a production collapse in the near future basis his study on over 200 peer reviewed journal articles published by engineers at Saudi Aramco.

Overall, I think the level of awareness and work done on Peak Oil is probably similar to where Global warming was in the 1980's when probably few people outside the scientific community would have heard about it.

While you might have more technical terminology in petroleum geology; this phenomenon is pretty much referred to as Peak Oil these days. Unfortunately atleast in my opinion, this term has also become synonomous with the doom and gloom, economic collapse and survivalist thinking that characterizes most posters on this forum. While almost anyone who has studied this issue agrees that oil production will peak worldwide this decade or the next; many dont subscribe to the doomsday scenario's.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby nwildmand » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 16:55:32

the problem with peer reviewed peakoil material is the topic of peakoil being so huge and all encompassing. a report like that may take several thousand pages. you need to get down to the specialized fields of study, read those and then be able to grasp putting all those several things together.

peer review will also not work because of corporate interests wanting to keep the status quo. just like those drugs companies miki.

when hubbert put out his theory it was almost universaly rejected. his claims stood the test of time. lorenzo has no workable ideas miki. he always is touting something that will save us but every one of arguments gets torn to shreds by just a few internet posters. his ideas are in the vein of "lets turn most of africa into a biofuel plantation".

what saddens me most is we almost had her on the bandwagon and then 2 cornicopians spit spit derailed the subject. i doubt miki that you will stay interested in the most important subject man has ever come across.

and lorenzo, your a fuckin troll.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby venky » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 17:07:35

Yup.....this thread is pretty much derailed. A split might be needed...
"Peak Oil explained - Doomer, Cornucopian and moderate perspectives"
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby nwildmand » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 17:12:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Miki', 'I') agree that this is a valid claim. I have access to some search engines for scientific databases that are much better than Google search. I'll try running a search to see what comes up. The only problem is that I'm not kno.........



your looking to far. everything you could find has already been posted here on this message board and discussed to a sickening length by very intelligent people on both sides.

here are a couple of good links for you to look through if you so desire.
US Army Corps of Engineers Energy Report

matt savinars site comes from a doomer perspective and has more links than you can shake a stick at.
http://lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/Index.html
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby SeasonOfPain » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 18:52:55

I second looking at Matt S.'s site. He's very thoroughly condensed a broad and complex subject into edible (if not easily-digestible) chunks, with plenty of references.

If you want to get to the real science behind things, check out publications and interviews by Deffeyes and Campbell. If you want to do more research on the anthropological side of things, I'd recommend reading Limits to Growth and Collapse.

Oh, and I refuse to vote in this poll, as I find it somewhat degrading to Miki. I'm hoping she keeps posting, even after reading LATOC. :)

Everyone should have their beliefs questioned regularly (as long as it's done in an intelligent fashion)... otherwise what you're left with is dogma.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby lorenzo » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 18:56:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lorenzo', 'Y')ou exactly prove my point. What do we read in any medical research institute's list of priorities: research into fighting cancer. It's a huge problem, hence the huge number of scientists working on it. Millions of peer-reviewed articles on it.

And we have what to show for all that? Butkiss. Nothing. More people every year dying from it. Now they get the choice of dying quickly and somewhat painfully vs. dying slowly, really painfully, and expensively.


No, actually we got the beginning of a cure:

News - Q&A: Skin cancer gene therapy
How scientists eradicated deadly skin cancer in two men using gene therapy.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/5305420.stm


95% relevance | 1 Sep 2006
News - Gene therapy rids men of cancer
Scientists clear two men of deadly skin cancer by genetically modifying their immune cells.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/5304910.stm


And we got some nice research finding new things: Cancer jab 'stops 75% of deaths' A cervical cancer vaccine could cut deaths by three quarters if given to all 12-year-old girls, a study says.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/5311598.stm


Etcetera.

But you're right, with your attitude ("all we can do is pray"), we would be nowhere.

So we're not counting on you. We would be fools.




$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lorenzo', 'G')lobal warming. Huge problem. Huge multinational mitigation effort (UNFCCC, Kyoto, EU ETS, etc...), huge number of articles, science institutes, experiments, satellites, etc... working on this.

Net end result? Earth in a toaster oven. Lots of people researching, but nobody doing anything. The scale of the problem defies a workable solution. Heck Kyoto was a token gesture and we couldn't even agree on that.


Actually no: September 05, 2006
Dutch CO2 emissions fell 2 percent in 2005, now at 1990 levels due to imported biomass
http://biopact.com/2006/09/dutch-co2-em ... nt-in.html

Much more needs to be done, but we'll get there.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', '
')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lorenzo', '"')Life in the cosmos, etcetera" is a big problem.
Ohh come on. Generations of Europeans and expatriate Europeans have devoted their lives to exterminating life in the cosmos and they haven't succeeded yet.

As always, as a European all I can say is: The Beginning Is Near! Just wait and see: http://rael.org/ Not exterminating, but creating! Creationism for Atheists.

By the way: aren't you Americans doing most of the killing nowadays?



Seriously, though, you still haven't answered the question: how come you, as a lay girl, can understand the immense complexity of the future, of the future of energy, of the future and of the past of science, technology, creativity and economy. How come you know everything so certain.

Absolute certainty is the fool's genius - you know this. Isn't there any doubt in your mind that maybe, Peak Oil could not be the big disaster you think it will be?
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby lorenzo » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 19:12:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mekrob', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')ut tut, don't dodge the point. A scientist is someone who has published scientific articles in science journals that are peer-reviewed by the scientific community. It's a rather straightforward concept and process.

Show me one Peak Oil author who has ever got one of his articles through the peer-review process of a scientific journal. One will suffice. Thx.

If PO were the crisis some of you make it to be, then there would be more than one scientist writing about it. Many more than one. Scientists. You know.


Why would they need to go through a scientific journal? It is COMMON SENSE among geologists and petroleum engineers that oil production goes up, then comes back down. That's PetroEng. 101! There is no need for any discussion about it. No need for articles about it. Why? Because everyone KNOWS it.



The Sun goes up, then comes back down too. All astronomers know this.

Stating the obvious is not very useful. And Peak Oil is not the obvious. The Peak Oil discourse here is one about clear dates and clear die-off scenarios.

So would you care to give us a single reference of an article about PO that puts a date on "Peak Oil", as is commonly done by the peak oil bestselling money makers, and which was published in a scientific journal? Just one. Thx.
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby lorenzo » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 19:15:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('venky', 'A')nd regarding Lorenzo's claim, this is what a search of Peak oil on google scholar came up with. 429,000 pages.

http://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=Pea ... tnG=Search


But see what happens if you search correctly, as you do, for "Peak Oil":
http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en ... tnG=Search

876 pages, not one really from a science journal. It's a difference! :-D
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Re: The 'Miki' Poll

Unread postby rwwff » Mon 11 Sep 2006, 20:41:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lorenzo', '8')76 pages, not one really from a science journal. It's a difference!


I'm not sure that really tells you anything though. How would you even structure a peer reviewable paper on something that revolves so much around predictions built upon very sketchy data.

I could see a sociology paper on family life in Japan after the collapse of the bubble being relevant; but it'd never say "Peak Oil".

I could see analysis of market behavior and accounting problems in a deflationary cycle; but again, it'd never say "Peak Oil".

Or maybe studies of various non-Eurocentric exercises of military force to acquire natural resources; but again, it'd never say, "Peak Oil".

So when you do that google scholar search, what would you expect to be looking for?
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