by GoIllini » Fri 06 Oct 2006, 03:41:52
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('marulk', '[')i]edit: Sorry, just noticed there was a thread about this subject already. I tried to see if there were any but didn't find them so I put this here. Feel free to remove this one. Hehe, kinda embarrassing first post.
Hello, this is my first post here. And as RelfF2 said in his opening words, this is a remarkable forum with really intelligent and interesting discussion, good job!
I found out about Peak Oil in last year, and thought the evidence (LATOC, mostly) was so overwhelming and down-to-earth rational that every criticism I read concerning it seemed ridiculous, like the abiotic oil joke or "Russia proves Peak Oil is a Zionist scam!". However, today I came across this
article debunking Peak Oil that seemed like the most rational so far. It's rather long but I hope that you who seem to know a lot more about PO than I do could check it out and see if there's any validity. This sentence sums it up rather well: "
The primary flaw in Hubbert-type models is a reliance on URR as a static number rather than a dynamic variable, changing with technology, knowledge, infrastructure and other factors, but primarily growing. Campbell and Laherrere claim to have developed better analytical methods to resolve this problem, but their own estimates have been increasing, and increasingly rapidly."
Peak Oil theory makes sense at least what I've read in LATOC or Energybulletin, but the claims that Laherrere et al would be using the statistics inappropriately is something I can't really criticize, I'm no economist or a geologist and they just might be wrong with their equations for all I know. Heck, I deeply hope they are and I don't have to spend that 200€ on a sleeping bag instead of CD:s and bicycle accessories.
Marulk,
This is an interesting notion, and I've seen it bounce around on these forums in the past.
IMHO, the recent drop in oil prices shows that Peak Oil may be further off than we think. If the peak occurs in 2017, as the EIA predicts, GM will have already had its hydrogen-powered cars out for six years, and the 16 nukes currently under review by the NRC will be mostly online. This may be enough to turn PO into a bad case of the '70s, or perhaps even something milder.
Pstarr and MBS claim that nuclear energy won't work. They cite studies from some of the crazier anti-nuke activists, as well as rising Uranium prices to make their points. In reality, there's enough recoverable Uranium in the oceans to run the world for several million years; there's enough U-238 getting ready to be buried in Yucca Mtn. to run the country for 200 if we reprocess.
If Peak CO2 production occurs around 2020, we may also be able to head off some of the more dire forecasts about global warming.
I don't want to wear rose-colored glasses, but I think there's plenty of hope for laissez-faire capitalists out there.