by johnmarkos » Wed 01 Dec 2004, 23:48:17
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pilferage', 'N')o, you won't be able to get the lights back on.
However, 2008 seems a bit soon. Regardless, the point is that any huge increases (like those from peak oil) in transportation and basic infrastructure costs will drive up the price of electricity, since coal is mined cheaply using cheap oil, and NG will most likely peak about a decade after cheap oil does...
so, if you have the price of everything going up, eventually it won't be financially viable to operate the power grid considering it's aweful efficiency and huge size. But there have to be quite a few other factors for that to play out....
Here's where I got the 2008 date.
http://www.energybulletin.net/3294.html
And here's the original "Olduvai" paper
http://dieoff.org/page224.htm
It's a bit of a brain worm. I find the "permanent blackouts by 2008" claim unrealistic and yet I keep coming back to it. And then the sensible part of my brain imagines that day in 2008. I wake up late because my clock radio doesn't go off. Then I realize there's no power. I turn on my battery-powered radio and hear that power is off all over the San Francisco Bay Area. So I don't bother going to work. My wife and I just hang around and eat as much of the perishable stuff in the fridge as we can. Six million people in the Bay Area do the same thing. We catch up on our reading. The sun shines. Life is good.
What next? Well, in my little fantasy, the power comes on in a few days because the big blackout allows stocks of natural gas, coal, and oil to build up to the point where they could get things running again. It seems to me that before you get permanent blackouts, you get sporadic blackouts for several years.