by Ayoob_Reloaded » Wed 08 Dec 2004, 23:37:28
And here's my reply to #1.
It sounds like you're asking about who the ordinary citizens are who talk about this issue. We just did a thread about educational background, current job, age, and place of residency. While that thread was interesting and informative, we really need a sample size of 800 or so in order to do a good job of collecting demographics. It would be misleading to suggest that we here on this site right now are the sample. We're a small group of perhaps 1000, whereas the Yahoo groups have been around for years and have several thousand members each. It might suffice to say that as far as demographics go, it's a fairly diverse crowd. We have young and old, education levels from 7th grade to PhD, jobs ranging from medical to trades to teachers to researchers to business etc etc etc, both theists and atheists, men, women, and children. I've seen quite a diverse mix of people at screenings of End of Suburbia, and an attorney driving a Hummer of all godforsaken things bought a copy from me at a film festival.
Another side to this question might be put a little differently. What is the range of opinion on how Peak Oil will affect my life -- from the gloomiest to the most optimistic, and which place on the range seems to be most likely to actually show itself?
A couple of the terms we've used (and I don't really know who coined them or where they came from) are Cornucopian and Doomer. The Cornucopian position is that there is plenty of oil, no need to even think about a peak in production, we'll just keep rolling along without noticing any difference because we'll never peak. That's the most extreme Cornucopian position I can think of. Another Cornucopian position is that we may begin to decline in oil production, but something else will take its place. We went from wood to coal to whale oil to "rock oil" and we'll go to something else next, and it'll be even better than oil so our lives will improve after the peak. Those seem to be the most optimistic viewpoints.
The very most pessimistic viewpoints say that human population is in "overshoot." What that means is that the Earth has a finite carrying capacity for human beings. When we get too numerous, we will exhaust both the renewable (fish, lumber, drinking water) and nonrenewable (oil, coal, uranium) resources on the planet that are physically necessary to sustain life. Peak oil is but a symptom of this idea of overshoot. They say that human population was fairly steady for quite some time at about 800 million, whereas we now number some 6.4 billion, an overshoot of 87.5%. The "optimistic" overshoot people say that our population would crash back to 800 million or so and become stable there. The "pessimistic" doomer position is that we will not be able to sustain an 800 million human population on this planet because we've overtaken so many complimentary species' habitats which may never be restored. Less deer/buffalo/fish/turtles, so fewer hunters. No oil, so no waterproofing your canoe or lighting your lamp. Water polluted, so no drinking water in the wild. No 800 million people, but some other, lower number.
So, that's the range of opinion. No problems at all to virtual extinction of all human beings.
Should you get some facepaint and camo and join the bonfire with the crazy survivalists? Well, that's actually a matter of some debate here, surprisingly enough. I guess it depends on whether you'll be alive when it's time to change your lifestyle either by choice or force. If oil is going to be around for another 500 years, then I personally would head back to the office and continue faxing TPS reports like no tomorrow, even if oil would peak at that time. Not much of a concern. On the other hand, what if PO hits in 2004, as some suggest, or whether oil peaked in 2000 as Ruppert said, or isn't due until 05 per Deffeyes, 08 as somebody else says, or 2037 as is bandied about by government agencies, or 2006-2007 according to Samsam Bhaktiari. Assuming any of the information we get is correct, as Richard Heinberg says. This is where opinion seems to enter into it.
Personally, I wonder how accurate the production numbers are anyway. How am I supposed to check and see whether demand was 66MBD or 68MBD or where this oil went and who bought it for how much? How do we verify those numbers? I talk as though I know what I'm talking about, but I actually haven't verified very much.
So that rant, without any links or fact-checking, is at least on file now. Tear it apart, add, delete, contribute your own answer, link to external sources, etc. I'll be checking facts and whatnot over time as well as I'm pretty sure I got plenty wrong.