Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Okay...I'm convinced...

Discussions of conventional and alternative energy production technologies.

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby JPL » Fri 29 Dec 2006, 19:39:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReserveGrowthRulz', 'A')t that price point, I imagine there will be alot of screaming, the usual recession, demand destruction, etc etc, whereas when you plan for it, it really isn't that big of deal, lifestyle wise.


Hi RGR

Yea, I too have no problem with your choice of vehicle. I think it's a good move. Give the title of your new thread, and some of your historical posts here (grin) I think if we can convince YOU, then we have won some sort of victory ;o)

Keeping lifestyles going won't be a problem for a while yet. From what I figure from the graphs, they may have turned down, but it will be 20 years IMHO before we hit a major energy/lifestyle crunch.

The main problems for the short-term will be created by people's attitudes. Their ability to change, and to cope with the (inevitable) energy-starved future.

We are all on this forum, hung & swinging between the slowness of Oil Decline and it's long-drawn-out inevitability. Even though we have passed the peak, we still have plenty of oil for now - I think that's one thing that a lot of people here have missed.

RGR is looking at the future, and I think that is great. I think there may be further steps he could make, but that has to be his decision.

For myself, I do look at the long-term future, which is why I have already quit my job and am now trying to live a sustainable lifestyle on a piece of my own land. But I wouldn't try and force my lifestyle on everyone else. If I did - society would collapse and then I would probably loose my land anyhow.

Everyone has to adapt and change in a Post-Carbon world, but we shouldn't try and force either society or people into un-natural shapes - they would bounce back and hurt us. Let them change slowly, in their own time, and then we will all benefit in the end.

To sumarise, I don't see RGR's new car as a major problem - right now. He will grow out of it in his own good time (as will everyone else...)

JPL
Nothing ever happens, nothing happens at all
The needle returns to the start of the song
And we all sing along like before


Del Amitri
JPL
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1264
Joined: Sat 18 Mar 2006, 04:00:00
Location: Off with the Fey Folk

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby ReserveGrowthRulz » Fri 29 Dec 2006, 19:48:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Eddie_lomax', '
')
So enjoy your new car, I don't know what the solution to peak oil will be, but it sure won't be petrol powered!


I agree. But I can't get an EV quite yet, so this will do for now.
So....heading into our 3rd year post peak and I'm still getting caught in traffic jams!! DieOff already!
User avatar
ReserveGrowthRulz
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 813
Joined: Fri 30 Dec 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby ReserveGrowthRulz » Fri 29 Dec 2006, 19:49:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JPL', '
')
To sumarise, I don't see RGR's new car as a major problem - right now. He will grow out of it in his own good time (as will everyone else...)

JPL


I will wear out the hybrid, and with luck, a decent pluggable hybrid will be ready by then, or even an EV.
So....heading into our 3rd year post peak and I'm still getting caught in traffic jams!! DieOff already!
User avatar
ReserveGrowthRulz
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 813
Joined: Fri 30 Dec 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby JPL » Fri 29 Dec 2006, 20:18:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReserveGrowthRulz', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JPL', '
')
To sumarise, I don't see RGR's new car as a major problem - right now. He will grow out of it in his own good time (as will everyone else...)

JPL


I will wear out the hybrid, and with luck, a decent pluggable hybrid will be ready by then, or even an EV.


Hi RGR

Yep, go for it.

Even though, as a college-trained engineer, I have already figured out that the best bio-powered, renewable transport source on the planet has four hooves and has to be kicked and told 'GIT movink you Bastard' - of a morning - I do respect your decision.

I am of course right (grin) but strangely enough, I may also enjoy being proven wrong.

As long as you don't keep pumping YOUR crap into MY sky, that's my sole condition. Because it's not worth it just to prove a point - and besides, it's not fair. But not too much to ask, IMHO, to make the table even. Do we have a deal here?

JPL
Nothing ever happens, nothing happens at all
The needle returns to the start of the song
And we all sing along like before


Del Amitri
JPL
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1264
Joined: Sat 18 Mar 2006, 04:00:00
Location: Off with the Fey Folk
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby Concerned » Sat 30 Dec 2006, 02:47:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReserveGrowthRulz', '
')As we've all been told, my solution in isolation may mean nothing, the fact that these cars even EXIST is a testament ( a fact often ignored or denied around here ) to what was learned 30 years ago the last time Doomerisms ran rampant, and the reality that they are a 100% improvement in fuel usage over the ride it replaces is often dismissed as "too little, too late", well, I bucked all these relatively simplistic and usually incorrect attitudes and did it anyway.

Acquired a 07 Ford Escape AWD Hybrid, plan on saving the universe, one gallon of gasoline at a time. And when the diesel electric pluggable reaches our shores in the form of a reliable Honda or Toyota in the next couple years, I hereby pledge to keep this particular bloodline of cars in my garage going into the future until, say, at least the kids are in college.


Thank you for freeing up some gasoline for Indian or Chinese or even your fellow Westerner's use. Welcome to Jevons Paradox. See you once we're driving off the cliff :twisted:
"Once the game is over, the king and the pawn go back in the same box."
-Italian Proverb
User avatar
Concerned
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1571
Joined: Thu 23 Sep 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby Frank » Sat 30 Dec 2006, 09:20:23

Hey, a vehicle that gets 25 mpg is better than one that gets 15 mpg, right? The trick is to incorporate the efficiency mind-set into everything that you do. There's as much benefit, for example, from combining trips as there is to using the hybrid.
User avatar
Frank
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 556
Joined: Wed 15 Dec 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Maine/Nova Scotia

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby seahorse » Sat 30 Dec 2006, 09:25:05

Unfortunately, I'm not aware of any hybrid that has any serious off-road capability. So, I'll wait.
User avatar
seahorse
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 2275
Joined: Fri 15 Oct 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Arkansas

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby Last_Laff » Sat 30 Dec 2006, 17:00:10

So then, as result there's no peak oil.
User avatar
Last_Laff
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 252
Joined: Sat 16 Sep 2006, 03:00:00

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby JPL » Sat 30 Dec 2006, 19:03:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Last_Laff', 'S')o then, as result there's no peak oil.


Silly person - Peak Oil is just a mathematical construction which shows, in simple terms, how Capitalism, which was based on the paradime of infinite growth, is fucked.

This is not a difficult concept to grasp. It's similar in scale to the collapse of Socialism a decade or so ago, which said that a centrally planned economy would work, turned out to be fucked.

It's not the end of the world. In fact I am optomistic enough to think it might be the beginning of a new one.

SMILE - social change - a REAL change - a sustainable economy - is coming ;o)

JPL
Nothing ever happens, nothing happens at all
The needle returns to the start of the song
And we all sing along like before


Del Amitri
JPL
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1264
Joined: Sat 18 Mar 2006, 04:00:00
Location: Off with the Fey Folk
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby ReserveGrowthRulz » Sat 30 Dec 2006, 19:28:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Concerned', '.') Welcome to Jevons Paradox.


Good one!

Anyone else want to call apon the gods of proto economists who's forecasting, using his own theory, was so far off its still a joke nearly a century and a half later?

So much for learning from the mistakes of the past.
So....heading into our 3rd year post peak and I'm still getting caught in traffic jams!! DieOff already!
User avatar
ReserveGrowthRulz
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 813
Joined: Fri 30 Dec 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby Concerned » Sun 31 Dec 2006, 02:17:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Frank', 'H')ey, a vehicle that gets 25 mpg is better than one that gets 15 mpg, right? The trick is to incorporate the efficiency mind-set into everything that you do. There's as much benefit, for example, from combining trips as there is to using the hybrid.


Not if it means there will be 3 times the amount of 15mpg cars on the road world wide.
"Once the game is over, the king and the pawn go back in the same box."
-Italian Proverb
User avatar
Concerned
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1571
Joined: Thu 23 Sep 2004, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby JRP3 » Tue 02 Jan 2007, 13:18:11

This seems quite relevant to this discussion:
http://www.evworld.com/view.cfm?page=ne ... com/y9wkd9

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')YNOPSIS: Buying an S.U.V. with fuel economy rated at 16 miles per gallon instead of 14 cuts oil consumption and reduces carbon dioxide emissions by three and a half times more than saving 2 miles per gallon in a typical car.
User avatar
JRP3
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 768
Joined: Mon 23 Oct 2006, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby grabby » Tue 02 Jan 2007, 13:27:40

If you want to by a hybrid then buy a hybrid. If you wnat an electric car, buy one! If you want to buy a Ford 350 truck then buy one.The only danger in a large vehicle is if Algores presidential campaign works you'll get razzed and ostracized because opinion rules.

One purchase over the other will not effect the outcome of our economy or change what is coming. Nor will it even delay it observably. When the trouble starts there will still be lots of gas but justmore pricey. But regardless, the economy will worsen yearly.

Buying a hybrid SUV will not change tohe outcome of our economy. They do sell. People want large luxury cars but don't want the razz.
Buying an hybrid SUV may make a person feel better. They can splurge and drive in comfort without the razz, Kerry can change to hybrid SUV's and he'll be ok politically.

A new hybrid vehicle uses 30,000 dollars or more of tight resources. more production, more building and more output. More lead mining more copper mining more tires and new paint, everything. We do not need one, we want one.
For a snowstorm, use the old Ford F150 4wd pickup. you can get a junked one for a few hundred dollars.

The benefit of a hybrid is you can drive a big, comortable car and still fit in with most green crowds and not risk status, this is important socially especially in parts of hollywood.

For pure environment reasoning, one would want to try to help the environment by buying an old used celica, and fixing up the bad parts, but that isn't comfortable for us. There is a fine balance between social razz and comfort and usefulness.
However we decide though, none of these things will change an iota the coming economic crash of the stock market, and the economic windown.

If one calculates the difference against keeping an old car and driving it less verses buying a new hybrid SUV and then driving it less, you wont make any significant difference.

The hybrid SUV's stated sticker mileage is way higher than real life because percieved savings is what it is all about. The numbers are whats needed, not the truth. People buying a new Hybrid can afford any gas price. Its all in the excuse, and they give it to you. In the '60's they under rated horsepower in the muscle cars so people would buy them.Now they are over rating mileage. Independant tests have shown this.

But youll probably never save 30,000 dollars in gas buying an SUV for the whole life of your vehicle, and if you buy it on a loan with interest it is not a wise choice. We seem to accept always being in debt to someone, when did this reasoning start?

The effect of BUILDING that new car could have been avoided since the savings comparisons results were equivocal. All the people going to work that didnt have to waste gas driving and building it. Supporting the large production base is not what downsizing is about.

When you look at a dollar you are looking at a third of a gallon of gas. When I was a boy a dollar would buy 6 gallons of gas. It is worth 18 times less now. Every dollar you see you should think of it as gasoline saved. I expect before gasoline disappears that a dollar will buy a cup of gas.

By not buying the Hybrid of any kind you can replace your old car and motor parts with rebuild and come out way ahead on fuel savings.
.
this is good. In Russia they even replace their bedsprings with parts they can buy at the local grocery store! Russia will do well.
Gearing up Hybrid manufacturing is not what is needed now. Downsizing efficiency is.

But still it wont change that much so ultimately it won't matter. Let the people have jobs. Isnt going to change that much.
This is not giving up, it is just saying, spend your energy on useful things. Boycotting and not buying things at xmas is the easiest way to impact wastefulness, staying away from wlrus mart and makeing your own card out of construction paper is a way to save several 1/3 gallons of gas. it won't make a difference, but you have more gas in your pocket.

but
we
dont
want to suffer
so
it wont
ever
happen.


PS Hybrid SUV's do not save that much gas, they are over rated. they "gas test them indoors on friction low dynos without wind"
the real mileage is not that much difference from all gas.
But the higher the sticker the more we can explain why we needed it. We don't need hybrids, we need to cut production.

My small gas car will outperform most all Hybrids out there without mining tons of lead for batteries and acid waste etc etc. But it won't make a differance. Staying home would make a bigger difference.

It takes X amount of energy to push Y amount of weight, with resistance of wind force Z. Electric, steam or gas, it will take the same energy to do it. and a hybrid with a large weight and windscreen is more expensive to run than a small gas car saved from the dump and fixed up with rebuilt parts.

If one were to drive a new all electrical cars, it will cost overall the same horsepower than if you just run a small car by gas given a certain weight, size and speed of driving.. electricity is made by coal mostly.

Yes you save gas, now you burn coal. the only advantage is with electric you are burning coal instead of gas and you loose a bit in converting and transmitting, but again it makes no difference. and though you burn more of it, you are saving gas but we're still harming the environment. And the economy will still become trouble.

In Germany some people work for years to buy a Mercedes they cant afford. They are hypnotized because cars determine class there. Mercedes #1 Porsche #2 BMW #3 volkswagen is a toadstool.

It is self perpetuating, people who have been marketed go around telling everyone how good they did so they may influence several more people to do the same thing, whatever useless purchase that was. Humans are like that. They dont want to cut back, they want to be comfortable.

I once knew a lady who bought two dresses because they were on sale. Good excuse. How much sense does that make?
Shouldn't have bought either dress, she was weraing one already.

Some may want to drive cadillacs until they have to walk, it really doesn't matter that much. Nothing will change observably.

So buy a hybrid, That is fine, won't make that much difference.
Convince some other people to buy one, still wont make any difference.
Even say your helping peak oil, and it could be true by microseconds. Then those nine people all bond together, maybe its worth it, living the amrican dream again, and feeling good about something.

But I would suggest you not do this and keep your 30,000 and pay off the house first. Then help those you know pay off their homes while you can.

Keep your old beater, to keep from getting razzed you can always tell them you can't afford a new Hybrid so you run some methanol or you cab run ethanol or biodiesel! This is good for a tight algore crowd so they won't attack you.

So really, buying a hybrid SUV is all about comfort without getting razzed, thats mostly it.
Remember, you can fit in with a Ford 150 pickup if you have the right excuses, (poor and you run ethanol gas) and it will track the deep snow pretty well. Plus you can haul wood later.

No one deserves to be razzed. If you want to drive a FORD 350 4wd truck and need it to haul lumber, people should not be razzed, its a free country, the economy will soon hit difficulty no matter what you buy now. Even after the crash there will be uses for a F-350 once in a while. Like pulling a tree off your house after a wind storm.

There is one interesting factor in all this, it is that if you do buy a Hybrid SUV, you probably do not think there is going to be a significant problem in the economy in the next few years
In fact if you buy anything new now you are in fact probably a cornucopian/ positive outlooking person. Whereas if you buy a used celica chances are you are a bit more worried of coming doom and don't care how people think about you. But agin that even doesn't matter.

Doomers usually drive doomers
and
cornucopians usually drive cornucopians
Last edited by grabby on Tue 02 Jan 2007, 20:18:08, edited 2 times in total.
___________________________
WHEN THE BLIND LEAD THE BLIND...GET OUT OF THE WAY!
Using evil to further good makes one evil
Doubt everything but the TRUTH
This posted information is not permissible to be used
by anyone who has ever met a lawyer
User avatar
grabby
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1291
Joined: Tue 08 Nov 2005, 04:00:00

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby ReserveGrowthRulz » Tue 02 Jan 2007, 16:22:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('grabby', '
')
There is one interesting factor in all this, it is that if you do buy a Hybrid SUV, you probably do not think there is going to be a significant problem in the economy in the next two years

You are what you drive.


Why would I think there is a problem in the economy over the next 2 years? We're more than a year post peak and all the BS arm waving dieoff predicted by Doomers still isn't any closer than it was when people started dreaming up this crap back when Ehrlich was writing books about it. And I imagine he was hardly an originator on the "gee the worlds gonna end because I don't like it" concept.
So....heading into our 3rd year post peak and I'm still getting caught in traffic jams!! DieOff already!
User avatar
ReserveGrowthRulz
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 813
Joined: Fri 30 Dec 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby JPL » Wed 03 Jan 2007, 18:40:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReserveGrowthRulz', '
')Why would I think there is a problem in the economy over the next 2 years? We're more than a year post peak and all the BS arm waving dieoff predicted by Doomers still isn't any closer than it was when people started dreaming up this crap back when Ehrlich was writing books about it. And I imagine he was hardly an originator on the "gee the worlds gonna end because I don't like it" concept.


There isn't going to be a problem in the economy over the next 2 years - I agree. Even if 'we' have a recession there won't be anything to stop us buying cars - if we want to.

I lived through the 70's oil shocks and 'we' still had plenty of cars.

A couple of ideas to throw in though:

1) Even in the 21'st century, the majority of the world's population has never (& will never) sit behind the controls of an automobile.

2) 'They' won't miss what they never had. But we will ;o)

JPL
Nothing ever happens, nothing happens at all
The needle returns to the start of the song
And we all sing along like before


Del Amitri
JPL
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1264
Joined: Sat 18 Mar 2006, 04:00:00
Location: Off with the Fey Folk
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby ReserveGrowthRulz » Wed 03 Jan 2007, 22:15:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JPL', '
')
1) Even in the 21'st century, the majority of the world's population has never (& will never) sit behind the controls of an automobile.



this is good! A major Doomer tenent I've noticed is the assumption that the entire world will want 2.6 auto's in their suburban driveway just like America. If we only have to worry about our lifestyle rather than EVERYONE's lifestyle, the entire problem is alot easier to solve, and is primarily an American one.
So....heading into our 3rd year post peak and I'm still getting caught in traffic jams!! DieOff already!
User avatar
ReserveGrowthRulz
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 813
Joined: Fri 30 Dec 2005, 04:00:00
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby NEOPO » Thu 04 Jan 2007, 02:16:04

We are potentially 1 year post peak production and not really feeling the pain for various reasons.
Reasons that I am sure people like RGR would rather not discuss.

Things might be different if CERA and the rest of the world admitted that we have already peaked or at least that it seems like we have.

The markets are still playing the short term, one day that will change and the effect will be a higher price.
For the most part much of the worlds oil producers are still thinking "this years budget" and one day that to will change.
One day we will know for certain that SA has peaked and these stupid threads aimed at discrediting PO will cease to exist.

Funny as a year ago Reserve growth ruled and there was no peak in sight......
Sorry for feeding the out of work comedians.....
It is easier to enslave a people that wish to remain free then it is to free a people who wish to remain enslaved.
User avatar
NEOPO
Permanently Banned
 
Posts: 3588
Joined: Sun 15 May 2005, 03:00:00
Location: THE MATRIX

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby dhfenton » Thu 04 Jan 2007, 13:45:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ReserveGrowthRulz', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dhfenton', '
')
And how much snow will be on the roads three hours after the storm? Less than an inch.



Another silly person. Well, lets see? After the LAST storm, call it 36 inches or so in the yard, it was 3 days before I could leave the driveway, and I had 8 inches of snow to drive through every time I left the cul-de-sac. For...oh....a week?

Gee...I guess that dispenses with the "one inch 3 hours after the storm" groupies. Where do you people get such silly assumptions on how weather works?

***************************************************

I see the problem now. Your snowplow crews are incompetent. I live in an area that gets those storms fairly often. The roads are plowed clean within hours, and its business as usual the next day.

***************************************************

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dhfenton', '
')
Denver gets a storm like that how often, once every few years? Come on, just admit you bought the SUV for something other than true "need".


I have already admitted that my "needs" aren't limited to JUST berm busting during blizzards. And this is about my third big blizzard in 3, 3-1/2 years? If I go back 8 or 9 years, I can remember another one or two.

[quote="dhfenton"]
User avatar
dhfenton
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 179
Joined: Wed 23 Mar 2005, 04:00:00
Location: Norwood, NY
Top

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby mgibbons19 » Thu 04 Jan 2007, 14:37:28

Interesting for a peaker to argue that we need to rely upon centralized, government run services like road service.

Let the guvmint take care of it.

Good thing that worked for Katrina victims.

Now there are cattle dieing on the plains, ranchers' livelihoods are getting creamed. darn snowplows just aren't doing their jobs.
mgibbons19
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1105
Joined: Fri 20 Aug 2004, 03:00:00

Re: Okay...I'm convinced...

Postby FatherOfTwo » Thu 04 Jan 2007, 14:46:50

If RGR is of the opinion (and I certainly don't want to put words in his mouth) that we have already passed peak and there are no problems, then I would agree with you that it is a foolish, short sighted position indeed. All one needs to look at is the fact that the majority do not think peak oil has happened. Oil supply is clearly tight, but it has not reached a breaking point yet.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Gideon', ' ') If you want to assume the position of the loyal opposition, however, rather than the shrill guy in the corner, then I suggest that you begin to make arguments as to why either . . .

1. Peak has not occurred and there will not be a peak any time in the next ____ years, and so this is a non-issue.

2. There will be a substitute, and it is _________.

or

3. Peak has occurred or will soon occur, but the world, and particularly the US, will deal with Coming Off Peak Oil without any major issues, and it will do this by _____________.



Now I haven't read many of your posts, but based on the above if you count yourself amongst the hard core doomers who believe that because of peak oil we are headed down into the abyss, no if's and's or but's, then I would posit a choice #4, similar to choice #2 to argue that you are wrong, or at a very bare minimum, highly premature.

4. It has been clearly demonstrated that there is AMPLE fuel for us to transition to a mostly electric society that is powered initially by nuclear power (and coal, ug) with more solar/wind coming online over time. I'm not going to go into the specifics of why we have enough fuel for this; that has been covered ad infinitum by very respectable individuals in other threads. We DO NOT have a crisis of not having another form of energy to switch to as oil supplies dwindle, and not only that nuclear power is powered by a more dense form of energy. However, that does not mean we do not have a major problem.

The crux of the problem of transitioning to an almost all electrical society lies in these points:
- the electrical grids are currently maintained only at bare minimums and will need massive investment to upgrade and expand the grid infrastructure.. this will take time, money and manpower.
- rolling out more electrical generation will take time, money and manpower
- our infrastructure (certainly in NA) and way of life are so over reliant on fossil fuels that there can't not be a massive societal convulsive attack as those fossil fuels decline in availability and the impacts become obvious. We are using so many joules of energy in the burning of fossil fuels that it is clear that as fossil fuel availability decreases, and if electrical output can only take up a portion of the slack, we'll be forced to scale back our lifestyles commensurately.
- once peak oil is clearly in our rear view mirror and this is recognized by the markets, the economic fallout will be staggering. There is no denying this. But there is, I firmly believe, enough fat in the system that we will be able to rapidly build out alternates. But again, it’s just not likely to be equal to the amount of the joules we blow through each day now, again leading back to the significant degradation of lifestyle.

Shit storm? Yes.
Run to the hills we're all going to die? Hell no.
User avatar
FatherOfTwo
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 960
Joined: Thu 11 Nov 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Heart of Canada's Oil Country
Top

PreviousNext

Return to Energy Technology

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron