by seldom_seen » Thu 15 Feb 2007, 16:29:02
One of the major defects of industrial civilization is the inability to grasp the big picture. To see the system, the whole, and not just the parts.
This fractured and incoherent worldview is embedded in our educational system. From science to engineering, medicine and economics. The machine view, a universe of independent parts, goes all the way back to descartes, galileo and the 'enlightenment.' I also think much of it can be explained by quoting the Mogambo guru who recently quotes Upton Sinclair "It's difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on him not understanding it."
This systemic blindspot can be expressed in the story of the little girl who goes to the doctor because she cannot stop crying. The doctor responds by removing her tear glands. Consequently, our civilization is severely hobbled in its ability to respond to widespread systemic disruptions. Specifically oil depletion and climate disruption.
Global warming and PO get much coverage as separate topics. However, they are part of a singular process. Humans removing carbon stores from the ground and pumping it in to the atmosphere.
These are not independent problems. Peak oil is holding our arms behind our back while global warming punches us in the stomach. Which brings me to fast collapse scenarios.
Lately, erratic weather events have caused widespread power outages throughout the United States. The most notable being Katrina (making New Orleans the first post-collapse city in the US IMO), as well as ice storms in the midwest and a severe windstorm in the northwest, which caused week long power outages for some people.
Using the windstorm in the northwest as an example, because I experienced it. I realized how close we are to a fast collapse scenario in our large metropolitan regions. The reason Seattle did not collapse because of this power outage is because we fortunately had enough oil supply to repair downed power lines in a timely manner before general looting and anarchy occurred. What is notable is that power crews were brought in from California, Oregon, other western states and as far away as Chicago. The critical point being the power grid is completely dependent on adequate supplies of gasoline to maintain it.
Now fast-forward a year or two (or next month?). Oil transport through the strait of Hormuz is reduced due to regional conflict. Cantarell is further down it's precipitous slope of decline. MEND one way or another severely disrupts oil production in Nigeria. The US daily consumption of oil is quartered, halved or more. Regional shortages occur.
Then, along comes our increasingly unstable and volatile climatic system. Another severe windstorm batters the northwest region. Once again, widespread power outages occur. People can no longer sit in their cars to get warm or avoid boredom by driving around. They don't have the gas, or can't afford it. The mobilization of power crews from across the US is not possible. They simply don't have the fuel to drive across the country to help out the NW.
An outage that may have lasted 4-5 days, now extends in to weeks. Eventually a month or more has passed and most people still do not have electricity. People start wondering whether the grid will ever be restored? As to what happens beyond that, I will allow the reader to extrapolate. Suffice it to say Seattle and/or Portland has effectively collapsed.
I believe this to be a realistic fast collapse scenario. That not only seems likely but almost inevitable.
I'd be interested in hearing other fast collapse scenarios that others have pondered?
But how the world turns. One day, cock of the walk. Next, a feather duster.