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Reasons to be optimistic

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General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby cultural_sublimation » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 14:41:01

I have started lurking through this forum some time ago, but this is my first post. Though I am obviously concerned about Peak Oil, I cannot help but to notice that a lot of people here have a strange fascination with doom. What's up with that?

Seriously, though people should be worried about the issue and perhaps even a tiny bit scared, always talking about the end of the world will only get us labelled as lunatics. Why can't a community like this one focus a bit more on the positive news about energy? Yes, I know there are also some of those, but isn't it funny that the gloomier threads always get more posts, and that the optimists are often labelled as cornucopian? (there is a difference!)

Anyway, I would just like to share with you some positive news related to peak oil. First, this week and for the first time, wind turbines were the number one source of power in Spain, providing 27% of power to the grid. Wow. This is not a tiny country with 10 people and a goat. We're talking about an industrialised european nation with 44 million people. Second, Spain's neighbour Portugal has realistic goals of having 45% of all its power come from renewable sources in just three years time.

Will peak oil hurt? Certainly. But more and more I am convinced that we can be moderately optimistic about the future. If instead of doom you are looking for moderately optimistic, yet still realistic, predictions about the post-peak future, they are also out there. It just seems many among us have a tendency to block them out and prefer to read about the soon to come apocalypse. (Quick test if you're a doomer: which of the two links in this paragraph are you more inclined to click instinctively?)
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby auscanman » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 14:55:24

It certainly won't be the case that 5/6 of the world's population will die in a short space of time. However, I have no doubt that 100 years from now the human population wil be 1 billion or less.

I think you don't understand the immensity of the problem we face. The economic system now present almost everywhere is predicated upon infinite growth and assumes a never-ending supply of resources. It's a system that overwhelmingly suits the top 5% or so of the population, who will fight tooth and nail to stop any paradigm change (even if it means a large scale die-off of poorer individuals) to a different economic model.

The renewable power being added in Europe is only possible right now because we still have plentiful oil supplies, which those countries are wisely putting to use in making these renewable sources. What would the effect be if every country started doing this? Price of oil would initially skyrocket as oil was diverted from fuel use to manufacture of this renewable infrastructure. Once the infrastructure was built, people would still need to fuel their cars, and if the price of oil were to decrease, they'd just drive more!

I don't dwell on this or let it ruin my life, and am positive in my daily life. But, I think it's delusional to believe that we have a great future ahead of us.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Olle » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 14:56:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cultural_sublimation', 'I') have started lurking through this forum some time ago, but this is my first post. Though I am obviously concerned about Peak Oil, I cannot help but to notice that a lot of people here have a strange fascination with doom. What's up with that?

Seriously, though people should be worried about the issue and perhaps even a tiny bit scared, always talking about the end of the world will only get us labelled as lunatics. Why can't a community like this one focus a bit more on the positive news about energy? Yes, I know there are also some of those, but isn't it funny that the gloomier threads always get more posts, and that the optimists are often labelled as cornucopian? (there is a difference!)

Anyway, I would just like to share with you some positive news related to peak oil. First, this week and for the first time, wind turbines were the number one source of power in Spain, providing 27% of power to the grid. Wow. This is not a tiny country with 10 people and a goat. We're talking about an industrialised european nation with 44 million people. Second, Spain's neighbour Portugal has realistic goals of having 45% of all its power come from renewable sources in just three years time.

Will peak oil hurt? Certainly. But more and more I am convinced that we can be moderately optimistic about the future. If instead of doom you are looking for moderately optimistic, yet still realistic, predictions about the post-peak future, they are also out there. It just seems many among us have a tendency to block them out and prefer to read about the soon to come apocalypse. (Quick test if you're a doomer: which of the two links in this paragraph are you more inclined to click instinctively?)


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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Armageddon » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 15:06:18

Well, here is the problem. The US economy is based on consumption and transportation. 2/3 of all the oil used by the US goes to transportation. The US has built a lifestyle called suburbia, and is dependant solely on cheap and abundant energy, and continued growth of this cheap and abundant energy. You cannot compare other countries to the US when talking about energy. It is way too late in the game to start changing now. If the US would have built their infrastructure to be more sustainable, such as public transportation, electric cars, hybrids, etc, when the oil was cheap and abundant, then there would be hope ( sorta ) . But, the US now has 300 million people and uses 21 mbpd of the world's 84-85 mbpd, and peak oil is upon us. Plus, the economy is a whole separate and intertwined issue. The US economy has to grow to stay afloat, and without growth it would collapse due to the fiat money system is uses. And, you cannot grow the economy without growing your energy supply. Throw in the amount of debt the average American has, and he will not be able to keep borrowing to keep this thing afloat like previously, and this is why I am a doomer.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby idomar » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 15:25:00

I like a bit of doomerism, it makes things interesting. If you are prepared for the worst and you are only met with 50% of what you expected, you are a winner, or in real terms, you havent lost as much as you thought you would.

I think that Europe will not fall as far or as hard as the USA by virtue of location, we are attached to Russia, not to far from ME there are pipelines all over the place ferrying oil from there to here. Europe is investing more in alternatives, not enough in my opinion, but its a start.

Others have predicited what will happen from apocalypse to mild slide into a friendlier world where everyone is nice to each other again in a shared suffering, World War II spirit kinda thing. I tend to err on the side of caution. I know what happens when kids have their toys taken from them, tantrums, add guns and poverty to this and it will make for an interesting mix.

I am preparing for a mid ground area. I think that I may learn another language, maybe for a country that has a lot of farmable land and then head for it if things get bad in the UK. Until then I am just sitting back with some popcorn watching things unfold.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Tinman » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 15:27:48

I think that climate change is a bigger concern then peak oil. I don’t have any fantasies of doom I would hope to continue to live this easy life style but I would be willing to live more like my grandparents and great grandparents if that meant a better future for my children and my children’s children.
Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. ~ Thomas A. Edison ~
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby eastbay » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 15:30:20

Combine what Armageddon said with the fact that the USA has effectively instituted an officially sanctioned open-borders policy allowing 1,000,000 people to enter illegally every year.

Then add to what Armegeddon said above with the fact that these illegal entrants and their offspring will create additional approximately 20,000,000 people in the next 10 years (all of whom wouldn't be here to heighten the scale and scope of the looming disaster if effective border controls were in place) all of whom will be desperately engaged in the final struggle to consume the nations (USA) ever-dwindling energy, food, educational, water, medical, and financial resources.

In my opinion, the ever-popular term 'doomer' falls far short of accurately describing what our appropriate current mood should be. In fact, and I'm certainly NOT a conspiracy buff, but it's starting to appear as though the official policy of the US government is to intentionally create a scenario whereby the coming human suffering and ecological disaster will be as apocalyptic as possible. Nah... the PTB wouldn't do something as completely crazy as that, would they???


.... edit for typo.
Last edited by eastbay on Fri 23 Mar 2007, 15:32:31, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Tinman » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 15:31:50

Sure they would look at Iraq.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby dinopello » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 15:46:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cultural_sublimation', 'I') have started lurking through this forum some time ago, but this is my first post. Though I am obviously concerned about Peak Oil, I cannot help but to notice that a lot of people here have a strange fascination with doom. What's up with that?


I think it's the optimists that create the doomers.

BTW, your "optimistic" link entitled "Oh-my-god-we're-all-not-gonna-die!" is not true, is it ?

We are all gonna die, its just a matter of when and how. As they say, the pessimist is always eventually correct.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby sameu » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 16:03:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dinopello', '
')I think it's the optimists that create the doomers.


true

problem is
we're in overshoot
simple system dynamics tells you this can't last, you cannot sustain a system that is fundamentally unsustainable
sure there are happening positive thing, I certainlyt won't deny that

but it represents nothing, as yet again system dynamics will tell you, due to exponentional feedback loops, we respond too late, the order of magnitude is just too big
and this will most likely be corrected not smoothly but with a crash

if you're realistic, if you look at the numbers
there's quite frankly nothing to be optimistic about
good luck to everyone would be the most optimistic thing to say
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby dukey » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 16:19:18

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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Ibon » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 16:26:16

A reason to be optimistic is that the exponential growth and consumption of the past 100 years is about to end. The transition toward sustainability will be a mixture of enlightenment and stupidity. Of brilliant innovation and primitive selfishness. It will be a full pallete of everything wonderful and horrible that humans under stress are capable of. Placing yourself somewhere in the middle of optimism and doomerism is probably a safe bet.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby strider3700 » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 16:31:36

Do we have anyone thats actually been here for years that is still an optimist? Most of them eventually read enough to realize we're screwed and then can put the pieces together to see just how screwed we are.

Optimists are just doomers that haven't figured it out yet.
shame on us, doomed from the start
god have mercy on our dirty little hearts
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby FoxV » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 16:49:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('eastbay', 'I')n fact, and I'm certainly NOT a conspiracy buff, but it's starting to appear as though the official policy of the US government is to intentionally create a scenario whereby the coming human suffering and ecological disaster will be as apocalyptic as possible. Nah... the PTB wouldn't do something as completely crazy as that, would they


This is a bit of an error in logic. It looks like they're creating suicide policies, but obviously that's not going to happen becuase they wouldn't do that.

Time to call a spade a spade. If that's what they're doing then thats what is happening. As for why they're doing it, I think Nepolean has the best explanation for it.

"Do not attribute to malice what can be better ascribed to incompetence"

Personally where I feel the optimists have it wrong is in appreciating the "non-linear" aspects of all of this. There will come a time when those that have surpluses will stop sharing, and those that have shortages will start taking.

Russia made an official statement a while back that if PO turns out to be true, they will stop exporting oil by 2010 to save for their own people (old article on peakoil.net)

How far will Mexico, Iran and Norway deplete their reserves before they turn off the taps.

What will happen to Saudi Arabia when the last son of Ibn Saud dies and there are now 30,000 prentenders to the throne.

Nigeria? Venezuela? The entire middle East?

What will India and China's 2.5Billion people do when we have global crop shortages (due within the next couple of years).

Soil depletion, water depletion, fish stock depletion, the list goes on and on.

I've come to feel that only by preparing for doom can you have any reason to be optimistic
Last edited by FoxV on Fri 23 Mar 2007, 16:52:59, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Coolman » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 16:50:13

LOL dukey. I remember that game.

But, seriously don't fool yourself. The modern way of life is screwed. This is not the end of the world, just the end of globalization/ consumerism/ idiotism. But, the road to this new life is not going to be easy, the human population will probably be much lower in 2100. Nature always wins, plan and simple. At least nature is allowing us to live, just not the way 5% of the population lives now.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Minvaren » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 17:04:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('FoxV', '"')Do not attribute to malice what can be better ascribed to incompetence"


I think that's a good thing to keep in mind for all of the doomers (myself included). However, the growing disconnect between what we know to be true intellectually ("The United States is addicted to oil") and what we are doing about it (driving corn prices through the roof with an ethanol pipe dream) is what continues to astound me. We don't seem able to accept the reality of our situation, which is that the whole world cannot live at current US consumption levels.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Armageddon » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 17:10:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Minvaren', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('FoxV', '"')Do not attribute to malice what can be better ascribed to incompetence"


I think that's a good thing to keep in mind for all of the doomers (myself included). However, the growing disconnect between what we know to be true intellectually ("The United States is addicted to oil") and what we are doing about it (driving corn prices through the roof with an ethanol pipe dream) is what continues to astound me. We don't seem able to accept the reality of our situation, which is that the whole world cannot live at current US consumption levels.


Neither can the US.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Minvaren » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 17:13:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Armageddon', 'N')either can the US.


Agreed - which probably makes the US one of the strongest bastions of doomerism, sprinkled amongst the obliviousness.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Ludi » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 17:13:41

I think there are reasons to be optimistic if you're young, healthy, and capable of physical work which might be considered "hard" - there will be plenty of opportunities for a new and good way of life. But if you're old, sick, and/or averse to change, there's not much happy to look forward to.
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Re: Reasons to be optimistic

Unread postby Coolman » Fri 23 Mar 2007, 17:23:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ludi', 'I') think there are reasons to be optimistic if you're young, healthy, and capable of physical work which might be considered "hard" - there will be plenty of opportunities for a new and good way of life. But if you're old, sick, and/or averse to change, there's not much happy to look forward to.


Well said.
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