by garyp » Thu 10 May 2007, 05:45:46
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kochevnik', 'T')o be honest - I'm a little disappointed here - I've been gone since I posted this and I was kinda sorta hoping someone could show me where my math doesn't make sense.
kochevnik, your maths both does and doesn't make sense. In a simple and proportional way its probably not to far off (BTW lookup the exportland model, since that's what you're heading towards)
However the reality is the system is in any case a dynamic one and that the transition from ever increasing supply to ever reducing supply is a phase change in the wider system. That means new rules, new behaviours, upheaval, etc. That will in turn affect the demand AND the supply numbers. EnergyUnlimited gets part of it in his post, political and military grabs for control via any means necessary.
If you really want to model it probably the best approach is a systems dynamics model, but even then the system will be changing in responce to changing structural drivers.
Stepping back, there are some broad brush factors that can be delineated:
- in response to threat, a sizable number of people reaction is to take action, usually violent.
- the global population is such that old (less energy intensive) ways of doing things aren't credible. We can't regress and still have a stable society. Regression might be an end point, but its not a method.
- those with the means will retract into protected enclaves. The rich will convert money into assets and attempt to disappear with them. Expect a roaring trade in caribbean islands.
- the incentive of those with oil, post peak, is to curtail production to sustain capability. This won't go down well, so expect resources to be destroyed in an effort to secure them.
- the western cultural psyche is ill prepared for significant change. Not only is life good, life has been good for a long time and the society is built on growth and money. It won't bend, it will break.
- national and supranational entities are built on a flimsy base. The first instinct of those in power will be to tighten their grip, but in reality they are unlikely to have the ability to carry through. Expect breakup to the city state level.
- two endstate models suggest themselves. One is the subsistance economy, maintaining enough to survive and licking its wounds. The other is the high tech enclave, holding on to as much capability as possible while reducing its energy consumption.
Overall, its not the absolute numbers that matter, its the response to those numbers. In absolute terms we are likely to have the resources of at least the 1960s for the rest of your life. However the changed system will probably mean we don't access those, the civilisation structure having changed that much.