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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

How pessimistic are you?

What's on your mind?
General interest discussions, not necessarily related to depletion.

Pessimism or Optimism over the next 10 years

100% Pessimistic: Global anarchy + wholesale slaughter before 2015
6
No votes
75% Pessimistic: Widespread anarchy, especially in the USA
12
No votes
50% Pessimistic: Massive energy and food shortage, but everyone pulls together for the common weal
29
No votes
25% Pessimistic: Small energy and food shortage but compensated by a healthier way of life
8
No votes
0% Pessimistic: No significant change
1
No votes
25% Optimistic: Small increase of energy and food supply
1
No votes
 
Total votes : 57

How pessimistic are you?

Postby Devil » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 12:45:59

The majority on this forum seem to be pessimistic and foresee, as a minimum, an AK-47 to prevent marauders from attacking your cabbage patch, with wholesale slaughter everywhere as everyone fights for a single candle. Is this impression right?
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Postby Permanently_Baffled » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 12:54:49

You are correct Devil , I think I maybe the last soft lander around here !!

Maybe I cannot get my hands on a AK 47!! :lol:

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Postby gnm » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 12:58:19

I'm gonna have to opt for a 60% scenario Devil, (good to see ya back) - I am sure some places or groups would pull together and get it together but I don't have such a high opinion about the majority. There are way too many people who kill others for thier sneakers, thier food, or because they are the wrong religion. And thats without severe resource stress.



-G :(
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Re: How pessimistic are you?

Postby pair-of-noids » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 13:06:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Devil', 'I')s this impression right?


At one point in the PDF 'Life after the oil crash' the comment is made about demand destruction.

Posters here who don't want to lower thier standard of living reflect the attitudes of the 'power brokers'. So if you have a mind towards not trusting 'the government' or 'big business' or whatever, the end for many won't be guns, a lack of butter, but a nice world-wide pandamic.

(and if the people who claim the weather and earth-crust movement is 'targetable' are not paranoid but actually correct - well - lots of ways of 'demand destruction' eh?)

Less people overall and people who need some form of shot from 'the government' would be easy to control.

Would any of you put such an action past 'the leadership'?
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Postby gnm » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 13:56:37

Yikes, well if there is something to be paranoid about a pandemic about hits the top of my list. I don't stay up nights worrying about peak oil, but I do pay close attention when I hear about the latest human crossover case of H5N1 (bird flu) in Asia. Those who have had it have had an 80% mortality rate. I think the 1918 flu was like 5%...

8O -G
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Postby mindfarkk » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 14:43:34

i think the worst case is possible, but not by any means inevitable. i will probably have an AK-47 if i can eventually afford one, but for now i'll be content to have a few necessary items reserved for emergencies, and not a full-scale fall-out shelter. i will have my "bug-out" backpack (assembling as i can afford items). but i'm really investing the minimum i think i can get away with that will actually work in an emergency, say one of similar severity to the recent tsunami destruction, and not long-term. on the other hand i am learning skills that i hope will help me re-establish myself if i am wrong and the worst case ends up being the long-term.

once i have my bug-out pack assembled, and primitive survival skills learned, and during same, i am going to invest considerably more time and money preparing for a middle-of-the-road solution - a homestead that can be worked part OR full-time if needed, a full self-powering home. because i DO really believe that heat/electrical/fuel power of any kind is going to become a luxury for some and a scarce treasure for many, particularly the unprepared. i'd love to homestead part-time and work my private practice part-time. my main concern is how to handle all this as i'm aging and potentially dealing with certain illnesses. i'm hoping that if they lack other opportunity, my BFs kids will be willing (and possibly glad) to join us and take over the farm as we get older. i can even see one or more of them joining us soon after we start it - john's youngest is a really sweet, basic, pooh-tao kinda kid, and a hard worker by nature.

i do not really believe there will be any pulling out of this economic swan dive, just maybe a few rolls along the way. and i don't consider that pessimistic. i honestly feel it is the best thing that can happen, in the larger scheme of things. i do think it's LIKELY we as a speces are going to pay a huge price in human suffering and possibly (probably) die-off in one form or another. globally speaking, we already are, so that's a safe bet. i expect it will get worse. where the swan dive ends is anyone's guess and that will depend on many unpredictable but expectable factors, including international politics, leadership, technology, medicine, religious fanaticism, social security, weapons of mass destruction, the earth's crust, global warming, etc etc. so how steep is the descent? no idea.

if i'm completely wrong, though, the worst that will happen is i have a lovely country home, good neighbors, and a self-sustainable lifestyle, and that seems like a fine thing to me anyway.
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Postby 0mar » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 14:54:53

Varies from week to week depending on what I'm reading, but I'm leaning towards 75% on that scale. It looks to be that bad anyhow.
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Postby Tyler_JC » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 16:16:09

I have a major issue with this poll.

100%= global anarchy and slaughter. Isn't the slaughter already happening right now...IRAQ?

Global anarchy isn't happening, but wars are being fought over oil right now. I had to vote for 100%

Secondly, $this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '7')5% Pessimistic: Widespread anarchy, especially in the USA

I think there will be widespread anarchy, but not especailly in the USA. I think we are heading for more government, not less. At least not less for another 15-25 years

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')assive energy and food shortage, but everyone pulls together for the common weal

I think this could happen, but everybody pulls together? That's optimistic. I think we have shortages and everyone fighting for the remaining stuff.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '2')5% Pessimistic: Small energy and food shortage but compensated by a healthier way of life

That doesn't even make sense. Food shortage=healthier way of life?
The end result after decades of shortage will be a healthier way of life, but not in the next 10 years.

Sorry to have to do this.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '0')% Pessimistic: No significant change

How could nothing change? Something has to change. Life isn't static. Saying nothing will change is being stupid, not pessimistic.
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Postby Permanently_Baffled » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 17:36:13

I think a lot of people would like to know your view on this Devil. As I understand it you have a lot of experience in the energy field(amongst others) , how do you see PO playing out?

PB :)
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Postby tmazanec1 » Tue 04 Jan 2005, 19:16:27

gnm
Go to Google.com and click on News. Enter "h5n1" to search the latest news on this scary virus. You can do it every week (articles stay for a month) and sort by date.
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Postby Devil » Wed 05 Jan 2005, 08:25:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Permanently_Baffled', 'I') think a lot of people would like to know your view on this Devil. As I understand it you have a lot of experience in the energy field(amongst others) , how do you see PO playing out?

PB :)


I would plump for the 25% scenario. I think that, in developed countries, there will be less energy and food, but both will be available in sufficiency, without excess, perhaps with less choice. To counter T_JC, we'll be walking more and will be less obese with fewer Mars Bars and less fast food, hence healthier.

I hark my mind back to the UK, where I was living then, during WWII. Food was severely rationed and motorised transport cut back to a minimum. Shale was used for part of the oil requirements. Buses were run on water gas, towing their generators. Fuel for private cars was severely rationed, sometimes to zero. With 1 egg and 2 oz of butter, 2 oz of sugar or sugar products etc. per week, cardiovascular disease fell dramatically. The only imported foodstuff which was rationed out reasonably generously was tea. Most other imported foodstuffs were simply unavailable. I never saw an orange for nearly 5 years nor a banana for 6. Muscularly, we walked much more and dug our gardens for fresh food, so we were lean and mean. I therefore know we could be much better off from having less energy and food available.
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Postby Devil » Wed 05 Jan 2005, 08:32:18

OK, how about the developing countries? I think this will be more difficult to predict, because there will a delay of 5-10 years before they are affected. This economic inertia will result more in an initial slow-down of the rate of development, rather than an actual turn-down. The large countries, like India and China, will react faster than Burkina Faso or Myanmar, which are already more dependent on an autonomous agroeconomy and which will not have the means to develop faster.
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Postby 0mar » Wed 05 Jan 2005, 11:28:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Devil', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Permanently_Baffled', 'I') think a lot of people would like to know your view on this Devil. As I understand it you have a lot of experience in the energy field(amongst others) , how do you see PO playing out?

PB :)


I would plump for the 25% scenario. I think that, in developed countries, there will be less energy and food, but both will be available in sufficiency, without excess, perhaps with less choice. To counter T_JC, we'll be walking more and will be less obese with fewer Mars Bars and less fast food, hence healthier.

I hark my mind back to the UK, where I was living then, during WWII. Food was severely rationed and motorised transport cut back to a minimum. Shale was used for part of the oil requirements. Buses were run on water gas, towing their generators. Fuel for private cars was severely rationed, sometimes to zero. With 1 egg and 2 oz of butter, 2 oz of sugar or sugar products etc. per week, cardiovascular disease fell dramatically. The only imported foodstuff which was rationed out reasonably generously was tea. Most other imported foodstuffs were simply unavailable. I never saw an orange for nearly 5 years nor a banana for 6. Muscularly, we walked much more and dug our gardens for fresh food, so we were lean and mean. I therefore know we could be much better off from having less energy and food available.


Wasn't there almost total anarchy when fuel was denied access to Britan. I distinctly remember reading about that.
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Postby khebab » Wed 05 Jan 2005, 11:44:42

I'm cautiously optimistic but my viewpoint fluctuates according to my readings. I don't think a massive die-off is realistic because it requires either a catastrophic event or an abrupt discontnuity in our energy supply. However, I anticipate a slow demand destruction due to steady higher oil prices over maybe a decade or more. A slow down of the world economy will then occur that will bring instability. Right now, all our focus should be on conversation, alternative ernergy and lifestyle makeover.
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Postby khebab » Wed 05 Jan 2005, 11:45:34

I mean conservation! :-D
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Postby Devil » Wed 05 Jan 2005, 12:34:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('0mar', '
')Wasn't there almost total anarchy when fuel was denied access to Britan. I distinctly remember reading about that.


You should really not read the tabloid newspapers. No, everyone, practically without exception, took the privations in their stride. Of course, a small black market developed, but this was severely repressed by the justice. Many black marketeers were practically lynched by the public, which showed a remarkable solidarity.

The main heating fuel of that time was coal. We had minimal fires and hesitated before putting on another lump. We were enjoined to use only 5 inches of water in our weekly bath. A catch-phrase of the war was "Is your journey REALLY necessary?". Even though they required steel, in short supply, bicycles were available.

All the petroleum companies operated under government control in a pool and produced a single grade of minimal quality motor fuel, labelled 'Pool'. When a small ration was reintroduced for private cars, the fuel for commercial vehicles, which obviously had a more generous ration, was coloured red and had a chemical added, to avoid a black market of "commercial" petrol being sold for private use. Before that, when the ration was zero for private or non-essential use of the car, anyone caught going down to the shops or taking the kids to school would be thrown in clink and fined a week's salary.

No, I can assure you that we were doing everything to win that war, with good grace. The UK was never so united in its spirit as during those years of conflict.
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Postby Pops » Wed 05 Jan 2005, 13:01:09

What did the man say? Making predictions is easy except for the ones about the future?

According to the ASPO by ’10 we’ll be back to where we are today production wise and down about 10% by ’15.

There will surely be some bad feedback from higher energy prices, maybe as soon as this year and a slowing or even a receding economy could easily extend the peak out a couple of years. A reduction in supply enough to hurt the economy badly but hardly sufficient to imply anarchy.

Considering a large percentage of the corn and beans the US grows is fed to cattle I can’t see us starving in the near term. Perhaps a return to cooking at home of items still somewhat resembling their natural state but not widespread starvation.

I can’t make any kind of guess regarding other countries. Perhaps if the US were to reduce some exports such as corn, to places such as Mexico where the little guys have been forced off the land by AgCorp, the little guy could move back to the farm from the shanty in the city and actually make a living again. Just speculating.

Things will surely change but not to widespread anarchy and starvation IMO; now 20 years down the road...
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Postby Permanently_Baffled » Wed 05 Jan 2005, 15:45:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '
') now 20 years down the road...


Damn it Pops I was feeling a bit more relaxed about things until you slipped this comment in! :lol:

I remain optmistic that we won't see mass starvation and anarchy until perhaps even after 2050. If we can avoid world war IV, then 35 mpd(which is the 2050 production amount which begins to level off) is still a lot of oil. For example if the UK can purchase 1.9% of this amount (which is the amount the UK consumes currently of todays 82 mpd), then the UK has roughly 700,000 bpd to feed/water the population as opposed to 1.6m bpd). Sounds doable to me , especially given that natural gas will still be around for those all important fertilizers and around 70% of todays oil consumption is for cars....)

It maybe a little different for the more overpopulated poorer countries however......

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Postby The_Virginian » Fri 07 Jan 2005, 04:39:03

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')K-47 to prevent marauders from attacking your cabbage patch,


Don't y'all even think of touching my cabbage patch doll collection, or I will, I swear. :)


Actualy, I'm more worried about BIG Governments we NO CONTROL over. They go to war, we suffer....whether it be nuclear or conventional.

Dev. If Shuckelgrubber was not a madman, Little Britian would have been on it's knees in 1940. Intead he intentionaly let the dunkurk troop leave w/o pursuit, against advice of his panzer-fhuerers (generals).
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Postby theshadypeach » Fri 07 Jan 2005, 04:47:52

I would've voted for an in between 50% and 75%. I think the high price of oil is going to be a rough time on our economy and agriculture, but at the same time, there are substitutes of energy, with smaller outputs of energy, so we'd still have to conserve and change our lifestyles. I can see a die-off happening because every species overshoots and undergoes a die off. However, I think the die off might be an organized one. Not having the masses starve to death, but I can bet there might be legislature passed to limit the population. If agriculture is affected greatly by the dwindling supply of oil, countries would have to limit their populations and stop the population growth. Anyways that's my take.


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