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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

THE Panic-Don't Panic Thread (merged)

Discussions related to the physiological and psychological effects of peak oil on our members and future generations.

Calumny

Unread postby Guest » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 03:37:02

I think the personal attacks accusing people of intentionally sowing fear to profit from it are really quite inappropriate.

Have you taken even a minute to contemplate what you, so blithely, are saying and what it implies?

One, that individuals you, likely, have never met and may or may not have a complete picture of their perspectives or intent are deep down really callous and immoral-on what grounds? They are selling various books?

Two, that buyers or potential consumers for these books are too dumb to decide what they believe on their own but, you have somehow a better grasp on the truth and you are gonna set things straight. So write a book about it.

Three, that you've failed to grasp that, for better or worse(likely worse) profit equals awareness in this culture. If profit is being made on Peak Oil then people are learning about it. Nike is a word known the world over, but The Victory at Samonthrace is known to a far fewer number. One you pay for the other you look at for "free".

Would you consign the issue of Peak Oil to the narrow scope of the market that non or not for profit business models share and deny such a vital issue the vigorous dialogue that results when a product/issue/idea attains a visible market position?

We are all learning that the Invisible Hand is giving us the finger but if it is used to deliver the message of Peak Oil perhaps it will allow us to escape its grasping demise.



:P
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Unread postby nigel » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 05:47:47

On the profiteering side issue - I thought I had made my position clear:
1. I see nothing wrong with making an honest profit.
2. I do have a problem with creating panic for profit.
3. I believe the social management of profit is necessary (think monopolies and social taxation). I mention this for completeness.
4. I apologised for traducing those with purely altruistic motives.
5. I did not restrict my criticism of money making to books. I had in mind petroleum industry consultancy fees and the internet.

As to the world's population being able to individually reassess their own individual plans, this appears to me to be either an overdose of wishful thinking or a myopic focus on the self-centered delusion of self-preservation. The problem has to be tackled by societies, by all of us. I remember nutters running off to build their own nuclear bomb shelters under isolated houses - how stupid was that? Besides the nuclear winter did they really imagine that their 300,000,000 short-sighted fellow countrymen weren't going to turn up sooner or later to ask for a share of their stash of tinned beans? I strongly suggest that all those who are preparing for a future living in caves go and do so now.

Those who over-consume and live on debt will get hit sooner or later under any scenario. Recessions happen which increases capacity and reduces consumption. How can anyone really know what will be discovered? I find this whole approach perplexing. The conrucopians say we will find more large reserves, the Malthusians say we won't. That's helpful?

And just to give those Americans worrying about the cost of petrol/gasoline some food for thought, yesterday I passed a petrol station
in central London (England!) selling unleaded for 84pence Sterling per litre. How does that figure in dollars per gallon in the USA? What do you pay?

And by the way, I do not live in a cave!
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Unread postby OilBurner » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 06:09:05

As a quick reference. 84p per litre = 3.81 per gallon.
However US gallons are not the same as UK gallons, it's rougly 3.785 litres instead of 4.546 litres.
Therefore, it's about 3.17 pounds per US gallon, the current exchange rate is about 1.83, so that's about 5.81 dollars per US gallon we pay in the UK.

8O

That also explains why our European eyes pop out when we hear of US fuel economy figures - if they were in imperial gallons instead of US gallons, the figures would sound much better.
I.e. 25mpg (US) becomes 30mpg for us Euro types.
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Unread postby nigel » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 06:29:01

Oil Burner - I thought leaving our American friends to calculate that we pay $5.82 per US gallon might give them pause for thought. If they paid as much tax as we did they might waste less and spend the tax on public transport and energy research then the peak oil horizon might vanish into the distant haze. If they did that, the distant haze might also go..
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Unread postby OilBurner » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 07:03:16

I'm pretty certain average mpg figures would shoot up in the states if they paid the same level of tax as we do.
The demand for oil would drop a large amount if new car sales shifted towards vehicles like we drive.
No need for hybrids, hydrogen, air power etc etc. Just smaller cars with smaller engines, and we can afford to fill them up without too much of a struggle, even at nearly $6 a gallon!

However, the idea of all the tax money going into alternative fuels investment seems a distant dream.
For instance, in 2001 Tony Blair promised a measly 100m pounds in investment:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/1205018.stm

That compares to around 22 billion pounds raised in 2000 from fuel duty:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/925315.stm

It would be nice if there was a tax on aviation fuel here too, apparently that could raise 9.2 billion pounds a year:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/1205018.stm

Wouldn't it be great if all that was spent on improving the energy return from PVs or Wind Turbines?

p.s. sorry about jumping the gun on the fuel price conversion - I couldn't resist, as last time this came up, people got the figures all wrong and it didn't seem that bad in comparison.
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Unread postby nigel » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 07:51:07

Oil Burner - Point taken about the potential for US gallon confusion.

I voted for Tony Blair - I wish that was also a distant dream!

Sitting under the Heathrow flightpath, some 7 miles east - I wish they'd tax aviation fuel too. They could spend some of that £9.2bn on a few wave power generating barrages and a SE London tube!

Can anyone imagine the Americans, who consume over 25% of the world's oil, voting to tax themselves off the habit? As I intimated at the start of this, American culture is a large part of the problem. Perhaps I should change tack and suggest they all panic, drop out and rush off to live like Thoreau in their glorious countryside? What say you?
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Unread postby OilBurner » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 09:18:40

American culture certainly needs to be questioned. The impression I get is that many Americans seem to consider it their birthright to drive large engined V8 trucks. No matter how much more efficient these get by using hybrid technology, you simply cannot beat a small hatchback with a diesel engine. Add a hybrid to that and you're really talking. If Ford can get 42 US MPG out of a huge SUV, imagine would they could do if they made the Focus TDCI (that's diesel to non-car buffs) with a hybird electric engine? 100mpg could be possible or better.

To be fair though, I'm a bit of a petrolhead myself and would love a big, powerful petrol engine. Two things stop me, one is environmental concern, the other is cost. I don't think I'm unique in Europe in buying a smaller, more economical car because fuel costs are so high, as those that can afford it are still buying great big 4x4s.
As most people don't seem that bothered about taking personal responsibility (a generalisation yes, but likely to be broadly true), tax or very high fuel costs will be the only certain method of changing the culture.
Like you say though, there's no political will for higher taxation and the fuel costs are still relatively low, so barring mass desertion of the cities for the caves, not much will change.
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Unread postby Pops » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 11:10:34

So if the point is that people are panicking and running for the hills I don’t know who that is - aside from John, who may well have other motives as well. Matt still lives near San Francisco, Mad Scientist has lived in a rural area for years, and I’m taking advantage of the real estate bubble to buy a retirement home with no mortgage.

While it is true many people are talking about impending doom, from the posts on the Assessments and Plans thread (http://www.peakoil.com/postt321.html) not many people are doing anything drastic. Mostly “planning for as many things to happen as possible, even if what happens is nothing”.

My assessment is that way before the actual decline of oil becomes a problem; there will be big economic dislocations from multiple bubbles and shrinking reserve capacity. It simply makes no sense to me, to recognize there will be a huge transition down the road and not prepare to keep ones children fed. Whether its saving money, learning to garden, paying down debt, whatever your situation warrants and your budget allows.

It is much easier to ridicule people for attempting to make prudent preparations for what most here agree will be inevitable hardships of one kind or another, than it is to get off the internet, look at ones own vulnerabilities and actually do something.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
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Unread postby nigel » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 17:37:58

Pops - play fair! You Yanks constitute 5% of the world's population and waste/consume 25%+ of the world's oil. I'm delighted some of you are finally getting a grip on reality. If you read some of the postings on this site one would think you were the victims rather than the primary cause of the waste. The selfish survivalists make me sick. What about the rest of the human race?

Personally, I'm delighted some Americans are waking up to at least ONE of the potential global disasters on the near horizon.

If my vote counted for anything I would want Americans to travel while the gas lasts and see what is actually going on in the world. I worked with some USA Peace Corps people in the Third World 1975 and they were the salt of the earth - there are not enough Americans like them.

As to peak oil panic - read your National Geographic June 2004. No-one has a clue as to when the peak production will occur. 2006 - 2040?

Personally, I have more faith in your Mr Ahlbrandt than our Mr Campbell who has predicted the end since 1989 - and counting. What he's counting I leave to your imaginations.

In any time, under any circumstances, living under piles of debt is
for the birds. I have never ridiculed sensible living.

Won't anyone admit what they pay per US gallon in US dollars?

Ashamed? So you should be. It won't be you, (or me), who dies first from the rising price of oil.

Little wonder that that maniac Bin Liner hates us.
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Unread postby Pops » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 18:22:23

Nigel, I can see this will be on of those omnibus rant threads like the Bunker thread.

Earlier you said; “My single point was 'don't panic'.” I thought I made an argument that while some are exploring Doomer scenarios; there isn’t much evidence that many (here at least) are panicked.

I even offered a link to a thread where people here have said what it is they are doing; did you see any panic there? It doesn’t appear so to me.

Now you tell me I should be ashamed of myself for paying $2.30 for gas, wasting the world’s endowment, not wasting more by touring Africa, and not playing fair.

If playing fair means responding to an argument with an off-topic rant; then you are right; I concede the rest of my bandwidth.


For now. :wink:
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
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Unread postby Aaron » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 19:15:48

A reminder that America does a large share of the "heavy lifting" in several key industrial sectors, including billions in exported goods and services. All these industries require massive amounts of energy to support. While Americans do enjoy the inertia of a robust economy and a high standard of life, the per capita consumption isn't measured at my meter...
The problem is, of course, that not only is economics bankrupt, but it has always been nothing more than politics in disguise... economics is a form of brain damage.

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if I were a rich man . . .

Unread postby Guest » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 20:16:58

2. I do have a problem with creating panic for profit.

Nigel,

I don't really think this happens unless maybe a Goverment, or Big Big media or corporate players do it.

True PANIC is, in fact, by its nature, self-limiting.

I'm all too well aware how wasteful I am and I sure hope I don't run into anyone after the crash that is as mad about it as you appear to be.

Unless they happen to be God, in which case I have faith he will take a long-term and balanced view of my life and culture, not just my energy effeciency.
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Unread postby The_Virginian » Mon 21 Jun 2004, 20:42:49

Nigel,

We can't get a straight answer about 9/11, let alone about Oil from either the house of Saud, or the US gov. Oil is thicker than blood. Much of both has been spilt for naught. :(

Hidden reserves, quite possible, how substantial they would be is very questionable, I suppose enough to run the kingdom into the ground before the princes flew off to exile. :wink:

I understand the strain European governments put on the common folk. Sometimes it may even be justifiable like with petrol. recently in Virginia, they had a referendum on whether we should raise the state sales tax by one percent in order to IMPROVE the roads (so they claimed!). It was defeated by a 68% margin. (I voted against as well @ 3 years ago, besides we all know more roads = more trafic in the end from increased cars etc. etc.)

American HATE taxes...the Hanovarian kings learned that well. It is counterproductive to tell us otherwise...even if you are 100% correct.

As for americans consumption... Consumption is the engine of fiat currency, Growth is needed to prop up a fake (non gold backed) Dollar (even when the growth itself is often faked).

These are things that no amount of whining to my "congress-critter" will change.

Pax.
[urlhttp://www.youtube.com/watchv=Ai4te4daLZs&feature=related[/url] "My soul longs for the candle and the spices. If only you would pour me a cup of wine for Havdalah...My heart yearning, I shall lift up my eyes to g-d, who provides for my needs day and night."
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Unread postby nigel » Tue 22 Jun 2004, 07:23:54

Pops - ticking me off again. Well deserved, I'm sure.

Guest - OUR whole consumer way of life has a distinct lemming feel to it. If we meet in the dire circumstances you imagine I'm sure we'll agree to share out the beans 50/50.

Aaron - American generosity is everywhere, no question about that. But the waste! Are you giving back as much as you take out – ie supporting the energy need equivalent of what – 1.5bn people? (I don't know how to answer for my own excess x% either so it was not just a cheap shot).

Virginian – The Saudi’s made a concerted effort to rebut Simmons and he sets out a much more positive appraisal in World Energy Vol 7 No 1 2004 than one might have expected from him. Your Mr Ahlbrandt seems like an honest man, he worked in Saudi, knows the Saudis who were in the delegation who visited the US recently to discuss their reserves and he feels comfortable with his projections. His figures have been used to show (Nat Geog 6/2004) that the world outside the Middle East/North Africa peaks in 2023 and world with ME/NA peaking in 2040.

2040 is 36 years away – to the peak. On that basis, I still think it fair to say a lot of the talk on Peak Oil revolving around disaster preparations is premature and panicky.

I don’t know anyone who likes being taxed.
Are not taxation and civilisation inextricably connected?
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Panic is starting

Unread postby NevadaGhosts » Mon 21 Mar 2005, 01:59:16

Seems that more and more average people are beginning to get worried and panicky about the quickly rising oil and gasoline prices. Check out this Yahoo thread regarding rising oil prices article:

Yahoo news article: link

Thread and posts in response to article: link

Here are some posts from that thread which mention peak oil/etc:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')EAKOIL!!!PEAKOIL!!!!!PEAKOIL!!! by: ganadoboy_2004 03/18/05 04:38 pm, Msg: 510 of 1028:
He// oil will be $90-100 a barrel by next summer and $150-180 the summer after. Gas will be over $3.00 a gallon by next summer, and $5.00 the summer after. Tough sh*t for humans, oil only lasts for a certain time, and with pretty much no alternative energy in place we are screwed WEll, see ya back in the stone age in about 10 years.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '&')quot;"peak oil"" is Arrogant VOO DOO BS.
by: gatwn (123/M) 03/18/05 04:44 pm, Msg: 584 of 1028, 1 recommendation

Oil RESERVES (proven and esp. UNproven) are PLENTIFUL, BUT Oil production CAPACITY is tight, and demand is growing, and THAT is why for the next few months or years, UNTIL new prod. capacity outstrips demand, prices will not crash.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')upply and Demand Economics. by: rlk691 (37/M/Baton Rouge) 03/18/05 04:54 pm, Msg: 686 of 1028:
Nobody's fault. Just get over it. If you don't like it don't drive your car. It's not going to get any better. Ever. That's my prediction. Do a web search for Hubbert's peak.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t's Going Nowhere But Up... by: sparky_mahoney 03/18/05 04:59 pm, Msg: 748 of 1028:
and won't ever stop. Peak Oil is almost here. Read it or ignore it at your own peril. The Party's Over: Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies

http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/de ... 4/sr=8-1/r ef=pd_bbs_1/104-5745124-9004707?v=glance&s=books&n=507846

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')HAT THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW by: youropinionmatters2 03/18/05 05:03 pm
Msg: 797 of 1028:
CAN BE FOUND DOING A SEARCH ON "PEAK OIL" OR BY GOING TO http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'R')e: WHAT THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO KNOW by: rlk691 (37/M/Baton Rouge) 03/18/05 05:06 pm, Msg: 831 of 1028:
Ever notice how many people posting to these boards choose to ignore posts referring to this theory, which I happen to think is well argued and supported by data.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')HIS COULD DESTROY AMERICA ECONOMY by: willneverforgett 03/18/05 05:03 pm, Msg: 790 of 1028, 1 recommendation:
Do you all realize that these high gas prices could DESTROY America's weak economy? The truck drivers taking products to the stores with have to pay more for gas, and the stores will have to charge the customers MORE MONEY. Not to mention what high gas prices will do to the airline industry. THIS COULD DESTROY AMERICA

The panic and paranoia of the American people will accelerate soon. The beginning of the end is here. I recommend that everyone read through those posts. There is fear and uncertainty in many of the posts. Now multiply this by millions of other paranoid and panicking US citizens. It's going to get much worse very soon. Just wait till peak oil becomes total mainstream. 8O

But I will admit that peak oil is much more mainstream than I thought! :shock:
Last edited by Ferretlover on Mon 09 Mar 2009, 20:12:15, edited 11 times in total.
Reason: Merged with THE Panic-Don't Panic Thread.
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Unread postby NevadaGhosts » Mon 21 Mar 2005, 03:18:18

And here's another thread regarding this article:

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&n ... gas_prices

Article thread:

http://news.messages.yahoo.com/bbs?acti ... tart=18172

I quoted some of the smart posts. Didn't quote any of the stupid ones:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'w')e're running out of oil
by: laidback643 (M/CA) 03/20/05 10:18 pm
Msg: 17877 of 18175

The writing's on the wall... you can outsmart the populace, pretend peak oil is still years away, blame it on doom-sayers... but the market knows better... listen!!


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'l')et's face it, we are oil junkies
by: sak54757 03/20/05 09:33 pm
Msg: 17487 of 18184

Our economy and agricultural system is based on cheap oil. 2/3 of the economy is consumer goods spending and that is directly impacted by higher oil prices. As peak oil approaches and we spend $350/barrel to secure oil supplies with the military don't you think it time to switch to something renewable and a sustainable economy. Lets kick the habit, just say no!


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hat's causing it?
by: ogobeone (45/M/Seattle, WA) 03/20/05 09:03 pm
Msg: 17135 of 18195

1. Falling dollar makes foreign goods/services more expensive to buy, domestic goods/services cheaper to sell. This is caused by a combination of having kept inflation down and an easing of borrowing by the Federal government, placing downward pressure on interest rates and a reduction in relative preference for lending to the US economy/government.
2. China and other 3rd world nations finding new wealth. They are buying more oil.
3. That old prediction that oil supplies are soon to run out -- it's coming true.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')il production will peak out soon
by: spicymos 03/20/05 09:01 pm
Msg: 17097 of 18196

Expect it within the next 5 years. Add that with the ever increasing demand of oil around the world, it will really be hitting us hard soon. Especially all the geniuses who invested in giant SUVs. Right now this is nothing. In any case, we're never gonna see gasoline for under $2 again.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')EAK OIL!!!
by: tipscommissar (36/M/Chicagolandia) 03/20/05 08:46 pm
Msg: 16910 of 18200
1 recommendation

Just thought I'd remind you all.

If you aren't familiar with the term, google it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')MERICA NEEDS TO STOP GROWING
by: nord45ca 03/20/05 08:43 pm
Msg: 16880 of 18201

Drawdown, Overshoot, Crash, Die-Off

From William Catton's book Overshoot (1980)

America should try to stabilize the size of its population.

More people means more demand for depleting vital resources (oil and natural gas)


http://dieoff.org/page14.htm

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'p')eak oil time?
by: sak54757 03/20/05 08:00 pm
Msg: 16383 of 18206

let's face it, sooner or later production will peak and our cheap oil dependent economy/food supply will be in trouble.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '8')4,000,000 (million)
by: daveiscool40 (40/M) 03/20/05 06:25 pm
Msg: 16271 of 18206

barrels a day. Thats what the world uses in oil. Multiply that by 365 days a year. Guess what? It's running out. It will be a slow way down, but it will run out. Don't kid yourself. Enjoy what we have now.

http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/
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Unread postby savethehumans » Mon 21 Mar 2005, 04:23:03

8O

I think the American people scare me as much, if not more, than the American government and/or the Globalized Oil & Gas companies. They are going to believe ANYTHING but the truth--because the truth stares them in the face every time they look in a mirror, and you can't have THAT, now, can you?

I'm really, really afraid of what a panicked American population is going to do....
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Unread postby clv101 » Mon 21 Mar 2005, 04:29:18

There does seem to be a reasonable degree of understanding in many Internet forums. Just go to a random forum and search of peak oill - there's often a thread.
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Unread postby BorneoRagnarok » Mon 21 Mar 2005, 04:32:47

Sorry to hijack your thread for my personal rant. The panic do happens here in East Malaysia. Complaints about higher costs of living, increasing random crime rate, homeless rate, massive credit cards debts, Big Brother.

I had to post something before I got killed. Random killing is popular now.
Yesterday , someone got killed over a parking space. They are fighting for a free parking space. :? 8O If I don't post here for 3 months in a row, administrator of this forum can consider me dead and append (Deceased) to my nickname.

Car culture is killing all of use. One at a time.
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Unread postby NevadaGhosts » Mon 21 Mar 2005, 04:37:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BorneoRagnarok', 'S')orry to hijack your thread for my personal rant. The panic do happens here in East Malaysia. Complaints about higher costs of living, increasing random crime rate, homeless rate, massive credit cards debts, Big Brother.

I had to post something before I got killed. Random killing is popular now.
Yesterday , someone got killed over a parking space. They are fighting for a free parking space. :? 8O If I don't post here for 3 months in a row, administrator of this forum can consider me dead and append (Deceased) to my nickname.

Car culture is killing all of use. One at a time.


Notice how Americans are freaking out all over the internet (and in the US) about gasoline rising to $2+ gasoline per gallon. $2 per gallon is nothing compared to the prices that are coming soon. Things are only now starting to get a little bit bumpy regarding gasoline and oil prices. Just wait until Americans start having gasoline shortages and power outages. It's not going to be pretty.
Last edited by NevadaGhosts on Mon 21 Mar 2005, 04:42:45, edited 3 times in total.
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