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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Economic growth with declining energy?

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Will our economy survive continuous Oil/Energy decline?

Yes
36
No votes
No
167
No votes
maybe (see comments)
35
No votes
I don't know
20
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Total votes : 258

Unread postby Mircea » Wed 09 May 2007, 13:20:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'H')ow about if consumerism was sublimated into a virtual realm.. identity expressed through consumption and material ownership could be replaced by a low energy virtual consumer society where ones bling is virtual...

ok that is extremely thin


Not really. I don't personally care for it as an idea, but barring a cataclysmic event, it would take generations to re-educate people into that kind of mentality. Even worse, the entire time you're trying to re-educate people, you'd be competing with Madison Avenue and the Advertising Industry, which is the driving force behind consumerism.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'i')f one wanted to create economic growth through people buying things and services that do not consume INCREASINGLY DISPROPORTIONATE amounts of energy perhaps virtual shopping is a possibility?


That ability is maxed out. Even now, people are finding that what they see on the internet isn't what arrives at their door. Virtual shopping is fine for books and music and a few other things, but for the most part people want to examine what they're going to purchase before hand, especially if they're going to spend lot's of money.
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Unread postby mididoctors » Fri 11 May 2007, 02:02:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mircea', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'H')ow about if consumerism was sublimated into a virtual realm.. identity expressed through consumption and material ownership could be replaced by a low energy virtual consumer society where ones bling is virtual...

ok that is extremely thin


Not really. I don't personally care for it as an idea, but barring a cataclysmic event, it would take generations to re-educate people into that kind of mentality. Even worse, the entire time you're trying to re-educate people, you'd be competing with Madison Avenue and the Advertising Industry, which is the driving force behind consumerism.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'i')f one wanted to create economic growth through people buying things and services that do not consume INCREASINGLY DISPROPORTIONATE amounts of energy perhaps virtual shopping is a possibility?


That ability is maxed out. Even now, people are finding that what they see on the internet isn't what arrives at their door. Virtual shopping is fine for books and music and a few other things, but for the most part people want to examine what they're going to purchase before hand, especially if they're going to spend lot's of money.


I think you misunderstand me.. I mean the things they buy never arrive at the front door because they are virtual things.... for their online/cyber exsistence

madison avenue is not a competitor in such a scenario...it is selling these virtual items (ie virtual things) as it would real things

I don't see why it should take generations to educate people... huge transitions in society can take place relatively quickly.. people are either going to get into it or not.

the main problem with the idea IMO is its nonsense..ie people will never go for it.. but the again people do think this new low profile shaving unit is the best a man can get..so you never know

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Unread postby Ender » Sun 13 May 2007, 05:15:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '
')Are you kidding? $7/gal gasoline would utterly destroy any economy. I'm not singling you out, Jack, just using your quote for a reference point. Get rid of the old gas guzzlers? To whom? The side of the road or the junkyard? Too many people here do not understand the far-reaching repercussions of rising fuel costs.

All fuel related jobs involving "leisure fuel use" will be gone over night, along with all the industries behind them. Does anyone actually think people are going to still buy boats, motorhomes, private airplanes, yachts, jet-skis, snowmobiles, rent cars, leave their lights on, run air conditioners, and go on vacation when gas is $7.00 a gallon?


Old thread. But it makes me laugh hearing yanks carry on like that about how $7 for gasoline (or petrol, as we call it) would destroy the economy.

Lets see, I pay A$1.30 a litre at the moment. At current exchange rates, that's more like US$1.10. As I understand, there's four litres in a gallon (in round figures), thus I fill up my car and motorbike paying the Australian dollar equivalent of $4.50/gallon.

I use something like 50L of petrol a fortnight, so even at the equivalent of the $7/gallon that (it is said) would destroy the economy and reduce everyone to sitting on the footpath with wooden bowls, my fuel bill would be around A$100 a fortnight. That's shared between two people, and we could comfortably afford it. It wouldn't even change our consumption pattern - $2 a litre we'd notice but it wouldn't hurt enough to change the way we do things. $5 a litre (roughly $16/gallon in US dollars) would be more like it - I'd drive the car less and ride the motorbike more, and probably get the tram to work, if I could physically get on it.

Those who drive guzzling 4WD's (SUV's, as you Americans call them) and who choose to live out in suburbia beyond the tram tracks might feel the pinch at two bucks a litre. They might even have to think about buying a smaller car or getting the train to work. Poor dears.

And we have the third-cheapest fuel in the OECD. The Euros already pay equivalent of $7/gallon or more. Has it destroyed their economy?

The gradual rise in fuel prices that we're now seeing is going to be a very good thing. It's encouraging people who used to pay 80c a litre for petrol to think twice when they buy their next car because now it's $1.30. Sure, they whinge, but they consider smaller cars for the next purchase. The longer the prices climb gradually without skyrocketing, the better adapted we'll be.

And this, again, is why I say the United States will fare worse than most in the post-peak world. Because they think $7 a gallon for fuel is ridiculous and will cause the sky to fall in.
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Unread postby Mircea » Sun 13 May 2007, 17:32:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mircea', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'H')ow about if consumerism was sublimated into a virtual realm.. identity expressed through consumption and material ownership could be replaced by a low energy virtual consumer society where ones bling is virtual...

ok that is extremely thin


Not really. I don't personally care for it as an idea, but barring a cataclysmic event, it would take generations to re-educate people into that kind of mentality. Even worse, the entire time you're trying to re-educate people, you'd be competing with Madison Avenue and the Advertising Industry, which is the driving force behind consumerism.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'i')f one wanted to create economic growth through people buying things and services that do not consume INCREASINGLY DISPROPORTIONATE amounts of energy perhaps virtual shopping is a possibility?


That ability is maxed out. Even now, people are finding that what they see on the internet isn't what arrives at their door. Virtual shopping is fine for books and music and a few other things, but for the most part people want to examine what they're going to purchase before hand, especially if they're going to spend lot's of money.


I think you misunderstand me.. I mean the things they buy never arrive at the front door because they are virtual things.... for their online/cyber exsistence


Sorry, I did misunderstand you. However, what you're suggesting is that consumerism is an addiction, perhaps even a neurosis, and people can get their "fix" buying virtual things, which maybe isn't too far off the mark.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'I') don't see why it should take generations to educate people... huge transitions in society can take place relatively quickly...

Well, yes they can, even more rapidly if Mao, Lenin or Pol Pot are providing guidance.
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Unread postby Mircea » Sun 13 May 2007, 20:40:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ender', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '
')Are you kidding? $7/gal gasoline would utterly destroy any economy. I'm not singling you out, Jack, just using your quote for a reference point. Get rid of the old gas guzzlers? To whom? The side of the road or the junkyard? Too many people here do not understand the far-reaching repercussions of rising fuel costs.

All fuel related jobs involving "leisure fuel use" will be gone over night, along with all the industries behind them. Does anyone actually think people are going to still buy boats, motorhomes, private airplanes, yachts, jet-skis, snowmobiles, rent cars, leave their lights on, run air conditioners, and go on vacation when gas is $7.00 a gallon?


Old thread. But it makes me laugh hearing yanks carry on like that about how $7 for gasoline (or petrol, as we call it) would destroy the economy.

Lets see, I pay A$1.30 a litre at the moment. At current exchange rates, that's more like US$1.10. As I understand, there's four litres in a gallon (in round figures), thus I fill up my car and motorbike paying the Australian dollar equivalent of $4.50/gallon.


It's important to understand that the US has a "car culture" and that everything revolves around "the car."

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('mididoctors', 'T')he gradual rise in fuel prices that we're now seeing is going to be a very good thing. It's encouraging people who used to pay 80c a litre for petrol to think twice when they buy their next car because now it's $1.30. Sure, they whinge, but they consider smaller cars for the next purchase. The longer the prices climb gradually without skyrocketing, the better adapted we'll be.

And this, again, is why I say the United States will fare worse than most in the post-peak world. Because they think $7 a gallon for fuel is ridiculous and will cause the sky to fall in.


A post-peak world? No way. The US will bite the dust in the pre-peak world. A lot of economists are saying the US can handle $4/gallon in the short term. I don't see any evidence of that. The US could barely manage at $3.50/gallon and it's $3.29 where I'm at and people are already slashing their wrists.

The only way people in the US can cut fuel costs is to use public transit. In the county I live in, 400,000 have no immediate access to public transit (they have to drive 10 to 20 minutes to a neighboring township), 300,000 have limited access to public tranist (they have 2 or 3 "express" buses in the morning and 2-3 in the evening), and the other 300,000 have some access to public transit. The public transit routes are the same ones in use since the 1950s before suburbia existed. Unless you work in the central down-town district, or on the way, you'll have to transfer buses 2 or 3 times, and you still might have to walk 1-3 miles to work assuming you work anywhere near a bus route in the first place. The neighboring 5 counties have no public transit so if you work there like many people do, or live there and work here like the majority do, you're screwed.

The national government could provide funding to the regional public transportation authorities to expand both bus service and bus routes, but I don't see where they will be able to find the money.

Alas, there are many who cannot cut their fuel costs for any number of reasons. People reduce consumer spending to pay for fuel, and that affects lots of businesses. Starbucks and those fast-food restaurants that rely on commuters get hit first. They cut back on employees because of reduced sales, then the bigger restaurants get hit. Inventories start piling up at retail shops and they cut back orders, then manufacturers cut back over-time. It continues to get worse, then the lay-offs start (or reduction in hours for non-union workers).

Fuel prices continue to rise, as do the prices of consumer goods. Wages are stagnant. Then more layoffs and the plant closings start. The US economy will be contracting and in negative growth long before you'll see $7/gallon.

I predict that within 10 years, the percentage of single parent families will drop from 31% to less than 12%. Marriages of convenience for money's sake. About 26% of Americans live alone now, and that will probably be cut in half also as people make other living arrangements to save money or more correctly they'll be making other living arrangements just to have money.

The run up to PO will slowly crush the US economy like a giant anaconda. By the time PO arrives, PO will be passe and just a minor footnote in history for most Americans, who will be pre-occupied with other more important things, like how to set up a clothes line to hang clothes out to dry and learning the fine art of making home-made beer, wine and spirits, since they won't be able to afford to buy it.

I think it's funny. Maybe it will teach them a lesson in humility, but I doubt it. They'll just find some excuse to invade Venezuela and take their oil.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby Blacksmith » Mon 14 May 2007, 01:28:46

I have heard the oil peaked in the USA in 1977 and that world oil will peak somewhere between 2010 and 2018. Now as I see it everyone then worries about depleating oil production, the tail of the bell curve. I believe because of recovery technology this tail will at first be quite sharp, then will gradually become skewed declining slowly to zero.
The main restaints are the cost and timing of the recovery. The higher the price of oil the more the incentives to try tertiary and possibly quaternary recovery methods.
Additionally, an oil resevoir has a lot of oil left in it even after various recovery techniques have been implemented, possibly the only exception to this being in situ burning.
However, be warned this type of oil will not be cheap and may reach such a cost as to only be used for essential goods and services.
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Unread postby Ender » Mon 14 May 2007, 09:24:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mircea', '
')It's important to understand that the US has a "car culture" and that everything revolves around "the car."

A post-peak world? No way. The US will bite the dust in the pre-peak world. A lot of economists are saying the US can handle $4/gallon in the short term. I don't see any evidence of that. The US could barely manage at $3.50/gallon and it's $3.29 where I'm at and people are already slashing their wrists.


Well, Americans will adapt or perish, I suppose. But the Euros and Japanese seem to be getting along OK at prices equivalent to $7+ a gallon, and I pay $4.50 and barely notice it.

If the Yanks are so entrenched in this 'car culture' and so unable to change it, then they probably have too faint a constitution for what's around the corner. But I don't think they are. There's nothing inherent in being American that means you'll develop some terrible disease if you get into a small car or touch a bicycle.
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Unread postby What_Went_Wrong » Sat 26 May 2007, 07:57:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '
')Bingo! Our entire economy is geared to the cheap price of oil. 40% of our oil goes to gasoline. The big consumer of fuel is the airlines. Anything over $30/barrel and they can not operate at a profit. Passing on the increase to consumers at 10,000 flights/day would cascade through the economy. Look at how much effect 911 had. Like I said before, it is the canary in the mineshaft.


Sorry to quote a very old post, but now that oil is well above $30 a barrel, are you suggesting that airlines no longer operate at a profit? Or has your thinking changed over the last 3 years now you have more knowledge on the matter?

Just curious, cause the cliff seems so damn close now....
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Unread postby MC2 » Tue 10 Jul 2007, 08:33:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mircea', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ender', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '
')Are you kidding? $7/gal gasoline would utterly destroy any economy.

A post-peak world? No way. The US will bite the dust in the pre-peak world. A lot of economists are saying the US can handle $4/gallon in the short term. I don't see any evidence of that. The US could barely manage at $3.50/gallon and it's $3.29 where I'm at and people are already slashing their wrists.

I think it's funny. Maybe it will teach them a lesson in humility, but I doubt it. They'll just find some excuse to invade Venezuela and take their oil.


Quoted patchwork for emphasis - I visited Korea in May, and people there were doing very well on 6 dollar a gallon gas. Just a lot fewer cars (per capita) on the roads. As far as the U.S., gas is still incredibly cheap here (at 3.00). Even when it's spiked up to 3.30 or so, I do not notice any real slow down in people's ridiculous waste of the resource. They still shuttle Skip and Jen into the soccer games and practices every day. When I see suburbia start to think about conserving, I'll believe demand destruction can work here.

It'll take at least 5.00/gallon to make a dent here.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby Revi » Wed 11 Jul 2007, 11:03:21

I think that economic growth is possible with declining energy, but only for those who "get it". As an example, the lobstermen here on the coast of Maine use about $250 worth of diesel per day to get their catch. If they put in solar/electric trap haulers and used a much smaller diesel they could cut their cost in half. They would be catching the same amount for half the cost. They might still be able to compete. This is just an example. The carpenter that uses a small pickup is keeping more of what he earns. Anyone who switches to more efficient ways of doing things will do better. Those who don't will be out of business. That's just the way it goes.

I just read 1000 Barrels per Second. He says the same thing. Now is the time to change things. This isn't going away. Crisis is opportunity.

http://globalpublicmedia.com/peter_tert ... per_second
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Unread postby I_Like_Plants » Wed 11 Jul 2007, 21:32:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ender', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Mircea', '
')It's important to understand that the US has a "car culture" and that everything revolves around "the car."

A post-peak world? No way. The US will bite the dust in the pre-peak world. A lot of economists are saying the US can handle $4/gallon in the short term. I don't see any evidence of that. The US could barely manage at $3.50/gallon and it's $3.29 where I'm at and people are already slashing their wrists.


Well, Americans will adapt or perish, I suppose. But the Euros and Japanese seem to be getting along OK at prices equivalent to $7+ a gallon, and I pay $4.50 and barely notice it.

If the Yanks are so entrenched in this 'car culture' and so unable to change it, then they probably have too faint a constitution for what's around the corner. But I don't think they are. There's nothing inherent in being American that means you'll develop some terrible disease if you get into a small car or touch a bicycle.


Great stuff!! And indeed. a bicyclist is considered not even really human.

Several months ago, I tried playing "my" (rented) violin for tips on University Avenue in Palo Alto. I made something like $1.50 lol. Mainly because I was not very good, I didn't have much volume, and I should have been standing up, jigging around a bit, and playing something simple'n'bouncy like some fiddle tune stuff. But the looks I got from people were like I'd expect to get if I were the anthrax virus.

One thing you'll see over and over again if you're a street musician is, the little kids love it! They'll rivet their attention on you, and dance if t there's any rhythm at all, and it's just heavenly. Their parents always hate this, and will drag them away, since as Good Americans(tm) they have to learn to be pleasure-avoidant.

Which brings us back to bicycles and even small cars. Small cars are fun to drive, and riding a bicycle makes you feel great. These are Un-American Values (tm) and have to be suppressed.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby sparky » Tue 24 Jul 2007, 09:58:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Blacksmith', ' ')" Now as I see it everyone then worries about ...the tail of the bell curve. I believe because of recovery technology this tail will at first be quite sharp, then will gradually become skewed declining slowly to zero.
The main restraints are the cost and timing of the recovery. The higher the price of oil the more the incentives to try tertiary and possibly quaternary recovery methods.
Additionally, an oil reservoir has a lot of oil left in it ......However, be warned this type of oil will not be cheap


Indeed blacksmith , the peak is quite irrelevant , the sting is in the tail !!
The U.S citizens are going to discover what most of the world knew already , there is life after 10$ a gallon !
the problem is that a decline in energy supply increase the cost of alll items ,
they call it inflation but it's really the money in your wallet which is shrinking ,
The net result is that the food part of your budget is increasing while , the discretionary part is decreasing
........leading to less spending
........leading to an economic recession
....... leading to unemployment
....... leading to depression
of course people adapt.. mostly by tightening their belt
government will apply economic plaster on a gangrenous economy ,
but less taxes revenues and more outlays will make them create monopoly money , this has happened before

The difference is that it will get worst every year for a century , driving most people to the lowest possible wage , the " Lassale minimum "
working for the food sufficient to come back working tomorrow ,
it's the point when it is a rational economic decision to sell yourself and your family in slavery to have a feeding job ,
even to fight for it if need be !!

The last time the world population was nearly sustainable was pre coal in early 17 th century
The population was ~0.6 billion it is now ~ 7.0 billions

of course it will be different by country and in each by region and classes ,
There is three basic scenarios
_ The cliff , all hell break loose leading to massive downward population adjustment
_ the glide , authoritarian regime enforce iron discipline , pol pot style
_ The stairs , a succession of steep crisis followed by stable periods

The best outcome is in fact the cliff , it allow some residual resources to be left by the time the population has stabilised in number and lifestyle
The worst is the glide , all the resources would be used at the bottom of the curve
really the stairs are the probable response , with a beggar the other general attitude , resources war and civil unrest to match

It really is a question of how steep the energy down slope will be

At -3% a year , all bets are off

:!:
Last edited by sparky on Tue 24 Jul 2007, 10:08:00, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby Roccland » Tue 24 Jul 2007, 10:03:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')t -3% a year , all bets are off


Nice post!!

I think all bets are off ...yes?
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Unread postby Denny » Tue 24 Jul 2007, 17:09:54

[quote="I_Like_Plants]
Several months ago, I tried playing "my" (rented) violin for tips on University Avenue in Palo Alto. I made something like $1.50 lol. Mainly because I was not very good, I didn't have much volume, and I should have been standing up, jigging around a bit, and playing something simple'n'bouncy like some fiddle tune stuff. But the looks I got from people were like I'd expect to get if I were the anthrax virus.

One thing you'll see over and over again if you're a street musician is, the little kids love it! They'll rivet their attention on you, and dance if t there's any rhythm at all, and it's just heavenly. Their parents always hate this, and will drag them away, since as Good Americans(tm) they have to learn to be pleasure-avoidant. [/quote]

We have been well trained to accept our entertainment only from approved sources. Informal stuff like you are talking about here is somehow anarchic. And the new generation is even more rigid about this. Funny to think that only a few generations ago, for most people who did not live in the cities where they could attend professional musicians, all music they heard was done by relative amateurs. Yet, more people sang back then, or played an instrument, and likely they enjoyed themselves more than we do today.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby sparky » Wed 25 Jul 2007, 03:03:46

.

Well yes , do we live a better life with a large power usage , probably not
that's why I'm not too much screaming for fusion research ,
if we had more energy we would probably just get to be bigger arseholes .
It is dubious if the oll' planet can take much more of us anyway
and we might get a bit of soul in the process

Still , it's easy to be cool with air conditioning on ,
I've done some bits of back breaking labor and being decadent beat it anyday

:-D
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby Alcassin » Wed 25 Jul 2007, 13:43:43

Further economic growth is impossible with declining energy.

I try to keep the energy as an equivalent of labour. To make a product you need material and labour/energy, service needs a product and energy. So production and service needs input of energy.

GDP = C + I + G + En

C - Consumption
En - export netto (it is consumption abroad)
I - investment
G - government spending (consumption from taxes + debt and investment from taxes + debt)

So
GDP = Consumption + Investment

Unlimited exponential growth therefore needs an increase of consumption and investment to create more consumption and to invest more to create more consumption. THIS IS GROWTH.

Unlimited growth then needs all-time energy (labour or fossil) inputs, and materials to meet all-time growing investment and consumption. Conserving is only decreasing the energy input with all-time growing economy it will reach the level from which it was conserved.

Productivity = Efficiency = Energy input per unit produced.

The more we are efficient per unit the more we have the money to invest, so we are going to increase production therefore there is no conservation effort without shrinking economy. When growth drops from 5% to 1% the economy still grows = created more goods & services.

In capitalism you MUST reinvest money to the economy because if not - your competitor will do it and he will be able to increase producitvity, and get more products with the same energy input. That's why he can lower prices. And if so - he will get more share of market, and then he has the ability to reinvest his money. That's why capitalism is cornucopian from its roots. YOU CANNOT GROW FOREVER.

In declining economy only the most ruthless and greedy will prevail. And that will turn the economy back to slavery - while more energy from labour will be needed. Sorry to interrupt you "capitalism is cool and natural" guys, but if capitalism was so natural it should have been in ancient Egypt.
Peak oil is only an indication and a premise of limits to growth on a finite planet.
Denial is the most predictable of all human responses.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 26 Jul 2007, 03:51:55

So if my Casio watch costs $50 and my Rolex $5000 are you suggesting that my Rolex has 100 times as much 'energy' in it because you seem to imply a 1:1 ratio between energy use and GDP growth?

And yet you go on to say that productivity gains (i.e. using less land, labor, capital and energy per unit of output) are possible?

Further you have not stipulated whether you mean nominal GDP, in say dollar terms, or percentage gains?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n the News: Global energy supplies tighten
A report released Monday by the International Energy Agency forecasts a continued squeeze of the global oil and gas markets in the coming years, due to tighter supplies coupled with increased demand. Against this backdrop, a new Quarterly chart pack shows that growth in demand can be cut in half or more over the next 15 years—without reducing the benefits end users enjoy.

Source: Curbing the growth of global energy demand

And

Making the most of the world's energy


I can almost accept that continued GDP growth in percentage terms will be difficult with declining energy even though studies from McKinsey suggest that we can make existing supplies go a lot further by cutting waste. That is run the same GDP on less energy therefore freeing up that surplus energy for more GDP growth as the case may be.
By cutting subsidies for example.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n 14 states the retail price for gasoline is less than the world price for oil (comparison data is taken as of November 2006; one liter of crude oil cost $ 0.38 at that time). It is possible due to considerable state subsidies. Turkmenistan (2 US cents per liter), Venezuela (3 US cents), Iran (9 cents), Lybia (13 cents) and Saudi Arabia (16 cents) are out of competition. Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Egypt, Yemen, Oman, Algiers, Brunei and United Arab Emirates also sell gasoline at very cheap prices.

The second group of states (10 countries) also subsidizes gasoline prices, though to less extent. They are Azerbaijan (46 cents per liter), Trinidad and Tobago (43 cents), Ecuador, Angola, Nigeria, Malaysia, Bolivia, Indonesia, Syria and Argentina (62 cents).


Source: Summary of World Gasoline Prices

But, of course, we are talking about post peak oil depletion, so there are natural limits to how far we can stretch existing supply.


However, I cannot accept that GDP growth, in say dollar terms, cannot expand with declining energy. Simply because as energy declines in absolute terms, its value will increase in absolute terms as well as the price of everything that depends on that energy in its production and distribution.

Also, by definition, as one source of energy depletes, such as petroleum, it automatically makes all other remaining energy more valuable. We may be able to run less GDP in percentage terms with less total energy, but the remaining energy may become very valuable in monetary terms (i.e. hydro, nuclear, geo-thermal, solar, fuel cell, bio-mass, etc.).

Totally inadequate to run our existing economy in its present form, but lets call it 'an invaluable resource' if you are sitting next to it, and can use it to run a factory while everyone else is making goods by hand. You want to talk about a sustainable competitive advantage? Locate your food canning, preserving factory, for example, next to a fixed source of renewable energy close to water and rail.

You have made some good points, but you need to re-think some of your arguments and conclusions.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby Alcassin » Thu 26 Jul 2007, 06:21:07

Mr Bill:

I defend my stance ;) Sum up energy to create 50$ casio and 5000$ Rolex. I only meant that Casio and Rolex when produced must have energy inputs - GDP is a sum, period.
Add to this effect of scale, total production, energy efficiency, raw materials used and Rolex may cost 100 times more than 1 Casio.

GDP in nominal terms can always grow as there are more money on market. Simply - inflation will mean more growth in nominal terms. In Dollar terms, Yen terms GDP can grow but nominal GDP is worthless. ECONOMY GROWTH IS PRODUCING MORE AND MORE GOODS AND SERVICES NOT PRINTING MORE AND MORE MONEY.

GDP in real terms and in PPP cannot grow forever with decreasing energy input - to do this ultimately you have to invent perpetuum mobile. It doesn't mean much if it is Rolex, Casio, no logo t-shirt or ermenegildo zegna. Every company on Earth must earn profits, so they have to sell more, with growing cost of energy - they will have to make cuts. Every corporation must care about shareholders and pay them, so investment in conservation (and thus cutting) will be always too late. They plan few years ahead, not decades.

With globalised production, the energy input in transport is growing. You can't replace global fleet over night. You can't replace air fleet and all automobiles to cut energy consumption. There is no massive replacement, better "new stuff" must be first invented and produced on massive scale. When the transport efficiency isn't higher than depletion rate = TSHTF. I don't believe in every year 4% growing efficiency in fuel consumption of transport - because every year you will have to replace more and more ships, trucks, airplanes so on. And when there will be less and less oil these conserving means of transport will have to be replaced by something else in the same rate. And when this happens - we will see Peak NG.

MrBill - when oil-producing countries will rise their prices - it will be death to their economy. And for global demand it will be drop in a bucket. After few years with decling supply of oil we will be at the same point. And remaining energy technologies will not help your truck from your ultra-non-existing-sustainable factory, which is not subsidized (when existing-non-sustainable-mass-corporations are), to get resources there and move from there to expand.

Yes there is still correlation between energy usage and growth of economy. When the GDP drops - the markets panic and they are making things a lot worser, because the economy falls below the rate of energy usage, and when they recover they will be at the same point after some time - shock after shock. Capitalism is cornucopian, from bigger efficiency (together with Jevons Paradox) you use more and more stuff. And stuff is never made out of thin air, never falls during rain and is not made by invisible hands.

Still with depletion rate there ultimately will be less and less plastic. I really don't know how are we going to replace this.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby sparky » Thu 26 Jul 2007, 09:31:03

.

I'm not much of an expert but I look upon wealth as power usage ,
in australia we are using about 7 Kw per day per capita ,
the world average is 2 Kw per day per capita .
at 0.5 Kw that is the basic survival line

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/e ... us_GDP.png



.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 26 Jul 2007, 11:30:41

Thanks for the clarification. So it really has zero to do with capitalism, as it is ultimately consumption that causes scarcity, and not unlimited growth to feed the beast.

You are right, each corporation, needs to generate a profit to pay its shareholders and attract capital to stay in business. But profits are not the same as growth.

There are two ways to grow your bottomline. One is by increasing sales, and the other is by cutting costs.

P = R - C

So efficiency gains do matter despite what Jevon's Paradox might suggest otherwise. If you produce the same volume of goods & services as your competitor at a lower cost by making better use out of your own land, labor, capital, energy and intangible assets then you will earn more profits, and as you said, then be able to invest more in even more productivity enhancements. This is either forces your competitor to also increase their own efficiency or retreat from head to head competition.

For a real-life example, Japan, Germany, China and the USA are all large manufacturers and exporters. But Japan uses less energy than any of the others, while China uses the most per unit of output. It does not matter whether crude is $30, 45, 60 or $75 per barrel. That is still a cost advantage to Japan.

We can assume this because in terms of land, labor, capital and intangible assets they all compete against one another successfully otherwise they would not be the world's top four manufacturers and exporters. Japan using less energy does not give China a competitive advantage, although their efficient use of energy may mean that crude prices are $75 instead of $90, but we will never know.

It is hard to put numbers on invisible demand and the consequences of what if? But if we reduced Japan's energy efficiency to that of China we would immediately see that they would need much more energy to produce the same amount of GDP. However, that would reduce demand somewhere else, so again it is hard to measure in'it?

The fact is that a Casio and a Rolex are near perfect substitutes for one another as far as watches go, but the Rolex contributes more to GDP than the Casio. There may be $40 worth of materials in a $50 Casio and therefore a 20% profit to be shared between maker, wholesaler and retailer. On the other hand there may be $4000 worth of materials and extra workmanship in a $5000 Rolex. That is still a 20% mark-up or profit, but $1000 is a bigger contribution to GDP than $10.

When global demand outstrips world supply for petroleum then we can look forward to higher real prices for everything made from or using petroleum in production or distribution. And by higher real prices I mean specifically relative to wages. Workers add to demand, but excess labor is deflationary. By definition this means real standards of living will fall. More hours of labor to buy the same standard of living and/or eventually falling living standards despite increasing amounts of labor.

But this is not because of capitalism as you highlighted in bold letters to draw out attention to it. This again is due to consumption. Unfettered communism would have brought us to this very end sooner or later, and likely sooner, as there was no market price mechanism to bring supply and demand into line thereby ensuring that petroleum was wasted in production.

Did you read the McKinsey links? Do you disagree that energy subsidies increase demand for petroleum? I happen to think that subsidies always lead to higher demand than otherwise would have been because they distort the market. Higher prices are supposed to curb demand and make alternatives more attractive, like public transport versus private autos.

Sorry I probably missed addressing some of your points, but that is all I can write at this time. Thanks.
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