by Nano » Fri 22 Feb 2008, 06:07:47
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kjmclark', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Nano', 'P')lease ignore the raving lunatics on this site who try to persuade you otherwise.
"Raving lunatics"? A little harsh, don't you think?
It's harsh, yes, but I seem to be becoming more and more inspired by some of JD's (and others) complaints about having too many doomlovers on this site spouting too much unsupported fearmongering claptrap, especially about food related topics. If we can't stay level-headed discussing PO and ramifications we might as well not discuss it at all.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')s for "no 'serious competition' from local (oil-free) farming in your lifetime", this is already questionable. Anyone who grows any food in their yard is seriously competing with industrial ag for that family's food dollar.
What I mean by 'serious competition' is the hypothetical situation that industrial farms should get forced out of business due to competition from food grown locally using traditional methods. That will never happen as long as people want to have cheap food.
Now if you want to grow your own food using traditional methods that's great. If you can hack the hard work and keep paying your taxes you have my blessing! Just don't count on ever being able to 'seriously compete' with industrial farming!
Even if there was no oil at all anymore, industrial farming would be threatened, but only temporarily! JD has pointed out on his controversial blog that farming machinery could pretty easily be run mostly on electricity instead of oil, by using long cables. And as a mechanical engineer I admit I don't see a problem with that assumption. It will be
inconvenient for the farmer but it will put a ceiling on production costs and keep industrial farming very cheap for the foreseeable future.
I did the math on the different aspects of industrial farming and the bulk transportation of food way back when I first found out about Peak Oil. But I concluded pretty quickly that as oil prices rise, base consumers would be priced out of the market
way before industrial farms get priced out.
That means industrial farming will remain very much viable even after peak oil. Oil demand destruction among consumers will leave plenty of oil for agribusiness and food transport, albeit at high, though easily bearable prices.
Anyone who says differently is a raving lunatic in my book. It is a waste of time to worry too much about the food supply. We should worry more about (geo)political stability, economic growth and poverty relief. Especially that last item should have our full attention or we risk going straight to hell for our miserly and callous inhumanity.
by dsula » Fri 22 Feb 2008, 10:24:09
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Nano', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'I') don't mind the raving lunatics, I kinda enjoy their perspective. However, I dislike going over the same ground again and again and again. Most of these topics have been thoroughly discussed recently already.
That's right. It would be great if topics such as these were closed down with a link to a relevant existing thread. It would be extra work for the mods but it would improve this forum. What happens now is that the experts see a rehash of an old topic and don't bother giving their input, leaving noobs stumbling around in fearfull darkness and confusion at the mercy of kneejerk doomers.
So? That's what makes a forum alife and enjoyable. People posting stuff, even if it's a rerun. Ever been to a local pub? Stuff talked about there has been discussed a million times, however I still enjoy going down there. Freedom is the key man, not control.