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Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

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

Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Oil-Finder » Wed 12 Mar 2008, 17:21:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'I')t must be very difficult communicating with you, since you clearly regard the present tense to be the same as the past tense. As I've said, Monte used the present tense and so it is highly likely that he was talking about the present or very recent past. So it doesn't matter how many words you find for "none", the fact is, Monte was almost certainly not talking about the last 25 years.

Spare me, please, you are desperate.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', 'T')he demand for meat is going up and being met...but no more grain is being produced.

Did he say the demand for meat was going up today? This week? A year ago Monday? The past 2 years? No. Did he say no more grain is being produced today? This week? A year ago Monday? The past 2 years? No. He believes that no more grain is being produced, which is false. Furthermore, even if you added up the totals for all the grains I listed on the first page "for just the past few years," you would see a rise anyway. So you are still wrong anyway.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'W')hy do you think, after 200 years of industrialisation and increasing knowledge of materials and their properties, we use the stuff we do? In most cases it will be because they are the best materials to use for the particular job they do, or the most abundant (or most easily produced or highest quality) substance of several possibilities. I don't think there is much likelihood of us coming across better more abundant substances for each of the resources that becomes scarce, though that may happen in some cases.

I disagree. Humans are an adaptable, inventive species. If we ever ran out of palladium, we could find a substitute for that. And if we ever ran out of oil, we could find a substitute for that, too.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'T')his is a belief in an infinite planet. You believe that our descendents (no timeframe so, I assume you mean indefinitely, with no time limit) will be able to always adapt or substitute for scarce resources. You don't know that, at all. It is a belief, and a dangerous belief, because it is the type of belief that causes us to pay no heed to earth's limits, thereby guaranteeing that we will crash into them and make it much harder for our descendants to survive.

I'm going to respond to this and your other response from your other post simultaneously, since they are similar:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'W')ell, if we assume it is finite and that the rate we produce it now will start to decline in the coming decades then shouldn't we use such an excellent source of energy more wisely? We should conserve it not to leave some for future generations but to allow us room to build sustainable societies, if at all possible. But you appear to be arguing that because some resource is finite anyway, what does it matter if we use it all up? You're right only if we don't care about our own future and for future generations.

You missed the point, and did not reply to it: What does it matter if we run out of a resource 100 years from now, or 300 years from now? If a non-renewable resource is scarce, either our decisions will screw somebody 100 years from now, or they will screw somebody 300 years from now. In either case it is impossible NOT to screw someone! It has absolutely nothing to do with caring about future generations, because we will have to screw some future generation, be it 100 years from now, or 300 years from now. And ironically, it is you who are inferring that the planet is "infinite," because you seem to believe the supply of oil or any other non-renewable resource can be spread out indefinitely, which is impossible for a non-renewable resource.

If that weren't enough, you're also telling me you want future generations to be able to use these resources. Perhaps some of them are understandable (such as iron), but what about oil? Please answer for me the following question: Do you want our descendants 1,000 years from now to be able to use oil? If so, why? And also if so, what is the basis of your belief that conservation today will ensure a supply of oil 1,000 years from now? You're simultaneously telling me that we're running out of good supplies of oil, but also telling me we can make it last 1,000 more years!! Who here is the real cornucopian?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'Q')uite right, Oil-Finder. This is something we agree on. The difference is that you are utterly convinced that oil companies will find plenty of oil and be able to produce shale at many millions of barrels per day. The likelihood of finding some fantastic new oil province is diminishing. Oil companies are having very little success in places that are relatively easy to explore and are having to go after less easy and less likely prospects. Your oil discoveries thread has almost no information that enables one to demonstrate big new production capacity in the near future (or any time). And yet you chastise those you call doomers for being wrong in the past and expect us to believe your claims of the future.

OK, you have now just, in effect, told me it is extremely unlikely there will be oil left for our descendants 1,000 years from now. Probably not even 300 years from now, and maybe not even 100 years from now. So I ask you once again, If we are running out of oil no matter what we do, what is the point of trying to "save" it for future generations? Somebody down the line is going to get screwed, no matter what we do. Do you not understand this? All you are trying to do is to delay the inevitable.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'T')his is not the argument you were making. You were saying that since we can't know what future generations will be able to do, we should assume that they will be able to cope with whatever world we leave them. In your example, you are assuming that the Romans would know how things would turn out and that the course they set us on was ultimately completely beneficial. The fact that one resource, iron, was and is abundant is irrelevant. You still have no idea what our descendants will be capable of and so are advocating that we don't consider them.

No, I did not assume that the Romans would know how things would turn out, I simply had them take the same stance you are: To conserve a resource for future generations. The only other assumption I make is that human beings are adaptable. You seem to think they aren't. I disagree.
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Oil-Finder » Wed 12 Mar 2008, 17:30:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'O')h, it's 2070 now, is it? Why should we believe this prediction when all predictions have turned out to be wrong? The population growth for the last 5 years has been estimated in the CIA World Factbook as 1.14%, 1.14%, 1.14%, 1.14%, 1.167%. Before that, it had been slowing but not for the last 5 years.

Yes, and the other predictions that have turned out to be wrong include Malthus' predictions about population outrunning food supply, Paul Erlich's prediction in 1968 that the same would happen in the 70's and that there would be a mass die-off, and many similar ones. Another prediction that could go wrong is the prediction that crude oil peaked in 2005. Or the other predictions that it will peak in the near future.

And your own prediction that we can stretch out oil supplies for future generations 1,000 and even 300 years from now could also be wrong.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'Y')es. Isn't that what the free-market economy is all about? Supply and demand. Man-made scarcity is still scarcity. Are you suggesting that the current plateau is man-made? If so, what is the point of your oil discoveries thread?

If the current plateau is man-made, the same men could also make it rise again. Thus, the point of the oil discoveries thread is to show where the new supplies will be coming from.
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Plantagenet » Wed 12 Mar 2008, 19:58:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '
')If the current plateau is man-made, the same men could also make it rise again.


The global oil production plateau is due to a conspiracy?

Who are the evil men behind this one and where are they hiding the oil?
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Oil-Finder » Wed 12 Mar 2008, 20:12:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '
')If the current plateau is man-made, the same men could also make it rise again.


The global oil production plateau is due to a conspiracy?

Who are the evil men behind this one and where are they hiding the oil?

Just because there might be short-term bottlenecks does not mean there are long-term supply problems.

Around 1980, world oil production didn't just peak, it actually fell for a few years. Did the fact that oil production fell for a few years mean there were long-term supply problems or some kind of conspiracy? No.
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Plantagenet » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 00:01:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '
')Around 1980, world oil production didn't just peak, it actually fell for a few years. Did the fact that oil production fell for a few years mean there were long-term supply problems or some kind of conspiracy?


Nooooooo.....it meant that Iraq had invaded Iran and bombed Iran's oil production and oil shipping facilities, and that Iran then attacked and disrupted Iraq's oil industry, taking 8 million barrels of oil a day out of production.

No mystery to that.... glad to provide the explanation for why global oil production fell for a few years :P
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Oil-Finder » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 00:36:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '
')Around 1980, world oil production didn't just peak, it actually fell for a few years. Did the fact that oil production fell for a few years mean there were long-term supply problems or some kind of conspiracy?


Nooooooo.....it meant that Iraq had invaded Iran and bombed Iran's oil production and oil shipping facilities, and that Iran then attacked and disrupted Iraq's oil industry, taking 8 million barrels of oil a day out of production.

No mystery to that.... glad to provide the explanation for why global oil production fell for a few years :P

And likewise, the US invaded Iraq in 2003, just when your plateau started, and removing about a million barrels of production a day. Hmmm . . . :P
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby BigTex » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 00:36:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', 'T')he demand for meat is going up and being met...but no more grain is being produced.

Did he say the demand for meat was going up today? This week? A year ago Monday? The past 2 years? No. Did he say no more grain is being produced today? This week? A year ago Monday? The past 2 years? No. He believes that no more grain is being produced, which is false. Furthermore, even if you added up the totals for all the grains I listed on the first page "for just the past few years," you would see a rise anyway. So you are still wrong anyway.


Oil-Finder, would you please stop referring to that comment from MQ? I don't think you are following the argument that just because you are in overshoot due to phantom carrying capacity, it doesn't mean that you can't go much deeper into overshoot if the phantom carrying capacity will permit it for a short period. We have a sustainable grain production capacity of X; if we choose to use our phantom carrying capacity to produce 10X for a short period, and burn our grain in our cars and feed to our cows, that doesn't mean that our sustainable carrying capacity is any greater.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')umans are an adaptable, inventive species. If we ever ran out of palladium, we could find a substitute for that. And if we ever ran out of oil, we could find a substitute for that, too.


But remember, we don't just need a substitute, we need a substitute that is AS GOOD OR BETTER than the resource we have depleted. If a substitute is not as good, the phantom carrying capacity is proportionally reduced.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')ou missed the point, and did not reply to it: What does it matter if we run out of a resource 100 years from now, or 300 years from now? If a non-renewable resource is scarce, either our decisions will screw somebody 100 years from now, or they will screw somebody 300 years from now. In either case it is impossible NOT to screw someone! It has absolutely nothing to do with caring about future generations, because we will have to screw some future generation, be it 100 years from now, or 300 years from now. And ironically, it is you who are inferring that the planet is "infinite," because you seem to believe the supply of oil or any other non-renewable resource can be spread out indefinitely, which is impossible for a non-renewable resource.

If that weren't enough, you're also telling me you want future generations to be able to use these resources. Perhaps some of them are understandable (such as iron), but what about oil? Please answer for me the following question: Do you want our descendants 1,000 years from now to be able to use oil? If so, why? And also if so, what is the basis of your belief that conservation today will ensure a supply of oil 1,000 years from now? You're simultaneously telling me that we're running out of good supplies of oil, but also telling me we can make it last 1,000 more years!! Who here is the real cornucopian?


Oil-Finder, your entire argument and the holes in it are concisely summarized in your comment above.

Whether you realize it or not, your view of the world is that it will be necessary for us to run ourselves into the ground as a species at some point in the future. You seem to concede that you see no other way. Within the exponential growth paradigm, you are right, it is inescapable that some future generation will be screwed. What I and others are arguing, however, is that this posterity sodomy is not necessary, and that's the whole idea behind aiming for SUSTAINABILITY and trying to break free of the exponential growth paradigm. When you reach a level of sustainability, a population can be maintained indefinitely. It's not necessary for anyone to get screwed.

But you have to admit you are in overshoot before you can get back to sustainability.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')K, you have now just, in effect, told me it is extremely unlikely there will be oil left for our descendants 1,000 years from now. Probably not even 300 years from now, and maybe not even 100 years from now. So I ask you once again, If we are running out of oil no matter what we do, what is the point of trying to "save" it for future generations? Somebody down the line is going to get screwed, no matter what we do. Do you not understand this? All you are trying to do is to delay the inevitable.

The objective is not necessarily to delay the inevitable. The object is to stop racing toward the inevitable as fast as we can. Once we sober up from the orgy of consumption, then we can start trying to figure out how to get back to sustainability, and, ideally, LEAVE THE REST OF THE OIL IN THE GROUND. That's where it needs to be in order for us to have a sustainable habitat. Ultimately, that is the most efficient use of oil from a long term human survival perspective.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')o, I did not assume that the Romans would know how things would turn out, I simply had them take the same stance you are: To conserve a resource for future generations. The only other assumption I make is that human beings are adaptable. You seem to think they aren't. I disagree.

Humans are adaptable; that's how we got from caves to skyscrapers. Adaptability is not the problem; it's the resources we have become reliant upon as we have worked our way into the current consumption-dependent lifestyle and presumption of ongoing exponential growth.

We are not talking about conserving ANYTHING for the future. We are talking about REMOVING our reliance upon non-renewable resources for our survival.
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Plantagenet » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 00:58:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 't')he US invaded Iraq in 2003, just when your plateau started, and removing about a million barrels of production a day. Hmmm


1. Its not my plateau. Its the world's plateau. The world's oil production has been steady over the at about 74 mbpd over since about 2005, with total liquids holding at about 85 mbpd. :P

2. The plateau didn't start in 2003 as you claim. It started in 2005. :P

I was a peak oil skeptic with views similar to yours when I met Prof. Ken Deffeyes when he visited us here in Alaska in late 2005. Deffeyes boldly called the global peak as occurring in late 2005---right during his visit--- and he also predicted oil production would subsequently plateau for a while. And so it has come to pass. That man either has the best crystal ball the world has ever seen or his modern recalculations of oil peaks using Hubbards methods actually work.

Check out the world oil production plateau since 2005. I'd love to see oil production resume its upward trend.....wouldn't you?

data on world oil production and more

Only time will tell what will come next, but Prof. Deffeyes' data suggests its all downhill from here.

Cheers! :-D
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Oil-Finder » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 01:10:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', '
')Oil-Finder, would you please stop referring to that comment from MQ? I don't think you are following the argument that just because you are in overshoot due to phantom carrying capacity, it doesn't mean that you can't go much deeper into overshoot if the phantom carrying capacity will permit it for a short period. We have a sustainable grain production capacity of X; if we choose to use our phantom carrying capacity to produce 10X for a short period, and burn our grain in our cars and feed to our cows, that doesn't mean that our sustainable carrying capacity is any greater.

MQ's quote was about a statement he made which was factually false. That is it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', '
')But remember, we don't just need a substitute, we need a substitute that is AS GOOD OR BETTER than the resource we have depleted. If a substitute is not as good, the phantom carrying capacity is proportionally reduced.

Agreed, but history shows us that whenever we substitute some resource for another, the new one is usually better than what it replaces. E.g. fossil fuels are better than wood and whale oil, etc.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'O')il-Finder, your entire argument and the holes in it are concisely summarized in your comment above.

Whether you realize it or not, your view of the world is that it will be necessary for us to run ourselves into the ground as a species at some point in the future.

No I don't. I believe we will someday find a better substitute for oil and other fossil fuels. Just like fossil fuels were better than wood and whale oil, whatever replaces fossil fuels will be better than fossil fuels. This is not a view of running ourselves into the ground in the future, this is a view of having a better future.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'Y')ou seem to concede that you see no other way. Within the exponential growth paradigm, you are right, it is inescapable that some future generation will be screwed.

The only thing future generations will be "screwed" out of is oil, and possibly some other natural resources. For some bizarre reason, Tony seemed to think we should try to conserve it, as if doing so would enable people 1,000 years from now to have access to it. Not only is this futile, I question whether this is what he would really want.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'W')hat I and others are arguing, however, is that this posterity sodomy is not necessary, and that's the whole idea behind aiming for SUSTAINABILITY and trying to break free of the exponential growth paradigm. When you reach a level of sustainability, a population can be maintained indefinitely. It's not necessary for anyone to get screwed.

But you have to admit you are in overshoot before you can get back to sustainability.
I maintain we are not in "overshoot," and that we can "sustain" technological human civilization as long as we want. I also maintain that the term "sustainable" is the most utterly useless and meaningless term invented by mankind in the past 50 years.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'T')he objective is not necessarily to delay the inevitable.
By telling me that we should conserve oil and other non-renewable and relatively scarce resources for future generations, that's exactly what Tony's objective was: to delay the inevitable.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'T')he object is to stop racing toward the inevitable as fast as we can. Once we sober up from the orgy of consumption, then we can start trying to figure out how to get back to sustainability, and, ideally, LEAVE THE REST OF THE OIL IN THE GROUND. That's where it needs to be in order for us to have a sustainable habitat. Ultimately, that is the most efficient use of oil from a long term human survival perspective.
Well once again, we have yet another peaker who believes in peak oil not because he thinks or even cares about whether or not oil production has or soon will peak in production, but because he wants oil production to peak.

Oh, but wait!! . . . I'm told by many peakers that these non-oil resources are just as "unsustainable" as are fossil fuels! Solar and wind power will never scale up, and it requires fossil fuels to build them! There is not enough uranium! Renewable technology X will never work! Renewable technology Y will never work! We are doomed, doomed doomed! No matter what!! :roll:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'H')umans are adaptable; that's how we got from caves to skyscrapers. Adaptability is not the problem; it's the resources we have become reliant upon as we have worked our way into the current consumption-dependent lifestyle and presumption of ongoing exponential growth.

We are not talking about conserving ANYTHING for the future. We are talking about REMOVING our reliance upon non-renewable resources for our survival.
That is not what Tony was telling me, and you were responding to my replies to Tony. Tony kept telling me we should conserve these non-renewable resouces for future generations, and he accused me of being selfish for not trying to think of them and plan ahead for them. Well, at least you're more consistent than Tony. Now, I hope you're not going to tell me that all these renewable technologies won't work.
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Oil-Finder » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 01:13:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '
')2. The plateau didn't start in 2003 as you claim. It started in 2005. :P

OMG we've been in a plateau for less than 3 years!! PORTENTS OF DOOM I TELL YA!!! WE'RE DOOMED!! 3 YEARS IS AN INDICATOR OF A LONG-TERM TREND!!! OMG OMG!!! :shock: :shock:
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Plantagenet » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 01:34:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 'O')MG we've been in a plateau for less than 3 years!! PORTENTS OF DOOM I TELL YA!!! WE'RE DOOMED!! 3 YEARS IS AN INDICATOR OF A LONG-TERM TREND!!! OMG OMG!!! shock: shock:


Why the panic?

"Cowardice, as distinguished from panic, is almost always simply a lack of ability to suspend the functioning of the imagination."

--Ernest Hemingway

Relax....theres always a chance that global oil production will start increasing again.

Cheers! :roll:
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby TonyPrep » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 05:45:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 'S')pare me, please, you are desperate.
Not at all, just trying to explain the English language. It seems that you don't care about language, just your beliefs.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'W')hy do you think, after 200 years of industrialisation and increasing knowledge of materials and their properties, we use the stuff we do? In most cases it will be because they are the best materials to use for the particular job they do, or the most abundant (or most easily produced or highest quality) substance of several possibilities. I don't think there is much likelihood of us coming across better more abundant substances for each of the resources that becomes scarce, though that may happen in some cases.

I disagree. Humans are an adaptable, inventive species. If we ever ran out of palladium, we could find a substitute for that. And if we ever ran out of oil, we could find a substitute for that, too.
What a great belief to have. So I guess you think we just wound up using the materials we use for different purposes purely by chance. But in future we'll have a definite strategy for finding better substitutes? This is a pipedream.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'W')ell, if we assume it is finite and that the rate we produce it now will start to decline in the coming decades then shouldn't we use such an excellent source of energy more wisely? We should conserve it not to leave some for future generations but to allow us room to build sustainable societies, if at all possible. But you appear to be arguing that because some resource is finite anyway, what does it matter if we use it all up? You're right only if we don't care about our own future and for future generations.
You missed the point, and did not reply to it: What does it matter if we run out of a resource 100 years from now, or 300 years from now? If a non-renewable resource is scarce, either our decisions will screw somebody 100 years from now, or they will screw somebody 300 years from now. In either case it is impossible NOT to screw someone! It has absolutely nothing to do with caring about future generations, because we will have to screw some future generation, be it 100 years from now, or 300 years from now. And ironically, it is you who are inferring that the planet is "infinite," because you seem to believe the supply of oil or any other non-renewable resource can be spread out indefinitely, which is impossible for a non-renewable resource.Then I'm afraid you missed my point. I'm not arguing for using our resources up more quickly, I'm arguing that we move to sustainability in as orderly a way as we can manage. It's important that we do it now rather than later because at least we have some high quality resources left and building a sustainable infrastructure will take resources. If we simply believe that current resources will last a long time and future generations will have to handle it, then we bequeath a sparser earth to them, reducing their ability to adjust. But, perhaps even more pertinently, those limits might kick in before we're dead, if your beliefs don't quite work out as you want. So it's not a question of using it up in 50 years, 100 years or 300 years, it's a question of having the capability to move manageably down the consumption curve to sustainability. I don't believe in an infinite supply or that it can be spread out indefinitely.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 'P')lease answer for me the following question: Do you want our descendants 1,000 years from now to be able to use oil?No.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'T')his is not the argument you were making. You were saying that since we can't know what future generations will be able to do, we should assume that they will be able to cope with whatever world we leave them. In your example, you are assuming that the Romans would know how things would turn out and that the course they set us on was ultimately completely beneficial. The fact that one resource, iron, was and is abundant is irrelevant. You still have no idea what our descendants will be capable of and so are advocating that we don't consider them.
No, I did not assume that the Romans would know how things would turn out, I simply had them take the same stance you are: To conserve a resource for future generations. The only other assumption I make is that human beings are adaptable. You seem to think they aren't. I disagree.Of course they are adaptable. They can adapt to a much more resource constrained lifestyle. Do you not agree? Some resources need to be conserved for future generations. For example renewable resources should not be used beyond their renewal rates, otherwise we will lose them just as surely as we will lose the less abundant finite resources that we use. Sustainability principles suggest we reduce our use of finite resources to zero (along the lines of the Oil Depletion Protocol, perhaps, which would see a gradual reduction), that our use of renewables doesn't exceed renewal rates and that we stop damaging the habitat that sustains us.
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby TonyPrep » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 05:58:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'O')h, it's 2070 now, is it? Why should we believe this prediction when all predictions have turned out to be wrong? The population growth for the last 5 years has been estimated in the CIA World Factbook as 1.14%, 1.14%, 1.14%, 1.14%, 1.167%. Before that, it had been slowing but not for the last 5 years.

Yes, and the other predictions that have turned out to be wrong include Malthus' predictions about population outrunning food supply, Paul Erlich's prediction in 1968 that the same would happen in the 70's and that there would be a mass die-off, and many similar ones. Another prediction that could go wrong is the prediction that crude oil peaked in 2005. Or the other predictions that it will peak in the near future.
Well, the other predictions that crude oil will peak in the future are currently wrong, and the fact that crude oil peaked in 2005 is, well, a fact. Of course that could be overturned but that's what the data currently shows. You seem to be agreeing that predictions of the future can not normally be relied on. And this is exactly what I've tried to argue. Since we can't rely on doom-laden or rosy predictions, why not go for something that looks eminently possible? Aim for sustainability, starting now. After all, you have complete belief in human adaptability so you cannot possibly think we can't achieve that aim.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 'A')nd your own prediction that we can stretch out oil supplies for future generations 1,000 and even 300 years from now could also be wrong.
Well, I hope I've laid that misunderstanding to rest now. Please don't raise it again. I do not advocate us conserving oil for use in the future, though I could be persuaded that some tiny consumption of oil for highly beneficial purposes could be sustained until we figure out a renewable (in human timescales) substitute for those uses.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'Y')es. Isn't that what the free-market economy is all about? Supply and demand. Man-made scarcity is still scarcity. Are you suggesting that the current plateau is man-made? If so, what is the point of your oil discoveries thread?

If the current plateau is man-made, the same men could also make it rise again. Thus, the point of the oil discoveries thread is to show where the new supplies will be coming from.In this case it would not be "will" be coming from but "may" be coming from. Your thread was intended to show that supplies can be maintained indefinitely (or as far into the future as we care to look) but has so far failed to do that because it has insufficient data to allow that determination. However, if the scarcity is man-made, it doesn't really matter if much more oil supply is possible, unless we force producers to produce it.
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Oil-Finder » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 06:23:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'T')hen I'm afraid you missed my point. I'm not arguing for using our resources up more quickly

I didn't say you were arguing for using up resources up more quickly, I was accusing you of wanting to conserve resources for future generations. I was also trying to tell you the futility of this for certain of the more relatively scarce resources, such as oil, because all conservation accomplishes is to delay the inevitable.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'I')t's important that we do it now rather than later because at least we have some high quality resources left and building a sustainable infrastructure will take resources. If we simply believe that current resources will last a long time and future generations will have to handle it, then we bequeath a sparser earth to them, reducing their ability to adjust.

But if finite resources will inevitably run out anyway, someone will eventually be "bequeathed a sparser earth" no matter what we do. Let's go back again to oil. If we conserve oil now, let's say it will run out in 300 years. Or, if we use it up willy-nilly, let's say it will run out in just 100 years. So, either we will "bequeath a sparser earth" to someone 100 years from now, or we will "bequeath a sparser earth" to someone 300 years from now. Ultimately it makes no difference. But according to you, both of them will have a 'reduced ability to adapt' because they have been "bequeathed a sparser earth."

However, in my mind I don't think the people 100 years from now will have any more difficulty transitioning away from oil than the people 300 years from now. As I've said before, humans are adaptable. The ones 100 years from now can adapt just as easily as the ones 300 years from now.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 'P')lease answer for me the following question: Do you want our descendants 1,000 years from now to be able to use oil?

No.

Then why were you accusing me of being selfish and short-sighted for not planning ahead for future generations 1,000 years from now? Before you said:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'S')o what was the point of your "thesis"? Are there no vital resources that are scarce or close to becoming scarce (relative to demand)? If you don't think so, do you think there is any need to be concerned about the finite nature of our planet? If not, how is this different to a belief in infinite resources?
And:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 'I')t's impossible to plan for that far ahead, because it's impossible for us to know what things will be like that far ahead.This must be one of the craziest arguments that cornucopians use. You are effectively saying that because we don't know whether future generations could cope with fewer resources (including those that we consider vital), we should completely ignore the possibility that they won't. If this is what you really think, then why not come right out and say it, because then we would be quite clear that you have no care for the effect your actions might have beyond your own lifetime (and probably even less than that).
In both those cases you accused me of being selfish and short-sighted for not wanting to conserve resources for future generations. Now suddenly you're telling me that, not only do you not care whether future generations have access to one particular resources (oil), in fact you don't want them to use it at all! In other words, first you told me we must conserve it for future generations, but now you're telling me you don't even want them to use it at all! If you don't want them to use it at all, why do we need to conserve it for their future use???

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'O')f course they are adaptable. They can adapt to a much more resource constrained lifestyle. Do you not agree?
Uh, yeah, that's what I've been saying! Why do you think I didn't care if future generations had access to sufficient amounts of palladium or oil? It's because I know they'll be able to adapt!!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'S')ustainability principles suggest we reduce our use of finite resources to zero
Which will happen anyway, because they are finite and we will eventually "run out" of them.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'F')or example renewable resources should not be used beyond their renewal rates, otherwise we will lose them just as surely as we will lose the less abundant finite resources that we use. Sustainability principles suggest we reduce our use of finite resources to zero (along the lines of the Oil Depletion Protocol, perhaps, which would see a gradual reduction), that our use of renewables doesn't exceed renewal rates and that we stop damaging the habitat that sustains us.
Well, here we could get into another huge debate as to what "renewal rates" for renewable resources are. That's probably another whole thread.
Last edited by Oil-Finder on Thu 13 Mar 2008, 06:35:24, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Oil-Finder » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 06:32:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', 'I')n this case it would not be "will" be coming from but "may" be coming from. Your thread was intended to show that supplies can be maintained indefinitely (or as far into the future as we care to look) but has so far failed to do that because it has insufficient data to allow that determination. However, if the scarcity is man-made, it doesn't really matter if much more oil supply is possible, unless we force producers to produce it.

Well, there is more than just my oil discoveries thread, of course. Earlier in this thread I gave a whole list of other large sources that have recently been identified. Yes, some of them might turn out to be busts, but others won't. And if there is demand for oil from these new sources, we can "force producers to produce it" simply through demand (and the price).

As I've already said several times now, I do not think even these new sources will enable us to use oil indefinitely - I don't remotely think we'll be using oil 1,000 years from now, and probably not even 300 years from now (at least, not much). But in the meantime, there is plenty of supply. We may have to start adjusting to something else in 50 years, or maybe in 100 years, or maybe longer. But the specific timing doesn't matter, because humans will be equally able to adjust in 50 years as they will in 100 years as they will in 300 years.
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby Oil-Finder » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 06:44:05

Incidentally . . .

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 'I') disagree. Humans are an adaptable, inventive species. If we ever ran out of palladium, we could find a substitute for that. And if we ever ran out of oil, we could find a substitute for that, too.

What a great belief to have. So I guess you think we just wound up using the materials we use for different purposes purely by chance. But in future we'll have a definite strategy for finding better substitutes? This is a pipedream.

And then later you said:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('TonyPrep', '[')b]Of course they are adaptable. They can adapt to a much more resource constrained lifestyle. Do you not agree?

So, one moment you were ridiculing me for thinking that future generations could adapt to the lack of a resource, but the next moment you were telling me they could adapt to a more resource constrained world. All I can say is, :roll:
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby TonyPrep » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 07:07:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Oil-Finder', 'S')o, one moment you were ridiculing me for thinking that future generations could adapt to the lack of a resource, but the next moment you were telling me they could adapt to a more resource constrained world. All I can say is, :roll:
I have clearly failed to get my point across, since you appear to believe something about my position that is just not true. Let me try again.

Since we are using finite resources, and using them at increasing rates, some of them will become scarce. Since we are using renewable resources at increasing rates, some of them will become scarce when that use exceeds their renewal rates. We are also polluting the planet faster than the planet's ecosystems can absorb that pollution and render it harmless.

This behaviour is unsustainable. If we don't want to move to a sustainable society then this society will end in a chaotic way. We don't know when that end might occur because we don't know exactly when some, or several, resources considered vital for our society to continue will become scarce (unable to meet the demand required for our society to continue as is).

If we want to move to sustainability, we have to reduce our use of resources to sustainable levels. For most finite resources, this is zero. For renewable resources, this is the sustainable renewal rate, or below. This almost certainly implies new living arrangements and a different type of economy. It will require a huge upheaval. But humans are adaptable, and they could, if they so wish, adapt to the necessary changes.

Some of the changes, like building renewable infrastructure and rearranging our centres of population, will take resources and energy, above what we'd need if we can reach sustainability. So it makes sense to start working towards that now, when we still are reasonably well off for resources, including energy resources.

If we leave it till later, we will have more retrofitting to do and will have less resources to do it with. The longer we leave it, the more difficult it gets.

I know it's difficult to argue against beliefs, so I don't expect you to take this on board immediately. But please think about what I, and Big Tex, have written. Try to read it as a whole, instead of in sentences, and consider whether or not it will be harder for future generations (which may include ourselves depending on how resource use and pollution go) to adapt with sparser resources, in a more consumptive world, with more people.

Do you think the best approach is to wait and see, or to do something positive to change whilst we may be in the best position to do so (compared with what the future may hold)?
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Re: Monte Quest vs Oil-Finder

Unread postby BigTex » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 09:05:15

Oil-Finder, note that I'm trying to stay away from the sky is falling doomer routine here.

I'm not like this guy:

Image

But if I was going to be a doomer, he looks like a pretty cool one.
:)
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