by OldSprocket » Sun 13 Mar 2005, 19:12:32
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('tmazanec1', 'H')ow does a person (say an American) use oil? Is it mostly directly, as in gasoline? Or is it indirectly, in making and transporting other goods? Whicj use will prove more elastic as the price goes up?
Good question. The average U.S.ian drives about 12,000 miles a year. Can we call that 600 gallons of gas? Does the food, clothes, and STUFF the U.S.ian buys represents more oil than their driving?
U.S. industry uses about 3 times as much energy as transportation. Pro rated that seems to mean that our indirect energy use is more than 3 times our direct use. I say "more than" since much of the transportation use is to get my new plastic geegaw from the manufacturer to me.
Food planted by tractor with fossil-fuel fertilizer and pesticides. Cotton (tractor, fertilizer, pesticides) and travel all over the globe for cheap sewing.
Perhaps I'm over-simplifyng. Can someone give me an example of industrial processes that are not
indirectly attributable to the people?
(I'm gonna duck now since it seems like this message is gonna be slammed.)