by dorlomin » Wed 13 Aug 2008, 06:49:55
The very fact Oil Finder2 chooses Germany from the 80s to now tells you he does not want to show you an honest assement.
He does like his little games...
Hmmm so any prizes for any political changes in that time in Germany that may have had an imact on industry? Anyone in the class... hint 1989.... Oh ok Ill give it away. Germany reunified and a marxist economy was combined with a most successful liberal market economy.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')ermany is the seventh largest coal producer in the world. In 2004, it produced 232.7 million short tons (Mmst), of which the large majority was lignite. The country operates ten mines, employing some 45,000 people. However, German coal production has declined rapidly since reunification in 1989-1990; in 1990, West and East Germany produced a combined 513.7 Mmst of coal. The closure of older, inefficient mines in the former East Germany has been the principle cause of this decline. Currently, over one-half of Germany’s lignite production occurs in the Rhineland region in the western part of the country.
Incdently NEVER trust graphs and quotes without links to the source. It often suggest a games afoot.
http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/cabs/Germany/Full.html
So all those coal savings.... how much of it comes from changes in the type of coal mined, the closure of out of date rolling mills and chemical factories, improvements in grid distribution efficiency and a host of other changes in the transfer from Marxism to liberal market economics and western enviromental standars?
Kinda hard to tell, isnt it. And that is the doubt and obstification OilFinder2 wants to spread.
And offcourse German machine tools and high end electronics are rather likely to take alot less energy per $ than sweat shop produced barbie dolls and spanners. But we cant have an economy without spanners even if its not the germans making the bulk of them. (they do make a damned fine spanner).

from the eia page.
Hmmmmm seems Germany has not cut back on electricity production. *scratches chin*
So when we can perhaps look at countries not making huge improvements from moving from Marxism then we can have another wee chat about energy and GDP.