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Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Roccland » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:16:25

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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby kdenninger » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:22:46

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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Roccland » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:24:49

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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby kdenninger » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:26:43

You obviously can't read.

I was attempting to insert the table dump from the SQL database to prove you a liar, as I said before.

The code here is throwing up on it; ergo, the edit attempt (there actually was more than one, as I tried more than once. Sorry if the software here can't count but I don't think that's my problem.)
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby idiom » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:33:43

So, Karl,

Even if the US tried to deal with the oncoming Energy Crisis, China would pick up the slack?

But this is unlikely, as half the establishment is hell-bent on American Powerdown anyway?

How are you not a Peak Oil doomer?
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Roccland » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:35:30

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kdenninger', 'Y')ou obviously can't read.

I was attempting to insert the table dump from the SQL database to prove you a liar, as I said before.

The code here is throwing up on it; ergo, the edit attempt (there actually was more than one, as I tried more than once. Sorry if the software here can't count but I don't think that's my problem.)


Ummm...yeah...ok dokay Karl...

Like I said - check back here from time to time to see how well your world view is holding up.

Oh - and your notion that GW/Climate change is a farce...

Yeah ok...whatever...but in case you care - and for your family's sake - you may want to read this.

Oh but this is all the left's fault too eh?

A fool and his ideas are soon parted.

Cheers.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby kdenninger » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:39:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ow are you not a Peak Oil doomer?

Because there's no point in it, and its wrong.

How long will the "Greenies" have their scalps when gasoline is $10/gallon?

Will we all die if that happens? No.

The oil isn't gone. Its just more expensive to get what's left. There's plenty of it, if we're willing to go get it and pay what it costs. And before you say "but the costs of extraction are higher than the returned energy when consumed", that's not relavent since that has always been true - remember, the ultimate source of the energy is the Sun, which is "free".

All of the cost of extraction is, in essence, the premium paid for the convenience of having this many BTUs of energy in that small and easily-transported of a space. That premium can exceed the net energy output and the equation still works, since you don't need to spend oil to extract oil (e.g. you could get the energy necessary from a nuclear plant, for example)

All we're talking about here is the price and long before we get to "truly out" the Greenies will be BBQd and eaten, at which point a reasonable solution, such as the path I have outlined, can be taken.

Notice how fast people started talking about sticking straws in the ocean floor when gas went to $4? That's just one small example; there will be many more as the cost of extraction continues to rise.

Liquid hydrocarbons can be created from short-cycle processes; you don't need to use long-cycle (millions of years) ones. We know how to do a few of them (E.g. ethanol) and even though most of them are non-viable for production use (e.g. ethanol again) as a consequence of the thermodynamics and yield potential, this does not mean they ALL suffer from the same defect. They do not.

Closed-cycle blue-green algae cultivation, for example, can take place on non-arable land and the density issue does not exist there. If we remove rail from hydrocarbon use and build nukes, we can replace literally all of our OTR transport fuel with biodiesel. No, we can't do it tomorrow, but the math works, unlike with ethanol and most other (e.g. "switchgrass", etc) biofuel plans.

This leaves us with aircraft which can't run that fuel at present due to temperature concerns (its too cold at 30,000 feet and the fuel gels, although a turbine can be recalibrated to burn it without difficulty) but even that is likely addressible with some effort (e.g. diverting some of the heat from the engines to warm the fuel in the tank)
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Revi » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:42:41

Can we get back to why America is headed for a Depression?

The term depression was coined by Herbert Hoover so that it wouldn't sound as bad as recession. Depression sounds like just a little dip in the road, not rolling backwards.

This one we'll have to make up a name for.

It's already happening around here. In Maine it's hard to tell the difference anyway.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Roccland » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:43:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kdenninger', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ow are you not a Peak Oil doomer?
Because there's no point in it, and its wrong.
How long will the "Greenies" have their scalps when gasoline is $10/gallon? Will we all die if that happens? No. -snip-

Wow - talk about where to start.
Ok Karl - really bro...you actually believe we are going to have 120 m/b/d in 2020...and if not the greenies are gonna be scalped an eaten ...

AND THIS IS GONNA SOLVE THE PROBLEM. And I thought some of the post I make are tin foil.

Wow.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Roccland » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:45:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'C')an we get back to why America is headed for a Depression? The term depression was coined by Herbert Hoover so that it wouldn't sound as bad as recession. Depression sounds like just a little dip in the road, not rolling backwards. This one we'll have to make up a name for. It's already happening around here. In Maine it's hard to tell the difference anyway.

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This is a no trading day for karl...so let's let him 'splain all this nonsense about PO.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby kdenninger » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:48:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'C')an we get back to why America is headed for a Depression? The term depression was coined by Herbert Hoover so that it wouldn't sound as bad as recession. Depression sounds like just a little dip in the road, not rolling backwards. This one we'll have to make up a name for. It's already happening around here. In Maine it's hard to tell the difference anyway.

Sure.
Its simple - read the post at link and it will make some sense (top level, today's) Bottom line: The "expansion" of the last 20 years has been in credit, not equity (e.g. not real earnings capacity) and leverage.

This is now unwinding whether we like it or not, and cannot be stopped. While the statistics say it will get bad they actually understate the problem because there is a significant portion of America that lived prudently and has no or little debt - which means that a significant segment of the population is and will crash HARD by comparison.

They will be effective zero-contributors so instead of a "slowdown" we're going to have something considerably worse.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby TheDude » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:57:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kdenninger', 'T')he oil isn't gone. Its just more expensive to get what's left. There's plenty of it, if we're willing to go get it and pay what it costs. And before you say "but the costs of extraction are higher than the returned energy when consumed", that's not relavent since that has always been true - remember, the ultimate source of the energy is the Sun, which is "free".

All of the cost of extraction is, in essence, the premium paid for the convenience of having this many BTUs of energy in that small and easily-transported of a space. That premium can exceed the net energy output and the equation still works, since you don't need to spend oil to extract oil (e.g. you could get the energy necessary from a nuclear plant, for example)


So we're going to supply offshore platforms with nuclear powered helicopters? 8) In case you haven't heard the news, for aircraft there really isn't a viable alternative. Powering civilian ships with reactors is a bit of a sticky wicket as well.

Many believe this can only go on so long before it becomes an insurmountable issue. Offshore, especially UDW, could simply become unprofitable due to the high cost of maintaining platforms, manufacturing parts for them, delays impacting construction or production. If energy becomes so cost-intensive it will become a major part of profitability analysis. It never has in the past because who cares about the cost of fuel? It's always been next to too-cheap-to-meter. In an era of skyrocketing fuel prices EROEI will begin to matter, and in the case of offshore directly impact supply, before anyone realizes the implications.

Sorry to continue with the derail.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby shortonoil » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 20:57:34

kdenninger said:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')here is no particular problem with a debt-based fractional reserve system.


The very definition of a debt based fiat currency, states that money comes into existence when a debt is assumed. The system allow for no other method to create “money” (which I differentiate from currency).

Thus to increase the money supply, debt must be increased. The problem arises when the money must be attained to pay the interest on the debt that was previously created. This therefore assumes that the debt must increase perpetually, otherwise, the prior debt can not be serviced.

Once growth in the economy is terminated or restricted, such as what is happening in the present PO world, debt accumulation falls. You then have a monetary crisis where not enough new money is available to service the existing debt. That is, defaults rise.

Coupled with a fractional reserve banking system, which allows for huge monetary creation from virtual debt, and the entire system has the potential to cascade into insolvency, quite rapidly.

It appears that the housing collapse, the LBO demise, the MBS contraction and the estimated $15 trillion that the world financial system lost last year has produced a credit crisis. A credit crisis is a monetary crisis where there is not enough new money (credit) coming into existence to service prior debt. The outcome most likely will be an ongoing crisis in the monetary/financial system.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Roccland » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 21:05:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('shortonoil', '[')b]kdenninger said:$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')here is no particular problem with a debt-based fractional reserve system.

Once growth in the economy is terminated or restricted, such as what is happening in the present PO world, debt accumulation falls. You then have a monetary crisis where not enough new money is available to service the existing debt. That is, defaults rise.

MOST IMPORTANT POST OF THIS THREAD...
Once the cheap energy that has fueled this economy is gone...it crashes...
But more importantly...it will not be brought back from the dead...factories will rust away...roads will turn to dust...and the spiral into the abyss will be a one way ticket.

If more economists got this...well...I am dreaming.
Again...shorty is spot on.
Last edited by Roccland on Sat 23 Aug 2008, 21:07:17, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby kdenninger » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 21:05:57

The growth over the last 20 years was not real.

We are now to where we need to add $5 in debt to create $1 in GDP. This is unsustainable and is rapidly going for an asymptote.

That is why we are now "unwinding."

Those who are in debt are fucked. As velocity falls and creditworthiness dries up (the issue becomes one of lack of collateral to secure further borrowing) defaults precipitate more defaults.

Those who have actual money (not credit, but actual funds) make out quite well. Asset prices fall rapidly and you can buy them cheaply - provided you don't need credit to do it.

Those who are in debt are crushed as the money necessary to pay it down becomes harder and harder to find (e.g. job loss, etc)

There is no particular reason that the system has to go "overcenter" and implode, unless certain limits (which are defined mathematically) are reached. There is no evidence that I can find that we have reached them, and in fact my calculations says we have not.

It is actually quite difficult to reach the "overcenter" point, because what is happening now tends to occur first. It requires truly foolish and massive policy mistakes to continue beyond that point and cause an actual implosion.

Its going to get much worse than it is now, but that doesn't mean we're all doomed. In fact we're not, although for those who are overleveraged (in debt) it sure is going to be doom for them.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Roccland » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 21:18:50

And this from ShortonOil on the economic meltdown thread:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he available energy model is predicting a 17 year decline. The worse part of this contraction will be in the foremost years. The suburban, corporate environment will be the most difficult to negotiate. FRNs will be the most unstable of currencies to hold, while metals will retain a significant share of their value over the long term. High quality farm land will do well, housing will continue to decline until it is reduced to little value.


This is why I am a gold bug.

And food bug...

and bunker bug...

and gun bug...

and sutures, garden, wool blanket bug...

17 years ain't that long...
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Revi » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 21:27:32

I don't know why you want to barbecue us greenies. We are the ones who live practically debt free and were the prudent ones in this past 5 year fiesta of fools.

"See, there are a very large number of people - perhaps much as 25% of America, that have no debt at all. Not even a car loan. I'm one of them, and in fact this has been, in the main, my viewpoint since I was a youngster.

Yes, I've had car loans and mortgages, but I never was one to run a credit card balance or charge plate at a store. Ever. There are quite a few people like me, some of them older, some younger, but not everyone is in debt up to their eyeballs." From the Denninger report.

Most of us "greenies" are the people you are talking about. We haven't even taken out a car loan. We drive old subarus and things and spend our money on solar panels.

I think the people you want to pick on are the people who bought the SUV's, overextended themselves to buy that ski boat, the house on the lake, the McMansion with the lawyer foyer and did it all on easy credit.

That doesn't sound like the greenies I know. BTW, I agree completely with your article, even though I might be one of the ones you want to marinate and cook.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Roccland » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 21:32:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'I') think the people you want to pick on are the people who bought the SUV's, overextended themselves to buy that ski boat, the house on the lake, the McMansion with the lawyer foyer and did it all on easy credit. That doesn't sound like the greenies I know. BTW, I agree completely with your article, even though I might be one of the ones you want to marinate and cook.

Revi weren't you recently interviewed by CNN and featured for your planning and energy saving efforts? or was that someone else I was thinking of?
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Revi » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 21:44:04

Yes, that was me. link

We have cut our fossil fuel by half over the last five years. We also save about $3000 a year from the changes we've made. I guess that makes me a "greenie". I just got done building a solar car. We hope to get it registered next week.

Check it out at www.sunnev.com . It's the green one in the middle of the page.
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Re: Why America Is Headed For A Depression

Unread postby Roccland » Sat 23 Aug 2008, 22:09:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'Y')es, that was me. link
We have cut our fossil fuel by half over the last five years. We also save about $3000 a year from the changes we've made. I guess that makes me a "greenie". I just got done building a solar car. We hope to get it registered next week.
Check it out at www.sunnev.com . It's the green one in the middle of the page.

Dude you rocc!!!!! way to go Revi!

Had to off the pic revi...nice job though!!
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