by ConsumptionJane » Mon 21 Mar 2005, 22:42:28
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')here seems to be a lot of DOOM and GLOOM on this site.
Most definately. This is why I take great lengths when introducing peak oil not confuse the geological reality of peak oil theory with its inevitable but unkown consequences. All the negative talk about its consequences erodes the credence of peak oil theory; it is simple, has strong empircal evidence and extraordinary explanatory coherence - especially in light of recent news.
For example, I was overjoyed that peak oil was actually on the table at Congress last week but also dismayed that gentlman Bartlett even mentioned Malthus. How many house members started rolling their eyes at this point? I think he should have stuck with the data - it is overwhelming enough - and leave the consequences for the policy makers to muse over and call themselves chicken little.
And all the "dots" that are connected to conspiracy theories from peak oil don't do much to help advance its acceptance either, at least not outside the "red pill" community.
The few people I have informed about peak oil automatically see the EOTWAWKI and then I am left with the mess of trying to lift their spirits. I suppose that the scope of the problem is so large that this reaction is natural and we really should be questioning "life as we know it". But after initially succumbing to humming the REM song, I pulled thru and regained my skepticism while accepting peak oil theory. Now I introduce "oil awareness" as just that. My friends can read stuff on die-off.org if they want but I don't direct them there.
I think we will be waiting in gas lines before bread lines. The problem of short supply will show up in the market first (as may be evident now). Prices and demand will fluctuate as we ride the bumpy infrastructure-induced production plateau until the point when peak oil is realized by terminal decline. In the meantime, new projects will come online, new pipelines will be built, new discoveries will be found, demand will vary and alternatives will become more attractive. The onset of Peak Oil will test everyone's faith in the market god but I will keep my faith until then.
As for economic collapse, dollar runs, housing bubbles, die-offs, global warming and future resource wars, peak oil may be an exacerbating factor but who's to say that all this sh*t will hit the same fan at the same time. Maybe, maybe not. I'ts sort of a question of Pascal's Wager and how much each of us is willing to bet. I'm just putting in the ante for now.