by Graeme » Sun 02 Nov 2008, 00:51:51
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'T')he Peak Oilists are alive and well.
Interestingly, the first thread I responded to here asked the same question:
linkI don't know if the tactic is an honest question, an invitation to debate or merely an effort to reinforce ones own convictions.
No matter, you may know some of me or not but 'round the first of this year I guessed the price of oil would get near $150 then go below $90 due to price rationing. Not too far wrong at this point and since I don't remember your guess I can't compare.
If you are feeling lonely since no one is responding to you let me clue you in:
The true Peak Oilists only debate for sport when they have time away from the real world.
Whoever else you have been talking to till now has probably become either bored with you or the game or more probably distracted by the reality of wildly fluctuating commodity prices and some other stuff of which you might have read.
I don't have any overarching point to make except to observe that many here have spent lots of effort to become less dependent to the structures on which we now rely and I commend them. As well I wish luck to those like you who trust the machine to make everything all right. As usual the end result will probably be a little of both.
And while I appreciate your contribution of positive news to the site, don't delude yourself into thinking the Peak Oilists have all gone back to life in the 'burbs.
No reply is necessary. Not debating, just stating - I had some spare time.)
It's an honest question. I merely saw the article and decided to post it. I have scientific training so I'm sceptical by nature.
Actually, the reaction is sometimes more revealing than the original post! How dare you question our theory! We will have you flogged at dawn.
I never guessed the price the oil. I do agree that eventually it SHOULD rise again because oil is a finite resource. But oil is not our only energy resource. If it was our only resource, then the darkest predictions of the peak community would come true. The trouble is we have other resources where investment can go, so the outcome in terms of oil price and global economy is highly unpredictable.
I'm not feeling lonely. I'm looking for answers. I don't think everybody can read everyone's posts. Even though there are some useful gems in this site, many will have missed them.
I think humans have an enormous will to survive. That desire and motivation should enable us to prevail through this difficult period in our history.
Thank you for your compliment regarding positive news I've posted here. I didn't ask the peak oilers to go back to the burbs. If they don't want to then that is their choice.
I'd like to add this story to the discussion on peak oil.
Oil reserve expert claims world faces ‘oversupply of energy’ problem$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he world now faces an oversupply, not a shortage of energy, and a peak in oil production is out of sight, according to Nansen Saleri, an oil reserve expert who will bring the contentious peak oil debate to Abu Dhabi this week.
“There’s plenty of energy sources,” he said. “We don’t have an energy shortage problem, we have an energy allocation problem.”
But Dr Saleri was confident investment in new capacity would continue, in part because a number of projects in the Middle East involved a huge amound of sunk costs and have already “crossed a point of no return”.