by sihmei » Wed 25 Feb 2009, 09:23:07
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t means that the majority of the damage to our economy and our way of life, and of the supply chain that brings goods and services to us, will happen in the first half-life.
Not really, the time it takes to half each time is the same. So we'll lose the first half of our oil in 30 years, the next half in 30 years, then the next half in 30 years. It's the relative % amount of our oil we lose each year that matters, not the absolute amount from the beginning. So if oil depletes at 4% a year, then it will be 4% the first year post peak and 4% 200 years from now.
Also, we have EROEI/Net energy. The second half of the oil is NOT the equivalent of the first half. The first half was the easy, cheap, real good quality stuff. The second half is the dregs, expensive, difficult, poor quality. The effect of declining EROEI is only marginal at first but rapidly accelerates over time until it heads off a cliff. So the net energy of the second half of the oil may only half the net energy of the first half, at best. So if the gross decline is 4%, the net decline will be at minimum 4% but accelerating. So T+10 years post peak we might have 4-5% decline. Then as the diminishing returns hit harder and harder, T10-T20 might be have a decline rate of 5-6%. Then T20-T30 might be 7-8%. Then T30-T40 might be 12-13%.
Then there is the per capita net oil energy, the amount of oil energy available to each person Earth, which is the only thing thatt should be used, NOT GROSS, as it determines the living standard of humans, just like when looking at how prosperous a country is you look at the GDP per capita, not the GDP gross.
Say we produce (gross) 80mb at peak. 10 years pre peak we produced 70mb and 10 years post peak we produce 70mb. The Earth's population 10 years pre peak was smaller than 10 years post, so the per capita oil, and therefore the standard of living globally, would be much lower 10 years post than 10 years past.
Then, add the net oil/EROEI to the per capita, and you find the amount of net oil energy available to each person on Earth declines very rapidly. So if the decline rate for the first 25 years post peak GROSS is 4% a year, the REAL rate people should be looking at is AT LEAST double - 9%-10%, and probably accelerating as EROEI kicks in. In fact I've done some modelling of this and it shows the net oil enegy per capita halving in the first 10 years, with the half life possibly getting shorter, depending on how much the population lags. In 20 years it's fallen by some 80%. Barely bears thinking about what that would do to the world.
The situation is far far grimmer than even most doomers and peak oilers realise.