by Pops » Sun 18 Apr 2004, 15:38:38
OilWatch said:
“ This is not a debate about pollution, this is a debate about economic growth.
I think you are right; pollution is only a worry if we’re intent on unlimited economic growth. But the debate is not about HOW to sustain growth indefinitely, because it simply won't happen without cheap energy.
In case you didn’t have a chance to click the link I posted earlier:
"Humankind can follow Plan War merely by continuing on its present course, planning for further growth even as the necessary resource basis for that growth is depleted. Given that some societies use energy resources at a higher rate than others do, that resources are not evenly distributed geographically, and that military power is also unevenly distributed among nations, the eventual results are not difficult to predict."
------------
So the goal is unlimited growth forever?
Another snip:
“By the year 2060, if the world maintained a mere 3 percent annual economic growth rate and all the world's people were to benefit equally, world economic output would have to increase to 80 times its current rate.”
----------------
And on the lesser amount of net energy in non-conventional oil (Although repeating Aaron’s point and probably to no effect, and no link - that's a waste of time), from The Death of the Oil Economy
by Ted Trainer, From Earth Island Journal, Spring 1997:
“Economists argue that scarcity will result in price increases, making it more profitable to access poorer deposits. That seems plausible only if one thinks only about dollar costs. The fact is, as an oil field ages, increasing amounts of energy must be exerted to pump the oil out. The cost of this energy must be subtracted from the total value of the energy in the oil retrieved.”
-------------
This goes for non-conventional oil as well as declining fields.
Who cares about the profit in a barrel of oil? Well of course it is the people who produce it. Take away the incentive to produce and you will get no production whatsoever. Which, OilWatch is of course your main point -The Market, remember.
And as for non-conventional oil increasing the total available, AGAIN from museletter):
“Still another important level of detail concerns non-conventional oil sources - heavy oil, polar oil, deepwater oil, tar sands, and natural gas liquids - which are typically more expensive to produce than is conventional oil. In the early 1970s, these sources made up an insignificant part of the total global oil market, but today they account for nearly twenty percent of total oil produced. The EIA gives current oil production at about 76 mb/d, of which nearly 15 mb/d is from non-conventional sources. A consumption curve that takes these sources into account shows oil production growing more steeply from 1984 on, as compared to a graph of conventional oil only, though even the EIA figures for combined conventional and non-conventional oil reveal flat or negative growth since 2000.”
-------------
Do non-conventionals help? Yes. They already are and are indeed extending the plateau. But extending it long enough to allow changes in the basic structure of society? That of course is the real solution, not merely prolonging Plan Snooze.
OilWatch stated: “That is the bottom line and that is how it is going to sustain economic growth.”
So the goal is unlimited growth forever? Ain’t gonna happen.
Pops