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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby TheDude » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 18:23:14

mos - do you seriously think reform is underway? We're still throwing more into the pot: jka on economics UK: Derivatives held by US banks increase to $200 trillion. That's from April.

At the least it will take a few election cycles to clear government houses of all the attendant corruption - which you also don't believe in, all evidence to the contrary. Suggest you read up on the political history of a nation like Mexico, where corruption is as fundamental as vents are to central heating. As it stands you need an unholy amount of money to win high office in the US, and the big banks have more of it than ever.
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby Plantagenet » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 18:53:13

No worries.

If oil goes to $200 we'll all just buy Chevy Volts from Government Motors with our Obama bailout checks, plug 'em in and keep on rolling. :)

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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby odegaard » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 19:06:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nobodypanic', '.')..
i' ve been kicking the idea around that perhaps past historical examples all owe their ultimate cause to running up against some resource constraint. the dfference in past being that we simply had to move on to other sources of easy to pluck resources. i have nothing concrete to back that up, though, but i do think it's an interesting perspective to take.
...

Cornucopians like to state that the stone age did not end because we ran out of stones.
That is technically true but......

stone age --> bronze age --> iron --> steel --> the age of plastics

Do you see a pattern here? Every transition phase happened because we found something bigger and better. A material that had superior qualities then the previous: either stronger, lighter, easier to machine, or more versatile.

Now if somebody were to discover a new energy source that has double the energy density and half the cost of crude oil and you can carry it around in a 1 gallon jug container just as easily as you can carry a bottle of water then yeah I guess we can declare that peak oil has been defeated.
and then we can shut down this website and ALL of us would have to go find a new hobby aside from talking about doom and gloom!

Unfortunately every "alternative energy" idea that has been placed on the table is an inferior replacement to oil.
It either has half the energy density, twice the cost, you can't carry it around in a 1 gallon jug container: wind power, solar power, nuclear power --> blah blah blah
Humanity has demonstrated plenty of times an ability to technologically advance by upgrading to a superior material.
however....
There has NEVER been an example of an *uplifting moment* for a society that had to downgrade to an inferior material or resource. NEVER
"They're not too big to fail, they're too big to bail out!" Peter Schiff
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby DantesPeak » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 20:05:06

I think differently about this. We are past peak easy to access and high quality oil. Going forward, the price of oil must - I repeat must - rise faster than other costs just to have enough to keep the economy running in the same place.

As oil becomes harder to obtain, the price of oil will just go higher and higher. The question posed by many is at what point will the economic system becomes so destabilzed that the economy collapses.

If the price rise occurs fairly gradually before the collapse, the price could go to $200 (in 2009 US dollars) or higher first. However I think that the Fed will indirectly monetize the price rise in oil (actually it already has), thereby leading us eventually to a price much higher than $200 before collapse. That might take a few years or so to achieve.
It's already over, now it's just a matter of adjusting.
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby vision-master » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 20:11:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')ow if somebody were to discover a new energy source that has double the energy density and half the cost of crude oil and you can carry it around in a 1 gallon jug container just as easily as you can carry a bottle of water then yeah I guess we can declare that peak oil has been defeated.


If everyone had free unlimited energy, the only losers would be the kings and queens of our empire. Ain't gonna happen (maybe) until TSHTF.
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby odegaard » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 20:27:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', '.')..
If everyone had free unlimited energy, the only losers would be the kings and queens of our empire. Ain't gonna happen (maybe) until TSHTF.

Oil is FREE energy.
Don't you know?
Mother nature made oil.
Oil companies do not "produce" oil.
The oil company simply justs pokes a hole in the ground, extracts the oil, refines it, and then sells it to you.

If you had to pay the "production" costs of oil --> my God it would be very expensive. I don't think anyone would be able to afford it. :wink:
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby Plantagenet » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 20:41:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('odegaard', '
')
If you had to pay the "production" costs of oil --> my God it would be very expensive. I don't think anyone would be able to afford it.


Chemists have been making oil from coal for almost 80 years. WWII Germany and Apartheid South Africa ran on it. Modern chemists can make oil from coal for about 2-3 times the current price of oil ---and methane and ethanol from coal may cost less then we currently pay for oil from Saudi Arabia.


"Methanol from coal could have a production cost of 40 to 64 cents a gallon, according to a 2003 study by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory that compared seven systems - including some developed during the US synfuels heyday. The Methanol Institute, a Washington trade group, this spring pegged the fuel's wholesale cost at 76 cents a gallon.

Methanol can be used directly as a fuel. Indy race cars have used it for years.
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby dunny » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 21:00:25

I thought odegaard meant the cost of actually making the the oil.. or coal.. ie trap the solar energy in biomass and then subject to astronomical inputs of more energy in the form of pressure and heat. If the oil companies actually "made" oil it'd be worth a million bucks a litre.

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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby odegaard » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 21:10:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dunny', 'I') thought odegaard meant the cost of actually making the the oil.. or coal.. ie trap the solar energy in biomass and then subject to astronomical inputs of more energy in the form of pressure and heat. If the oil companies actually "made" oil it'd be worth a million bucks a litre.

Mick.
+1

yeah that's what I meant.

Plantagenet was simply just trying to quote out of context
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby odegaard » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 21:13:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dunny', 'I') thought odegaard meant the cost of actually making the the oil.. or coal.. ie trap the solar energy in biomass and then subject to astronomical inputs of more energy in the form of pressure and heat. If the oil companies actually "made" oil it'd be worth a million bucks a litre.

Mick.
That's right. The oil companies lie every time they say "produce."

They suck. :twisted:
well technically speaking:

It's too deep so it cannot be SUCKED out.

It must be PUSHED out by increasing the pressure. :wink:
"They're not too big to fail, they're too big to bail out!" Peter Schiff
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby Nefarious » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 21:48:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('odegaard', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('dunny', 'I') thought odegaard meant the cost of actually making the the oil.. or coal.. ie trap the solar energy in biomass and then subject to astronomical inputs of more energy in the form of pressure and heat. If the oil companies actually "made" oil it'd be worth a million bucks a litre.

Mick.
That's right. The oil companies lie every time they say "produce."

They suck. :twisted:
well technically speaking:

It's too deep so it cannot be SUCKED out.

It must be PUSHED out by increasing the pressure. :wink:


Since we are being technical. It is already under pressure. They just pop a hole in the top and let it spew.
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby mos6507 » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 22:43:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'M')os you repeat the same thing over and over.


So do you.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '
')The housing bubble caused the recession.


I know you don't believe that, so why say it?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 's')o there must be other reasons for those recessions. What?


Could it be.... SATAN?

Correlation is not causation. Take every recession on a case by case basis, zoom into it and determine its causative factors with the same degree of scrutiny this one is getting. Don't just overlay two graphs and call it a day. That's sloppy beyond belief. And seriously, I'm not arguing the cause of OTHER recessions. Just this one. It doesn't HAVE to follow any sort of pattern. There isn't just ONE way an economy can go into the shitter.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '
')And no. We can not withstand $150 oil. Our US economy depends on the retail sale of items shipped (many from overseas) with petroleum,


Goods transport is a very small portion of final retail cost. I'd really like to believe that globalization will end tomorrow, but bunker fuel will have to go up a lot higher than where it was when oil was at $150 for the bean counters to justify bringing those manufacturing jobs back to the US. It will happen, just not as swiftly as most peakers believe. Look back in the archives for when doom was to have occured when oil hit the unbelievably high price of $60/bbl. We really don't know for sure which price thresholds will cause which aspects of TWAWKI to buckle under, except maybe the airlines.
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Re: can the world really afford $200+ a barrel

Unread postby mos6507 » Mon 22 Jun 2009, 22:50:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'O')kay Mos, then what caused the other recessions?


There are reams of books deconstructing the various depressions and recessions, few of which you've probably read. If you want a thorough analysis of THOSE then it's going to take more than overlaying two graphs to tell the whole story.
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