by americandream » Wed 05 May 2010, 00:12:12
The two don't necessarily coincide. One can reasonably hold a view on peak oil and BAU's wasteful use of resources whilst contemplating a BAU that is more efficient.
In contrast, advocacy of climate risk is much more broader in scope.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Graeme', '[')b]Why do peak oilers and climate changers not get along better?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')'m currently attending Ohio State University's Moving Ahead 2010 conference, focused on transitioning to sustainable transportation. I'll be moderating a panel tonight. I think it will be filmed -- I'll let you know, assuming it's not a disaster.
I had an interesting experience this morning at a presentation by Robert Hirsch (oil industry vet, now a consultant, author of famed Hirsch Report) on peak oil. It was pretty familiar stuff to anyone who's followed the issue: oil production is going to head into inexorable decline in the next few years, oil prices will spike, electrification won't be fast enough to replace liquid fuels, and the only near-term options are coal-to-liquids, tar sands, and to a lesser extent, efficiency.
Afterwards I asked him about climate change, which he hadn't mentioned in his presentation. I noted that all his short-term mitigation options involve increasing CO2 emissions, despite the fact that scientists are recommending U.S. emissions fall to effectively zero by 2050.
He said, basically, that people and their suffering matter more to him than the climate.
I followed up by noting that droughts, severe storms, loss of freshwater supplies, declining agricultural output, and disease migration do, in fact, impact people and create suffering (what with the climate containing so many humans).
He said, and I quote: "Don't believe everything you read."
grist