by alecifel » Tue 21 Mar 2006, 22:37:25
Oklahoma City: 2010
I think the peak is a couple of years out. There's about to be a mad rush to bring some known smaller fields on line, but they'll peter out in about 18 months. Then the pooh's going in the windmill.
Oklahoma, and probably a lot of other central western states, is blessed (if you could call it a blessing) with being somewhat economically blighted to begin with. Our oil-based economy was killed by the petro-politics of the 80's and never really recovered. Geographically speaking, our major cities (both of less than a million each) only sprawl so far.. Tulsa's "outer suburbs" are 15 miles from downtown. Being endowed as we are with fairly plentiful natural gas and considerable remaining oil fields, we'll be able to either exchange those resources for cash, or hold on to a share of them to extend our ability to operate for a year or so.
Oklahoma has a large electrical energy surplus, selling 40% of our generation to out of state users. Again, we have plenty of natural gas to keep them running for some time.
My scenario for this area goes like this:
2007-2010: Pre-peak period
Fuel prices inching upwards cause an inflationary bubble that slows housing sales and reduces average sale price. Devaluation of real estate begins to eat into property tax revenues, which when combined with rising fuel prices, places hardships on school districts, fire departments and police departments. Maintenance of infrastructure such as roads, sewer and water lines, and electrical transmission lines is cut by about 5% per year, leading to a reduced level of service in a couple of years.
With the constriction of municipal budgets, entity spending on expansion projects is halted. This will kill the commercial construction (bid market) industry, turning approximately 1.5% of the population to Unemployment. Likewise, the housing slump has rendered the 1% of the population that builds houses for a living out of work. The loss of this sector spirals through the entire chain of supply, which by the time it reaches manufacture of tools and materials, employs 14% of our population. Once this industry collapses (all construction is predicated on growth), other sectors are to follow.
My future unemployment numbers look like this (an uneducated but intuitive guess, if you will)
'06: 4% - '07: 4.5% - '08: 5.5% - '09: 8% - '10: 14% - '11: 15% - '12: 16%
I think job loss will level out around the peak period, maybe even reverse for a little while, as huge numbers of displaced workers are recruited to attempt to ramp up biofuel production and other alternative energies.
After 2010? I won't make any projections that weren't outlined in the outstanding Portland scenario that opened this post. I will say that Oklahomans are a resilient (and somewhat backwards) lot who are not far removed from their pioneer roots. If we have to move back into soddies and start all over, so be it. We have a lot of people here who know still how to grow food without a tractor, to shape scrap metal into tools on an anvil, and to "make do" with what they have.
I will predict that by 2030 America will be back to the way it was in the sustainable period between the Civil War and the Roaring 20's (much like the roaring 90's): 8 miles or less to town, by wagon or horse; once you get to town, you hop a train to the next town. Those trains may be powered by biodiesel, or more likely, concentrated biomass fueling steam boilers. 35% of our population will be farming. 40% will be involved in making things of value (smiths, carpenters, etc.), 15% will be in financial services and advertising, 5% will be in religion, charity, entertainment and leisure, and the other 5% will be the lazies at the very top and the very bottom who do nothing. (Don't kid yourself. You will NEVER get rid of this 5%, although the faces will rotate in and out of that number rapidly.)
The large urban areas will be a checkerboard. You'll have your "new urbanist" areas like Mesta Park in OKC turning more self sufficient while the vast spreads of lower-income slums (Del City, Bethany, Warr Acres, and the Southside) cannibalize the vacated commercial districts until they are absorbed, one person at a time, into the new communities and rural neighborhoods as they get fed up, or are naturally liquidated by gang activity, malnutrition, drugs, disease and domestic violence (attrition).
Me? I'm working 4 acres of woodland.. the only mortgage is on the land (I'm PRAYING for hyperinflation.) and building my house 1 board at a time as I have the pocket money to get it. I'm off the main roads but within 5 miles of 3 workable small towns. I have plentiful water, plentiful wood for charcoaling (capturing the driven off gases to keep from smogging my air) and fertile humus 9 inches deep on top of rich sandy loam where anything will grow.
I love it out here!
N.J. Allen
Luther, OK USA
carpenter, blacksmith, philosopher and farmer.