by EnergyUnlimited » Thu 07 Sep 2006, 04:21:50
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ayoob', 'W')e go from 80 million to 40 million in the first halving. 40MBD gone. The second halving only costs us 20MBD. By comparison, that's really not so bad. The third one is a mere 10MBD. It's the first one that's really going to be the monster.
Consider the magnitude of the first halving compared to the third halving. The first one is 40MBD, the third is only a quarter of the size of the loss. It should be relatively easy to adjust to the third halving. It's all about the first one.
I would argue with your assertion.
First halving, even if huge, will simply discourage peoples from non essential (and yet fuel consuming) activities. Most of holliday activities (especially those involving far away destinations) will be gone and driving your SUV few miles to pick your groceries will also be gone.
People will happily do car pooling, while travelling to work (with no legislation needed to encourage it! - they will prefer this, than foreclosure of their Mc Mansion). OK, you will see the end of lumpen air travel perhaps. It will turn to be experience once in lifetime, not few times in the year like now.
Overally simpler life style will be enforced but all critical services will still work relatively uninterrupted. This is based on my assumption, that about half of oil is simply wasted to provide people with lavish life style.
The worst, I believe would be second halving. This time some critical services will take a hit and distribution of necessary goods will be interrupted. Car pooling will no longer be viable as 90% of fuel will be distributed to essential services and only 10% or so will be left for the market.
Only rich will be able to afford it and others will not be able to get to work, if public transport is not available and company is out of biking distance. Mc Mansions foreclosures will go rampant. Air travel will be privilidge of the richest (as well as governments & military of course).
You will witness The End of Suburbia, The End of Globalization, authoritarian governments forming, limited die-off in OECD countries (mainly due to collapse of medical care) and unlimited one in Third World countries (mainly due to collapse of food supply).
You will observe roads & airports infrastructure collapse, as they will no longer be needed. Third World War may well go ahead, if it didn't happen during first halving stage. This period of time will deliver major structural changes of modern society towards sustainable (but uncomfortable) life.
The third halving will rather have mild consequences, as bio fuels are likely to be able replace this 10mbpd lost. Critical services will still be running as in the second stage, and provided, that WW III did not materialise, our society (or whatever remain from it) will rely on nuclear power, renevables (bio-fuels, wind, solar etc).
Any further decline would only be slow.