by fletch_961 » Mon 02 Jun 2008, 06:18:42
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hat's a good question, Deffeyes doesn't state, but it appears to be annual data in the past, with more frequently calculated and prorated points closer to the present.
Prorated points? Prorated for what? But yes that is my interpretation-the points come from a long temporal period and then is overlaid with today's GDP. Making the chart useless. Anybody who wants to use that to reflect how much of our GDP went to oil purchases is being lied to.

That chart goes to 2006 when oil was half what it is now. That puts oil now at ~6.5% of today's GDP. It is a lie to state that we are in new territory as his chart shows.
From Dreffeyes article:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')ow big is the problem?
Multiplying production (barrels per year) times the oil price (dollars per barrel) gives a total cost in dollars per year. It's an enormous number; tens of trillions of dollars per year. To put a scale on it, the three thin curves on the graph show the oil cost in contrast to the total world domestic product; the annual value the goods and services added up for all the world's countries. The three curves show the oil cost at one percent, two and a half percent, and five percent of the total world economic output. At $130 this morning, we are at six and a half percent.
Somebody to ignorant to realize that GDP changes over time ...
And..
Anybody who can't multiply two numbers together loses a lot of credibility if you ask me. Ten of trillions of dollars?
~30B bpy * $130 = $4.2 trillion.
This guy was a geology professor at Princeton for 30yrs? How embarrassing...for Princeton. I think he should stick to scratching rocks together to determine their hardness on the Mohs scale and leave chart drawing and thinking for people with the capacity to do so.
About the only thing of value in the whole [s]mess [/s] article was the fact that the whole economy would be hurting if oil went to $300. Duh.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]My intuitive, uninformed guess is that it cannot go above 15 percent. If we see oil at $300 per barrel, we will be looking out over the smoldering ruins of the world's economy.