by gego » Tue 21 Feb 2006, 01:58:15
There is a big difference to everyday life in how you view peak.
If you define peak as the day you have produced 1/2 of the total reserves you will ultimately produce, the half way point, then the peak date is not so significant when translated into everyday life. This is how Dreyfus calculated the peak date. Actual production can move higher after peak when defining peak this way.
If you define peak on a percapita basis, then we hit peak years ago, according to Duncan's calculations, but we are still producing an absolute amount of oil that is higher today than when this percapita peak hit. What this means is that someone near the bottom of the distribution curve is now suffering, while those nearer the top keep on trucking, unfettered.
Forget Dreyfus and Duncan; the long term curve may have already rolled over, but shorter term cyclical patterns may allow production to increase for a few more years. The long term curve involves some averaging. If however, we produce more each year for a few years, but the averaged curve has rolled over, then there will be a sharp drop to bring us back to or below the long term curve, so when things really break, they will break even more sharply. This is what I expect, because extreme measures are being taken to prevent production declines now, which must be paid for later (lots of water and steam injected now to artificially hold up production).
Forget about trying to be precise with imprecise data in this imprecise world. The big picture is that we are in the area of the peak of humanity's use of energy. We are in the area of the peak in human population supported only by this energy. We are on the precipice of the greatest collapse in human population ever experienced. Does it really matter if we fall off the cliff today or five years from today? I think not.
It is comical to watch all the wishes for something different. Even George Bush must finally have been confronted by the nature of the problem, as you can see him struggling with denial. According to him we are on the verge of major technological breakthroughs to save us. This is typical denial thinking. Look through the threads on this site and see how many times people have posted wishful ideas about how this or that will bail us out. I would venture to say that this site is full of denial and wishful deluded thinking.
TSHTF soon enough, so unless you are into the excitement produced by danger, enjoy what little time you can. Take a final trip to Disney World, have a few affairs, read a few more good books, live it up to the extent that does not impede your survival plan.