by dorlomin » Thu 13 Mar 2008, 19:56:30
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('thuja', 'O')K - my prediction has been that we are entering a period that will reflect historical eras. Not everything will be the same but there could be remarkable similarities. Thus my thesis that we will reexperience the 70's, then the 30's, then the 1890's then....the 1400's?
Starting off, we are in the process of entering a period not too disimilar from the 70's with stagflation, high energy prices, high unemployment rates and stagnating wages.
This is likely to be followed by a 1930's style Depression in which unemployment levels skyrocket, bankruptcy is endemic, food and fuel become expensive and scarce for many and outright penury is the lot of a substantial portion of 1st Worlders.
At some point we will morph into a 19th century situation (1890's) where power in the form of electricity and fuel become very expensive and scarce to the point where whole communities must revert to life without, or with very intermittent supplies. There will still be very wealthy areas and we will still see car and heavy machine usage- just at a much lesser level...similar to the 19th century.
And after that...hmmm...prognostications? I can't see a way out of this one but it doesn't look good. Even the 19th century had abundant coal. Even that may be lacking 30 years hence.
Denmark has already managed to get 20% of its electricity out of wind power. Countries like the UK, Norway, Argentina and New Zealand have huge potential wind and tidal wind potential.
The script is not yet written but it will be the nations that identify the problem earliest and act quickest that can go furthest in avoiding the worst of fates.
I strongly think some countries will experiance an Olduvai George experiance and others may only be slowed down in a long emergency type experiance. The relative education of the population and the reactions of individual leaders will matter alot.
Britains refusal to increase its investment in renewables puts them well behind the race. They may find a dependence on Russian gas and unbuilt nuclear power stations a huge drag on there economy meaning they have far less power and ability to manufacture and trade as the peak oil depletion curve starts to kick in.