by kpeavey » Mon 30 Nov 2009, 23:38:17
70% of the homes in the northeast are oil heat. When heating oil was through the roof last year, I was reading stories about how people coped. Much of it was by suffering. I lived in Bangor through the ice storm of 98 when much of the state was without power, for several weeks in some places. Eastern Maine Medical Center was a mile away, it was a priority, we lost power for only an hour. A friend stayed with me for a few days. Doubling up will be the solution for many, find a friend with wood, a full fuel tank, or electric heat.
I think the woods are safe in an oil crisis. Most of those oil heated homes have no fireplace, woodstove or even a chimney. Firewood is not an option. Back in the '75 just after the oil embargo my father switched to wood. The old chimney had to be torn out and replaced, hearth built, woodstove installed, seasoned wood delivered. It was a couple weeks from start to finish. There are not enough woodstoves in stock in retail stores, or flu brick/stovepipe, or seasoned firewood for a massive transition to wood heating. It won't happen. Even if a massive proigram was started right now to convert as many homes a possible, there are not enough mason, installers, umberjacks, and home inspectors to get the job done in less than 10 years.
Many dwellings are not suited to firewood heating. Apartment buildings, condos, mobile homes are good examples. Homes built specifically for oil or electric heat were not laid out to include a woodstove and chimney. Most homes built since 1950 were designed around oil or electric heat, and a small percentage for gas. Figure half the homes and all the apartments will never be converted to wood heat, even with an all out effort starting yesterday. Then there is the issue of offices and retail stores-how do they get heated? Again, mostly oil and electricity. Gonna put a bunch of woodstoves into the local Wal-Mart? If a movement to wood heat was in progress, the stores and offices would be more able to afford the stoves and installations and firewood, removing them from the market or driving the price up to make them unaffordable to an underemployed homeowner.
This just offers an idea of the scope of one aspect of our dependence on oil. Getting out from under it will take many years and we just don't have that time available. A 50% production decline is not needed to change the lives of a great many people. If 10% of the home users could not afford or acquire heating oil, its a crisis.
If you want a picture of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face--for ever."
-George Orwell, 1984
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twenty centuries of stony sleep were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle, and what rough beast, its hour come round at last, slouches towards Bethlehem to be born?
-George Yeats