by seven » Sat 10 Jun 2006, 05:21:46
Our high 'standard of living' is based entirely on cheap oil. Most of the products that we depend on are made from and/or produced with/by oil. Man-made fabrics are oil-based. The food we eat is grown with oil-intensive methods on large farms using large quantities of oil-based pesticides and fertilizers, and use oil products to transport around the country and world. All plastics are made from oil. Many pharmaceuticals are oil-derived in part. Most of the items and resources we buy or use in our daily lives are oil-dependent on multiple levels for harvest, production, manufacture, transport, and sale. Take the 'cheap' out of the oil equation and we are in serious trouble.
Previously, humans used a finite resource for one or several crucial or important elements of life, but never before has a large civilization depended entirely on ONE non-renewable, finite resource for almost everything to maintain their entire way of living - food production, clothing, medicine, transport, manufacturing, heating/cooling, everyday products - the list is endless. (sure, some earlier peoples used corn, for example, for everything from food to fabric to whatnot, but they didn't have to support millions of humans with it, and grew the renewable resource themselves - and when there wasn't enough corn, the population and lifestyle necessarily contracted) Cheap oil is as central to our mode of large-scale, industrialized, first world living as breathing air is to human life...it's both the building block and the fuel for our civilization's existence. And there is NO alternative resource or combination of resources that will take the place of cheap oil for the staggering range of modern uses and requirements - it's simply not possible.
Sure, a few alternatives will be used to partly offset the oil problem in some ways, heating, transport - but the crux of the issue is that our lives are built on the large-scale consumption and multi-use of ONE finite, non-renewable resource - worse, one finite resource at a CHEAP price. Once that resource is not cheap, or not widely available in the huge quantities required to support our everyday uses, our way of life will first be increasingly expensive across the board, then disrupted, then crippled, then GONE. Moreover, since oil is the building block and fuel of the entire industrialized economy which fuels our lifestyle, once there are waves of supply disruptions or scares about its availability (which are starting to happen now) markets and economies may falter or even collapse before any actual 'oil emergency'.
That is why it's 'different this time', and why we won't 'just move to another resource'.
obscurum per obscurius