Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Discuss research and forecasts regarding hydrocarbon depletion.

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Ibon » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 15:52:10

Here is a thought.

When EROEI was 1 : 100 suburbia and an affluent middle class was possible. When EROEI is 1 : 4 and going down we are also heading down the historical norm of a small elite and peasants.

For the ever smaller fraction of our society that remains the privileged oil consumer Peak Oil will never happen. For those increasing numbers of the disenfranchised it already has.

Relevant for modern society it is far better to define peak oil by the cost of energy whose consequence excludes you from being part of the privileged still able to consume it. A few obvious early examples; when you can no longer afford to own and maintain an automobile. When you can no longer afford airplane tickets.

A little later on it will go like this. At some point increasing energy costs will create an inflationary economic environment where you will see your ability to consume slowly curtailed back to the very basics in a steady progression until you are a member of the underclass, a peasant, a serf.

There will always remain a very small elite who will never experience peak oil.

How many of us (or our children) on this board can claim to even have a chance in hell of being a member of this privileged elite in the next 20-50 years?
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
blog: http://blog.mounttotumas.com/
website: http://www.mounttotumas.com
User avatar
Ibon
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 9572
Joined: Fri 03 Dec 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Volcan, Panama

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Shaved Monkey » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 19:42:35

If someone had deliberately downsized to avoid the rush and chosen a self sustaining life on his fertile functioning permaculture property, in a like minded community,he would probably do as well as the elite, who could still afford the high prices but would have a massively diminished choice to fulfil their desires.
Genuinely wanting and needing less is the major key to having a good life,that needs a quantum shift in thinking.
Staying healthy would be a bonus,but doctors in Greece are bartering food for services so there is still hope.
Ready to turn Zombies into WWOOFers
User avatar
Shaved Monkey
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2578
Joined: Wed 30 Mar 2011, 01:43:28

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby SeaGypsy » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 22:21:51

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')
Relevant for modern society it is far better to define peak oil by the cost of energy whose consequence excludes you from being part of the privileged still able to consume it. A few obvious early examples; when you can no longer afford to own and maintain an automobile. When you can no longer afford airplane tickets.

A little later on it will go like this. At some point increasing energy costs will create an inflationary economic environment where you will see your ability to consume slowly curtailed back to the very basics in a steady progression until you are a member of the underclass, a peasant, a serf.



A growing trend among the older generation in Australia is to buy a caravan, motorhome, RV or some such nomadic life tool.

While this looks like increasing consumption, looking beneath the surface, the numbers stack up as being relatively benign.

Called 'Grey Nomads', the model goes something like:

Mr & Mrs Smith, working class, retired, sell their home for about $500k.
They spend about $50k on a nice 4 wheel drive and another $50k on a tow along caravan with all the mod-cons. The other $400k goes into some kind of investment fund. (Of course some don't have these resources and do a 'poor man's version' of same.)

The Smiths follow the sun, seeking the endless summer. If they have the money, they stay in trailer parks (caravan parks in Australia). Otherwise they camp in the many thousands of short term free spots provided along the highways, in national parks and state forests.
As an aged pension couple, the Smiths get about $550 a week to live.

It is about 3500 km from the far north to the far south of the continent. Towing a van, about 2 weeks pension will get them from one end of the country to the other (at current costs). Following the seasons, food can be bought cheaply and minimal heating/ cooling expenses are necessary. Many Grey nomads will travel about 100- 200 km each pay check, or every 2 weeks. They can do this only refueling every 6 to 12 weeks.

These people become experts on travelling over time and saving money. Many will pick fruit seasonally to supplement their pensions. Many make friends both on the road and along the way. Some find their favorite places and become part time community members.

There is the argument that this is not sustainable in the long run. However fuel can become much more expensive before stopping these people in their tracks. Meanwhile, they are building connections to remote communities, making themselves useful and finding their dreams sometimes coming true. If/ when stopped in their tracks, it will often be with far more options than people who have stayed in one place.

My point here is that 'downsizing' may not mean deleting mechanized transport in favor of micro farming or serfdom in the median term. The key investment for many people might be the means of flexibility and travel to 'get out there' and find themselves. One doesn't have to be an intrepid sailor or backpacker to avail themselves a much broader pallet of life than they would just staying put and waiting to be put on the bread line or chain gang.

IMO, owning land is over-rated. Especially when it comes to a more energy restricted world, the value of direct human physical labor will become again a very important part of sustaining any community. A 100 acre farm which relies on mechanical inputs run by a nuclear family may quickly die as these inputs become unsustainable. The same farm with 50 dedicated workers may both sustain those people and allow some surplus to trade. In this case, with diminished outside authority, the social structure of each farm becomes much more flexible and adaptable- not necessarily a serf/ landlord relationship at all. The landlord must keep his/ her team together and cooperative, foster trust and good relations. We serfs of the future are not quite the utterly naive illiterates we might have been before the industrial revolution.

This is my rainbow thread in the dark tapestry of our age.
SeaGypsy
Master Prognosticator
Master Prognosticator
 
Posts: 9285
Joined: Wed 04 Feb 2009, 04:00:00

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Loki » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 23:01:47

Ibon, I think what you're basically describing is the widening of the gulf in what is becoming a two-tier society, at least here in the US. Our large middle class is really the only thing that distinguishes us from a Third World country, but they haven't been faring so well the last couple decades, and I really don't see how this trend will be reversed given the converging catastrophes. Most of us will just get poorer and poorer until there is hardy a middle class left, but there will always be a small minority whose vast wealth will cushion the effects of hard resource limits.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ShavedMonkey', 'I')f someone had deliberately downsized to avoid the rush and chosen a self sustaining life on his fertile functioning permaculture property, in a like minded community,he would probably do as well as the elite, who could still afford the high prices but would have a massively diminished choice to fulfil their desires.

Good work if you can get it, but still an exceedingly rare option for most. I've tried to move in that direction myself, insinuating myself into the local organic farming community (managed to con one farmer into letting me work and live on his farm) and learning to live with a lot less (I filed my taxes yesterday, made $16,300 last year :lol: ). But my quest to “collapse now and avoid the rush” is still very much a work in progress. I don't see my current situation as long term, unfortunately, but the peasant skills I've been developing can at least be brought with me to my next situation, whatever that may be.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')enuinely wanting and needing less is the major key to having a good life,that needs a quantum shift in thinking.

Agreed. Voluntary poverty is a viable solution for a small minority of freaks like you and me. It's understandable why folks continue to hold onto the American Dream (or Australian Dream?) of infinitely increasing material abundance, it can be quite compelling, but its days seem to be over. Unfortunately I think a lot of people are going to learn that involuntary poverty is far more painful than voluntary poverty.
A garden will make your rations go further.
User avatar
Loki
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 3509
Joined: Sat 08 Apr 2006, 03:00:00
Location: Oregon

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby ralfy » Sat 02 Feb 2013, 23:33:33

The biggest catch of all is that much of the wealth of the elite consists of money, and that money has value only as long as increasing production and consumption of goods and services are maintained. The irony, then, is that for the rich to remain so, more of the poor have to become part of the middle class. Otherwise....
User avatar
ralfy
Light Sweet Crude
Light Sweet Crude
 
Posts: 5651
Joined: Sat 28 Mar 2009, 11:36:38
Location: The Wasteland

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby SeaGypsy » Sun 03 Feb 2013, 00:22:23

Good points all. It seems the longer one holds on to the rapidly slipping illusion of middle class life the more one becomes trapped in the inevitable slide. There may never be a better opportunity than now to jump ship, before the water becomes full of fleeing rats.
SeaGypsy
Master Prognosticator
Master Prognosticator
 
Posts: 9285
Joined: Wed 04 Feb 2009, 04:00:00

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Narz » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 02:13:29

The Simpsons (episode 24, season 9) just had a "prepper" episode. It was kind of amusing actually.
“Seek simplicity but distrust it”
User avatar
Narz
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 2360
Joined: Sat 25 Nov 2006, 04:00:00
Location: the belly of the beast (New Jersey)

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Ibon » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 08:29:05

After reading the last couple of posts it is worth reminding everyone that one of the psychological benefits of departing from oil gluttony and moving toward oil scarcity is that the consequences remove mediocrity. There will be both more suffering and more gratefulness at the extremes and far less ambivalence and ennui and less superficial couch potato mindless consumption.

Life is better lived when one is experiencing the extremes of hardship and gratefulness rather than hanging, as we have for most of the past 50 years, in a gluttoness state of satiating all our whims.

There is a positive side to moving back to the historical norms where one can not count on being constantly held by an affluent external environment. This cultivates a richer inner environment, something our collective modern culture is sorely lacking.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
blog: http://blog.mounttotumas.com/
website: http://www.mounttotumas.com
User avatar
Ibon
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 9572
Joined: Fri 03 Dec 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Volcan, Panama

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby hurricanechaser » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 10:24:55

embrace it..we dont want them embrace it,merely acknowledge
hurricanechaser
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 4
Joined: Tue 05 Feb 2013, 10:08:21

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Ibon » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 19:53:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '
')You must be speaking for yourself Ibon, not the billions in North Africa, Haiti, Asia already one barrel away from hunger and depredation. The piper has his arms outstretched and is collecting his due. As for me, I have lived a materially comfortable life, yet it is not a mediocre one. I personally strive to do the best I can and believe my inner life is not lacking, even though no one will remember me or my works. That is of no consequence.


Between the mediocrity of satiated consumerism and Haiti is quite a large percentage of our human population. The last I looked the US for example is still 5% of the human population and still up there around 20% in consuming the planets resource base. The mediocrity of life in the vast suburbs I do believe is directly related to these consumption rates and I further do believe that Americans will find both hardships and surprising rewards when the inequality of consumption flattens in the decades ahead.

There are the social or economic conditions that lead to mediocrity and there are always individuals who make choices that resist the collective. I have no doubt you have made those choices Pstarr.
Patiently awaiting the pathogens. Our resiliency resembles an invasive weed. We are the Kudzu Ape
blog: http://blog.mounttotumas.com/
website: http://www.mounttotumas.com
User avatar
Ibon
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 9572
Joined: Fri 03 Dec 2004, 04:00:00
Location: Volcan, Panama

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby WildRose » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 14:28:26

Over the past few years, increasing energy costs have made quite a dent in my family's standard of living, and I know we are in good company. We are gainfully employed and manage to pay the bills but there isn't much left to save, with the sting of high utility bills and higher food prices. Most families like ours, who are working and just managing, can't afford to buy new appliances or cars or pay for a vacation without putting it on a Mastercard, which is something we won't do. I'm guess I'm waiting to see what's going to happen when the majority of people in the wealthier countries can no longer put cars and appliances and vacations on credit.

What will happen in our cities? I'd like to imagine teenagers getting together in a schoolyard to play sports in their spare time, and adults helping each other out in their gardens and maybe bartering some services. But then there's the idea of the whole transportation-in-the-city and jobs/lower-paying-jobs/no jobs for a lot of disappointed people. And I'm wondering about the transition from Iaptops and personal automobiles and fixation on shopping, thinking how many generations will it take to feel grateful for what we have left?
User avatar
WildRose
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1881
Joined: Wed 21 Jun 2006, 03:00:00

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Plantagenet » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 15:01:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('WildRose', ' ')I'm guess I'm waiting to see what's going to happen when the majority of people in the wealthier countries can no longer put cars and appliances and vacations on credit.


Vacations? Vacations will be the least of their problems. Right after they can't afford vacations people will have to start worrying about being able to heat their house and find medical care when doctors will no longer accept the low Obamacare and Medicare payments and how they will afford food for the family.

Whats going to happen is that the vast majority of people are going to get poorer and poorer. For a glimpse at the future just watch what is happening in Greece, Spain, and other deeply indebted countries with extremely high energy prices

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('WildRose', 'W')hat will happen in our cities?


If you are lucky enough to live in Europe, you'll at least be able to take trains and subways and trams to find work. If you are here in the US, the lack of mass transit will contribute to people's inability to get around to do their jobs and will produce even more poverty.
User avatar
Plantagenet
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 26765
Joined: Mon 09 Apr 2007, 03:00:00
Location: Alaska (its much bigger than Texas).
Top

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby WildRose » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 15:22:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('WildRose', ' ')I'm guess I'm waiting to see what's going to happen when the majority of people in the wealthier countries can no longer put cars and appliances and vacations on credit.


Vacations? Vacations will be the least of their problems. Right after they can't afford vacations people will have to start worrying about being able to heat their house and find medical care when doctors will no longer accept the low Obamacare and Medicare payments and how they will afford food for the family.

Whats going to happen is that the vast majority of people are going to get poorer and poorer. For a glimpse at the future just watch what is happening in Greece, Spain, and other deeply indebted countries with extremely high energy prices

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('WildRose', 'W')hat will happen in our cities?




If you are lucky enough to live in Europe, you'll at least be able to take trains and subways and trams to find work. If you are here in the US, the lack of mass transit will contribute to people's inability to get around to do their jobs and will produce even more poverty.


I didn't make my point clear enough, Plant. I can imagine the worst of scenarios for the poor, as in Children of Men, although the optimist in me sees something better than that. But what happens to the corporations when we can't buy their sh*it anymore?

As pstarr was saying, we've been living in slavery, arguably of a somewhat voluntary type, but what about when we can't hold that up anymore?
User avatar
WildRose
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1881
Joined: Wed 21 Jun 2006, 03:00:00
Top

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Buddy_J » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 19:13:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '
')If you are lucky enough to live in Europe, you'll at least be able to take trains and subways and trams to find work. If you are here in the US, the lack of mass transit will contribute to people's inability to get around to do their jobs and will produce even more poverty.


and some places in the US do okay with mass transit commuting, don't they? The Metro in DC ain't all bad, and that is a metropolitan area if there ever was one. Moves a big chunk of people everyday as well, and sure works pretty good. Takes me about 30 minutes to get to work, the only bummer is the bicycles. Would like to be able to take them on the rail, but you can't.
Buddy_J
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 166
Joined: Sun 03 Feb 2013, 12:07:44
Top

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Buddy_J » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 19:16:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', ' ')But suburban rail (that breeches municipalities) requires collaboration and strong local, regional, state, even national government.


Glorifying the Metro in DC! I like it! Now if they would just let out of state concealed carry permit holders go heeled on it.
Buddy_J
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 166
Joined: Sun 03 Feb 2013, 12:07:44
Top

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby lper100km » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 20:35:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', '
')A little later on it will go like this. At some point increasing energy costs will create an inflationary economic environment where you will see your ability to consume slowly curtailed back to the very basics in a steady progression until you are a member of the underclass, a peasant, a serf.

There will always remain a very small elite who will never experience peak oil.


Ibon: I subscribe to the general trend of your thinking though do not agree with the idea of presently perceived wealth equating to future power or even survival in the long term. Your comments could be relevant up to some tipping point where present day social mores would cease to apply. If the majority of the population become essentially reduced to poverty ie without money, as is suggested, wealth as defined by $ x^n bits in a binary account somewhere will be meaningless. There will be few to share it with for those who have it and even fewer means to exchange it for any kind of benefit. Furthermore, the status quo will not remain as we now know it. With increasing deprivation, widespread lawlessness will rise rapidly, thereby restricting the flow of goods, people etc. Attempts by the governments of the day to enforce order would fail eventually. Present day wealth is not guaranteed to translate into future dominance or even survival. All the rules will change. Corporations lacking a stable society in which to operate will become bankrupt. Wealth will rapidly return to meaning tangible property directly supporting survival – land, animals, grains, storage etc. and useful skills - farming, fighting, metalworking, carpentry etc. The ability to support national entities on the scale now considered common will fail over time and thousands of local fiefdoms will emerge instead. I think it will arrive at such a point only after decades of turmoil. It will take many iterations of power struggles before a new and workable social order emerges. The Middle East uprisings give some hint of that. The years of transition will not be pretty.

We are living now in the greatest fools paradise that ever existed.
User avatar
lper100km
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 397
Joined: Mon 05 Jun 2006, 03:00:00
Location: Over the tracks, left under the overpass, right, third boxcar on the left, ask for Jack
Top

Re: Will the media ever fully embrace peak oil?

Postby Plantagenet » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 20:44:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Plantagenet', '
')If you are lucky enough to live in Europe, you'll at least be able to take trains and subways and trams to find work. If you are here in the US, the lack of mass transit will contribute to people's inability to get around to do their jobs and will produce even more poverty.


and some places in the US do okay with mass transit commuting, don't they? The Metro in DC ain't all bad, and that is a metropolitan area if there ever was one. Moves a big chunk of people everyday as well, and sure works pretty good. Takes me about 30 minutes to get to work, the only bummer is the bicycles. Would like to be able to take them on the rail, but you can't.


Yup. DC metro is great. Atlanta is also rated highly, and Portland is good too. But most of the US has broken down infrastructure or is a complete mass transit wasteland when compared to DC or to the cities of the EU.

DC is a special case----due to high federal salaries and contractor money it is the wealthiest urban area in the country right now, and it benefits from direct federal subsidies for the local government, metro, museums, the arts, etc. etc. It would be nice if some of the money that the FEDs spend on sub DC would be cycled back to the rest of the country, now that DC is the wealthiest city in the country. Cities with aging mass transit infrastructure (NYC, Boston, Chicago) could use some help, and cities without light rail need even more financial help. 8)
User avatar
Plantagenet
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 26765
Joined: Mon 09 Apr 2007, 03:00:00
Location: Alaska (its much bigger than Texas).
Top

PreviousNext

Return to Peak oil studies, reports & models

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron