Page added on July 22, 2008
Oil production in Australia has already peaked and the alternative fuels industry needs to be dramatically ramped up in response, an expert research group says.
After years of a stop-start approach to ethanol production, Australia is fast running out of time to end its love affair with crude oil, much of which is imported, the NRMA Motoring funded Jamison Group says.
“Oil production in Australia has already peaked,” the group’s report, A Roadmap for Alternative Fuels in Australia, warns.
“Meanwhile, Australia’s demand for petroleum is increasing at a rate of two per cent a year, from 750,000 barrels per day currently to 800,000 barrels by 2009/10.”
The domestic arrival of peak oil means more and more crude will be imported from the Middle East.
One of the researchers, former CSIRO automotive expert David Lamb, passionately called for change.
“Our cities, our towns, our farming, our food distribution are all very heavily oil dependent,” Mr Lamb told reporters today. “It leaves us with a large trade deficit for the oil we import.
“We owe it to ourselves to plan our way out of this situation.”
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