Page added on May 10, 2011
Jim Jackson, adjunct professor of geology at Portland State, delivered a lecture last month for the Yachats Academy of Arts and Sciences titled “Peak Oil: All Geology is Local,” which covered the history and future of oil production, the many estimates of how much oil remains and the fact that global analysis of these issues has little to do with how a country’s energy policy is actually crafted.
“Peak oil” refers to the peak of global oil production. Within the coming decades, and possibly this very decade, societies throughout the world will face a sudden and permanent shortage of their oil supplies as the rising demand for oil runs headlong into a finite supply. Once oil reaches its maximum level of output, economies that depend on the resource will contract, and human survival will have to occur on a local scale, according to the 2007 Portland Peak Oil Task Force’s final report.
According to Jackson, who worked for more than 20 years as a petroleum geologist for ARCO Gasoline before retiring from the oil industry in 1999, the daily global consumption rate in 2010 was 86.7 million barrels per day, adding up to an annual global consumption rate of 31.6 billion barrels.
“I don’t think there’s any question that there’s a finite amount of oil out there, and we’re using it at a phenomenally fast pace,” said David Cohan, senior manager of Northwest Energy Efficiency Alliance.
Cohan served as the representative from the grass roots interest group Portland Peak Oil on the Portland Peak Oil Task Force.
“The entire economy is based on oil. That’s the thing that people can’t get through their heads,” Cohan said.
Michael Armstrong, one of the city staff who worked with the task force, said that the world currently depends on oil for “almost every facet of contemporary life.”
The report’s forecasts are pretty bleak. It states that 50 years from now the peak of global oil production will be a distant memory, with the most common predictions for the peak year occurring between 2010 and 2020.
In short, it is not a question of “if” peak oil will occur, but “when,” according to the report. As international demand for oil outstrips the available supply, peak oil will spell catastrophe for Portland and other metropolitan cities throughout the globalized, industrialized world.
“There’s no city on the planet right now that could just switch to a non-petroleum future,” Cohan said.
According to the task force’s report, peak oil will hit economically vulnerable citizens first and hardest. The fallout is likely to include widespread business failures, a reduction in imports and exports that are expensive to produce and transport, higher transportation costs that force the population to relocate from suburbs to city centers, disruptions in supply chains that decrease the amount of food available while pushing up its price and an overall plunge in living standards.
Although Portland ranks seventh among U.S. cities in terms of “peak oil preparedness,” according to a 2008 report from Common Current, the city will not be exempt from these disturbances.
“Portland is fortunate to have an outstanding public transportation system and a great network of bikeways and walk-able neighborhoods,” Armstrong said. “In this respect, Portland is better off than most American cities.”
But these amenities will not be enough for the city to withstand the impact of peak oil, according to Cohan. At best, public transit and most alternative energies—which require petroleum-based technology for their proliferation, the report says—represent short-term solutions to a long-term crisis.
He added that Portland needs to transition to a non-petroleum infrastructure sooner rather than later because the risks to society of reaching peak oil before the transition is in place are “unbelievable.”
While Jackson does not claim to know when peak oil will occur—if it hasn’t already—he said that experts would need to know how much recoverable oil has been discovered, how much has been consumed, how much is left, and what future oil-demand rates will look like. Much of this information is off-limits, however, because members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries—an oligopoly of oil-producing states—prefer to keep their reserve estimates classified as state secrets.
Jackson parts company with other peak oil experts in believing that there will be no overarching public policy to confront peak oil. Any solutions to the planetary problem of oil shortages will have to emerge from local concerns and be locally tailored, he said
2 Comments on "Is Portland prepared for peak oil?"
Kenz300 on Tue, 10th May 2011 10:41 pm
Quote — “Portland is fortunate to have an outstanding public transportation system and a great network of bikeways and walk-able neighborhoods,”
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Increased public transportation along with an expansion of bikeways and walkable neighborhoods will be part of the solution to Peak Oil. Low and moderate income people will move to these by choice or necessity as the price of oil continues to rise. Walking or biking to work, school or play will become more common.
Poopypants on Wed, 11th May 2011 1:14 pm
You can have all the ‘public transporation’ and ‘bikeways’ in the world, but where are they going to get you? To a job that no longer exists? To a grocery store with no food?
All urban areas will become death zones. The vast majority of people in this country have never heard of Peak Oil, what do you think they’ll do when the poo hits the fan? Buck up and walk to their job as a marketing director for some company that doesn’t exist anymore?
The truth is this: Without the vast amounts of cheap oil that is available to us today, the system will fail. There will be no middle ground, no ‘community gardens’ no ‘transition towns’ will survive. It will devolve to gangs and warlords all fighting for survival.
I’m sick as shit of these BS articles about some ‘plan’ that will get a city through PO. It will not happen. If Portland happens to survive and even prosper post PO, what happens then? You think everyone in every other city that didn’t plan will lay down and die quietly?
It is simply impossible to maintain anything close to the present system once PO really hits.
For those that visit this site on a regular basis and still feel that we can continue the American way of life on ever decreasing oil supplies, I’ve got news: you better wake up real quick. Take a second look at the corolation between oil production and food production and oil production and population growth. It tells the whole story, once oil production declines, food production declines, and population declines. That’s it, that’s all, it’s not complicated.
No need to write more article on hydrodgen cell cars and algae oil and ethanol, there is no solution except massive population reduction.
Wake the f#$k up people, the data does not lie.
I’m not sure what pisses me off more, the vast majority of people that won’t even acknowledge PO, or the people that do acknowledge it and still believe that everything will continue forever, as it is today.
Rant over.