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druff wrote:Nobody cared about Peak Oil anymore until that graph started making the rounds. So suddenly it's an emergency again. Like it was 5 years ago, until gas prices stopped exploding.
wintler2 wrote:Welcome Monk, my first post was on peak oil too! The drop in demand in OECD countries is apparently because of 'peak demand, we don't need so much oil any more, nothing to do with being broke of course. Once our plebs start to notice that they aren't alone in not being able to afford oil, i predict more talk about political impediments (nations refusing to bend over for Big Oil) and regime change.
JackRiddler wrote:druff wrote:Nobody cared about Peak Oil anymore until that graph started making the rounds. So suddenly it's an emergency again. Like it was 5 years ago, until gas prices stopped exploding.
The biggest explosion in oil/gas prices ever happened two years ago, $144/barrel and $4+ at the US pump. Consumption has fallen off since, due to the economic decline. More recently barrel prices rose again into the 80s and 70s.
Mark Robinowitz in an e-mail from a couple of weeks ago wrote:
The 2008 (Sacramento) and 2009 (Denver) ASPO Association for the Study of Peak Oil conferences were the most diverse I've ever attended -- Wall Street investors, oil company people, post carbon / permaculture / transition town types, some mainstream media journalists, corporate representatives (Boeing, VW, etc.) and even a few "intelligence" operatives (openly admitting their affiliation). However, the environmental NGOs and the foundation funded alternative media were mostly AWOL. The only "alternative" media I saw at the Sacramento event was community radio station KBOO-FM (Portland Oregon).
I have had a number of foundation funded environmental staffers and alternative media journalists privately tell me (and other allies) over the years that "limits to growth" is not an acceptable topic to discuss when dependent on the graces of philanthropic foundations invested in the growth and debt money system that requires exponential consumption ad infinitum. There are a few exceptions to this self censorship, but they are mostly tangential. It is sad that the environmental movement's main concern about "oil" is that they're against it, but there's almost no admission of the fact that fossil fuels are more concentrated than the alternatives. A solar powered society would require a much smaller, steady state economy since sunlight and wind energy are difficult to store in very large scales. Solar power could run a decentralized civilization where long distance shipment of food would be rare, but our globalized production system cannot be run without fossil fuels. It even takes fossil fuels to make solar panels and wind turbines (and especially their control equipment), to move them, and install them -- since steel and concrete and mining rare minerals are energy intensive processes. Worse, since we've waited too long to make substantial shifts, it's going to be increasingly difficult to divert some of the remaining fossil fuels to construct "alternative energy" systems on the downslope.
It would be good to get some of the DC based Non Profit Industrial Complex type groups to attend. It's getting old to argue with them about whether Peak(ed) Oil is something to consider or not, I had hoped years ago that this would have been long settled, certainly once peak had arrived.
The industry representatives who understand Peak Oil need to learn from the ecologists and permaculture experts about pollution prevention and powerdown approaches (learning to live happily with less). And the environmental movement needs to learn from the Peak Oil experts about the interconnections between exponential growth, overshoot, energy density and depletion.
The European media is ahead of the US media in pointing out the reason anyone would drill for oil in a mile of water - such as the notorious BP drill that blew out off the Louisiana coast - is that the easy to get oil on shore is winding down. Neither the pro-offshore drilling supporters nor the anti-drilling environmentalists in the US talk about Peak Oil as the reason for offshore drilling.
norton ash wrote:Deep offshore drilling and cooking dirt in Alberta. Nobody's desperate.
JackRiddler wrote:druff wrote:Nobody cared about Peak Oil anymore until that graph started making the rounds. So suddenly it's an emergency again. Like it was 5 years ago, until gas prices stopped exploding.
The biggest explosion in oil/gas prices ever happened two years ago, $144/barrel and $4+ at the US pump. Consumption has fallen off since, due to the economic decline. More recently barrel prices rose again into the 80s and 70s.
Nordic wrote:JackRiddler wrote:druff wrote:Nobody cared about Peak Oil anymore until that graph started making the rounds. So suddenly it's an emergency again. Like it was 5 years ago, until gas prices stopped exploding.
The biggest explosion in oil/gas prices ever happened two years ago, $144/barrel and $4+ at the US pump. Consumption has fallen off since, due to the economic decline. More recently barrel prices rose again into the 80s and 70s.
Well that spike was due to market manipulations, and in timing matched the food price spike as well, which Harper's has revealed to be the Goldman Sachs Evil Empire (and friends!) doing the same thing with edible commodities.
When they closed the "Enron Loophole" the prices fell. A lot. Fast.
Oddly enough, the $144 price tag is what Osama Bin laden said a barrel of oil should cost in one of his manifestos.
I'm sure that's just a coincidence.
Nordic wrote:When they closed the "Enron Loophole" the prices fell. A lot. Fast.
Nordic wrote:Oddly enough, the $144 price tag is what Osama Bin laden said a barrel of oil should cost in one of his manifestos.
We can't afford to fall into the trap of seeing the speculators literally engage in banditry, and then assume there's no underlying reality to worry about.
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