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Archived Posts from this Category
Posted by Jesse on 20 Jul 2008 | Tagged as: Economics, General
It has only been a few weeks since I first learned about Peak Oil, and in a short time I’ve read nearly a hundred articles, watched a couple movies and spoken to dozens of people about what this means for the future of mankind.
I’ve found reactions range from “that’ll never happen” to “hydrogen is the new oil” to “this will mean the end of suburbia” to “WE’RE ALL GOING TO DIE!!” and every shade of optimism and pessimism in-between. I’m not sure which is worse, those cripplingly in denial, or the obsessed doomsayers who insist the worst-case scenario is the most likely.
The fact is, nobody really knows how this is going to play out. There are so many factors involved, including the behaviour and reactions of the entire human population, and the biggest of world market forces involving food and energy in which nearly all humans are involved.
Here’s a quick breakdown of what I understand will definitely happen, what might happen, and what probably won’t:
What will definitely happen sooner or later
What might happen
What probably won’t happen
We know things will change drastically on earth, we just don’t know when. We also don’t know what pains will emerge as people are forced to adapt faster than possible.
And we must not forget that this will be a worldwide event. Not being able to afford to drive is one thing, watching your entire community or country starve to death is another. Most of the real victims will be in third-world countries like Bangladesh. Those in the first-world will probably complain the loudest about the cost of filling up their SUVs, but the varying levels of suffering will be incomparable.
The doomsayers, having realised that the world needs to change and adapt, believe that it is their sole responsibility to run around scaring everyone into changing immediately. At the same time, they dismiss economists suggesting that economics could never understand or explain the market forces at work. Of course this is completely ironic, because economic forces are the only explanation for what is happening and how and why the world will change.
Long before the message of the doomsayers reach the consciousness of the entire world, people will start making big changes in their lives in order to save money and/or earn more money. Money is the reason people change, not bestselling books or youtube videos.
The rules of supply and demand are deceptively simple but more powerful than we can imagine. Take a simple scenario that we’ll be facing on a regular basis: on some random day in 2008, the world produces 85 million barrels of oil, and the world wants to use 86 million barrels. What happens? The price will go up until enough people feel oil is too expensive and decide not to buy a million of those barrels. They may use a different energy source instead, or might decide they didn’t need to use the oil so badly after all. Ideally, these million barrels will be the oil that is used most wastefully. Unfortunately, it will also include those that were depending on it to live, but still can’t afford it.
So how easy will it be to reduce demand by (ie. change peoples’ minds about) 1 million barrels per day? or 2? or 10? or 86? Nobody knows, and the future reality will depend on the answer to this question.
Here are just a few more examples of how higher prices will encourage people to change their minds and decrease their demand for oil:
It’s very important to remember the element of choice in all of this. People will choose to adapt because the alternative will be unattractive, expensive, or just plain stupid. It’s not like you won’t be able to choose to drive a car, you just won’t make that choice as often. Ask someone in middle class USA in a few years if they feel they were forced into changing their lives by the power of the world market forces and they will simply say “no, I chose to do _____ because I could save $_____.”
In fact, world market forces have “forced” people into choosing all sorts of things. If you were to go back to 1900 and tell someone that over the next century the entire world would be reshaped, people would leave the farm to enter the cities, buy cars, live in the yet-to-be-built suburbs, and develop massive technology which would shift work away from manual labour and towards information technology, they would freak out and start running through town insisting everyone start bracing for change and probably that they should leave the farm immediately, buy a car, and brace for the impacts of globalization. But of course, that wouldn’t have made a difference.
So what is one to do, armed with the knowledge that the world will be facing some big changes? First, don’t panic. Realise these changes will come at a gradual enough pace that you will be able to survive. You may want to prepare yourself for the possibility of blackouts and shortages of food and gas, but don’t go crazy. A well-stocked pantry and a supply of candles may help you to relax. You can also start making bigger changes like installing a wood stove or moving somewhere that doesn’t require a car. It takes time to make changes, so the sooner you start the more comfortable the transition will be.
And if you’re really clever, you’ll realise that there are infinite new business opportunities being created by this change. Start a company to help start and maintain backyard gardens, or sell and install wood stoves and solar panels, or help companies transition to telecommuting, or develop or sell electric cars.
We do need to change, but there’s no need for pessimism. There are lots of ways to help people change that don’t involve shocking them with doomsday scenarios. Warn them of the coming apocalypse and you’ll be dismissed as a chicken little. Offer to help them save money instead, and you’ll be welcomed with open arms.
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Posted by Jesse on 08 Jul 2008 | Tagged as: General
I just read this, but Google said last November that they have created a team to find cheap sustainable energy cheaper than coal:
The newly created initiative, known as RE<C, will focus initially on advanced solar thermal power, wind power technologies, enhanced geothermal systems and other potential breakthrough technologies. RE<C is hiring engineers and energy experts to lead its research and development work, which will begin with a significant effort on solar thermal technology, and will also investigate enhanced geothermal systems and other areas. In 2008, Google expects to spend tens of millions on research and development and related investments in renewable energy. As part of its capital planning process, the company also anticipates investing hundreds of millions of dollars in breakthrough renewable energy projects which generate positive returns.
“We have gained expertise in designing and building large-scale, energy-intensive facilities by building efficient data centers,” said Larry Page, Google Co-founder and President of Products. ”We want to apply the same creativity and innovation to the challenge of generating renewable electricity at globally significant scale, and produce it cheaper than from coal.”
Could they develop the technology that so many have been hoping for and, well, assuming would happen? If not Google, maybe another company?
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Posted by Jesse on 06 Jul 2008 | Tagged as: General
Following the summit in Madrid this past week, OPEC president Chakib Khelil announced that prices will go higher soon. He also emphasised that the cause of higher prices is the US dollar and bioethanol. My understanding is that bioethanol would relieve some demand thus lowering oil prices, but the president of OPEC claims otherwise (from Xinhua):
ALGIERS, July 6 (Xinhua) — Oil prices are likely to rise further largely due to a weak dollar and geopolitics, Chakib Khelil, president of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), said Sunday.
The minister denied accusations by some western countries that insufficient supply by the oil producing countries are causing the soaring prices.
“The price of oil will rise again in the coming weeks. We have to follow the evolution of the dollar, because a 1 percent fall in the dollar means four dollars more on the price of oil,” Khelil said in an interview with the local daily Algeria-News.
“I believe that 60 percent of the rise is due to the fall in the exchange rate of the dollar and to geopolitical problems, and 40 percent to the intrusion of bioethanol on the market,” he said.
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Posted by Jesse on 05 Jul 2008 | Tagged as: General
It seems the Marshall Islands may already be the first country to be plunged into disaster following rising oil prices. Essentially the island can’t afford to buy the diesel fuel it needs to provide electricity on the island (from Google News):
Marshall Islands declares ‘economic emergency’ over energy crisis
MAJURO (AFP) — The tiny western Pacific island nation of the Marshall Islands has declared a state of economic emergency as soaring fuel prices threaten to shut down electricity supplies.
Failure to resolve the fuel crisis could lead to a “disaster of unimaginable magnitude,” President Litokwa Tomeing said in a statement late Thursday.
…
“Without electricity everything will come to a standstill,” Finance Minister Jack Ading told visiting Asian Development Bank officials this week.
“The adverse effects of this global fuel crisis, its intensity and severity, are even more acute and destabilizing on small island states like the Marshall Islands with practically no means to protect itself from external pressures and shocks,” he said.
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Posted by Jesse on 04 Jul 2008 | Tagged as: General
We are entering the world after Peak Oil. From now on, everything we do and buy that depends on oil will become much more expensive. Nearly every aspect of our lives will be affected. This could very well be the most dramatic moment in human history: the point where our population and behaviour is simply too much for the Earth to handle. The only direction will be down for the next very long while.
But there is hope. We are very good at adapting, and many of the changes are things that have been advocated over the years for various reasons: much less dependency on automobiles, more locally grown produce, fewer big box stores and less suburbia, more smaller communities, less garbage, less pollution. Look out, the “good ol’ days” are coming back with a vengeance.
The only thing for us to do is adapt as quickly as possible and move to a lifestyle that doesn’t use any unsustainable energy. This will take massive effort and time. We must ALL start immediately.
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