HOME | IMC UK | Editorial Guidelines | Mission Statement | About Us | Contact | Help | Support Us

Oxford Indymedia

Newsflash: The Oil Is Running Out!

jools | 25.06.2005 10:31 | Analysis | Culture | Ecology | Oxford

In short, the so called "alternatives" to oil are actually "derivatives" of oil. Without an abundant and reliable supply of oil, we have no way of scaling these alternatives to the degree necessary to power the modern world.

When considering the role of oil in the production of modern technology, remember that most alternative systems of energy — including solar panels/solar-nanotechnology, windmills, hydrogen fuel cells, biodiesel production facilities, nuclear power plants, etc. — rely on sophisticated technology.

In fact, all electrical devices make use of silver, copper, and/or platinum, each of which is discovered, extracted, transported, and fashioned using oil-powered machinery. For instance, in his book, The Lean Years: Politics of Scarcity, author Richard J. Barnet writes:

To produce a ton of copper requires 112 million BTU's or the
equivalent of 17.8 barrels of oil. The energy cost component
of aluminum is twenty times higher.

Nuclear energy requires uranium, which is also discovered, extracted, and transported using oil-powered machinery.

Most of the feedstock (soybeans, corn) for biofuels such as biodiesel and ethanol are grown using the high-tech, oil-powered industrial methods of agriculture described above.

In short, the so called "alternatives" to oil are actually "derivatives" of oil. Without an abundant and reliable supply of oil, we have no way of scaling these alternatives to the degree necessary to power the modern world.

Global oil discovery peaked in 1962 and has declined to virtually nothing in the past few years. We now consume 6 barrels of oil for every barrel we find.

Few people realize how much energy is concentrated in even a small amount of oil or gas. A barrel of oil contains the energy-equivalent of almost 25,000 hours of human labor. A single gallon of gasoline contains the energy-equivalent of 500 hours of human labor. Most people are stunned to find this out, even after confirming the accuracy of the numbers for themselves, but it makes sense when you think about it. It only takes one gallon of gasoline to propel a three ton SUV 10 miles in 10 minutes. How long would it take you to push a three ton SUV 10 miles?

While the energy-density of oil and gas give them rates of return comparable to a lottery ticket or marriage to a ketchup fortune heiress, the energy-density of solar and wind give them returns comparable to minimum wage jobs. A few examples should help illustrate this point more vividly:

1. It would take all of California's 13,000 wind turbines to
generate as much electricity as a single 555-megawatt
natural gas fired power plant.

2. On page 191 of his book The End of Oil: On the Edge of a
Perilous New World, author Paul Roberts tells us that:

" . . . if you add up all the solar photovoltaic cells now
running worldwide (2004), the combined output -
around 2,000 megawatts - barely rivals the output of
two coal-fired power plants."

3. It would take 4 Manhattan size city blocks of solar
equipment to produce the amount of energy distributed
by a single gas station in one day. With 17,000 gas
stations just in the United States, you don't need to be a
mathematician to realize that solar power is incapable of
meeting our urgent need for a new energy source that -
like oil - is dense, affordable, and transportable.

4. It would take close to 220,000 square kilometers of solar
panels to power the global economy via solar power.
This may sound like a marginally manageable number
until you realize that the total acreage covered by solar
panels in the entire world right now is a paltry 10 square
miles (about 17 kilometers).

5. To replace the amount of energy produced by a single
offshore drilling platform that pumps only 12,000 barrels
of oil per day, you would need either a 36 square mile
solar panel or 10,000 wind turbines.

Unfortunately, the odds of us upscaling our use of solar and wind to the point where they provide even just 2-3 percent of our total energy supply are about the same as the odds of Michael Moore and Dick Cheney teaming up to win a 5K relay race. Despite jaw-dropping levels of growth in these industries, coupled with practically miraculous drops in price per kilowatt hour (95% drop in two decades), along with increased interest from the public in alternative energies, the percentage of our total energy supply derived from solar and wind is projected to grow by only 10 percent per year.

Since we are starting with only one-sixth of one percent of our energy coming from solar and wind, a growth rate of 10 percent per year isn't going to do much to soften a national economic meltdown. Twenty-five years from now, we will be lucky if solar and wind account for one percent of our total energy supply.

While other alternative energy sources, such as wave and geothermal power, are fantastic sources of energy in and of themselves, they are incapable of replacing more than a fraction of our petroleum usage for the same reasons as solar and wind: they are nowhere near as energy dense as petroleum and they are inappropriate as transportation fuels. In addition, they are also limited by geography - wave power is only technically viable in coastal locations. Only a handful of nations, such as Iceland, have access to enough geothermal power to make up for much of their petroleum consumption.

This is by no means reason not to invest in these alternatives. We simply have to be realistic about what they can and can't do. On a household or village scale, they are certainly worthy investments. But to hope/expect they are going to power more than a small fraction of our forty-five trillion dollar per year (and growing) global industrial economy is woefully unrealistic.

Consequently, a declining supply of oil must be accompanied by either a declining supply of money or by hyperinflation. In either case, the result for the global banking system is the same: total collapse.

This financial collapse will, in turn, further devastate our ability to implement alternative systems of energy. Any crash program to develop new sources of energy will require a tremendous amount of capital, which is exactly what will not be available once the global monetary system has collapsed.

Thus, the aftermath of Peak Oil will extend far beyond what you can imagine. If you are focusing solely on the more fuel-efficient forms of transportation, or alternative sources of energy, you aren’t seeing the bigger picture.

If you've been wondering why the Bush administration has been spending money, cutting social programs, and starting wars like there's no tomorrow, now you have your answer: as far as they are concerned, there is no tomorrow.

Within a few months of global oil production hitting its peak, it will become impossible to dismiss the decline in supply as a merely transitory event. Once this occurs, you can expect traders on Wall Street to quickly bid the price up to, and possibly over, the $200 per barrel range as they realize the world is now in an era of permanent oil scarcity.

With oil at or above $200 per barrel, gas prices will reach $10 per gallon inside of a few weeks. This will cause a rapid breakdown of trucking industries and transportation networks. Importation and distribution of food, medicine, and consumer goods will grind to a halt.

The effects of this will be frightening. As former oil industry insider Jan Lundberg recently pointed out:

The scenario I foresee is that market-based panic will,
within a few days, drive prices up skyward. And as supplies
can no longer slake daily world demand of over 80 million
barrels a day, the market will become paralyzed at prices
too high for the wheels of commerce and even daily living in
"advanced" societies. There may be an event that appears
to trigger this final energy crash, but the overall cause will
be the huge consumption on a finite planet.

The trucks will no longer pull into Wal-Mart. Or Safeway or
other food stores. The freighters bringing packaged techno
-toys and whatnot from China will have no fuel. There will be
fuel in many places, but hoarding and uncertainty will trigger
outages, violence and chaos. For only a short time will the
police and military be able to maintain order, if at all.

The collapse will be hastened by the fact that the US national debt will become completely unsustainable once the price of oil gets into the $100 range. Once this mark is passed, the nations of the world will have no choice but to pull their investments out of the US while simultaneously switching from the dollar to the euro as the reserve currency for oil transactions. Along with the breakdown of domestic transportation networks, the global financial shift away from the dollar will wholly shatter the US economy.

If you're wondering why the mainstream media is not covering an issue of this magnitude 24/7, now you know. Once the seriousness of situation is generally acknowledged, a panic will spread on the markets and bring down the entire house of cards even if production hasn't actually peaked.

In summary, we are a prisoners of our own making.


jools

jools

Comments

Hide the following 8 comments

Newsflash: The Oil Is Running Out!

25.06.2005 14:20

Except, no its not !

For the past 100 years we have the tall story that is oil supplies ending. The Earth has massive oil supplies. Go do some research, go read, go check


All


Misunderstanding the nature of the crisis

25.06.2005 15:46

The scenario I foresee is that market-based panic will,
within a few days, drive prices up skyward. And as supplies
can no longer slake daily world demand of over 80 million
barrels a day, the market will become paralyzed at prices
too high for the wheels of commerce and even daily living in
"advanced" societies. There may be an event that appears
to trigger this final energy crash, but the overall cause will
be the huge consumption on a finite planet.

BUT (a very big but) you nevertheless attempt to analyze based upon CURRENT "business as usual" and treat one place as if the problem would not be affecting everywhere else at the same time. Yes of course that leads to strange predictions.

How well do you understand history? Have you ever read accounts about how people, however rich they may have been before, etc. survive the utter devastation of say war being fought on theor own territory, etc. Ask yourself what matters then. No, it's not those pieces of paper we now pace back and forth but real things. Only real things matter, things which have physical rather than symbolic existence. Absolutely true, some place where people are now living high on the hog they may have to make do with only a tiny fraction of their current consumption -- but that might yet be well above bare survival. In other places the decrease may be less severe percentagewise, but if the current level now is only somehwat above bare survival, people will die.

LOOK at what you are saying

The collapse will be hastened by the fact that the US national debt will become completely unsustainable once the price of oil gets into the $100 range. Once this mark is passed, the nations of the world will have no choice but to pull their investments out of the US while simultaneously switching from the dollar to the euro as the reserve currency for oil transactions. Along with the breakdown of domestic transportation networks, the global financial shift away from the dollar will wholly shatter the US economy.

You really don't understand, do you. Debt exists ONLY because of the need for FUTURE borrowing (if you don't need to ever borrow again, it's "screw you creditor" unless the creitor has enough guns to collect). No international trade means no foreign investments. From a Eurpopean perspective look at your LOCAL problem. You think the US will be in trouble forced into a situation of having to feed its people on what is available from about 6+ acres per person once we're back to "subsistence" conditions? Perhaps so, but then doesn't your own situation appear MUCH more bleak -- the entire Britich Isles do not have even 1 acre per person.

You are speaking like a "gold bug" and like them forgetting that in the SHORT run lead can ourweigh gold. What you should be analyzing is not whether the US could succeed by force in the long run by controlling (seizing) enough of the world oil supply during the relatively brief period of resource exhaustion because perhaps there is no "long run" >

Get what I am saying? Of course $100/ ga oil would collapse the US economy as it exists today. But do you imagine that it would leave your economy in any shape to take advantage of that? Do you imagine that if the price of oil went up like that it would leave the price of wheat and maize unaffected (takes oil to run the tractors).

Mike
mail e-mail: stepbystpefarm mtdata.com


Note date

25.06.2005 20:05

"within a few days, drive prices up skyward"

Today is Saturday. let's see how it takes to come true !!!!

realist


if it makes you feel safer and comfortable...

26.06.2005 20:01

...so you don't have to do anything, then just deny all talk of Peak Oil, talk like an oil-based economy is the only possible way (what did people do before mobile phones too?!), and trash all possible alternatives.

To realist and All: yes people have talked about oil running out from time to time for some decades now, but if you want to be a little more sophisticated, go and find out about Peak Oil theory. It's not that it'll run out in 2012, it'll peak, and from then on prices rise, extraction costs rise, and our society starts to change or crumble, depending on how dependent we are.

So you go read, go do some research, go check. Oh, and by the way, get real.

The oil industry will die - it's just a question of when, and how many species we've killed by that point, and whether we've trashed the planet for human life. Oh and before you start yabbering on about how climate chaos isn't happening, it's all natural cycles, blah yawn, compare the UN Panel on Climate Change 2,000 scientists reports on how serious it is and how our consumption is responsible, or believe the few oil-industry funded scientists that get the newspaper coverage. Go figure, or continue with your head where the sun don't shine.

realist too


NAS article on Peak Oil

26.06.2005 21:12

Here's an interesting article from the latest edition of "Issues in Science and Technology", a journal of the US National Academy of Science:
 http://www.issues.org/issues/21.3/hirsch.html

Quote:
"Given this long history of failed forecasts, what convinces us that our foresight will be better? In brief, the quality of the evidence has improved immeasurably."
(End quote)

The authors are basically making the case that it doesn't matter if oil production is peaking right now or in a few years or even a few decades, that the real issue is we have to take action in advance of this if we wish to continue with our projected global economic growth.

The CIA are publishing results of their simulations of what would happen to the US following a rapid oil price rise:
 http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/11979395.htm

But most of the action that's been proposed by the US legislative groups so far centres around increased use of nuclear, coal, etc., rather than around reducing demand. Nobody likes to vote for reducing demand, you see...

John


re:To realist and All

27.06.2005 09:25

>To realist and All: yes people have talked about oil running out from time to time for some >decades now, but if you want to be a little more sophisticated, go and find out about Peak >Oil theory. It's not that it'll run out in 2012, it'll peak, and from then on prices rise, >extraction costs rise, and our society starts to change or crumble, depending on how >dependent we are.

Yes well this is what i've been trying to say... We are and will be totally dependant for a long time even if we start making alternatives at crisis speed now (the paradox being the more we panic and use oil the faster things will become uncontrollable. It is time for VERY careful planning (probably more careful than we are capable of).

jools


Let the government decide

03.07.2005 07:29

Surely the use of oil must be controlled by the government, who should be able to decide whose energy use, travel etc is useful to society and whose is merely frivolous. Wonder how much fossil fuel was consumed by travel to Scotland this weekend.

mi


government

05.07.2005 15:04

errrm...
Is it not he government decisions that got us here in the first place?
Is it not the goverment decisions that caused all those people to go to Scotland?
Are you that disinterested in your own life that you would just let the government decide everything for you?

jools


Publish your news
-->

Kollektives

Birmingham
Cambridge
Liverpool
London
Oxford
Sheffield
South Coast
Wales
World

Other UK IMCs
Bristol/South West
London
Northern Indymedia
Scotland

Oxford Topics

Afghanistan
Analysis
Animal Liberation
Anti-Nuclear
Anti-militarism
Anti-racism
Bio-technology
Climate Chaos
Culture
Ecology
Education
Energy Crisis
Fracking
Free Spaces
Gender
Globalisation
Health
History
Indymedia
Iraq
Migration
Ocean Defence
Other Press
Palestine
Policing
Public sector cuts
Repression
Social Struggles
Technology
Terror War
Workers' Movements
Zapatista

IMCs


www.indymedia.org

Projects
print
radio
satellite tv
video

Africa

Europe
antwerpen
armenia
athens
austria
barcelona
belarus
belgium
belgrade
brussels
bulgaria
calabria
croatia
cyprus
emilia-romagna
estrecho / madiaq
galiza
germany
grenoble
hungary
ireland
istanbul
italy
la plana
liege
liguria
lille
linksunten
lombardia
madrid
malta
marseille
nantes
napoli
netherlands
northern england
nottingham imc
paris/île-de-france
patras
piemonte
poland
portugal
roma
romania
russia
sardegna
scotland
sverige
switzerland
torun
toscana
ukraine
united kingdom
valencia

Latin America
argentina
bolivia
chiapas
chile
chile sur
cmi brasil
cmi sucre
colombia
ecuador
mexico
peru
puerto rico
qollasuyu
rosario
santiago
tijuana
uruguay
valparaiso
venezuela

Oceania
aotearoa
brisbane
burma
darwin
jakarta
manila
melbourne
perth
qc
sydney

South Asia
india


United States
arizona
arkansas
asheville
atlanta
Austin
binghamton
boston
buffalo
chicago
cleveland
colorado
columbus
dc
hawaii
houston
hudson mohawk
kansas city
la
madison
maine
miami
michigan
milwaukee
minneapolis/st. paul
new hampshire
new jersey
new mexico
new orleans
north carolina
north texas
nyc
oklahoma
philadelphia
pittsburgh
portland
richmond
rochester
rogue valley
saint louis
san diego
san francisco
san francisco bay area
santa barbara
santa cruz, ca
sarasota
seattle
tampa bay
united states
urbana-champaign
vermont
western mass
worcester

West Asia
Armenia
Beirut
Israel
Palestine

Topics
biotech

Process
fbi/legal updates
mailing lists
process & imc docs
tech