The Peak Oil Point has Passed!
I'd like to alert you to the writings of Geonomist GRMorton on why he believes that the Peak Oil has likely passed. "We have now passed the most significant time in human history. For the past million years, every day in the future humanity had more energy than they had yesterday. But from here on out, we will have less energy every day in the future.
This will have implications for crop yields (1% of the world's energy supply goes to making fertilizer; N. Korea is starving to death because they can't get fertilizer), interest in your bank account (how can banks make money when every day in the future the businesses they loan money to have less energy with which to ship their products to market?), the structure of American and European cities, the ability to travel the world, the ability to ship food to distant places."
I believe him. I think it is a travesty that we only seem to care about short term solutions that keep the oil/gas prices lower temporarily. What we need to do in the US is phase in over the coming years a tax on oil/gas at EU-levels, coupled with income transfers to offset the impact and to make the tax politically feasible. This will delay the worse impact of the Peak Oil problem and give us more time to develop, in cooperation with the rest of the world, good long-term alternatives. It will also give us an important policy lever to use against oil-producing countries with human rights problems and may be a peaceful way to prevent more oil-motivated wars.
This needs to become a serious issue in the coming elections.
dlw





Yes. From all the articles and data, my understanding is that world crude and condensates peaked in December, 2005. And OPEC peaked in October, 2004.
Our elected leaders don't really have a clue. They are afraid of what happened to Jimmy Carter after his famous 'malaise' speech to call for bold steps. It is as if they don't see the problem, and are totally blind to the future. Our government isn't going to save us.
We in America are particularly vulnerable to economic meltdown because we have a third-world rail system, live in huge houses miles and miles away from our jobs which may be gone as consumer spending tanks.
But Asia is already so overpopulated -- India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, China. 200,000,000 in India alone living now on $2 a day.
August 10, 2006 10:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
this is so important.
Please do everything you an to tell others about this!!!
dlw
A blog-activist dedicated to the reduction of the faith-based political acrimony in the United States of America so as to make our political system more democratic and just and to improve our witness to the rest of the world.
August 11, 2006 5:32 PM | Reply | Permalink