Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 Peak oil' spells cataclysm for U.S., oil theorist warns Sunday, August 21, 2005 ALEXANDER LANE Think high gas prices are bad? Get a load of what ex-oilman and ex-Princeton professor Kenneth Deffeyes believes are following closely behind: " War, famine, pestilence and death, " he said, eyes wide and voice deep. " We've got to get the warning out. " The threat? Peak oil. The term, probably unfamiliar to most Americans, refers to the time when the worldwide production of oil peaks and begins a rapid decline. From then on, this incredibly efficient fuel source, which still costs less than most bottled water, will be scarcer and more costly. Highly respected sources, including the U.S. government, think that day is distant, and most mainstream economists think it won't cause much of a ruckus. But Deffeyes says peak oil is coming in November, and could bring humankind to the brink. He is a devotee of former Shell geologist M. King Hubbert, who correctly predicted U.S. oil production would peak in the early 1970s. Deffeyes is also the author of " Hubbert's Peak " (2001) and " Beyond Oil: The View From Hubbert's Peak, " which was published last spring. He is among a cadre of peak-oil proponents who sketch out a frightening near-term future in which the American way of life is upended as the United States, China and other great nations scramble after oil fields like desperate players in a game of musical chairs. " He comes out of oil. He was born in oil, " said Julian Darley, an energy analyst, fellow predictor of an imminent oil peak and founder of the Post Carbon Institute, an Oregon think tank. Deffeyes' point -- that the peak has either arrived or will very soon -- is serious. In the long term, the nation will compensate with clean-coal and nuclear energy, along with renewable sources like wind and solar power, Deffeyes says. " It's the five-year time scale that I'm really scared about. " History has demonstrated that the fear of a coming oil shortage, justified or not, can be a powerful determinant of events. U.S. oil experts predicted a " gasoline famine " just after World War I, prompting Britain to combine three former provinces of the Ottoman Empire into a new, oil-rich country that was to remain friendly to England. It was named Iraq. 2005, Newhouse News Service Alexander Lane is a staff writer for The Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J. E-mail: alane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 of course the mainstream peak oil ppl always soften it by saying " oh we'll have nuclear or clean coal or renewables " without oil, NONE of those work.... and, there's no such thing as clean coal besides, coal will have its own peak...at the best case(promoted by the coal companies)..200 years...(this is of course at current rate of use...) others say 50 yrs of us coal is left and, not even gonna get int onuclear... rvijay <rvijay07 Aug 21, 2005 7:00 PM Peak Oil By November ?!!! " War, famine, pestilence and death, " he said, Peak oil' spells cataclysm for U.S., oil theorist warns Sunday, August 21, 2005 ALEXANDER LANE Think high gas prices are bad? Get a load of what ex-oilman and ex-Princeton professor Kenneth Deffeyes believes are following closely behind: " War, famine, pestilence and death, " he said, eyes wide and voice deep. " We've got to get the warning out. " The threat? Peak oil. The term, probably unfamiliar to most Americans, refers to the time when the worldwide production of oil peaks and begins a rapid decline. From then on, this incredibly efficient fuel source, which still costs less than most bottled water, will be scarcer and more costly. Highly respected sources, including the U.S. government, think that day is distant, and most mainstream economists think it won't cause much of a ruckus. But Deffeyes says peak oil is coming in November, and could bring humankind to the brink. He is a devotee of former Shell geologist M. King Hubbert, who correctly predicted U.S. oil production would peak in the early 1970s. Deffeyes is also the author of " Hubbert's Peak " (2001) and " Beyond Oil: The View From Hubbert's Peak, " which was published last spring. He is among a cadre of peak-oil proponents who sketch out a frightening near-term future in which the American way of life is upended as the United States, China and other great nations scramble after oil fields like desperate players in a game of musical chairs. " He comes out of oil. He was born in oil, " said Julian Darley, an energy analyst, fellow predictor of an imminent oil peak and founder of the Post Carbon Institute, an Oregon think tank. Deffeyes' point -- that the peak has either arrived or will very soon -- is serious. In the long term, the nation will compensate with clean-coal and nuclear energy, along with renewable sources like wind and solar power, Deffeyes says. " It's the five-year time scale that I'm really scared about. " History has demonstrated that the fear of a coming oil shortage, justified or not, can be a powerful determinant of events. U.S. oil experts predicted a " gasoline famine " just after World War I, prompting Britain to combine three former provinces of the Ottoman Empire into a new, oil-rich country that was to remain friendly to England. It was named Iraq. 2005, Newhouse News Service Alexander Lane is a staff writer for The Star-Ledger of Newark, N.J. E-mail: alane To send an email to - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 , fraggle <EBbrewpunx@e...> wrote: > of course the mainstream peak oil ppl always soften it by saying " oh we'll have nuclear or clean coal or renewables " > > without oil, NONE of those work.... > > and, there's no such thing as clean coal > besides, coal will have its own peak...at the best case(promoted by the coal companies)..200 years...(this is of course at current rate of use...) > others say 50 yrs of us coal is left > > and, not even gonna get int onuclear... > We don't have the infrastructure in place for all to use Coal. Besides witth global warming this is a serious concern. Also, we need to mine 5 times as much coal for this they say. But peak oil by November ?!!! What I think is they are trying to warn us is that one of the major oil wells can probably go down. Vijay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 22, 2005 Report Share Posted August 22, 2005 well..after peak oil(lets assumin its november) it doesn't mean in december there is no oil it means it will have passed its peak of production, and enter a decline its not so much running out, as not having enough available to keep our economies(and hence our civilizations) going oh..its gonna be interesting rvijay <rvijay07 Aug 21, 2005 7:33 PM Re: Peak Oil By November ?!!! " War, famine, pestilence and death, " he said, , fraggle <EBbrewpunx@e...> wrote: > of course the mainstream peak oil ppl always soften it by saying " oh we'll have nuclear or clean coal or renewables " > > without oil, NONE of those work.... > > and, there's no such thing as clean coal > besides, coal will have its own peak...at the best case(promoted by the coal companies)..200 years...(this is of course at current rate of use...) > others say 50 yrs of us coal is left > > and, not even gonna get int onuclear... > We don't have the infrastructure in place for all to use Coal. Besides witth global warming this is a serious concern. Also, we need to mine 5 times as much coal for this they say. But peak oil by November ?!!! What I think is they are trying to warn us is that one of the major oil wells can probably go down. Vijay To send an email to - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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