Darth Wong wrote:
Are you trying to make a fool of yourself? When they say that gas demand is much lower, they obviously mean it is much lower than it has been in recent weeks or months. The fact that it is 0.4% higher than it was a year ago does not necessarily contradict a news statement that gas has dropped, because news is coverage of recent events.
Thing is, it hasn't been. Demand has been roughly unchanged and has grown year-over-year. These articles often make silly mistakes like this and the usual mentioning of inflation adjusted price or bubbles is not much better for elucidating the situation (gasoline stock up, yay. But no mention of more important diesel being in short supply?). Given these people lend credence to a survey that has a 50% chance of being right or wrong, I question whether they really grasp what it means for prices to reach this high, inventories to be drawn down and no real change in demand.
Frankly, I'm getting a little tired of the "hur hur everyone but us Peal Oil people is an idiot" pile-on bullshit that I've been seeing lately. Yes, there are some foolish people out there who postulate stupid shit like oil magically generating itself underground, and other foolish people who think that the party will never end without even bothering to explain why. But that's no excuse for the kind of half-assed no-thought Peak Oil self-celebratory nonsense that I'm starting to see on the forum, where people just post Peak Oil spam rather than arguments. If it weren't for Sikon, these energy-related threads would be absolutely intolerable.
Well I don't see anyone celebrating anything here, and whenever I post any news articles related to the subject (something a damn sight more important than the US primaries), I always add input. Sikon is a good contributor, but he is also rather optimistic in outlook, never taking geo-politics or market conditions onboard. If I was going to take the EIA/IEA projections at face value, I'd be happy as a clam too. But there's a reason such things have been revised, and going by the state of the global economy and diesel shortages, I wonder how the likes of the EIA and IEA missed such problems coming about.
Frankly, I'd rather just get everyone to read and understand
Limits of Growth and then just keep their eyes peeled for such stories in the news. I'm through reiterating my position on the topic over again. However, the way it interacts with the insolvency issue, food inflation and political atmosphere warrants further threads discussing what's going on. The economy, for one thing, is going to determine the US election and the future UK one at the very least.