Total energy consumption and production...?

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Boyish-Tigerlilly
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Post by Boyish-Tigerlilly »

Oops, sorry for the double post:
What's really scary is what we as a species are doing to the topsoil and forests, rapidly destroying them as we spread our reach across the world's land. That stuff doesn't come back easily.

Doesn't that problem cause desertification in some areas? It's really amazing how people know this shit causes problems, but they either really don't care or they refuse to believe it's true.

In one of my ecology classes, people just scoffed at the entire concept of the ecological footprint and biome studies that showed increasing desert formation. They were like "pfft."



Edit: On my last post, I am not sure of the effectual nature of the donations we give. I keep hearig that they often don't fix the problem. It would be great if the infrastructure could be fixed, but I have heard Africa called the money funnel, for whatever that's worth. One philosopher adovcated "lifeboat" ethics; in that particular circumstace, he said we should just give up all aid and let them die off. Meh.
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Post by GrandMasterTerwynn »

aerius wrote:Sometimes I wonder if global thermonuclear war might actually be better for us in the long run than a total economic & production collapse caused by lack of oil. With nuclear war we can wipe out billions of people overnight while leaving the resource base mostly intact, and the couple billion people left alive will likely grow accustomed to living frugally in a post apocalyptic world.
Nuclear wars tend to create nasty nuclear fallout and does nasty things to cities. And I suspect if nations get sufficiently nasty in their post-oil competition, the Shep Solution might be used. After all, what better way to discourage the People's Liberation Army from rolling into Saudi Arabia than to point ICBMs at Beijing and Hong Kong? After all, we may be pushing much of our dwindling oil imports into agriculture, but we'll certainly leave more than enough to fuel our military industrial complex. Especially if future leaders are committed to the nihilistic "Last man standing" mentality.

With that aside, though, if the absolute worst-case predictions of post-peak oil come to pass, the only way that we might have a hope of preserving civilization somewhere in a form that can make the transition to a post-fossil-fuel world while maintaining high technolgy and mature into a true Type I civilization . . . would be to somehow rid the planet of, say, 75% of its population. The remaining twenty-five percent, of course, have to be committed to preserving civilization and developing a sustainable planetary economy.

Unfortunately such a solution is unworkable. Again, who would one trust to decide who lives and who dies? And that's saying nothing about whether or not the survivors will actually work towards the bright, shining goal laid out for them.
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Post by Seggybop »

No one is going to volunteer to commit suicide except the loonies who'd be doing it anyway under any circumstance. It's not happening. Would you do it? People want to live, no matter how crappy it gets. They'll do their best to keep living, and if someone needs to go, they'll do their best to ensure it's someone other than them. The "last man standing" scenario is the only one that can realistically be expected.
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Post by Alerik the Fortunate »

One of the other problems with non-growh economies is that civilizations that do manage to find a viable way to survive a declining population will still likely find themselves at a disadvantage to societies that maintain growth. Compare population growth in the Muslim world to Japan. While growth could be managed detrimentally, it could eventually give some groups advantages in shear numbers. Nations and ethnic groups might find themselves in reproductive arms races to not have their populations decline as fast as rivals. Of course cultural traditions also usually praise prolificacy and ethnic superiority, and will create a strong bias. Consider the issues raised in the thread about the book America Alone. Different religious/ethnic/politically oriented blocks are likely not soon to see themselves as having equal stakes in a shared world, especially when several of them have total expectations of being rescued by a returning Messiah after the unbelievers screw up the world (no mention is of course made as to the believers contributions...) I don't currently see a way of promoting or enforcing controlled population decline (even if a suitable economic structure could be implemented) without polarized lines of disagreement becoming sharpened with mass refusal to cooperate, and cries of imperialism and genocide at any attempt at enforcement. It could end in one direction with the situation in Stanislaw Lem's Peace on Earth, in which nations can no longer tell if variations in their birthrates are natural or the result of subtle biological weapons deployed by their enemies.
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Post by Darth Wong »

I see no merit in the idea that rapidly overpopulating nations will have some sort of huge tactical advantage in a hypothetical 21st century international conflict over dwindling planetary resources. Modern weapons have a way of nullifying the advantage of sheer numbers in open conflict, and the most overcrowded nations will be suffering from such massive internal problems as they fight over their own dwindling resources that they won't be able to mount and organize a serious military threat to their neighbours.
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Post by GrandMasterTerwynn »

Seggybop wrote:No one is going to volunteer to commit suicide except the loonies who'd be doing it anyway under any circumstance. It's not happening. Would you do it? People want to live, no matter how crappy it gets. They'll do their best to keep living, and if someone needs to go, they'll do their best to ensure it's someone other than them. The "last man standing" scenario is the only one that can realistically be expected.
Yes. Unfortunately, "last man standing" is the most likely outcome of a post-oil induced collapse of civilization. And the strain of fighting what is effectively WW3 on a diminishing energy budget, and the additional strain of garrisoning the areas they have secured will almost guarantee that precious little effort will be put into technology that will save the planet from the inevitable spin-down to the 18th and 19th centuries, and eventually further back to a permanent state of cycling between Dark Ages medieval feudalism and the 17th century level of technology that mere wood-burning can support.

The only hope in such a scenario is that some small nations can make it reasonably intact, and are already at the optimum scale for alternative energy production and transportation technologies to be put into widespread practice. This would have a better chance of coming about if the nations most apt to play "last man standing" before doing something sensible implode fairly early on in the post-oil catastrophe, before they get any imperial ambitions. Given that China, owing to its absurd population density and general lack of anything resembling environmental foresight, is especially vulnerable to a Malthusian catastrophe, and since the United States is an enormous house of cards totally dependent on cheap energy and likely the first nation to go apeshit over a post-oil crisis as a result . . . this scenario is more likely than one might think.

So, two possible futures, 3000 years from now. First, humans might be out among the stars in 3000 years. Except they'll all be speaking Spanish and Portuguese. Maybe even Arabic if militant Islam spreads into the Third World as the destruction of the Middle East causes a mass-diaspora. English and Chinese will be almost unknown to them and the United States will be condemed as the instigator of what might be called the Catastrophe or the Interregnum.

Second future, some philospher/historian for some future neo-barbarian feudal lord will translate some ancient writings and mavel at how the ancestors apparently irrevocably threw it all away and condemned their children and their children's children to forever toil in dreary, miserable lives on their one planet called "Earth." The philosopher might even see the end of his own species as the answer to an ancient philosophical problem called "Fermi's Paradox."

(Chillingly, now that I think about it, this just might be the answer to Fermi's Paradox. If we assume that energetic, tool-using life evolves in conditions similar to ours, then they will have evolved in similar time-frames, allowing the accumulation of similar quantities of coal, natural gas, and petroleum on their planets. When they develop far enough, they will discover these neat packages of abundant energy. Only the really bright ones might realize that such bounty can't last forever, and they'll take steps to ensure they're ready when it finally runs out. Most of them, however, will do as we've done and stupidly stumble into the same trap that we have and forever trap themselves on their planets, powerless to stop whatever natural catastrophe finally wipes them out. If they planet is lucky and orbits a cool, long-lived star, in a few hundred million years, enough fossil-fuels will accumulate to give the most recently evolved batch of natives another shot. If the planet isn't, then it becomes uninhabitable in a few hundred million years and it won't matter anymore anyway.)
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Post by Darth Wong »

Hang on a minute, who said we're going to revert back to the 18th century? Our current lifestyle will have to change dramatically, but it's not as if we're going to unlearn what we have collectively learned about science and technology. Are all the books going to spontaneously vapourize?

What will more realistically happen is that our technological society will continue, but it will become massively rationed. All of the technologies and capabilities will still be there, but you'll have to either be very wealthy to use them with abandon or you will have to become accustomed to severe rationing of what is now a precious resource.

Things like running your air conditioning from May to September will become a memory. The "highway freedom" lifestyle will become a memory for all but the wealthy. Even things like electric lights will be used much more sparingly, with people relying far more heavily on natural sunlight for illumination. Appliances will become far more expensive, so people will have far fewer convenience devices in their homes. People will start buying food from local farmers. Bicycles will become a more viable mode of transportation, especially since the now-empty roads will need only one occasional-use lane for motor vehicles and the rest can be reserved for bicycles. People will start using their backyards for growing vegetables instead of competing to see who can grow the flattest and most uniform patch of totally useless grass. But the idea that we'll regress to a pre-industrial state is silly. It will be a weird amalgam of modern technology and elements of the pre-industrial lifestyle.
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Post by Alerik the Fortunate »

Actually the rationed high-tech society sounds very appealing to me. It would be even nicer if we would transition to it voluntarily with a minimum of rampant destruction and disorientation.
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Post by Arthur_Tuxedo »

But eventually technology will progress to the point where we can live the reckless lifestyle without putting much of a dent in the environment. Hopefully that will happen before the scenario Mike describes comes to pass.
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Post by Alerik the Fortunate »

Darth Wong wrote:I see no merit in the idea that rapidly overpopulating nations will have some sort of huge tactical advantage in a hypothetical 21st century international conflict over dwindling planetary resources. Modern weapons have a way of nullifying the advantage of sheer numbers in open conflict, and the most overcrowded nations will be suffering from such massive internal problems as they fight over their own dwindling resources that they won't be able to mount and organize a serious military threat to their neighbours.
You are right of course. What I was thinking, though, is that will many of the most egregious overpopulated cultures consider it worthwhile to reduce their populations voluntarily, or will they see U.S. style growth economy correlated with population growth as necessary or advantageous in the shorter term? They may choose to go that route even if in longer terms it is likely to not only cause exacerbated military conflicts but be a severe liability.
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Post by GrandMasterTerwynn »

Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:But eventually technology will progress to the point where we can live the reckless lifestyle without putting much of a dent in the environment. Hopefully that will happen before the scenario Mike describes comes to pass.
Now that sort of thinking is the sort of Pollyanna-ish thinking that will carry people clear through Mike's reasonable scenario of effective (as far as standard of living is concerned) regression to the dawn of the 20th century and right into the worst-cast scenario of eventual regression into the nineteenth or beyond.

The fact that the transnational petrochemical companies are tacitly admitting that Peak Oil is upon us, and subtly urging us to consume less of their product means that they think that our current plateau in production is at an end (remember, companies don't do things that hurt their bottom line until they feel they've got no other choice in the matter. For example, sure the tobacco companies might be telling you how bad their product is for you now but they had to be sued and legislated into compliance first.) Mark my words, production will begin to decline within the next few years . . . a decade at the outside. Once the global market realizes the game is up, the price of oil will likely do things you never thought possible. And when the price of oil shoots up like an Osama bin-Laden wet-dream, the price of oil-based commodities will appreciate similarly. The sorts of short and medium-term effects of that kind of deflation of the average consumer's buying power will not be very pretty.

Technology will not develop quickly enough to save us from our own excesses. The end of cheap energy will hurt, make no doubt about that. How much it will hurt will depend directly on what courses of action our elected leadership will take.

ADDENDUM:

I say "effective regression to the dawn of the 20th century" because that's about the time all our modern conveniences, save recent stragglers like computers, were invented. Back then, the conveniences the modern suburbanite, or even the post WW2 GI took for granted were too new and expensive to achieve more than limited market penetration among the top economic tiers of society.

The same will be the case in a society where energy-intensive technology is strictly rationed. The techonology will still be there, and the average person will still get tastes of it, but he or she will otherwise learn to live frugally. Less frugally in places where something like hydroelectric, nuclear, or coal-fired powerplants predominate, and rather more frugally in places where oil or gas-fired plants dominate.
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Post by His Divine Shadow »

Thank god for Finland building nuclear power plants. More i say! More! Anyway I am optimistic about us being able to get enough electricity to power our appliances without severe rationings and high prices. As long as we pursue a rational energy policy. Fuel for cars and such is another issue however.
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Post by Stuart Mackey »

NZ should be ok, we have reasonable natural resources compared to our population, providing we get our act together over rail transport, power generation and transmission.
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Post by His Divine Shadow »

Ah yes, about rail transport, I just found this article: [url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2...[/url]

Interesting that trains are becoming less and less efficient, to the point where you're better off getting a diesel with a particle-filter.
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Post by His Divine Shadow »

Oh I fucked up the URL, here it is properly dressed:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2...
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Post by Darth Raptor »

So what would you guys predict to be the best and safest country to live in? It might be time to work on learning a second language.
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His Divine Shadow wrote:Ah yes, about rail transport, I just found this article: [url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2...[/url]

Interesting that trains are becoming less and less efficient, to the point where you're better off getting a diesel with a particle-filter.
That study seems to be at odds with previous ones that suggest that trains are more eco friendly than cars. :?
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Post by Arthur_Tuxedo »

GrandMasterTerwynn wrote:Now that sort of thinking is the sort of Pollyanna-ish thinking that will carry people clear through Mike's reasonable scenario of effective (as far as standard of living is concerned) regression to the dawn of the 20th century and right into the worst-cast scenario of eventual regression into the nineteenth or beyond.

The fact that the transnational petrochemical companies are tacitly admitting that Peak Oil is upon us, and subtly urging us to consume less of their product means that they think that our current plateau in production is at an end (remember, companies don't do things that hurt their bottom line until they feel they've got no other choice in the matter. For example, sure the tobacco companies might be telling you how bad their product is for you now but they had to be sued and legislated into compliance first.) Mark my words, production will begin to decline within the next few years . . . a decade at the outside. Once the global market realizes the game is up, the price of oil will likely do things you never thought possible. And when the price of oil shoots up like an Osama bin-Laden wet-dream, the price of oil-based commodities will appreciate similarly. The sorts of short and medium-term effects of that kind of deflation of the average consumer's buying power will not be very pretty.

Technology will not develop quickly enough to save us from our own excesses. The end of cheap energy will hurt, make no doubt about that. How much it will hurt will depend directly on what courses of action our elected leadership will take.
All I'm saying is this: When there's such a great need that every other scientist in the country is working on clean, renewable energy, when the currently insurmountable political barriers have been thrown aside, when the corporate complex throws its entire weight behind these efforts instead of in front of them, change will happen a lot faster than current predictions indicate.

Nuclear power combined with cars running on diversified fuels can solve most of our energy problems with today's technology. Between ethanol, bioethanol, biodiesel, propane, natural gas, greater use of regular diesel, kerosene (I didn't know cars could run on that either until I went to Chile), and electric cars, and with a much greater percentage of the population using mass transit, there's no energy problem. The only things stopping this scenario are that consumers don't want to have to choose between cars that use that many different fuels and political resistance, both of which will melt away in a bad enough crisis.

I don't disagree that we're headed for a major economic splash, one that could be worse than the Great Depression, but when there's that much of a pressing need, things will change fast, and they won't stay like that for more than a decade or so, certainly not long enough for our lifestyles to regress to resemble pre-WW2.
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Post by His Divine Shadow »

Lord Zentei wrote:That study seems to be at odds with previous ones that suggest that trains are more eco friendly than cars. :?
Yes the article mentions it. But as I understood it, recent developments of new and faster trains are the reasons why the study doesn't conform to others. More studies would be prefferable.

As to what country, heard on the radio they are now talking about a 6th nuclear powerplant in Finland.
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Post by Arthur_Tuxedo »

His Divine Shadow wrote:Oh I fucked up the URL, here it is properly dressed:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2...
Even without having seen their data and methodology, I'm deeply skeptical of these findings. The fact that they based their study off of only one route (London to Edinborough) should set of alarm bells straight away. I've been on a lot of different train systems in the States, South America, and western Europe, and I can guarantee they were all more efficient than a car. Now I'm sure you can cherry pick a route with low ridership or other inefficient factors and conclude that it is less efficient per rider, but I suspect that a study that included thousands of different routes would paint a very different picture.
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Post by GrandMasterTerwynn »

Arthur_Tuxedo wrote:
GrandMasterTerwynn wrote:Now that sort of thinking is the sort of Pollyanna-ish thinking that will carry people clear through Mike's reasonable scenario of effective (as far as standard of living is concerned) regression to the dawn of the 20th century and right into the worst-cast scenario of eventual regression into the nineteenth or beyond.

The fact that the transnational petrochemical companies are tacitly admitting that Peak Oil is upon us, and subtly urging us to consume less of their product means that they think that our current plateau in production is at an end (remember, companies don't do things that hurt their bottom line until they feel they've got no other choice in the matter. For example, sure the tobacco companies might be telling you how bad their product is for you now but they had to be sued and legislated into compliance first.) Mark my words, production will begin to decline within the next few years . . . a decade at the outside. Once the global market realizes the game is up, the price of oil will likely do things you never thought possible. And when the price of oil shoots up like an Osama bin-Laden wet-dream, the price of oil-based commodities will appreciate similarly. The sorts of short and medium-term effects of that kind of deflation of the average consumer's buying power will not be very pretty.

Technology will not develop quickly enough to save us from our own excesses. The end of cheap energy will hurt, make no doubt about that. How much it will hurt will depend directly on what courses of action our elected leadership will take.
All I'm saying is this: When there's such a great need that every other scientist in the country is working on clean, renewable energy, when the currently insurmountable political barriers have been thrown aside, when the corporate complex throws its entire weight behind these efforts instead of in front of them, change will happen a lot faster than current predictions indicate.
Several problems with this scenario. First, research and development kludges and economically feasible prototypes are not the same thing. For another, taking a technology from a few gee-whiz prototypes and replacing decades of infrastructure with them will take . . . decades to accomplish. And this is under the best of circumstances. No amount of pushing will overcome the sheer inertia involved in constructing all new factories and tooling, nor will it alleviate the initial cost overruns, delays, shortfalls in production, and first-run bugs that affect every new venture. It certainly won't solve the interfacing headaches of getting the new pieces to play well enough with the old, since you couldn't possibly replace all infrastructure everywhere in one fell swoop. It won't overcome the need to train people how to install, inspect, remove, and service/repair these marvelous new technologies.

Of course, add to that the fact that you'll have to build in the dramatically rising cost of oil into every industrial step in the process (from powering the factories, to shipping/extracting the raw inputs, to constructing the initial runs of parts, to paying a liveable wage to your workforce (whose purchasing power will be dropping as fast as the cost of oil rises) and to getting parts shipped from the factories out to the relevant sites,) and progress slows further still.

This isn't going to be anywhere near as easy as sending a man to the Moon. It's going to be about forcing entire nations to undergo a fundamental transformation of their basic infrastructure utterly alien to the human experience (As J pointed out, in the past the 'alternative' power sources were already ready and raring to go when the in-vogue sources were waning. For most of us, this is nowhere near the case.) Some will make it. Some won't.
Nuclear power combined with cars running on diversified fuels can solve most of our energy problems with today's technology. Between ethanol, bioethanol, biodiesel, propane, natural gas, greater use of regular diesel, kerosene (I didn't know cars could run on that either until I went to Chile), and electric cars, and with a much greater percentage of the population using mass transit, there's no energy problem.
Screeching Greenpeace anti-nuke ultra-green neo-Luddites won't go away just because the oil is running out. Anti-nuke howlers will be just as implacable about having a nuclear power plant in their backyard as they are now. They'll probably continue to be this way until enough rolling blackouts, being shot by police/National Guard/federal troops, or lynchings by their neighbors convince them to shut up. Not to mention nuclear power doesn't begin to provide even a sixth of the world's power. Just four nations get the majority of their power from nuclear power-plants. Just sixteen get more than a quarter of their power from nuclear powerplants.

And this is completely ignoring the fact that nuclear plants take not-insignificant amounts of time, effort, and material to build. The costs of all of which are going to feel the pinch imposed by rising energy costs.

As far as all those "alternative" fuels are concerned, they're not really oil alternatives, they're oil derivatives. Ethanol, and biodiesel require the sort of high-impact farming only made possible by the fossil-fuel based Green Revolution of the 1950s. Natural gas production will peak and decline not too long after oil does. Not to mention many power-plants are, in fact, fired by natural gas. And you're going to be needing that electricity to power the factories so you can perform your massive infrastructure upgrades and construct those scads of nuclear powerplants you're talking about.

Not to mention diesel and kerosene are refined products of petroleum. Not as refined as gasoline, yes . . . but these are still dead dinosaur juice. Sure diesel and kerosene might stretch out the oil supply on the account that they cost less to refine, and on the account that diesels bitch-slap gasoline motors in efficiency; but it's literally solving the oil crisis by burning more oil.
The only things stopping this scenario are that consumers don't want to have to choose between cars that use that many different fuels and political resistance, both of which will melt away in a bad enough crisis.
If human history has taught us anything, it's that the average citizen, and the politician she votes for, will tolerate a lot of bullshit before she deems it "bad enough," or a genuine "OMG we're all gonna DIE" crisis. I mean, look at the excesses of King George the Wonder-Chimp and the overwhelmingly "blah" reaction it's elicited from the voting public. In a post-oil world, citizens won't be choosing between flex-fuel and hybrid cars, they'll be giving them up entirely and learning the virtues of walking, bike riding, and mass-transit. The only time personal motorized transportation will again be within the realms of the typical consumer is when electric cars and fuel-cell powered vehicles can be produced cheaply on non-fossil-fuel inputs.
I don't disagree that we're headed for a major economic splash, one that could be worse than the Great Depression, but when there's that much of a pressing need, things will change fast, and they won't stay like that for more than a decade or so, certainly not long enough for our lifestyles to regress to resemble pre-WW2.
Snapping enough of the public out of its complacency will require a decade of things going into the shitter, or a suitably shocking market panic. Getting the public into sensible crisis-management mode and out of stupid "ZOMG PANIC roffle" mode will take another decade by itself. Infrastructure replacement will take decades, unless you happen to live somewhere where the territory is small enough, and the reliance on fossil fuels light enough, and the government and corporate structures flexible enough, that the change-over can be phased in not-so-painfully (in short, move to France. :wink:)

Sure, for some countries, peak-oil won't affect them much at all. Then again, these countries are generally already in the shitter, and the only way things will get worse for them is that the developed world will be too busy with its own troubles to adequately bail them out of their famines/civil wars/psychotic military takeovers/episodic ethnic cleansings.
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Darth Wong
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Post by Darth Wong »

To put this in simpler, more easily-digested terms, the public will wake up when it costs $500 to fill up your gas tank. Then they'll finally approve the construction of new nuclear power plants, so we'll break ground on those plants, and they'll be ready to produce juice in five to ten years. In the meantime, what do you do? Even the cost of food will skyrocket.

The irony is that people will probably push to build nuke plants much faster than normal, which will lead to safety shortcuts, which will lead to exactly the sort of accident that Greenpeacers currently use to argue against nuclear power.
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Post by AniThyng »

It also occurs to me that in this situation the world will see people fleeing to places where they percive to have greater energy reserves. I imagine many countries with self-sustaining energy capacities will enact tighter border controls to prevent being overwhelmed as refugees try to flee before thier countries collapse...or is this being a tad too far fetched?
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Post by Darth Wong »

AniThyng wrote:It also occurs to me that in this situation the world will see people fleeing to places where they percive to have greater energy reserves. I imagine many countries with self-sustaining energy capacities will enact tighter border controls to prevent being overwhelmed as refugees try to flee before thier countries collapse...or is this being a tad too far fetched?
How are these hordes going to get here? Flap their wings and fly? Any kind of mechanized transportation will cost a fortune after the oil crash.
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"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing

"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC

"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness

"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.

http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
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