Ethical To Raise A Child Today?

SLAM: debunk creationism, pseudoscience, and superstitions. Discuss logic and morality.

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Post by J »

TheLemur wrote:Every single piece of the infrastructure save for the liquefaction plants is already in place, remember? The US is already the #1 coal producer in the world, and once the oil is produced it can simply be shunted into existing distribution channels.
Wrong. To replace say, half of the US's oil consumption would require mining an additional 3.8 billion tons of coal every year in a best case scenario. Current US coal production is roughly a billion tons a year. Which leads to the next problem, transporting all that coal around, or transporting all the oil around if on-site coal liquifaction is used. Both will be needed, meaning countless miles of new rail lines & pipelines since coal deposits aren't conveniently located near existing oil pipelines. Oh yes, and to move all that coal out of the mines you'll need mega-sized steam shovels, dumptrucks, frontloaders, and other heavy eathmoving machinery. Caterpillar et al can only build so many of them a year, they'll need to undertake massive facilities expansions, the US steel & tooling industries will also have to greatly ramp up production (dumptruck parts don't machine themselves) which requires more coal & energy. Did I mention railway boxcars? We'll need a few million of those too, along with all the locomotives to pull them, someone's going to have to make them too.

The costs for all the infrastructure were worked out in a previous thread, it came out to something like a trillion dollars a year for the next 20-25 years to build everything and move into full production.
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Post by TheLemur »

And should any stock be taken of hardcore survival groups like these: http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/
As a serious theory? Their website's claims are almost effortless to pick apart:
between $100-$250* dollars to derive from alternative sources of energy.
This is unsourced and blatantly untrue. A BOE of coal costs around $10. A BOE of uranium costs even less.
Once they do begin aggressively pursuing these alternatives, there will be a 25-to-50 year lag time between the initial heavy-duty research into these alternatives and their wide-scale industrial implementation.
In 1939 the US was basically demilitarized. In 1944, five years later, the US was producing over ten thousand airplanes and tanks a year, and airplanes and tanks are a lot more technologically sophisticated than any alternative energy source I've heard about.
that we absolutely will not have once oil prices are permanently lodged in the $200-$300 per barrel neighborhood. (oil at $200-to-$300 puts gas at $8-to-$12)
The Europeans already pay $6-$7 a gallon, and Europe hasn't exactly shut down due to the supposed impossibility of doing heavy manufacturing under those conditions. Keep in mind that oil prices are very inelastic- even at $200 a barrel, oil use will probably still be at %80 of what it was earlier.
we may only get 25-to-50 days once oil production peaks.
Oil peak, even in the most rapid scenario, takes several years to happen and several years for the effects to get really bad. More made-up unsourced catch phrases.
This will cause a rapid breakdown of trucking industries and transportation networks.
Yup, after all, there's no truck or transportation industry in Europe whatsoever. :)
According to the International Air Transport Association aviation is a $400 billion dollar industry that indirectly generates $1.3 trillion dollars in economic activity. Overall, it accounts for 9% of global GDP.
$1.3 trillion is ~3% of global GDP, not 9%. This can be easily checked through Google.
Hundreds of trillions of dollars to construct fleets of hydrogen powered cars, trucks, boats, and airplanes.
You can convert your pre-existing car to run on hydrogen for a few thousand dollars and some minor engine modifications. An H2-air mixture isn't radically different from a gasoline-air mixture.
* Hundreds, if not thousands, of oil-powered factories to accomplish number one.
Oil does not power factories; it's far too expensive to use for bulk, nonportable energy.
* Need #3: The construction of a ridiculously expensive global refueling and maintenance network for number one.
We already have a global electricity network, and hydrogen refueling is as horrendously complicated as exchanging tank A for tank B.
As of 2003, the average hydrogen fuel cell costs close to $1,000,000.
As I said before, you DO NOT NEED a fuel cell to run your car on hydrogen. You can use your existing engine.
Hydrogen is the smallest element known to man. This makes it virtually impossible to store in the massive quantities
Hydrogen does not need to be stored in huge bulk tanks; it can be produced on-site and stored on-site, without the need for a global pipeline network.
illustrates the different projections of uranium depletion,
Using the resources we are currently mining. But there is an enormous amount of uranium in seawater, and an even enourmouser amount of unused U238 in existing uranium stocks, and an even enourmouser amount of thorium, which can be converted to uranium and fissioned.
It would take 10,000 of the largest nuclear power plants to produce the energy we get from fossil fuels.
Except for the convenient trick of bait-and-switch used with these "energy" calculations. When you mine coal, the "energy" figure is the heat that can come from burning the coal. But when you mine uranium, you calculate the electricity that can be produced and use that as the "energy" number. So we would indeed require, say, 5,000 nuclear power plants to produce as much energy as the coal power plants. But 75% of the "energy" produced by the coal plant is simply dumped in the river and is never used by anyone, so we only need 1,250 plants to meet actual demand.
Speaking of nuclear waste, it is a question nobody has quite answered yet.
Except that they invented reprocessing over 30 years ago, and we have simply refused to use it. The French have been handling their waste very well.
* Where are we going to get the massive amounts of oil necessary to build hundreds, if not thousands, of these reactors,
The primary costs of building a reactor are concrete, steel, and insanely tight safety standards. The insanely tight safety standards will be rewritten in the event of a large-scale Peak Oil depression, and neither concrete or steel requires large amounts of oil compared to all the other stuff we do with it.
Biodiesel is considerably better than ethanol, (and probably the best of the biofuels) but with an EROEI of three, it still doesn't compare to oil, which has had an EROEI of about 30.
Obviously this is catastrophic, to spend $60 on energy costs for a $180 barrel of biodiesel (also note how they're implicitly assuming all energy is equivalent, when most of the energy involved is non-hydrocarbon-based).
Population growth alone reduces the calculated lifetime to some 90−120 years.
Population growth is negative in most Western countries and is already slowing down elsewhere.
If it continues to drop at this rate,
This is the same old creationist extrapolate-the-current-trend-forever fallacy. Honestly, there is so much misinformation here I haven't even covered a lot of it.
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Post by TheLemur »

To replace say, half of the US's oil consumption would require mining an additional 3.8 billion tons of coal every year in a best case scenario.
You mean half of world consumption, right? A ton of coal, accounting for losses in the process, has roughly the same energy as four barrels of oil, which works out to around 15 billion BOE/year, half of world consumption.

Current US coal production is roughly a billion tons a year.
If you're going to use world oil consumption figures, why aren't you using world coal production figures?
Which leads to the next problem, transporting all that coal around, or transporting all the oil around if on-site coal liquifaction is used.
We have these thingies called pipes. We built an 1300-kilometer long pipe in the middle of the Alaskan wilderness with zero pre-existing infrastructure, so don't tell me we can't build pipes.
The costs for all the infrastructure were worked out in a previous thread, it came out to something like a trillion dollars a year for the next 20-25 years to build everything and move into full production.
Okay, that sounds reasonable enough. It's only around one tenth of what the US spends on its military, which is in turn only 5% or so of GDP.
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Post by J »

TheLemur wrote:You mean half of world consumption, right? A ton of coal, accounting for losses in the process, has roughly the same energy as four barrels of oil, which works out to around 15 billion BOE/year, half of world consumption.
I'll check my calculations again, it's possible I made an error somewhere. In anycase, assuming you are correct, that's still an extra 1-2 billion tons a year to replace 50%-100% of US oil needs, respectively. Replacing half of US oil needs will require a doubling of coal production.
Which leads to the next problem, transporting all that coal around, or transporting all the oil around if on-site coal liquifaction is used.
We have these thingies called pipes. We built an 1300-kilometer long pipe in the middle of the Alaskan wilderness with zero pre-existing infrastructure, so don't tell me we can't build pipes.
Which cost IIRC, something like $8 billion. As mentioned before, we'll be building countless miles of new pipelines to connect the plants to existing pipelines & distribution hubs.
The costs for all the infrastructure were worked out in a previous thread, it came out to something like a trillion dollars a year for the next 20-25 years to build everything and move into full production.
Okay, that sounds reasonable enough. It's only around one tenth of what the US spends on its military, which is in turn only 5% or so of GDP.
I believe you mis-understood. I'm talking about spending a trillion dollars every year for the next 20-25 years, for a cumulative total of $20-25 trillion. That's what it's going to cost. Assuming inflation stays at roughly current rates, the USD doesn't crash, the economy continues along as it has for the past 10 years, etc etc.
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Post by TheLemur »

I'll check my calculations again, it's possible I made an error somewhere. In anycase, assuming you are correct, that's still an extra 1-2 billion tons a year to replace 50%-100% of US oil needs, respectively. Replacing half of US oil needs will require a doubling of coal production.
That sounds about right.

Which cost IIRC, something like $8 billion.
Which had everything to do with it being a pipe, and nothing to do with it being in the middle of the Alaska wilderness with no electric network and few roads. :roll:
I believe you mis-understood. I'm talking about spending a trillion dollars every year for the next 20-25 years, for a cumulative total of $20-25 trillion. That's what it's going to cost.
What's you reference/calculation? I joined just a few days ago and I haven't seen this other thread.
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

TheLemur wrote:
which I have shown to be completely false. And it isn't as if we're going to run out of seawater anytime soon.
So these plants aren't going to use energy to make energy? Quite a leap if you ask me, since coal production alone consumes a great big chunk of oil anyway, just as any large-scale industry will. As for sea-water, sure, so long as you have desalination plants. That requires even more energy.

Okay; I concede that some HCl could be generated. Except that HCl can be easily neutralized by something as common and dirt-cheap as limestone.
Which will have to be brought in bulk to the site. Surprise, surprise, more energy usage and your EROEI ratio decreases more.

And another thing, the UK has been looking at water shortages for years now, with no means of combating them. The costs of desalination plants are large, to both build and operate. Surely if it was as easy as you state, the UK wouldn't be imposing hose-pipe bans, but wallowing in an unlimited supply of fresh water, no?

The infrastructure to deal with solid wastes is not in place? So what do we do with the millions of tons of coal ash we already produce? Does it just vanish courtesy of the Magical Garbage Fairy?
No, if you read my point, I was referring to the CTL facilities to rival oil, NOT the waste disposal which is naturally not as hard to do, but still requires more energy to deal with and furthers harm to the environment.
A

*Destroy* the economy? Obviously it would badly damage the economy, but to suggest that it would be destroyed to the point where building simple, low-tech infrastructure on a large scale is impossible is simply crazy. Nazi Germany succeeded in doubling its production of tanks from 1941-1944, while under heavy Allied bombardment and a critical fuel shortage. Even the Great Depression doesn't compare to having thousands of tons of high explosives dropped on you every night for years on end.
And Nazi Germany failed at the end of its endeavour, where it peaked for synoil around 1944, where it was still trying to capture foreign oil fields instead and where it owned most of industrialised Europe without any real attack on its empire until well into the war. Obviously it was working out so well for the Germans, they didn't need to capture foreign oil fields, and Japan had all of China's coal to do CTL, so attacking Pearl Harbor over oil was a very silly thing for them to do. You also seem to forget they had a fair few years beforehand to actually prepare for militarisation to boot, they didn't just do it overnight after invading Poland.

Again, you've not shown the whole industrialised world can match its global oil production, nevermind meet growing demand, via just coal liquifaction. Of course, if the economy goes into a major depression, which it is shaping up to do now with or without PO, good luck finding confident investors to go along with this amazing plan of replacing all oil with coal when oil output could be dropping anywhere froma couple of percent to 20% after the peak. Nazi Germany and S. Africa are simply not analogous to a globalised economy that has lost all growth and is having to cut jobs just to keep with current energy demand. It's obvious to anyone you need masses of energy just to make these plants, running them is something else. I presume you're magicking this energy out of nowhere then, since making liquid fuels from coal requires energy and a load of coal and non-brackish water. You're essentially telling me you can rebuild the global energy market to fill that gap where oil is with coal in barely a decade, with the economies in recession, energy prices going through the roof and resource wars likely coming into play because, let's face it, no one wants to give up that last drop of oil to some A-rab or Chinaman.

I'm sure the trillions needed for such a venture will come out of the US gov't's coffers no sweat. Not like Iraq is draining them or anything or global loss of confidence in the dollar sees it collapsing...

The Chinese demand for huge quantities of resources is fairly recent, as these things go; Chinese oil imports have come close to doubling in only eight-nine odd years.
They also don't have to worry about t ... rel of oil per ton. So even if every single cent of coal's price were going towards paying for oil, it would still only require 3 GJ of oil to get 24 GJ of coal.[/quote]

And you think coal prices are going to stay low when the global demand rockets up? You'll be lucky to supply most of the first world with coal simply because of the transporting issues, then there's the digging up more coal mines, producing carbon neutral facilities etc. If this was so easy, why didn't the US or UK do this in '73 or '79 when it would've made them unreliant on OPEC oil from the unstable Middle-East? It's not like oil prices weren't far higher than coal or gas at the time, nor did they have a tiny industrial machine to implement such a plan.

Because converting it is very profitable with oil at $60 a barrel, but $60 a barrel still isn't high enough to break the huge momentum behind current industry (notice how the oil sands project has been growing very rapidly because that project was already started at the time).
The oil sands are also suffering rising prices themselves, just look at the Shell Colorado site. They also have crap returns on energy input and they can't mine and refine the stuff fast enough. Coal and tar sands or oil shale are not oil.

It certainly won't save us from high oil prices in the interim, but the Hirsch report showed that it can still fulfill the demands of industrial civilization, even if it does take a while to build all the infrastructure.
Assuming the economy in the US, along with the rest of the West, doesn't falter. You never countered the points about the economy raised before showing how jittery it is with oil prices as it is now. I don't doubt the technology, I doubt the will and resources to work in time. Mitigation doesn't mean no recession, and a recession is going to harm industry whether they want to change or not.

So what? In any peak oil scenario demand for cars will crash because they will be so expensive to operate, and your own chart shows that only %10 of the energy a car uses is manufacturing (the portion of hydrocarbon liquids is even less).
It's still a lot of energy that is needed when you factor in the 230 million cars in the US alone. They are not going to be replaced overnight with more efficient models, even if people could afford them and the Great Depression showed people were more than willing to operate their cars when they couldn't even afford food every day.

And that has.... what relevance? I was trying to show the feasibility of a rapid growth in the manufacturing base of a product. The qualities of the product then compared to today are totally irrelevant.
So show me how 1920s America compared with 21st century America. It should be easy enough to prove the point.

Okay, in nice big letters so you can understand:

I was not trying to say anything about the oil consumption of 1920 compared to today. I was trying to make a point about the AUTOMOBILE MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY and how millions of cars were rapidly produced over a short period of time. I only chose cars because it came to mind and was easy to look up; it could just as easily have been bananas.
HAY TATS GRATE LOLZ!!1

Care to show how that means anything today? We made thousands of fighter planes in WWII, but guess what? We can't today, for a very good reason. I'll let you try and figure that one out, sparky.
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Post by TheLemur »

Quite a leap if you ask me, since coal production alone consumes a great big chunk of oil anyway, just as any large-scale industry will.
And why does this oil have to be drilled oil, instead of synthetic oil? Obviously a small amount of oil is required to start the process, but at any production level, from 1,000 barrels a day to 10,000,000 barrels a day, the process produces far more oil than it consumes. There will still be some drilled oil flowing, so the coal mines wouldn't be powered exclusively by synthetic oil, but it could be done if we had to for whatever reason, admittedly at additional expense.
As for sea-water, sure, so long as you have desalination plants. That requires even more energy.
You don't get it, do you? You can just dump seawater directly onto heated coal and the vast majority of the impurities- sodium, potassium, sulfate, magnesium, calcium, etc. will simply settle out. You mentioned HCl as a gas that might be formed, but HCl can easily be scrubbed from the gas stream by limestone.
Which will have to be brought in bulk to the site. Surprise, surprise, more energy usage and your EROEI ratio decreases more.
Oh come on! You're not seriously going to argue that transportation of limestone is going to be a major energy cost, especially since at most 2% or so of the gas stream would be HCl. You don't even have to dig underground to get limestone- there are huge deposits on the surface. So yes, it will decrease the EROEI- by 1-2% or so. How this matters is beyond me.
but still requires more energy to deal with and furthers harm to the environment.
There is not a huge qualitative difference between mining four billion tons of coal a year and mining eight billion tons of coal a year. If you want green power, start pushing for nuclear power plants, but those will take several decades to build because they are much more complex.
And Nazi Germany failed at the end of its endeavour, where it peaked for synoil around 1944,
Because the Allies were bombing oil production plants into the ground! Did you forget about that?
You also seem to forget they had a fair few years beforehand to actually prepare for militarisation to boot, they didn't just do it overnight after invading Poland.
Germany did not need synthetic oil plants in 1939 because it was still trading internationally, and so in 1939 synthetic oil plants were not being built.
Obviously it was working out so well for the Germans, they didn't need to capture foreign oil fields,
I'm not trying to argue that coal liquefaction is *better* than simply pumping unlimited quantities of oil out of the ground, I'm simply trying to show it's viable as an alternative.
Again, you've not shown the whole industrialised world can match its global oil production, nevermind meet growing demand, via just coal liquifaction.
Did you even *read* the Hirsch report? Notice that in every scenario, including the one where mitigation is not started until after Peak Oil happens (the realistic scenario), fuel production bottoms out and then starts increasing again?
good luck finding confident investors
I don't need confident investors, I need investors who want to get rich. Nine out of ten venture capital investments fail, and yet the VC business is huge because of the investments that do succeed. And there'd undoubtedly be direct government intervention in the event of a major depression.
It's obvious to anyone you need masses of energy just to make these plants, running them is something else.
It's also obvious that that energy is *available*, even if it is four times as expensive. You said it yourself- peak oil will only decrease oil supply by a few percentage points in the first few years, and a project like this would undoubtedly be given priority.
I'm sure the trillions needed for such a venture will come out of the US gov't's coffers no sweat. Not like Iraq is draining them or anything or global loss of confidence in the dollar sees it collapsing...
You do realize that there are countries other than the US in the world, right? The US in particular will be very hard hit, but most other countries don't have the burdens of a foreign war, huge debt, trade imbalance and heavily road-dependent society.
No other nation on Earth has their manufacturing base,
So what? Does it really matter if the oil comes from China instead of the US? Peak Oil is a global scenario, remember?
why didn't the US or UK do this in '73 or '79 when it would've made them unreliant on OPEC oil from the unstable Middle-East?
Because that was a temporary political situation and this is a permanent global situation. You of all people should understand that. And the US lowered its ratio of oil-demand-growth to GDP growth by half, so quite a bit of progress was made anyway.
And you think coal prices are going to stay low when the global demand rockets up?
Of course not, but that'll only happen after a large network of CTL plants are in place and using coal.
They also have crap returns on energy input
They're making a hell of a lot of money, so if energy costs are such a huge percentage of their budget, how do they manage to pay to run the site and still make a large profit?
just look at the Shell Colorado site.
Is that site even in commercial production yet?
Mitigation doesn't mean no recession, and a recession is going to harm industry whether they want to change or not.
Agreed.
and the Great Depression showed people were more than willing to operate their cars when they couldn't even afford food every day.
*Some* people were still operating cars during the Depression. These were obviously not the same people who couldn't afford to eat. If you think differently, please provide evidence.
They are not going to be replaced overnight with more efficient models, even if people could afford them
Of course not; a great many of them won't be replaced at all, because there will be a glut of used cars on the market and few buyers.
So show me how 1920s America compared with 21st century America. It should be easy enough to prove the point.
Why? Is there some magical pixie dust that 1920s America had that allowed it to develop new industry quickly, that has since mysteriously vanished? If you want to make that claim, find your own evidence.
We can't today, for a very good reason.
We *can't*? Of course we don't, but how do you know that we can't? We haven't been embroiled in a world war for sixty years and there's little reason to think that one is going to start soon. The wars we are involved in, in Iraq and possibly Iran, do not require huge numbers of fighter planes.
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

TheLemur wrote:
And why does this oil have to be drilled oil, instead of synthetic oil? Obviously a small amount of oil is required to start the process, but at any production level, from 1,000 barrels a day to 10,000,000 barrels a day, the process produces far more oil than it consumes. There will still be some drilled oil flowing, so the coal mines wouldn't be powered exclusively by synthetic oil, but it could be done if we had to for whatever reason, admittedly at additional expense.
Because that small amount will still grow over time and, as I stated, it doesn't do anything but delay, maybe by a few decades, another peak. This also means building more plants to sustain current demand, since you'll be using a good load of that product to continue building more such facilities and fuelling them.

You don't get it, do you? You can just dump seawater directly onto heated coal and the vast majority of the impurities- sodium, potassium, sulfate, magnesium, calcium, etc. will simply settle out. You mentioned HCl as a gas that might be formed, but HCl can easily be scrubbed from the gas stream by limestone.
Yes, but that means now needing to have that water transported to plants that may not be anywhere near the sea. You can use fresh water, though this leads to the problems the tar sands and oil shale are running into since they really do use epic amounts of water for the process. Still, the use of the coal to purify the water means using more energy to make it so.
Oh come on! You're not seriously going to argue that transportation of limestone is going to be a major energy cost, especially since at most 2% or so of the gas stream would be HCl. You don't even have to dig underground to get limestone- there are huge deposits on the surface. So yes, it will decrease the EROEI- by 1-2% or so. How this matters is beyond me.
You still need to dig and transport it, and I reiterate J's comments before about the extra infrastructure for supporting this newly enlarged coal industry, because it will have to be built far faster and to much larger scales than at any time in our past.
b

There is not a huge qualitative difference between mining four billion tons of coal a year and mining eight billion tons of coal a year. If you want green power, start pushing for nuclear power plants, but those will take several decades to build because they are much more complex.
Much as I like nuclear, for the reasons stated they are not an answer, though given the time it takes oil wells to meet production from first discovery, it takes them anywhere up to a decade too. I've not seen numbers on how well such a coal plant would do comparatively, so you'll have to excuse my blindspot on that aspect.

The big issues for me are it being able to be built in time, assuming investment capital and a still sturdy stock market, and also the carbon issue. The price of a CCS unit is dramatically higher than a normal coal powerplant (likely why the Chinese build dirty and so quickly). If you're to avoid peaking energy, you can't go floundering into global warming, so you've got to have these plants working clean. That requires more energy input and longer build times, so it remains to be seen whether the gov't would cut the red tape and take their chances with climate change, or consider that still and further exacerbate the energy crisis, perhaps to irreparable levels of damage to the economy.
Because the Allies were bombing oil production plants into the ground! Did you forget about that?
And you seem to think this isn't analogous to falling oil and gas output that could be fairly dramatic given the efficiency of enhanced extraction?

Germany did not need synthetic oil plants in 1939 because it was still trading internationally, and so in 1939 synthetic oil plants were not being built.
But they still had to try and capture oil fields because they knew synoil wasn't going to make do. Same with Japan, and they most certainly were not being bombed day and night by the Allies like Germany as they felt the oil pinch.

I'm not trying to argue that coal liquefaction is *better* than simply pumping unlimited quantities of oil out of the ground, I'm simply trying to show it's viable as an alternative.
I know, and I'm not disputing that. What I argue is that it may not be enough, and even if it is, it doesn't solve anything and leads to further complacency. And no, I don't know what would save us, but I'm not an energy scientist and I'm not expecting nuclear fusion anytime soon.

Did you even *read* the Hirsch report? Notice that in every scenario, including the one where mitigation is not started until after Peak Oil happens (the realistic scenario), fuel production bottoms out and then starts increasing again?
You mean the one that states "significant liquid fuels deficit for more than two decades" in it? Because I don't see how that helps your cause when you're going to need that energy and be trying to get it from every other industry on the planet, and that's on top of the economic repercussions of demand outstripping supply.

I don't need confident investors, I need investors who want to get rich. Nine out of ten venture capital investments fail, and yet the VC business is huge because of the investments that do succeed. And there'd undoubtedly be direct government intervention in the event of a major depression.
Good, because you need trillions, afterall. Now you need time too, which is not so easy.

It's also obvious that that energy is *available*, even if it is four times as expensive. You said it yourself- peak oil will only decrease oil supply by a few percentage points in the first few years, and a project like this would undoubtedly be given priority.
No, I said it can vary on what the fall is. It may be a couple of percentage points like some of the older US oil fields, or it could be up to 15% like Brent which is also the more likely one given the technology used on these fields today is as good as it can get. Our efficiency in sucking it out means it runs out faster, so you may not have a good deal of oil left to play with when the other parties muscle in too. The Chinese, for instance, aren't going to let the US or EU or Russia hog what's left, and that is a big factor in determining how the environment plays out for CTL or similar ventures.
You do realize that there are countries other than the US in the world, right? The US in particular will be very hard hit, but most other countries don't have the burdens of a foreign war, huge debt, trade imbalance and heavily road-dependent society.
I also realise those nations aren't going to rival US production capacity. The US has the world's biggest economy for a reason, and China may not be so loving given how they play the markets now, much to the US' chagrin.

So what? Does it really matter if the oil comes from China instead of the US? Peak Oil is a global scenario, remember?
For the point mentioned above. They'll make you work for it.

Because that was a temporary political situation and this is a permanent global situation. You of all people should understand that. And the US lowered its ratio of oil-demand-growth to GDP growth by half, so quite a bit of progress was made anyway.
No one knew it was temporary and the US gov't even planned for the situation to last for years, but such plans never had to be implemented. If they had to go with CTL, you'd then have a good more modern and relevant example to contrast today with at least.
They're making a hell of a lot of money, so if energy costs are such a huge percentage of their budget, how do they manage to pay to run the site and still make a large profit?
Production costs go up, I didn't say it bankrupted them else not even Shell would still be doing it. The fact is, it proves nothing given Jack-2 is a similar situation with regards to an output bottleneck. They can't process it fast enough, not to mention it sucks up tonnes of fresh water. In Canada, they're getting warnings over water usage and environmental waste that is seriously affecting agriculture. Now, you can hope and pray this stuff can be pumped out fast enough and doesn't kill the environment and hasten global warming, or you can find another strategy. Frankly, I'd rather put money into CTL if that's the only other option, because tar sands and oil shale along with deep sea ops. are not going to meet growing demand and certainly not going to replace current demand.

Is that site even in commercial production yet?
I was under the impression it was, but I was using it as an example anyway. The Canadian sites are, and they all have the same issues with cost, pitiful returns on investment and the use of water and harm to the surroundings.

*Some* people were still operating cars during the Depression. These were obviously not the same people who couldn't afford to eat. If you think differently, please provide evidence.
I don't think differently, it was a statement that some people still saw a point in paying such high prices on a luxury at the time. Not every human is rational, and a lot of people are addicted to oil to the point of desperately trying to find more of it or take it from others, rather than look at the other options. The US could be doing this today, rather than think Iraq and the rest of the Middle-East will be won over by their democracy plan.

Of course not; a great many of them won't be replaced at all, because there will be a glut of used cars on the market and few buyers.
That does have the side-effect of harming productivity though, remember. There will be limitations to what can and cannot be done by industry simply down to how one allocates resources. My earlier point with regards to heavy industry in the UK and fuel shortages in 2005's winter for instance. I also wonder what social unrest will develop from our car obsessed society.
Why? Is there some magical pixie dust that 1920s America had that allowed it to develop new industry quickly, that has since mysteriously vanished? If you want to make that claim, find your own evidence.
Given the state of the car industry today, that's what I'm alluding to. The US car companies are essentially bankrupt, their industry being outsourced or otherwise dismantled via unions and the like. The US is not the car super industry it once was.

We *can't*? Of course we don't, but how do you know that we can't? We haven't been embroiled in a world war for sixty years and there's little reason to think that one is going to start soon. The wars we are involved in, in Iraq and possibly Iran, do not require huge numbers of fighter planes.
Cost. Even if you had the industry to crank out an F-22A every hour, no one could afford it. You don't think the USAF wants a thousand such aircraft? They do, and they'd love numbers like they had for the Mustang circa 1944. But the complexity and regulations of modern projects like this make it far harder to economically sustain. Same with cars. Look at hybrids and the toxic products needed for something like a Prius which will also suck down a lot of Li-ion cells if such a thing ever became really common (again, costs keep that from happening which is why your average hybrid is $3k more than the equivalent petrol model). If we're to get off oil based cars, you're going to need to seriously consider the price of such an investment in such radically different and less advanced technologies. Course, this may be easier with the incentive and lack of Big Oil killing efficient, gasoline-free transport.
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Admiral Valdemar
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

Vyraeth wrote:You know I see discussions like these on an internet board, and I wonder what if anything, the fucking people in my government are doing about it?

Surely, it's not only AV who realizes how serious a situation like Peak Oil is, Bush may be a moron, but the government employs a broad spectrum of scientists, who had to have pointed something akin to this out.
The GAO this week published a report into PO, but it's already been criticised as missing a lot of issues out and generally not being as comprehensive or demanding as it should be. It'll be ignored, as was Hirsch and numerous other reports.

And really, this issue is only around a decade or so old for the more mainstream scientists and energy consultants getting involved. Hubbert may have started it against Shell's position in the '50s, but since then it's been mostly ignored and pooh-pooh'd.
I mean, government officials have whole advising staffs, is the US government too caught up in trivial politics to realize how much relying on oil could end up costing us?

Where are the campaigns promoting mass transit, where are the laws banning SUV and making fuel efficient cars mandatory? Where are the efforts at developing alternative sources of fuel and energy?

Surely civilization will not eventually be killed off by bureaucratic ineffectiveness.

I mean, I looked briefly over google to find public interest groups promoting greener campaigns and I've found nothing.

Global warming is indeed a serious issue, but I think Peak Oil tops it quite considerably; and hell, if we focused on strategies for dealing with this oil crisis, we would help stem off some of the causes of global warming.
I'm curious AV, and others, what do you think should be done?

And should any stock be taken of hardcore survival groups like these: http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/
Bush knows about it, Cheney even hinted at it in '99. They know and either don't care, or don't get it. Whether what I'm saying today from my studying is wrong or not, we have an issue that is coming eventually. It may be now, it may be 2050. No one is doing anything about it.

As I stated over on another board, learn to be more energy efficient. Use fluorescent bulbs, not incandescent. Buy a smaller, more economical car, not some stupid Dodge Ram or Hummer or Camarro. You'll save money in the long run and help bring down carbon and other GHG emissions. Switch to an energy supplier who uses only renewable or high efficiency energy sources. Learn how to be self-sufficient, or failing that, just how to help your local producers. Do not buy into consumer lies that you MUST have the latest, greatest of everything. Watch Fight Club and see what I mean, it's actually quite smart for that social commentary.

If everyone did this, we'd have decades more oil left, a cleaner environment and less warfare and waste.

Of course, my pessimism tells me people don't want to do this, thus increasing energy usage, lower mileage cars and ever more extravagant lifestyles. The news won't tell anyone about this because the media is now simply in it for money too. News that gets ratings, but means fuck all in the grand scheme of things is common. Do you really care about Britney going into rehab, or why your gas costs are going up? Are you gullible enough to think the US cares about Iraq for democracy and human rights, when we buddy up to the Saudis because of a certain black goo we all are addicted to? People just need to be educated, and if they are, they need to care.

Massive paradigm shifts are needed, and yes, that means changing lifestyles. But you can do it voluntarily and how you see fit, within reason. George H. W. Bush once said "the American way of life is not negotiable". Well, sadly, nature doesn't give a shit what American presidents think. And America is the leading cause (for now, until China starts really competing with you, and believe me, they make the Soviets look small fry) of this massive waste and energy policy globally. If you don't change, then you run into Peak Oil and later Peak Energy and this life you know, everything you've taken for granted, it vanishes. No more games consoles, no more going to the mall to watch a movie and eat pizza. No more MTV and celebrity magazines. No more car journeys, flights abroad or big screen TV. No more medical procedures for cosmetics or even for really necessary reasons. Progress grinds to a halt and the brief shining period we knew as the industrial revolution ends, and with it go the lives its existence made possible (that's five billion and counting, by the way). Like I say, if it doesn't happen now, don't breathe a sigh of relief just yet. It will come, and we need to prepare if we are fortunate to get a few extra years from some unforeseen oil find or something curbi8ng use today.

Deal with reality, or reality deals with you.
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Post by TheLemur »

Because that small amount will still grow over time and, as I stated, it doesn't do anything but delay, maybe by a few decades, another peak. This also means building more plants to sustain current demand, since you'll be using a good load of that product to continue building more such facilities and fuelling them.
By that logic, pumping oil strains the oil supply because oil is burned during transportation, processing, building the machinery, etc. :)
Yes, but that means now needing to have that water transported to plants that may not be anywhere near the sea.
Conceded. But why would such transportation be based on oil? California has a huge water pumping network that transports water hundreds of miles clear across the state. Very little oil is used; all the pumps are electric-powered.
Still, the use of the coal to purify the water means using more energy to make it so.
What? The impurities in the water have negligible effect on the energy required for the reaction (keep in mind they only make up ~3% or so of the water by mass).
You still need to dig and transport it,
While we're at it, why don't we say furniture is very energy-intensive because it requires transporting nails? Seriously, the concepts of "size" and "proportion" seem to elude you.
it takes them anywhere up to a decade too.
I realize that, that's why I'm talking about CTL as a stopgap. It's fairly simple and can be done with pre-existing fuels. Natural gas can also be used (yes, I know America has a natural gas shortage, but gas isn't easily portable while oil is).
The price of a CCS unit is dramatically higher than a normal coal powerplant (likely why the Chinese build dirty and so quickly).
We build pipes for natural gas, if we have to we can build pipes to pump CO2 into holes in the ground. 70% of the carbon in the coal handled by a CTL plant is turned into CO2 during burning, not during processing anyway.
And you seem to think this isn't analogous to falling oil and gas output that could be fairly dramatic given the efficiency of enhanced extraction?
Whatever happened to Hubbert's curves? They were supposed to be spot-on for US oil production, weren't they?
Same with Japan, and they most certainly were not being bombed day and night by the Allies like Germany as they felt the oil pinch.
The Japanese, although they felt the pinch sooner (being an island), were sure as hell bombed by the Allies. The Japanese also lacked Germany's large reserves of coal.
And no, I don't know what would save us, but I'm not an energy scientist and I'm not expecting nuclear fusion anytime soon.
What's wrong with nuclear fission? Sure, it takes a long time to implement, but it can effectively provide all the energy we could possibly want indefinitely into the future.
You mean the one that states "significant liquid fuels deficit for more than two decades" in it?
Yes, that one. Notice how the deficit peaks early on and then decreases, showing that the situation, although bad, is perfectly fixable.
Because I don't see how that helps your cause when you're going to need that energy and be trying to get it from every other industry on the planet,
The industry that uses 80% or so of oil is transportation, divided between personal transportation and product transportation. Personal transportation is funded by the consumer, who is already broke. Product transportation is funded by low-profit-margin shipping companies. So it's not as if they'll be competing against people who have trillions of dollars stashed away to buy oil with.
No, I said it can vary on what the fall is.
According to the standard Hubbert curve, the upslope mirrors the downslope. Annual oil production never increased faster than 8%.
so you may not have a good deal of oil left to play with when the other parties muscle in too.
If we're already at the point where it is impossible to buy sufficient quantities of oil at any price, than the government *will* intervene directly- they would be politically forced to. And obviously producing more oil would be a very high-priority project.

are not going to meet growing demand and certainly not going to replace current demand.
I think that's vice-versa.
he fact is, it proves nothing given Jack-2 is a similar situation with regards to an output bottleneck.
Wasn't Jack-2 just discovered? And wasn't Jack-2 a conventional oil well? Why would it require processing any more than conventional oil?
and they all have the same issues with cost, pitiful returns on investment
Riiiiight..... And note that you actually need to mine a lot more oil sand than coal to get the same amount of oil.
That does have the side-effect of harming productivity though, remember.
Which was my point.
The US car companies are essentially bankrupt, their industry being outsourced or otherwise dismantled via unions and the like. The US is not the car super industry it once was.
Although I agree with you on this fact, cars do not suddenly triple in price due to supply shortages.
Cost. Even if you had the industry to crank out an F-22A every hour, no one could afford it.
Okay, so they can crank out fewer aircraft which are each more sophisticated, and you yourself said that this sophistication is the cause of the fewer numbers. But a barrel of oil in 1940 is essentially the same as a barrel in 2010.
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Post by TheLemur »

Progress grinds to a halt and the brief shining period we knew as the industrial revolution ends,
You seriously think that PO is going to shut down all of industrial society? Well oil as we think of it wasn't even discovered until 1871 (ie, well into the industrial revolution), and for the next forty years it was primarily used for kerosene lamps, which we've already supplanted, first with incandescent, then CFLs and now LEDs. We already have enough hydroelectric and nuclear power today to run a 2000-era industrial society, albeit on a much smaller scale. Just take every figure you see about production of various goods and services and replace them all with something an order of magnitude or so lower.
Use fluorescent bulbs, not incandescent. Switch to an energy supplier who uses only renewable or high efficiency energy sources.
You do know that this will do precisely nothing to change oil consumption, right?
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Admiral Valdemar
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

TheLemur wrote:[

By that logic, pumping oil strains the oil supply because oil is burned during transportation, processing, building the machinery, etc. :)
Bah, you know what I mean. In an age where such commodities can only go down in supply, it ain't the best news. ;)

Conceded. But why would such transportation be based on oil? California has a huge water pumping network that transports water hundreds of miles clear across the state. Very little oil is used; all the pumps are electric-powered.
No doubt alternatives could be found, I can't state every possible scenario around the globe, but taking into account that more energy may be needed to set up such new structures is to be considered in the overall costs.
S

What? The impurities in the water have negligible effect on the energy required for the reaction (keep in mind they only make up ~3% or so of the water by mass).
I was under the impression the water had to be quite clean for hydrogen extraction to be most efficient in such a process. I'm assuming this is water needed for hydrogen here, whereas most modern plants use LNG. It's late though, so I can only assume I've buggered up this in my mind.
While we're at it, why don't we say furniture is very energy-intensive because it requires transporting nails? Seriously, the concepts of "size" and "proportion" seem to elude you.
I'm only pointing out that when you're dealing with potentially rapidly dwindling energy output, these things stack up. It seems petty now, but when oil costs several hundred percent more than it does now, it's not pocket change. Bad enough we need the trillions or at least hundreds of billions to go about bringing in such plans. I don't trust gov't when they start pinching the pennies.

I realize that, that's why I'm talking about CTL as a stopgap. It's fairly simple and can be done with pre-existing fuels. Natural gas can also be used (yes, I know America has a natural gas shortage, but gas isn't easily portable while oil is).
I'm curious as to what you expect may replace our current energy network today, it's not something many have an answer too, rather, saying what won't be powering our society in the next century is easier. I've not read anything that didn't involve either reverting to coal forever, based on the chance that coal will last us centuries, or using bio-fuels or hydrogen.
We build pipes for natural gas, if we have to we can build pipes to pump CO2 into holes in the ground. 70% of the carbon in the coal handled by a CTL plant is turned into CO2 during burning, not during processing anyway.
True enough, though I have heard these technologies are still in their infancy and there is leakage or issues regarding the best sites to sequester such carbon deposits, likely a reason for a lot of Big Oil companies taking so long in adding such capabilities to their repertoire (or the price, oil companies aren't rolling in cash(!)).

On the subject of piping, I never knew how long it took to build certain pipelines used today. The Prudahoe pipe being 800 klicks and taking a decade to bring on-stream pales next to the Baku to Ceyhan line, admittedly, these aren't your average pipeline problem areas though. But it does show what a challenge something as simple as laying transport pipes rather than railways etc. is.
Whatever happened to Hubbert's curves? They were supposed to be spot-on for US oil production, weren't they?
Things changed with the advent of better secondary recovery and enhanced extraction technologies. While ordinarily Hubbert's Curve would best fit a typical oil field, there is lack of consensus on how the slope goes as we pass the peak (or plateau as it stands now). I mentioned before the differences between first gen. US fields and the later North Sea ones. Well, assuming things go globally the way they did with the North Sea, Hubbert may be too conservative. The far better pumping technologies today mean we can reach the peak output and suck what's left far quicker than in the '20s, for instance. Most modern giant and super-giant fields have lasted nowhere near as long as they would have with technology that started off the post-war boom. To add to that, the Saudis may have critically weakened their output by overusing their fields to the point of stress fractures appeating within the cap rock. If that is the case, they may have lost significant amounts of their reserves already that will never be recovered, no matter how much water they pump down there.

It's quite fuzzy how we fare after the peak. I always hope for the best, prepare for the worst.

The Japanese, although they felt the pinch sooner (being an island), were sure as hell bombed by the Allies. The Japanese also lacked Germany's large reserves of coal.
I said bombed as early as Germany or with as much power. Sure, they got a nuking and many firebombings, but these were a few years into the war still. And I'm sure I read somewhere the Japanese were using coal in China, but they couldn't off-set the loss of oil imports and hence went to war, which sealed their fates.

What's wrong with nuclear fission? Sure, it takes a long time to implement, but it can effectively provide all the energy we could possibly want indefinitely into the future.
Much as nuclear is a good energy source, there are still certain downsides that aren't retarded "THINK OF TEH CHILDREN!1" Greenpeace ones. If you don't use breeder reactors, your uranium will run out within a few decades of supplying the demand gas does now and more (I'll have to look at the figures again; I'm sure they were overhyped much like oil at first). If you do use breeders, then you've now got a much more dangerous world with plutonium everywhere, unless you clamp down on "rogue" nations having nuclear, in which case, you're going to see them carry on using coal or the like and giving the finger to the AGW fearing masses. There is also doubt today about how the US can supply itself with uranium as is, that and to mine this stuff requires plenty of oil too, but that's obviously less of a concern if we survive Peak Energy with regards to fossil fuels.
Yes, that one. Notice how the deficit peaks early on and then decreases, showing that the situation, although bad, is perfectly fixable.
I'll have to look over that again when I have time. I only recall the costs being extortionate and the couple of decades being the main problem, since that could very well crash the economy and prolong the crisis.

The industry that uses 80% or so of oil is transportation, divided between personal transportation and product transportation. Personal transportation is funded by the consumer, who is already broke. Product transportation is funded by low-profit-margin shipping companies. So it's not as if they'll be competing against people who have trillions of dollars stashed away to buy oil with.
Well, no, but the fact of the matter is that those people need to move still. Whether it be by public transport (which I hear sucks as much in the US as it does in the UK), or they bring in new vehicles that are cheap, enviro-friendly and easily mass produceable, those people need to get to work. Otherwise, you have unemployment going up too, general unrest and the impact it has on industry. With the idiocy that is the suburbs being so popular, many people rely on cars to get to work. If they can't travel, they can't work (ignoring those who can do it via the Internet). That is going to be a hot potato for policy setters around the world.

If we're already at the point where it is impossible to buy sufficient quantities of oil at any price, than the government *will* intervene directly- they would be politically forced to. And obviously producing more oil would be a very high-priority project.
But of course. I just don't see any action, bar Iraq, for that yet. In fact, one thing that irks me is the fact that airliner travel will go up 50% in the coming years thanks to the open skies agreement this month. The EU and US basically laugh at the idea of kerosene going up. I wouldn't mind, but Blair and Brown are adamant at pressing their green policies, only this Janus party of the political world uses the other face to welcome increased air travel at discount prices, with airliners being the biggest single polluters and one of the biggest for oil consumption. Do these people not even take a hint? Moves like this and the ignoring of Hirsch and the GAO reports makes me think no one will even care when they're paying $100 a barrel, it'll just mean less of other things. Truly depressing.

Wasn't Jack-2 just discovered? And wasn't Jack-2 a conventional oil well? Why would it require processing any more than conventional oil?
Jack-2 was discovered a few years back and announced by Chevron around the end of 2004. It's not a conventional oil source. The problem with these wells is they have a few klicks of water in the way of the rocks before they get to the oil, and deep sea drilling is quite the expensive little hobby for Big Oil right now. BP decided to put all their cash in deep sea drilling site exploration, while Shell went and did the tar sands thing. BP and Chevron have managed to excite investors, but the problems with deep sea are two fold. First, Chevron blew hundreds of millions on the machinery to even get to Jack-2, a bill not even Big Oil can keep paying with lowering supplies. The rigs and drills had to all be bleeding-edge technology, which made deep sea drilling possible around 2001 or so. This means your return on investment just got slashed dramatically. Secondly, Jack-2 is also predicted, even when going into production phase, to get around 500k bbls. a day tops. It may go higher, in fact, it will. It won't save anyone though, and I think BP now knows this even if their CEO saw it as a bright future.

As Deffeye's quote goes with regards to tar sands and similarly deep sea oil: they are the oil of the future... and always will be.

Riiiiight..... And note that you actually need to mine a lot more oil sand than coal to get the same amount of oil.
Costs have been rocketing for these ventures with set-backs hampering output too, among the other issues mentioned. Like the Edmonton Journal report says, these prices and set-backs are not going to be replacing anything near to global demand today and demand is ever growing.


Although I agree with you on this fact, cars do not suddenly triple in price due to supply shortages.
Ah, that depends on what car though. If you're making more of what we have, sure, they'll not be radically more expensive. If you're going for fuel-cells or hybrids or electric, then that cost is going to be passed on to someone. I expect this will lead to a second renaissance in public transport which, strangely, someone asked one scientist giving talks on this issue whether such a thing would work, as if the US never had public transport before and it was some science-fiction ideal to strive for.
Okay, so they can crank out fewer aircraft which are each more sophisticated, and you yourself said that this sophistication is the cause of the fewer numbers. But a barrel of oil in 1940 is essentially the same as a barrel in 2010.
Hm, but they never had to deal with a global decline in that oil. More expensive and resource intensive when combined with dwindling supplies means even stricter output numbers. Course, you could use a simpler design, but when I apply this to cars, that means what we have today since we don't have the industry to make useful electric cars or hybrids today. Diesel would be the next best thing and is apparently on the rise in the US (even if overall trends are for lower fuel economy, for some assbackwards reason).
You seriously think that PO is going to shut down all of industrial society? Well oil as we think of it wasn't even discovered until 1871 (ie, well into the industrial revolution), and for the next forty years it was primarily used for kerosene lamps, which we've already supplanted, first with incandescent, then CFLs and now LEDs. We already have enough hydroelectric and nuclear power today to run a 2000-era industrial society, albeit on a much smaller scale. Just take every figure you see about production of various goods and services and replace them all with something an order of magnitude or so lower.
No, it will simply radically alter society, not kill off all industry or shift us to the 18th century as if no progress ever happened. It does mean living standards go down, or rather, rampant consumerism bullshit does and waste becomes a major issue for once the people really take note. It will also mean many starving though, since reduced industry is going to mean less agriculture, unless you do decide to restrict even more energy from other sources to keep the present populace going. You need oil for all those other products too, so how you ration it between fuel and manufacturing comes into play.

You do know that this will do precisely nothing to change oil consumption, right?
Yup, but I posted that to give some sense of hope for the individual. It sounds better than "Move to the country and learn to farm". Though really, switching to a renewable energy supplier means you're not using as much oil nor producing as much pollution. So it gives you a moral highground to enjoy when everyone else bitches about the mess we made.
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Post by Sikon »

Lonestar wrote:I mean, as oil dries up (not "disappears suddenly") wouldn't we naturally be shifting away from such energy sources?

Didn't America run out of it's primary energy source(wood) during the late 19th century, and yet managed to smoothly transition to fossil fuels without any economic impact?
Here's a depiction of what historically happened:

Image

I wouldn't count on a smooth transition with peak oil, with the potential for major economic depression. It would be vastly better to have switched away from fossil fuels before. But survival of industrial civilization will occur for the reasons described in my past post and the following replies to Admiral Valdemar:

******************
******************
******************

Quotes are rearranged from original chronological order when helpful in organization.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:
Sikon wrote:Regarding the opening post, I could see being concerned about whether having children is ethical if they were doomed to starvation, but that isn't the case. There will not be collapse of modern industrial civilization, although temporary economic suffering for a number of years is likely.
[...]
Mechanized agriculture will continue, which consumes only 1.7% of the energy supply, and there will not be starvation (not in the U.S.):
[...]
After the initial years of economic trouble, there would be more production of alternative fuels.
You assume the economy survives the initial months of going over the peak. The US economy as it stands now is on shaky ground with many fearing a strike on Iran which is pushing oil prices to a record this year already. When it comes to the point that no more cheap oil exists globally, then those fears are compounded and it gets worse as drop-off continues.

[...]
What will happen is that demand will outstrip supply, which alone is enough to topple the largest economy in the world thanks to the way the US has been creating money over the years (which is strained by house prices, health-care and other issues without the need for PO, all of which can cause a '29 level depression by themselves).
You haven't defined what is your criteria for whether "the economy survives," e.g. 90+% of GDP, 50+% of GDP, or what. I said before that there can be major economic depression. But my idea of a situation making raising children unethical is like them being doomed to die of starvation, and that isn't the case here.

I can't tell exactly what you are arguing here when it comes to the quantitative degree of peak oil effects, aside from economic depression that I already suggested as likely in my last post, but my point in this thread is that the U.S. can and will survive without massive population die-off or going back to 19th century living ... also answering the thread title's question about the ethics of having children.

When world peak oil occurs, aside from potential indirect effects like wars, the trend is for the oil supply to decrease by a few percent in the first year, like the Hubbert curves in the graph in my previous post. That applies both to a local geographical area and to the total of various geographical areas. For example, here is a graph of historical U.S. domestic oil production (not including imports), which peaked back in 1970:

Image

As illustrated, oil production declines, but, like the original rise in production, it takes a number of years to decline by tens of percent, buying time for alternatives.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:It will not be a gentle lowering in prices and supply, especially when in the '70s a 5% loss in supply caused a 400% increase in price which was only alleviated by the finding of the last elephant sized fields and the US buddying with non-OPEC suppliers, the UK also had just brought the North Sea facilities onstream which are now peaked.
There is potential for economic depression, and switching away in advance from fossil fuel dependence would be preferable. But I already said that before. The sudden artificial cut off to the U.S. of most imported oil from Arab countries in the oil crisis three decades ago was economically damaging yet survivable.

The reduction in imported oil that the U.S. survived in part of the 1970s to the early 1980s was quite major, about 50% loss as shown here:

Image

Even with domestic oil production, such resulted in about a 20% drop in total oil consumption as shown here, a drop that caused much economic harm but was survived:

Image

In event of major disaster with world peak oil, indirect effects like wars and instability are possible. For example, the U.S. continuing to receive oil from various Middle Eastern countries is questionable in the possible event of that region turning into chaos. That may lead to a faster decline in oil supply than the usual Hubbert curve.

However, the U.S. presumably keeps oil flowing in from countries like Canada and Mexico, as well as remaining domestic production, while their production declines but at a moderate rate as suggested before, so the decline in the total U.S. oil supply is not utterly precipitous. In fact, Canada and Mexico are the two largest sources of oil imported into the U.S.. After all, even in event of oil wars, they would tend to be fought elsewhere, with no country's military being foolish enough to try invading North America. Indeed, now oil imports from the Middle East do not amount to more than 18% of imported U.S. oil, about 10% of total U.S. oil consumption.

In other words, in the first years of peak oil, the U.S. tends to suffer a supply loss of a number of percent, experiencing mostly a scenario like the Hubbert curves described before with decrease over years and over decades, rather than an unlimited instant drop. That can be survived, with economic harm as opposed to utter collapse, buying time for alternatives.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Additionally, it's been shown during the crises of the '70s that the demand was inelastic and the market made no attempt whatsoever at replacing their oil with alternative sources which are still massively underfunded.
What has been the situation so far is that the amount spent on suitable production of alternative fuels has been very, very close to zero relative to the whole economy. Private companies haven't been much attracted to producing synthetic fuel when oil prices have been low enough that it appeared they would not compete, not provide enough of a financial return for many investors to risk their money. Even when prices rose during the 1973 oil crisis, investing in synthetic fuel production was financially risky since the price of competing fuel from oil could later drop again, making the plants be competitive too briefly to give a good return on investment (like capital costs). And that is what happened, like this one illustration, which is actually for non-conventional oil instead of synthetic fuel but a similar situation:
Article wrote:During the oil crisis of the 1970s, [some] people thought that oil supplies were peaking, expected oil prices to be around seventy dollars a barrel for some time to come, and invested huge amounts of money in refining oil shale — money that they lost. Because of the astronomical sums that were lost last time around there is considerable reluctance to invest in oil shale this time around. Investors are waiting to see if oil prices really will remain this high (in August 2006: US$75 a barrel).
[...]
In 2005, Royal Dutch Shell announced that its in-situ extraction technology could be competitive at prices over $30/bbl [$30 per barrel, below current oil price today in 2007 but above it until recently]
From here.

If that oil crisis had been clearly permanent, physical rather than a matter of politics, the situation would not be the same.

Let's look at the government (the U.S. government). Total federal spending is 2900 billion dollars per year, about $30+ trillion per decade (aside from $20+ trillion more state & local government spending), but how much is spent in a manner preparing for peak oil?

A bit less than 1% of the total federal budget, the Department of Energy's annual budget is $23.6 billion (2007). Of that, $9.868 billion is on nuclear weapons and other defense-related activities. Another $5.827 billion is environmental cleanup at various locations. If one continues looking through the details in a similar manner, the main expenditures that appear very relevant in this context are the following:
.gov site wrote:The Budget provides $54 million in 2007 for the Nuclear Power 2010 (NP 2010) initiative to make it feasible to build new nuclear power plants in the United States for the first time in three decades.
[...]

If successful, this seven-year, $1.1 billion effort [~ $0.16 billion per year], 50 percent of which would be non-Federal funding [~ $0.079 billion annually], could result in a new nuclear power plant order by 2009, and a new nuclear power plant constructed by the private sector and in operation by 2014.

[...]
The Budget provides $32 million for research and development (R&D) to support Generation IV nuclear energy systems.

[...]
The Budget provides $250 million in 2007 for the Global Nuclear Energy Partnership (GNEP)
From here.

Adding up the above, the result is ~ $0.42 billion annually. That's about 0.01% of the total federal budget and about 1 part in 30000 of annual U.S. GDP.

There are some other potentially relevant expenditures like the Biofuels Initiative project attempting to develop ethanol from cellulosic sources like relatively abundant and cheap agricultural waste rather than ethanol from relatively expensive corn, funded at about $0.09 billion to $0.15 billion annually, although it succeeding is uncertain. And one could go through the rest of the federal budget and those of state governments. Not everything really counts much in this context relative to expenditures, like the California Million Solar Roofs project that with current solar roofs results in vastly less electrical generation than such funds being spent supporting nuclear power, as described in another thread.

Anyway, the overall picture is that current expenditures, particularly those spent efficiently, are utterly miniscule compared to what is possible if or when strong motivation develops from effects of world peak oil. Much of the public has an anti-nuclear bias, but, if they start getting desperate, start getting motivated from seeing shortages affecting them personally far more than their imaginary significant harm from nuclear reactors, then they may finally make a substantial amount of funding get devoted to nuclear power expansion.

And while that Nuclear Power 2010 Initiative with $54 million per year funding or one part in 240,000 of U.S. GDP of $13,000,000 million ($13 trillion) annually is hoped to result in a new nuclear power plant in 2009 to 2014, that's next to nothing compared to what would happen if extreme motivation from peak oil troubles led eventually to the literally thousands of times greater funding possible.

Observe even a potential economic downturn and depression affecting U.S. GDP by a number of percent doesn't change the overall picture of the number of orders of magnitude difference. If the U.S. coming out of the Great Depression and some other nations couldn't devote vastly, vastly more than a few millionths of economic output to a new project when really motivated, the Allies wouldn't have won WWII. Current funding for nuclear expansion that is mere millionths of U.S. GDP does not represent what is really possible.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:The problem is China, for instance, is not building CCS plants, and bar China, no one is ramping up coal powerplants unless they already have to. Why would they? Oil is a far superior product and is why the US and UK do not even bother with coal relatively.
I showed how coal power plants dominate the U.S. and world electricity supply in past threads, like part of my recent posts here and here, which included verifiable references a click of the mouse away as usual.

Let's add a graphical illustration of generation from oil power plants today versus the amount from other sources:

Image

The 2006 figures are from here.

Why is coal so much more of electricity generation than oil? Coal is multiple times cheaper per unit of energy, as illustrated by the following:
Since 1976, however, coal has been the least expensive fossil fuel used to generate electricity. In 1999, on a dollars-per-million-Btu basis, natural gas was the most expensive fossil fuel ($2.59) [*], petroleum was second ($2.56), and coal was least expensive ($1.22).
From here.

[*] Natural gas is a significant portion of electricity generation today despite its expense compared to coal for reasons including past economics and the financial suitability of small relatively efficient low-capital-cost natural gas generators for applications like load following power plants.

Actually, with the major rise in oil prices for now compared to 1999, oil would be even much worse compared to coal for electricity generation today. Some oil-fueled electrical generation exists for reasons such as it being easier to have a small generator work with diesel fuel, but that isn't much at <= 3% of the total. Oil's dominance in fueling transportation is a different situation, of course.

Coal liquidification producing synthetic gasoline and diesel fuel isn't nearly as cheap as the cost of raw coal, but it still isn't astronomically expensive, rather costing on the order of $35 per barrel. Investors have historically been discouraged from implementing such for multiple reasons, such as oil only recently much exceeding that price, having for a while been around $20 per barrel, aside from the too-short price spike:

Image

Oil has recently started being in the $60 to $70 per barrel price range. Once oil not only gets up to ~ $100+ barrel but also appear certain to permanently stay that expensive, then major investors may conclude alternative fuel plants costing years to build will be able to operate competitively long enough afterwards to pay back capital expenses. Or, if the economic situation with oil eventually becomes really extreme, actions of the government may become what matters most.

Incidentally, coal mining today involves 74000 workers in terms of "all employees engaged in production, preparation, processing, development, maintenance, repair shop, or yard work at mining operations, including office workers [excluding preparation plants with less than 5,000 employee hours per year]" (from here). That's less than 1/1000th of the U.S. workforce, so there is the potential to mine much more coal per year if more resources ended up being diverted to it.

One might object that the preceding figure doesn't represent indirect manpower costs, but those are captured in the price of coal: The 1039 million short tons of coal consumed for electric power (more than 90% of total coal use) in 2005 cost the electric utilities $30.91 per delivered ton on average, corresponding to $32 billion per year. Again, that is limited, about 1/400th of U.S. GDP today of $13 trillion. Again, even an economic depression doesn't change the general picture, the order-of-magnitude situation, that a lot more coal could be mined per year if necessary for still a small portion of the total economy.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:All of which is great, until you remember that Germany had horrible energy shortages, hence Operation Blau and the failure of such campaigns which led to the Sixth Army being stranded outside Stalingrad. If this is an ideal situation to you, especially given Nazi Germany is nowhere near 21st century Earth, then by all means believe the growth economy will not stagnate.
The modern-day U.S. economy has a relative advantage compared to WWII Germany's economy for multiple reasons including not starting, fighting, and eventually losing a war against most of the civilized world at the same time as the conversion away from oil. WWII Germany had about $0.4 trillion annual GDP converted to 1990 dollars or $0.6 trillion annual GDP in today's dollars, largely blown on the war, compared to the 20 times greater figure for the U.S. today. But my point is not that economic growth couldn't stagnate. Economic output could potentially stagnate and somewhat decline for a time, though such a depression would be no more forever permanent than the 1970s oil crisis or the Great Depression, albeit in worse-case scenarios potentially lasting longer. Recovery and then growth once more would tend to occur eventually after even the public finally realized the value of nuclear power conversion. Before then, industrial civilization survives with a combination of cut-backs in non-critical oil usage and alternative fuels as described later, as possible when the oil supply doesn't drop precipitiously overnight, rather mostly follows Hubbert curves.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:It is incredibly dirty and the FDA openly opposes such coal gasification given the environmental risks. So now you're basically adding to global warming and forcing people to work with highly toxic products that get into the local environment too.
Coal liquidation is dirty and not my preferred method, but realistically it tends to happen. If or when the average American gets seriously inconvenienced, they care more about maintaining a modern lifestyle than the environmental side-effects of coal liquidation. What Germany accomplished during a few years in WWII with their building production infrastructure for primarily synthetic fuels has not been forgotten, and they had about 5% of the U.S. economic output today as described before, plus inferior technology.

If instead talking about what would be preferable, here's a random illustration, an arbitrary example: With total U.S. GDP over a 40-year period being ~ $520 trillion neglecting economic growth and change, devoting 0.5% of that would be $2.6 trillion. If measures were taken to obtain economics like those of the Maine Yankee power plant of 920 MW capacity that was built in four years between 1968 and 1972 for a cost of $231 million, which is $1.14 billion converted to today's dollars, the preceding $2600 billion would correspond to 2280 nuclear power plants of 920 MW capacity each or the equivalent. (Eventually historical nuclear power economics were not quite as great as plants like the Maine Yankee, but such was due to avoidable factors as discussed in an older thread).

That would be a generation capacity of ~ 2,100,000 megawatts, not bad for construction with the fraction of one percent of GDP over the decades. At a typical nuclear power plant capacity factor above 90%, that would be 0.9+ * (2100000 megawatts) * (24 hours/day) * (365 days/year) = 16,500,000+ megawatt-hours a year. Total U.S. electricity generation today is a quarter as much: 4,055,000 megawatt-hours a year (2006). That much clean energy running off uranium in seawater that can last for eons would help solve a lot of troubles.

The preceding with even X thousandths of GDP instead would be the equivalent of about X * 110 nuclear power plants of 0.9 gigawatts each constructed per decade. The current nuclear power plant expansion rate of 0 new plants ordered since 1973 corresponds to not 1/1000th of U.S. GDP being spent on such nuclear power expansion.

But I don't focus on expecting nuclear power expansion on the preceding level since a requirement in making standard predictions is to account for real-world sociopolitical factors against doing anything like the preceding. For that reason, I predict funds devoted to nuclear power expansion to much exceed the current few millionths of GDP only after the public and the government become desperate enough to significantly change the status quo. Even then, realistically, the probable initial government focus is on fuels from coal more than nuclear energy, albeit hopefully with the public learning enough from the peak oil experience to eventually switch away from all fossil fuels before coal supplies later much decline (in the more distant future after a number of decades of elevated consumption).
Admiral Valdemar wrote:There are means to counter the decrease in supply, but they are nowhere near being implemented because they are not economically viable, at least on such a scale, to be brought onstream.
In many cases, they tend to not be economically viable in terms of competing with oil at the prices described before. The situation changes if prices rise enough, or if the government allocates enough funds.

In the long-term, nuclear energy has the potential for much reduced energy cost that I have discussed elsewhere. Extreme motivation would make the public more willing to implement it to some degree since most have a moderate anti-nuclear bias rather than an utterly absolute one.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:I won't even go into bio-fuels, which are a big white elephant and hydrogen, as stated, is not an energy source.
[...]
Too many people mare looking at bio-fuels, for instance, which even if they had the facilities to supply the whole of the US, means the US has now lost all of its corn and similar crops to the fuel, plastic and related industries. Again, the meagre returns on invested energy with regards to cellulose based alternatives means there is a huge energy deficit still (16% of the populace can drive and use plastic since a tonne of corn is around 450 litres of bio-fuel).
Bio-fuel concepts vary in practicality, like corn (food) -> ethanol having its issues, but even the better ones tend to be practical more as only a good supplement to other techniques rather than the dominant solution. However, some supplementation can be helpful in this context of mitigating peak oil as discussed later.

The popular hydrogen fuel-cell vehicle concept corresponds to a situation of replacing 200+ million automobiles, as well as almost maximum infrastructure change, like the huge existing distribution system for liquid gasoline and diesel fuel being incompatible with hydrogen gas. There is a reason hydrogen-fueled fuel-cell vehicles have existed for years yet never even had the slight level of sales of electric cars, mainly being built as prototypes not even attempted to be sold: They remain extremely expensive. While the basic nominal economics of replacing vehicles is $5+ trillion if $25,000+ for the average vehicle, already not particularly good, hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles of today so far remain one to two orders of magnitude more expensive. (That's without hydrogen generation expense, which would be proportionally small with nuclear power yet tend to be very expensive with some popular concepts). Admittedly, perhaps there could be extraordinary change in cost in the future, as some predict and hope. But it is undesirable to count on it too much when there are perfectly workable alternatives that could be implemented immediately rather than waiting indefinitely.

Presumably the idea of some of its proponents is that the expense of vehicle conversion doesn't count as much through occurring naturally over a long period of time. But it isn't as good if the goal was switching away from fossil fuel dependence for minimum trouble, in minimum time, and at minimum expense. The expense makes conversion of the total national vehicle fleet primarily to hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles unlikely to happen in the next two or three decades, if ever. Not even the vast popularity of the idea is likely to overcome its economics in the near-term.

For perspective compared to the preceding, if not for the sociopolitical factors preventing such, proper usage of nuclear power to replace non-electrical energy usage by synthesizing gasoline, diesel fuel, and plastics with zero net CO2 emissions would be on the order of $1.6 trillion extra in power plant capital costs for the equivalent of current consumption, not a huge amount compared to $130+ trillion GDP per decade, simultaneously added to by other expenses but also countered by eliminating existing importation and extraction costs. That avoids the vast expense of changing vehicles and avoids most infrastructure change to allow it to be implemented much more cheaply, helping conversion be faster. However, judging from the approximately zero popularity in public discourse for proposing anything much like the preceding, it doesn't tend to actually be implemented in the near-term foreseeable future. So, let's get into what likely happens if peak oil is devastating.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Alternatives exist, but they are simply not going to meet demand, which is the whole basis for PO, not that we won't have energy. The world's oil shale and tar sand productions may reach 4 mbd by 2030, if we're lucky.
The equivalent of four million barrels a day or less of non-conventional oil equivalents could be the case in 2030 if the current proportionally miniscule level of funding continued, but motivation is low today precisely because there aren't undisputed major peak oil effects yet.

Indeed, given that production cost for non-conventional or synthetic fuel tends to be the equivalent of no more than ~ $30 to ~ $80 per barrel for some likely techniques, production not going above 4 million barrels a day even after many years would be implicitly assuming the world would devote only the correspondingly tiny fraction of ~ 0.1% of its economic output to the purpose. And a scenario of economic downturn doesn't change the general order of magnitude here. But this is getting off-topic to the degree that my focus is on the U.S. here rather than the world in general. It takes long enough to discuss some of the details with the U.S. alone.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:And you're not building these coal gasification plants, wind turbines, nuke plants or converting cars to hybrids without using oil already. If oil is at a premium, good luck trying to siphon that resource into these areas without depriving the rest of society of a great deal.
How might things go in the U.S. if peak oil effects become major enough?

In that case, a major degree of energy conservation and rationing would likely be implemented by the government. While that's no permanent solution by itself with the oil running out sooner or later at any likely consumption rate, plus or minus a moderate number of years, such may tend to occur at the same time as there finally being enough public motivation to start switching the energy source, so it can buy time during the important first years of peak oil.

Transportation is obviously a concern with a decrease in the oil supply.

First, consider trucks transporting goods.
Statistics page wrote:In 2001, it took more than 23 million trucks (of all weight classes) to haul 8.8 billion tons of freight. [...]
Trucks need fuel to run, and it took nearly 47 billion gallons to power those trucks (all weight classes). Most heavy-duty trucks run on diesel fuel, which is why 69% of those 47 billion gallons was diesel, and 31% gasoline.
From here.

If a lot of those 47 billion gallons a year are a priority to be kept supplied, where can emergency savings be made?

Let's look at personal transportation:

The average household has 1.9 vehicles and travels 23100 vehicle-miles per year, with an additional 113 billion gallons consumed by such personal use. If prices rise vastly and/or rationing occurs, huge drops in that consumption are possible. For example, the average person drives to and from work with a single person in the vehicle, yet it is possible to drop the gasoline consumption for his commute by several times if four or five people carpool in the same vehicle.

Instead of the preceding figures being 47 billion gallons + 113 billion gallons = 160 billion gallons, so much of the latter could be eliminated if the situation was sufficiently dire that even 100 billion gallons a year or 60% as much would be more than enough for critical transportation to keep operating. And, as previously discussed, the U.S. will not tend to suffer that much of a drop in oil supply during the first few years of peak oil. That gives time to get alternative fuel production going, as would happen if the critical necessity and importance of oil alternatives became blatantly obvious to the entire public and the government.

As another example, the technique of thermal depolymerization currently costs $80/barrel. That is more than the regular oil competition today, and it is a figure that could vary with feedstock. Yet its potential in a peak oil scenario is significant, e.g. "converting all the U.S. agricultural waste into oil and gas would yield the energy equivalent of 4 billion barrels of oil annually [... and in 2001 ] the United States imported 4.2 billion barrels of oil" (from here).

Cost for the main past plant was around $20 million for the 600-barrels-a-day plant, proportionally like $91 billion capital cost per 1 billion barrels of annual capacity. For example, that would be capital costs like Y * 0.07% of the $13 trillion U.S. GDP for new construction per year in the case of ramping up to Y billion annual barrels of synthetic oil production with construction over a 10-year period. On the other hand, the likely production cost of $80+ per barrel corresponds to Y * 0.6+% of GDP in production expense, so some of the other options look potentially less expensive, such as because it can be better to synthesize gasoline or gasoline-equivalent fuel than to make synthetic oil that doesn't become it 100%. But other can see the general idea.

Here's another example, for wood alcohol, able to be produced from wood, natural gas, coal, and/or other sources, where approximate price figures in today's dollars have been added in brackets:
U.S. Forest Service wrote:METHANOL FROM WOOD WASTE: [...]
The yield of methanol from wood is about 38 percent, or about 100 gallons per ODT [oven-dry-ton] of wood. This yield is based on all process energy required coming from the wood waste. At a wood waste cost of $15/ODT [$57 per dry-ton], the selling price of methanol is estimated at $0.77/gal [$2.94 per gallon]; at $34/ODT [$130 per dry-ton], the selling price is $0.96 / gal [$3.77 per gallon]

[...] Any carbonaceous material such as coal, lignite, wood waste, agricultural residue, and garbage can be utilized for synthetic methanol production.

[...] The investment estimate requirement for a 50 million gpy methanol plant using wood waste totals $64.0 million (1975 dollars). [$245 million]

[...] Because of the simplicity of the conversion of natural gas to methanol, the investment costs for such a plant is about one-third that of a comparable wood waste facility.

[...]Conversion of coal to methanol, while considerably more efficient than
that of waste wood, involves more processing facilities because of the
greater amount of ash and sulfur (wood has no sulfur). Coal conversion
to syngas is more efficient because it has a higher carbon content and
less oxygen than wood.

[...]CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
It is technically feasible but not economically attractive to produce
methanol from wood waste. [...]
From here.

I am just looking to illustrate one method rather than necessarily finding the cheapest method, so let's look at it:

In the case of the <= ~ $3.77/gallon of methanol economics described above, that is the equivalent of $6.80 per gallon of gasoline replaced or better (1.8 gallons methanol = 1 gallon gasoline).

To replace X% of the 100 billion gallons of fuel consumed annually described before costs $6.8 * X billion a year. Compared to U.S. GDP of $13000 billion a year, that would be about X * 0.052% of the total economy.

Economic depression could affect GDP, as could economic growth before peak oil have the opposite effect, but the basic idea is that it isn't utterly unaffordable.

In the case of the $245 million per 50-million-gallons-methanol-per-year plant described above, that is the equivalent of $8.8 * X billion capital cost to replace X% of the 100 billion gallons of fuel consumed annually. For example, for construction over a 10 year period, that is $0.88 * X billion new construction cost per year.

Such is X * 0.0068% of U.S. GDP, not too bad. The expectation is not 100% conversion to methanol fuel as compatibility with existing vehicles without excessively expensive modification is a goal. But the preceding is one of various methods that are options to help.
Biomass resources can be used to produce methanol. Estimates of biomass resources available for use in the production of alcohol fuels range from one million to 4.7 million dry tons per day one ton equaling 100 gallons of methanol when biomass is also used to fuel the processing plant. Biomass resources include crop residues, forage, grass, crops, wood resources, forest residues, short-rotation wood energy crops and the cellulosic components of municipal solid waste.
From here.

That corresponds to such a supply for potentially on the order of 0.1 billion to 0.5 billion gallons of methanol a day, e.g. ~ 37 billion to 180 billion gallons per year. It is not just like ethanol production in the U.S. today that uses up corn (food), since the preceding is largely wastes. Some aspects of methanol like its toxic nature are undesirable, including reasons ethanol is traditionally preferred as a goal, but one is just giving an illustration here about helping sustain modern civilization.

If supplementing biomass supplies is needed, production of methanol from coal is also possible, with, in fact, the first methanol document above showing methanol from coal as slightly less expensive than the $3.77/gallon-of-methanol figure illustrated previously, e.g. table 9 of this and the usual dollar conversion.
Methanol has been seen as a possible large volume motor fuel substitute at various times during gasoline shortages. It was often used in the early part of the century to power automobiles before inexpensive gasoline was widely introduced. In the early 1920s, some viewed it as a source of fuel before new techniques were developed to discover and extract oil. The World War II era saw wide use of synthetically produced methanol as a motor fuel in Germany. Wartime fuel shortages throughout Europe prompted the use of the fumes produced by wood-burners as a source of fuel to power vehicles.

The use of methanol as a motor fuel received attention during the oil crises of the 1970s due to its availability and low cost. Problems occurred early in the development of gasoline-methanol blends. As a result of its low price some gasoline marketers over blended. Others used improper blending and handling techniques. This led to consumer and media problems and the eventual phase out of methanol blends. However, there is still a great deal of interest in using methanol as a neat fuel.

[...] Before modern production technologies were developed in the 1920s, methanol was obtained from wood as a co-product of charcoal production and, for this reason, was commonly known as wood alcohol.

[...] Methanol's energy density is about half that of gasoline, reducing the range a vehicle can travel on an equivalent tank of fuel. Current-technology vehicles using neat methanol at temperatures below 45 degrees Fahrenheit are difficult to start because of methanol's lower vapor pressure and single boiling point.

[...] 85 percent methanol solves the cold start difficulties because of its 15 percent-gasoline component. The availability of 85 percent methanol is limited, but growing through a network of dozens of gasoline stations in the key, high-population areas of California.
From here.

The above is just adding more on the methanol example.

There are also synthetic gasoline techniques like the coal liquidation discussed before.

What about oil usage in electricity generation? As shown earlier in this post, it amounts to 3% of electricity generation, so that is no major concern.

Overall, oil usage is primarily in transportation. While manufacturing consumes some oil, it has even tended to decrease over time.
EIA wrote:The large majority of oil products purchased by manufacturers to produce heat and power are distillate and residual fuel oils.
[...]
Manufacturers have reduced their consumption of fuel oil as a fuel source between 1974 and 1994. As a proportion of total heat content (Btu) of purchased fuels and electricity, fuel oil reached a high of 16.5 percent in 1977 and decreased to a low of 4.5 percent in 1994.
From here.

The second graph near the top of this post showed that two-thirds of oil energy is used in transportation, which is more in the personal use of vehicles than critical trucking of freight shipments, as discussed earlier. Manufacturing uses a lot less oil.

Part of the argument in this post can be illustrated graphically. As discussed earlier, post-peak oil decline from oil-producing regions typically follows approximately a Hubbert curve, like this illustration for domestic oil production (not including imports):

Image

Along with cuts in oil usage and alternative fuel production like that described previously, the finite rate of decline is likely to allow a switch away from oil, such as more coal usage and eventually funds devoted to nuclear power expansion reaching far more than the current few millionths of the ~ $13000000 million annual U.S. GDP (as illustrated before in this post). That overall order-of-magnitude picture still applies if the GDP was somewhat different after economic depression.

Image

Such is meant to graphically suggest how the diversity of the U.S. energy supply realistically leads to most energy remaining available even into peak oil troubles.

My graphs are just approximate even for the pre-peak-oil period, as well as the obvious uncertainty of future prediction in the bottom graph. The historical data up to the "peak oil" dividing line in the "early 21st century" is actually just data valid up to the year 1998, rather than whatever year peak oil starts. But the graphs are meant only as a very approximate, non-exact illustration. They show the general idea.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:As an aside, some of your numbers may be less than fruitful. The EIA, for instance, have admitted cooking their books before:
These adjustments to the estimates are based on non-technical considerations that support domestic supply growth to the levels necessary to meet projected demand levels. (EIA, Annual Energy Outlook 1998, p.17)
[...]
The cases where I used EIA data in my past post was for historical and current data, for which the Energy Information Administration has the official statistics published by the U.S. government.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:Then there's the fact that China is building a non CCS coal fired plant every two weeks and still cannot meet demand.
China's electrical generation, industrial output, and prosperity are all growing at a rate of tens of percent per decade, the exact figure more than that for any other large nation, but the U.S. is the focus here.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:The production of oil derivatives from coal gasification is doable, as Nazi Germany showed
Ok. We agree there.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:[However,] we should be starting this now, since the transition will not be as leisurely as some have forecast using previous energy crises.
Definitely advance preparation in terms of a switch away from fossil fuels would be much better, for both economic and environmental reasons. That has always been my position in past posts about dependence on fossil fuels, like one getting into some details here.

Realistically, though, the default situation of little actually being done each decade is illustrated by the past three decades. However, sufficiently prolonged, permanent oil price rise may cause a bit more progress, and that seems to be starting now if the price trend of the past several years continues.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:
Sikon wrote:[...]
It is perfectly ethical for people to have children now, if they will raise them well. Even with peak oil, most people born in industrialized countries today have a lot more to look forward to than the bulk of people throughout history.
Ignoring the ethnical question for a moment, no one said that oil would disappear, nor plastics, nor medicines nor such likes. What will happen is that demand will outstrip supply, which alone is enough to topple the largest economy in the world thanks to the way the US has been creating money over the years (which is strained by house prices, health-care and other issues without the need for PO, all of which can cause a '29 level depression by themselves).
My main point in this thread is that there will not be massive die-off and starvation in countries like the U.S., nor a return to 19th-century living, nor a situation where having children is unethical, as likely substantial temporary economic troubles do not equate to such.

EDIT: I just had to respond to a later quote:
Admiral Valdemar wrote:If you don't use breeder reactors, your uranium will run out within a few decades of supplying the demand gas does now and more (I'll have to look at the figures again; I'm sure they were overhyped much like oil at first). If you do use breeders, then you've now got a much more dangerous world with plutonium everywhere, unless you clamp down on "rogue" nations having nuclear, in which case, you're going to see them carry on using coal or the like and giving the finger to the AGW fearing masses. There is also doubt today about how the US can supply itself with uranium as is, that and to mine this stuff requires plenty of oil too
This is irritating. I see you really haven't read quite a number of threads in the past few months given how often the practicality of an almost unlimited supply of uranium from seawater if necessary has been repeatedly mentioned with reference(s) in posts by myself and several times by others too. An example getting into the details is here, and, as can be seen, its information is verifiable with its online references.
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[/url]Earth is the cradle of humanity, but one cannot live in the cradle forever.

― Konstantin Tsiolkovsky
TheLemur
Padawan Learner
Posts: 204
Joined: 2007-03-27 09:36pm

Post by TheLemur »

I was under the impression the water had to be quite clean for hydrogen extraction to be most efficient in such a process. I'm assuming this is water needed for hydrogen here, whereas most modern plants use LNG.
Er what? Did you even read my explanation of how Fischer-Tropsch worked? The water is added into the system by reacting it with coal at high temperatures, following this equation:

C + H2O ---> CO + H2

It is also added directly to the gas stream, using this equation:

CO + H2O <----> CO2 + H2

You are right that electrolysis requires fairly pure water, but no electrolysis is involved.
but when oil costs several hundred percent more than it does now, it's not pocket change.
Of course it isn't pocket change, but you have to account for the leverage on the other end: the oil that is produced is also worth several times as much. And the leverage is much, much stronger on the production end, because while oil is only a fraction of the costs, it's 100% of the profits.
I'm curious as to what you expect may replace our current energy network today,
Our current energy network will probably eventually become entirely electric, because electricity is cheap and high-grade, and hydrogen fuel can be easily generated from it on-site.
But it does show what a challenge something as simple as laying transport pipes rather than railways etc. is.
In such areas, you have to develop the roads, infrastructure, etc. in addition to the pipe, because it's all wilderness/Third World.
And I'm sure I read somewhere the Japanese were using coal in China,
Which requires- surprise!- oceanic transports, which the Allies were sinking in droves.
If you do use breeders, then you've now got a much more dangerous world with plutonium everywhere,
You conveniently forgot about thorium breeder reactors, which produce no weapons-grade material.
your uranium will run out within a few decades
Did you even read the article saying uranium can be extracted from seawater? Estimating the reserves of a mine is tricky, but how can you "overestimate" or "overhype" the quantity of something in seawater when it's so easily measurable?

That is going to be a hot potato for policy setters around the world.
Indeed, that's why a government rationing scheme will probably be implemented. And who is going to get first dibs on the rations? Alternative oil producers, of course!
But of course. I just don't see any action, bar Iraq, for that yet.
That's because we're nowhere near that point yet!
with airliners being the biggest single polluters and one of the biggest for oil consumption.
Only 6% of oil is used for aviation, and since fuel is a major component of airplane travel costs, ticket prices will go up very quickly under any restriction of the oil supply.
they are the oil of the future... and always will be.
According to ASPO, deepwater and heavy oil will constitute ~20% of world oil supply by 2010.
as if the US never had public transport before and it was some science-fiction ideal to strive for.
If public transport is so efficient compared to cars, then why does Amtrak use fully 60% of the energy that cars do per passenger-mile?
Hm, but they never had to deal with a global decline in that oil.
De facto, they had to deal with it, because it was wartime and oil was scarce as the military required a lot of it and had first priority.
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

An intriguing post, if one I had to briefly go through just before bed. I'm a little iffy on the downslope diagrams, since I'm going to have to go back to other sources I've come across looking at more dramatic losses due to the variables mentioned previously. I confess to not knowing about the advancements in the uranium from seawater technologies given I overlooked such threads, though that won't be an issue now given I'm more interested in energy concerns as of now. I believe my points on global nuclear proliferation still stand, however, given abundant nuclear fission, while desirable over coal or any fossil fuel, has the drawbacks that Iran is currently making headlines with. This alone will need a rethink of global nuclear policy no doubt.

In anycase, my main purpose for making this topic was actually not what the title suggested. It was a bit sneaky, but I really wanted to get PO discussed more without simply copying a thread J posted the other week. I find the ethical question was just a tagged on excuse which, as I stated, doesn't affect me today anyway; it was interesting to read the replies though.

The matter that concerned me more was the effect of immediate PO and when it could occur. Since I see no major dispute over it seemingly taking place before the decade is out, the effects are more pertinent to the matter. It's nice to get some hard numbers on the situation that I've not read elsewhere extracted from other reports years old.

The matter now is up to the powers that be and how they react. I don't hold as much faith as some in that, which is why I er on the side of bigger problems given the transitionary period from cheap liquid energy now.
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A note on methanol: it can easily be chemically converted to dimethyl ether, which solves most of methanol's problems: it has a high ratio of combustion energy to mass, a high vapor pressure, is fairly non-toxic and is basically inert chemically (methanol has this annoying tendency to dissolve aluminum).
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Someone please fix broken link.
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This alone will need a rethink of global nuclear policy no doubt.
You'd be surprised how quickly people can come around to your point of view after they've had to declare bankruptcy.
Since I see no major dispute over it seemingly taking place before the decade is out,
A table of world oil production shows that oil production has been basically dead flat during 2005-2006, only increasing at an average rate of 0.16%/year.
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Sikon wrote:However, the U.S. presumably keeps oil flowing in from countries like Canada and Mexico, as well as remaining domestic production, while their production declines but at a moderate rate as suggested before, so the decline in the total U.S. oil supply is not utterly precipitous. In fact, Canada and Mexico are the two largest sources of oil imported into the U.S.. After all, even in event of oil wars, they would tend to be fought elsewhere, with no country's military being foolish enough to try invading North America. Indeed, now oil imports from the Middle East do not amount to more than 18% of imported U.S. oil, about 10% of total U.S. oil consumption.

In other words, in the first years of peak oil, the U.S. tends to suffer a supply loss of a number of percent, experiencing mostly a scenario like the Hubbert curves described before with decrease over years and over decades, rather than an unlimited instant drop. That can be survived, with economic harm as opposed to utter collapse, buying time for alternatives.
There's a couple problems with that, mainly, Mexican oil production has already peaked and is entering the early phases of decline. Canadian oil sands production can't be expanded significantly without severe environmental consequences, even if those are ignored expansion is still limited as there isn't enough water to go around. Doubling current oil sands production is about the most which can be reasonably expected, especially if it's to be done in a sustainable and environmentally responsible fashion.
Incidentally, coal mining today involves 74000 workers in terms of "all employees engaged in production, preparation, processing, development, maintenance, repair shop, or yard work at mining operations, including office workers [excluding preparation plants with less than 5,000 employee hours per year]" (from here). That's less than 1/1000th of the U.S. workforce, so there is the potential to mine much more coal per year if more resources ended up being diverted to it.

One might object that the preceding figure doesn't represent indirect manpower costs, but those are captured in the price of coal: The 1039 million short tons of coal consumed for electric power (more than 90% of total coal use) in 2005 cost the electric utilities $30.91 per delivered ton on average, corresponding to $32 billion per year. Again, that is limited, about 1/400th of U.S. GDP today of $13 trillion.
Umm...that's the operating cost of an existing industry after all the mines have been dug, the equipment bought & paid for, and so on and so forth. For our Great Coal Project, we have to double coal production. Some of the extra coal could come from ramping up production at existing mines, but a lot will have to be entirely new mines & infrastructure, and we don't have a special wand to magic them into place.
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Umm...that's the operating cost of an existing industry after all the mines have been dug, the equipment bought & paid for, and so on and so forth.
Really? And so the coal industry undertakes no new exploration and builds no new infrastructure at all? And their equipment is magic and never wears out, and so on? :roll:
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Post by Sikon »

Admiral Valdemar wrote:[...]
Okay.

Whatever the prediction of the details of the aftermath of peak oil, I'm sure we agree on general ideas of the world's lack of preparation for peak oil being foolish and fossil fuels staying the world's primary energy source being unwise.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:I believe my points on global nuclear proliferation still stand, however, given abundant nuclear fission, while desirable over coal or any fossil fuel, has the drawbacks that Iran is currently making headlines with. This alone will need a rethink of global nuclear policy no doubt.
Iran itself will probably finish its nuclear weapons long before much nuclear power expansion is implemented, even in an optimistic scenario, but there may be concerns of other countries getting nuclear weapons hypothetically when they wouldn't otherwise.

The bulk of oil usage (peak oil issues) and carbon dioxide emissions (global warming issues) come from the world's major economies like the U.S., China, India, the E.U. and so on. If major nuclear power conversion was ever implemented in policy, a good start would be countries like the U.S. with the capability to economically mass-produce reactors. For those most major nations, there isn't a very direct effect on nuclear proliferation, considering how all of the very largest economies and largest polluters (U.S., China, ...) either already have nuclear weapons or have demonstrated a lack of major interest in harming international relations by obtaining such in the future; usually they already have some nuclear reactors anyway. For example, if the U.S. goes from a small portion nuclear power to about 100% nuclear generation, the environmental and long-term economic benefits are concrete; a direct effect on nuclear proliferation doesn't exist with the U.S. already having all of the nuclear weapons it wants; and what is left is the hypothetical indirect influence if some nations copy it, decide to obtain nuclear weapons, and hypothetically succeed in some case where they wouldn't otherwise.

It is not very vastly easier, not orders of magnitude easier, to make nuclear weapons through the process starting with plutonium-breeding in reactors than to do so through enriching natural uranium into weapons-grade uranium without needing reactors. Both techniques have historically been used, and both are possible at relatively similar levels of technical capability and competence. Even the Iranians are trying the uranium enrichment process at the same time as the separate plutonium technique with their reactors, not doing too well so far on either but not finding the latter vastly faster and easier than the former.

Besides, in the big picture of the future of the world, even if nuclear power expansion really led to one or more extra nations getting nuclear weapons, that tends to affect the overall future of mankind less than the overall situation being talked about here. One can't really be much concerned about peak oil and/or global warming without logically seeing most of the preceding nuclear concerns as less major, not tending to affect the lifestyle of billions of people to the same degree. The old WWIII scenario might directly and indirectly kill a total of billions of people, but causing that to happen is not the scenario here. Working out the details could be more complex. For example, it might be worthwhile to export only cross-border electricity and/or thorium reactors difficult for weapons development to any countries that simultaneously have the industrial capability to operate nuclear reactors, the apparent desire for nuclear weapons, and a lack of having obtained them long ago.

Whatever the exact details, the big picture of nuclear power being preferable is certain enough compared to staying with fossil fuels.
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TheLemur wrote:A note on methanol: it can easily be chemically converted to dimethyl ether, which solves most of methanol's problems: it has a high ratio of combustion energy to mass, a high vapor pressure, is fairly non-toxic and is basically inert chemically (methanol has this annoying tendency to dissolve aluminum).
Dimethyl ether does have possibilities, able to be made from sources including biomass and coal. For example, to add another to your link, pages 25 and 26 (in Adobe Acrobat reader) of this describe some aspects of DME use including a description of running a diesel engine from a Dodge Ram on DME. They state:
Article wrote:In North America, both the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the California Air Resources Board have adopted emissions limits covering the full range of engine sizes. As emissions standards continue to be tightened, substantial engine research and development will be required to reduce engine exhaust emissions levels. Early indications are that expensive engine/fuel injection equipment modifications and emissions equipment will be required if compression ignition (CI) engines are to continue operating on conventional diesel fuel.

Alternative fuels have been considered as potential replacements or supplements for diesel fuel in CI engines. One fuel in particular, dimethyl ether (DME), has shown promise [...]

Early test results indicate that fuelling CI engines with DME instead of diesel fuel would allow the 1998 California Ultra Low Emission Vehicle emissions requirements to be met without the addition of expensive emissions systems. Of particular relevance is its almost smokeless operation, low oxides of nitrogen (NOx) emissions and considerably reduced noise levels.
From here, page 25 in Adobe Acrobat Reader

Some think DME could be rather affordable and workable. I haven't heard of DME being used other than in diesel (compression ignition) engines, but definitely there are a lot of diesel vehicles on the road, dominating truck shipping. At the same time, methanol is not to be underestimated, with a methanol-gasoline blend working in gasoline (spark ignition) engines like ordinary personal cars (as well as methanol-diesel blends for diesel engines possible), with a substantial history of usage from early cars to WWII conversions as described in the article link by my second methanol quote in my past post. My post is more about just giving some examples than trying to figure out the details of all that could be used. But DME is definitely a possibility.
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Post by Sikon »

J wrote:
Sikon wrote:However, the U.S. presumably keeps oil flowing in from countries like Canada and Mexico, as well as remaining domestic production, while their production declines but at a moderate rate as suggested before, so the decline in the total U.S. oil supply is not utterly precipitous. In fact, Canada and Mexico are the two largest sources of oil imported into the U.S.. After all, even in event of oil wars, they would tend to be fought elsewhere, with no country's military being foolish enough to try invading North America. Indeed, now oil imports from the Middle East do not amount to more than 18% of imported U.S. oil, about 10% of total U.S. oil consumption.

In other words, in the first years of peak oil, the U.S. tends to suffer a supply loss of a number of percent, experiencing mostly a scenario like the Hubbert curves described before with decrease over years and over decades, rather than an unlimited instant drop. That can be survived, with economic harm as opposed to utter collapse, buying time for alternatives.
There's a couple problems with that, mainly, Mexican oil production has already peaked and is entering the early phases of decline. Canadian oil sands production can't be expanded significantly without severe environmental consequences, even if those are ignored expansion is still limited as there isn't enough water to go around. Doubling current oil sands production is about the most which can be reasonably expected, especially if it's to be done in a sustainable and environmentally responsible fashion.
Actually, I said "their production declines but at a moderate rate as suggested before." See nestled quotes. The expectation is declining oil from Canada and Mexico in the world peak oil timeframe. Yes, Mexican oil production has already peaked. The middle graph in my first post in this thread, on page 2, shows how it recently hit the top of its Hubbert curve. And so has U.S. domestic oil production been gradually declining for decades as shown in two of the graphs in my last post. But it is a decline at a number of percent per decade without being utterly precipitous in all three cases. I will skip writing much more here, as the context and details of my statements are already apparent in careful reading of all of my previous post.

Oil sands aren't really sustainable and very environmentally responsible in any case. It is one more source of fossil fuels that will all run out sooner or later whatever the exact supply and whatever the exact consumption rate, while emitting pollution in the process. Nuclear power eliminating the limited fuel problem once and for all is vastly preferable to just buying a little more time at much expense, still needing to switch sooner or later. But my post tries to model what will tend to happen, even when not my preference:

Realistically, there will probably be little proper conversion away from oil and fossil fuels in advance of world peak oil, then a rush to substitute more of other fossil fuels like coal, which keeps industrial civilization operating after the oil peak, until the public eventually supports full-scale nuclear power, given the lesson of peak oil and their motivation then.
J wrote:Umm...that's the operating cost of an existing industry after all the mines have been dug, the equipment bought & paid for, and so on and so forth.
Actually, if one wants to be really precise, coal prices include a combination of both operating / maintenance expense and paying back past capital costs of constructing mines (and transportation). A given coal mine will often not supply for more than a moderate number of years, and recent growth in coal production is apparent in graphs in my last post. An analogy is electricity generation where the majority of the selling price of nuclear, hydroelectric, and wind generation is amortizing the past capital expense, like paying back loans for past construction. The mine construction expense likewise is unable to be astronomical without implying a far higher selling price of coal than is actually the case, far more than the $31 per ton. Besides, the general order of magnitude is what matters in the context of my argument about industrial civilization surviving, that supplying a billion tons annually of coal today amounts to 1/400th rather than 1/4th of U.S. GDP or something extreme.

As a random example, one new coal mine costs $750 million while being estimated to produce 12 million tons of coal per year. That's not a huge amount, proportionally like $30 per ton relative to the amount of coal produced in the first two years, though actually the capital cost would be amortized over the life of the mine, estimated as about 17 years at that production rate. Effective amortized capital cost can be more than the preceding alone would indicate if factors like interest rates on loans for construction are considered, but the preceding shows the general idea.

Coal isn't really desirable, not compared to nuclear, but it is realistically likely to be used a lot.
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Now I'm finally able to get online again, just thought I'd add a couple more points.

There is currently a new coal powerplant being readied for building in Doncaster, Yorkshire that was on the news this morning. The mines there have reopened as of late, though even with the modern technology it is still a vastly more difficult and dangerous process than oil and gas, but workers are ready to get back down there and gear up for the powerplant's future fuel stock. Coal is 40% of electricity here, though it has been far higher in the past with nuclear too, both of which came down a lot when the North Sea came into the picture.

The problem is, this one new plant will maybe be online by 2012 at the earliest. As with nuclear, the on-stream times are measured in years which, if the peak is now, really doesn't stop an economic depression (we had recession from 4% loss of output in the '70s for a few months which was only remedied by factors we don't have today) which will seriously screw over progress into financing and building new plants. Personally, even with potentially centuries of uranium, I wouldn't go nuclear because of various issues from public opinion which itself slows build times to at best a decade (5 years if you pull a Japanese method and rush them) and the threat of global nuclear stocks increasing terrorist or rogue state dangers. We have technology today that is fully renewable that, with the same investment we're throwing at fossil fuels today, could replace all major powerplants from nukes to fossil fuels and allow for a bio-fuel/hydrogen/electric mix of transportation. I believe the Pentagon paper on this looked at future investment in oil over the next few years as $180bn, while replacing most inefficient vehicles today, implementing micro-power towns like Woking and switching to renewable baseline plants using various sources from hydro, tidal and solar and CHP systems would be just a bit less than that and aid national security.

You just need the will to go there, which is amazingly lacking given the US could've done all of this in the '70s when oil was hideously expensive but never even bothered looking past fossil fuels, least of all when new produce was coming on-stream. It's quite sad, especially when security agencies, insurance companies and various independent groups all agree that lowering carbon emissions and becoming independent of fossil fuels is a worthy goal and not impossible. If people panic like they did in previous oil price hikes, then you can kiss goodbye any immediate start on remedying the system in place even with the alternatives already available and workable today such as CTL, solar, nuclear etc.

TheLemur wrote:
You are right that electrolysis requires fairly pure water, but no electrolysis is involved.
I know how it works, my point is the water usage and fossil fuel basis that doesn't solve anything, even in the short-term

Our current energy network will probably eventually become entirely electric, because electricity is cheap and high-grade, and hydrogen fuel can be easily generated from it on-site.
Having just read a good piece on fully renewable ways of replacing our ageing network, I think this is going to be one aspect of a multitude of new technologies utilising various sources. It's all annoyingly long term and ignored for now though.

In such areas, you have to develop the roads, infrastructure, etc. in addition to the pipe, because it's all wilderness/Third World.
Terrorism is a big part, too. The pipes in Iraq and the previously mentioned one to Turkey was attacked a great deal and has overall shoddy workmanship to boot. It's like the companies don't care about whether it works or not.

Which requires- surprise!- oceanic transports, which the Allies were sinking in droves.
Yeah, conceding this point, mainly down to I think we have other issues that aren't relevant to how the Germans and the Japanese fared to contend with today.

You conveniently forgot about thorium breeder reactors, which produce no weapons-grade material.
Doesn't change that the world now has a vastly more nuclear oriented network. Nuclear plants being dangerous themselves, as good as Western designs are and the problems you have with people and waste.

Did you even read the article saying uranium can be extracted from seawater? Estimating the reserves of a mine is tricky, but how can you "overestimate" or "overhype" the quantity of something in seawater when it's so easily measurable?
I missed that particular article. Amazingly, I'm not omniscient and able to read every thread in these forums.
That's because we're nowhere near that point yet!
Huh? What point? If you want to stave off a massive economic depression, we should've started a decade ago at least. No matter what alternatives we muster, the plateau now is bad news if this really is the highest we can pump out because not even coal-to-liquids will cope with a 2% decrease in annual oil output in the next few years. I'm looking further into the future for replacements.

Only 6% of oil is used for aviation, and since fuel is a major component of airplane travel costs, ticket prices will go up very quickly under any restriction of the oil supply.
I was thinking green taxes for a start now, since air travel is going up and up and people, while showing concern for global warming, don't seem to really give a shit when it comes to cancelling that holiday abroad. There needs to be action now on this issue, yet gov'ts do the total opposite.

According to ASPO, deepwater and heavy oil will constitute ~20% of world oil supply by 2010.
I'm having doubts about that graph. What context is it in within the article? Does that take into account rising population and energy rates? As it is, deep sea and heavy oils are nowhere near meeting rising demand, even with the costs being economical now.

If public transport is so efficient compared to cars, then why does Amtrak use fully 60% of the energy that cars do per passenger-mile?
The US, Amtrak especially, are not a good indicator of good public transport at all. To say Amtrak are badly handled is to say Railtrack here were slightly unsafe to ride. The US would do better to mimic Germany or Japan's models which are not only more efficienct, newer systems, but on time.
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and allow for a bio-fuel/hydrogen/electric mix of transportation.
(laughs)

The orangutan is already being heavily pressured by habitat destruction due to biodiesel production, and the Mexicans are already getting mad due to ethanol production putting upward pressure on corn prices. And this is when biofuel accounts for how much of world oil production? 5%?
switching to renewable baseline plants using various sources from hydro, tidal and solar
This guy is the very first person in the US to live in entirely solar-hydrogen powered house. It cost him $500,000, which is a hell of a lot of money even compared to the several trillion it would take to expand nuclear/CTL by that extent. The percentage of hydropower in use in developed countries has steadily declined over the past twenty years, primarily due to lack of available sites. As for tidal power, only 3 TW (~25% of global energy consumption) is available in total, and only 1% of that is practical to exploit.
Nuclear plants being dangerous themselves, as good as Western designs are and the problems you have with people and waste.
As compared to the risks of coal power plants? The total number of direct fatalities (including children who died of thyroid cancer, which is the only disease to have a clear spike after Chernobyl) is 56. The total number of direct fatalities in the coal industry, just considering coal mining disasters, totals in the tens of thousands. As for waste, a standard nuclear power plant produces several metric tons a year; a coal power plant produces millions of metric tons, a good deal of which is toxic.
I missed that particular article. Amazingly, I'm not omniscient and able to read every thread in these forums.
Go back and read this thread; I linked to it directly in one of my posts.
If you want to stave off a massive economic depression, we should've started a decade ago at least.
Ideally, yes, but we don't live in Nevereverland; we live in a world where people do not start major industrial projects without major incentives.
I'm having doubts about that graph. What context is it in within the article? Does that take into account rising population and energy rates?
It's purely a graph of estimated oil production, based on current trends and geological factors. I don't know exactly what it takes into account; ask ASPO.
To say Amtrak are badly handled is to say Railtrack here were slightly unsafe to ride.
I'm not that familiar with passenger rail (living in the US, I've never ridden on it once); please explain both.
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