Preparing for Peak Oil

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Sikon
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Post by Sikon »

J wrote:Billions of people cease to exist.
[...]
Shockingly, the Shep Solution (tm) also works for peak oil!
Enforcer Talen wrote:Which, ironically, solves a lot of the problems.
No it wouldn't.

As one random example, if sufficient motivation was obtained, for a proper nuclear power conversion program for all fossil-fuel electricity generation over a 20-year period, the U.S. would need on the order of $20 per month per household as shown here, around 0.2% of U.S. GDP, around 0.2% of total economic output over that timeframe. (And total conversion away from fossil fuels would be up to a few times greater cost, as indirectly implied here and here).

Some number of people hypothetically dying here or elsewhere doesn't help that figure.

There's no great, awesome problem-solving accomplishment like billions of deaths making the figure change to tenths of a percent of GDP less.

Rather, the trouble of conversion is approximately proportional to

cost_of_conversion / economic_output

which is

(cost_per_capita * population) / (economic_output_per_capita * population)

=

cost_per_capita / economic_output_per_capita

The huge numbers of people dying would harm production, trade, and the economy, tending to decrease economic output per capita of the remaining population, decreasing GDP, thus indirectly increasing the percentage of GDP needing to be spent on conversion. It is as little a real solution to limited fossil fuel as U.S. involvement in the Middle East hypothetically slightly prolongs the availability of the oil supply, neither changing the need for switching the energy source nor improving the conversion cost per capita.
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Post by Sikon »

Admiral Valdemar wrote:Too bad, then, that the seawater technology is still in the early experimental stage and not even considered an industrial method yet. You can get gold from seawater too, but we don't because it's just not economical and technically a bitch.

[...]
The "peak" I refer to is in extraction rates. There's no "peak" to gasoline either, yet it's happening. Reserves = useless. What you can produce is all that matters and we have plenty of oil around the US and yet gasoline is going to be in shortage this summer. The same applies with the underfunded uranium mining and exploration industry.
The process already obtained $210/kg, already more than good enough, as discussed in detail before. It isn't in large-scale production because and only because currently getting uranium from mines is more economical. Change the price of the competition, and uranium from seawater enters production.

As usual, you talk about nuclear fuel like chemical fuel, despite the orders of magnitude difference in energy content per unit mass that causes reduced sensitivity of total generation cost to fuel expense, as discussed before. Gasoline is a lot different from uranium. Gasoline is a lot of the expense of vehicle operation, but raw, unenriched uranium is a tiny portion of total nuclear generation expense, with uranium price having limited overall effect.

Increase the price of gasoline by a factor of 10, and that is unaffordable. Increase the price of uranium by a factor of 10, and the earlier detailed discussion illustrated how that would change total economics by about a tenth with non-breeder reactors or affect breeder reactors by a fraction of 1%. And uranium from seawater already obtained 5.5 times current cost, while being projected to drop to 3.3 times as much.

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

Economics of nuclear power:

One illustration is estimated cents per kilowatt-hour figures of 2.34 for nuclear versus 2.16 for coal in South Korea; 4.80 for nuclear versus 4.95 for coal in Japan; 2.60 for nuclear versus 3.11 for coal in Canada; etc. (for the discount rate described here)

Incidentally, notice how nations survive and prosper despite widely varying electricity costs. That's because electricity generation expense is a very small portion of total GDP. And uranium is even less. The cost of uranium consumption by the U.S. is about $1.8 billion per year (2006) out of a $13000 billion annual GDP economy, for currently about 20% of electricity generation being nuclear. Although uranium requirements relative to generation could be reduced by a couple of orders of magnitude by breeder reactors, the situation is good enough even with regular reactors. There is plenty of room for rise in uranium expense without it being unaffordable if declining fossil fuels give motivation to go nuclear.

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

It is technically quite possible for all of mankind's current and future population to have survival and prosperity, in aspects ranging from energy to food production, as illustrated in detail here. In practice, poor decision-making and sociopolitical factors will likely lead to substantial peak oil troubles despite them being technically avoidable. But if there is eventually more effort looking for solutions than just looking for problems and dismissing solutions, then the future situation could be more like the bottom than the top of this graph (description elsewhere):

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Post by Darth Wong »

That picture touches back to a question I posed a while ago: what makes everyone so certain that the other side of the hill on fossil fuels will drop off so steeply? I don't recall hearing much of an answer, and if it takes decades to slide down the other side of the hill, then the whole "we can't build nuclear power plants because it takes more than 10 years" argument doesn't hold water.

Having said that, to be honest I actually welcome the idea of the passenger car diminishing in importance. I believe the passenger car culture has had a ruinous effect on society in many ways.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

Having said that, to be honest I actually welcome the idea of the passenger car diminishing in importance. I believe the passenger car culture has had a ruinous effect on society in many ways.
A mass-nuclear society would have to employ public mass-transit systems on a far more massive scale than anything seen before.

Not to mention that centralized energy supply systems are always less wasteful and more effective than the currently existing system of "individual" energy consumption in cars and other fuel-based machinery simply by the virtue of centralization.
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Post by Chris OFarrell »

Well it sucks to live in Australia.

On the pro side, we have huge resources of coal and Uranium as well as a relatively small population for our side, we produce food and have a declining population. We are isolated on our own landmass without a land border.

On the negative side, our Government has issues with doing ANYTHING about any of these problems and a population who don't for the most part have a clue and are complacent about the current situation to a fault. Global warming is probably more of a problem for us then peak Oil.

Most of our population is concentrated in a handful of large cities with poor to okay public transportation, which can be upgraded given time. Most of these cities have water supply issues thanks to the change in rainfall patterns. I mean we INVENTED a great deal of water recycling technology that other nations use to purify water back to high quality drinking level, but the public idiotically cringes over the idea of using it. HELLO? EARTH CLOSED SYSTEM FOR WATER?

Not to mention some of the water infrastructure is hopelessly outdated. I mean Sydney had its dam system built in the 1950's when it had a population of two million. The population increased to 4 million, nothing has changed in the infrastructure and low and behold we're slowly running out of water.

Oh and mostly thanks to fuckheads like Bob Brown, most of the country are anti nuclear to a fault and think we can replace all our coal stations with solar panels and wind farms.

With solid long term planning I'm sure Australia could withstand the changes, with quite a bit of change but avoiding the catastrophic outcomes...but somehow I think we'll all be shocked when the car sails off the cliff and goes into freefall, and then wish we had remembered to bring a parachute.
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Post by CaptHawkeye »

Having said that, to be honest I actually welcome the idea of the passenger car diminishing in importance. I believe the passenger car culture has had a ruinous effect on society in many ways.
Here here. Just look at the number of accidents that occur in the world. Automobile operation is far too much responcibility for the typical man.
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Darth Wong wrote:
Having said that, to be honest I actually welcome the idea of the passenger car diminishing in importance. I believe the passenger car culture has had a ruinous effect on society in many ways.
I wonder if in a few generations people will read about hundreds of thousands of motoring casualties with the same detached horror we have about medieval famines.
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Post by His Divine Shadow »

I hope they'll be too busy driving their flying cars to think about that.
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

Arthur_Tuxedo wrote: The answer to this one is simple. The auto industries took back all their EV's when the leases expired and crushed them down in the middle of the night as soon as it looked like California's Zero Emission Mandate would get shot down. It had nothing whatsoever to do with any flaws of electric vehicles.
I never said it had anything to do with flaws, I was implying it was everything to do with politics, as you just proved for me.
The "easy" uranium will last a century with modern breeder reactors, more than long enough for any kinks with the seawater method to sort itself out, and unlike shale oil, it actually is still economical to get uranium that way.
Breeders are also not in widespread use, are not the most fantastic of economic success stories and help in proliferation again (no one is going to invest in thorium until uranium disappears, which won't be anytime soon). You've got the political problem of allowing nuclear breeder reactors to prosper. There are also no large scale extraction sites for seawater uranium and until it is proven on such a scale assuming the price or uranium goes up past the '70s highs, then there's no reason to factor it in to short term solutions.
Large public works projects are a staple of depressions. It does, of course, depend on how steep the back side of the slope is, like I said.
And you need an awful lot of oil to make a nuke plant. This isn't like building a small dam or anything and it's not like Joe Bloggs out of work from GM is going to suddenly start helping to build your several hundred or so AP1000 plants. Expertise is a limiting factor too, and that's in short supply also.
It happens if it's made to happen. If it's not made to happen, then it doesn't happen. There's no magic law of economics that says an industry can't grow 30, 300, or 3 thousand % per year if there's a desperate need for it.
No, the laws going against us are purely physics related. If there's not enough energy to make these solar fields, then they won't get made. To even contemplate renewable making up any decent proportion of US electrical output, you should have started decades ago.
All the mechanization is not going to disappear, it will just be cut back as oil gets more expensive. It will dip during the crunch time and come back as nuclear replaces oil. Global warming in conjuction with peak oil will be a bitch, but it doesn't look like the worst of peak oil is set to coincide with the worst of global warming. Instead, it seems they'll hit about 10-20 years apart from each other.
How will nuclear replace oil? This is a liquid fuels crisis and nuclear is not oil. Nuclear could make hydrogen or DME, but only by wasting the majority of the energy you're getting. And mechanisation getting cut back is the issue, not it vanishing altogether. You're going to need to fuel your agriculture side of things as well as building several hundred brand new nuclear plants. That means your economy just died.
In any case, it is likely that millions will die as a direct result of peak oil, perhaps tens of millions, and many more will be hungry and malnourished. But agriculture will not be hit so hard as to cause a loss of large fractions of the globe's population. All the oil would have to practically vanish overnight for that to happen, and no respected expert predicts the backside of the slope will be that steep.
You're missing the exponential function here. Humans aren't going to to stop breeding overnight either and the modest drop-offs in oil with the modest increase in population is going to get bigger and bigger every year.
The first world agriculture industries could lose half their production rate and still be able to feed the world. As food prices go up, production increases to match. The idea that first world nations would need to hoard the food or there wouldn't be enough to go around is simply ridiculous.
And what of your transport? The UK nearly ran out of fuel after a week or two of blockades that cleaned the supermarkets out of food. No distribution system is as good as no food, just go to Africa and let them know that we have bountiful yields of the stuff, they'll not listen. The world is based around a precarious just-in-time delivery method. And if the food cannot make it to the people, then it is useless. The fact that MI5 even have planning scenarios based on this from terrorist attacks, to say nothing of a global energy crisis, is telling.
The primary reason why nuclear never took off is because of the shennanigans of the Department of Energy, and also because old nuclear technology was nowhere near as safe or as good as what we have today.
And this is all going to change for the near future is it? We've seen plenty of private firms screw over the people for a buck. The last thing you want is the likes of another Enron running a major project like this.
There is no shortage to the number of areas that would be cut back before projects to restore energy production would be cut. Same goes for food production, for that matter.
But no one is investing in such plants because of the risk. When the insurance firms collapse, no one will want to risk anything. That leaves the gov't trying to fund all of these nuclear plants, and since the US is wasting its time with ethanol and coal, I don't see how it's remotely plausible to get them to replace fossil fuel output with nuclear in any reasonable timeframe when factoring real-world problems, not just technical ones. The US is already seeing limits to their nuclear renaissance as is, which will only be exacerbated by future ramping up of construction for such sites from elsewhere.

Now, don't see this as me dismissing nuclear out of hand. Because I'm not. It most certainly is going to be bigger in the future and only a fool would deny that even with the lacklustre investment in it for the time being. What I'm saying is that to replace all fossil fuels with nuclear before major troubles hit, as they are doing in the developing world now, is simply not possible. No report out there sees that happening without prior capital investment and construction well underway by now. The sheer number of reactors needed would be in the thousands. That runs into problems with storage of waste, locations for reactors to be properly utilised and the fact that you'll be building one and decommissioning one every day for the rest of our expansion into nuclear, even with reactors living 60 years or so (most only have 40 year lifespans today which can be extended somewhat). If you can foresee that many reactors appearing in a couple of decades, then I applaud your optimism. Me, I don't see that happening when it's obvious more are trying to consume every last drop of oil, cubic metre of gas and tonne of coal whilst maybe funding the odd solar or bio-fuel project.


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Sikon wrote:
The process already obtained $210/kg, already more than good enough, as discussed in detail before. It isn't in large-scale production because and only because currently getting uranium from mines is more economical. Change the price of the competition, and uranium from seawater enters production.
If prices keep going up, that should happen in the future. Right now, though, everyone is grabbing what uranium can be extracted from the mines today which the WNA sees as leading to a massive bottleneck soon enough. Then you will see if seawater extraction catches on or people get cold feet and move to other areas of energy.
As usual, you talk about nuclear fuel like chemical fuel, despite the orders of magnitude difference in energy content per unit mass that causes reduced sensitivity of total generation cost to fuel expense, as discussed before. Gasoline is a lot different from uranium. Gasoline is a lot of the expense of vehicle operation, but raw, unenriched uranium is a tiny portion of total nuclear generation expense, with uranium price having limited overall effect.

Increase the price of gasoline by a factor of 10, and that is unaffordable. Increase the price of uranium by a factor of 10, and the earlier detailed discussion illustrated how that would change total economics by about a tenth with non-breeder reactors or affect breeder reactors by a fraction of 1%. And uranium from seawater already obtained 5.5 times current cost, while being projected to drop to 3.3 times as much.
I said no such thing about the price or the nebulous EROEI of uranium. I'm pointing to a simple bottleneck that is causing the same problems for uranium that is now happening with refined oil products. There are NO seawater extraction plans on the table even given the massive increase in price for uranium over the last two years and the warnings of mining issues. Even breeder reactors are not on the cards given designs like the AP1000 are being looked at instead. It's all very well saying we could do this or that, but I don't see any of that happening and we're already way too late here.

In anycase, this is a liquid fuels crisis which nuclear doesn't solve. You're not getting EV or hydrogen replacing all ICEs within an appreciable timeframe now. That time has long past, I'm afraid.
It is technically quite possible for all of mankind's current and future population to have survival and prosperity, in aspects ranging from energy to food production, as illustrated in detail here. In practice, poor decision-making and sociopolitical factors will likely lead to substantial peak oil troubles despite them being technically avoidable. But if there is eventually more effort looking for solutions than just looking for problems and dismissing solutions, then the future situation could be more like the bottom than the top of this graph (description elsewhere):

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True enough, in a perfect world this wouldn't be an issue. We have the technology, we know how to conserve and all about carrying capacity of ecological niches. What gets in the way is our humanity which is just making things worse with short-sighted planning now. The "undulating plataeu" we're on now is going to eventually disappear and when we finally start seeing demand outstrip supply by a fair margin, it's anybody's guess how the markets will react. To initiate any of what we're talking about today on a good enough scale still requires our economic model survive, otherwise a massive transition will have to take place to, maybe, a barter system or a command economy. Whatever does arise will take time to come about, likely not long after the populations of the First World make things much worse with resource hoarding and general panic responses.

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Non-OPEC production is likely to decline anywhere from 3.4 to 4% given current analysis. If OPEC starts running into similar issues, which the likes of KSA could easily foresee given the strain on their super-giants and giants and with efforts to bring other fields on-stream quick enough running into financial and personnel difficulties, you could be looking at a far steeper curve. If that curve rises dramatically, you have a far harder time doing anything on any real scale (uranium prices are one thing, but given steel and concrete are putting many largescale industrial plans on hold or outright cancellation, you can't just look at one or two commodities. Again, uranium extraction may be cheap for energy, but you also have to add on other energy expenditure costs too that require that oil). A 15% decline, for instance, would see you lose half of your production capacity in just 4.6 years, or in other words, the world producing only 42.5 mbpd from the current 85 mbpd. That rate may not be hit, but really, it doesn't matter, because before a geological limit is applied that matches such a high figure like 15% (keeping in mind some areas of the world have seen nearly 30% decline in oil output such as Forties and Cantarell), you'll run into socio-political barriers such as attacks on resources, mercantilism and the simple cessation of exporting oil because of growing demand in the producers' countries. They don't need to actually run out to really make the downward slope steep, they just need to value their people more than ours. And they do.

Let's look at the five main reasons that will act as positive feedback loops on the rate of decline in oil production and exporting.

As Jeff Vail has highlighted, the attacks on resource investments have been going on for a few years now and the reasononing for these attacks can be anything from political to simple economic gain. The troubles in Nigeria and Ethiopia are causing no small amount of pain for the oil companies stationed there, Nigeria losing 600 kbpd in production thanks to the tense political atmosphere there, not helped by the recent elections either. The very same thing is happening in Iraq also and the recent KSA foiling of a supposed al-Qaeda attack on their major fields is evidence of the same ideological modus operandi for factions opposing the House of Saud.

For the mercantilism aspect of things, we have China building ever bigger SPR tanks and shifting oil into them to give at least a month or two worth of supply should disruption happen on the global market. Japan has also signed an agreement with Abu Dhabi on securing oil contracts for the future, with some plans for a larger storage capacity being floated. The US has tried to expand their SPR too, but I've already mentioned they've never reached their new target limit and are putting off buying more oil until prices ease somewhat. The US has no shortage of light, sweet and heavy, sour now anyway, so it is not of immediate concern. Similar plans for growth of storage sites have also stirred some in the UK to act on the ever more dependent on foreign supply threat to national security.

Then the final three parts fall into place. Export-land and nationalism along with privateering. The former essntially kills the global trade of fossil fuels as internal demand for more energy and higher population growth make it prudent to serve those in your own nation first, rather than sell off your energy on the global market. This is already looking to be a problem in Iran and may manifest in several other former swing-producers too. The KSA has already made it clear they will not be upping production and intend to invest money back into their economy for coping with a post-carbon world. Nationalism is something that is right now causing the Kurds to oppose the US oil bill in Iraq and Nigeria and South America are experiencing similar pains too. The chaos caused by energy privateers will be more than enough to destroy any meagre gains in producion from new projects planned, given the vast majority of fossil fuels now exist in far less stable areas of the world.

Keep in mind, decline rates would increase naturally anyway as more and more effort is put into sucking more oil out, so I don't see how the Hubbert bell curve really fits given the geological decline rate doesn't dictate final output in the least. The model of Hubbert Linearisation may be good at predicting URR with fields already past peak and where we can see their decline rates, but for accounting for above-ground factors it's next to useless. A geological decline rate may be 1 to 2.5% from most expert opinions, which is possible to deal with assuming good organisation and a decent plan of action rather than carry on regardless. But that won't be the final decline rate, because it could easily go up to 20% and higher simply because those producing the oil no longer have the export capacity to supply you with it. Mexico is going to be dealing with zero net exports soon, which the US will have to find elsewhere. This will occur with other exporters, that much is certain.
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Post by J »

Darth Wong wrote:That picture touches back to a question I posed a while ago: what makes everyone so certain that the other side of the hill on fossil fuels will drop off so steeply? I don't recall hearing much of an answer, and if it takes decades to slide down the other side of the hill, then the whole "we can't build nuclear power plants because it takes more than 10 years" argument doesn't hold water.
It's based on observed depletion characteristics of individual oil fields, countries, and geographical regions of the world, though there is some guesswork and uncertainty involved.

In short, every oil field has an optimum flow rate which maximizes its production life as well as the total amount of recoverable oil. This flow rate is unfortunately rather low, too low for oil producers to really profit from so they use various methods to move oil out of the ground faster, but we'll get back to that later. Flowing oil at the optimum rate results in the symmetric textbook normal curve seen in statistics classes, production rises as more wells are drilled and then slowly falls as the reservoir is depleted.

However, oil fields haven't been developed that way, at least not for the last 50 years or so. We now do all kinds of things to speed the flow of oil from the ground; water floods, gas injection, slanted & horizontal drilling, detergent floods, and many other techniques. These are collectively known as enhanced recovery methods, they move the oil out of the ground a lot faster, but at a price, and that is production life and ultimate recovery. The production curve on these fields resembles a steep climb to a plateau followed by a fall off a cliff.

So we have countries like the US & Canada which did most of their drilling & production with conventional methods, these countries have a smooth production curve with a gradual increase and decliine. Others such as the UK & Norway who've used enhanced recovery for most of their production have seen much sharper declines.

Which brings us back to the original question, how do we know how world decline will be like? Well, of all the top oil producing countries in the world, most of them use enhanced recovery methods to flow oil from the ground as fast as they can. Based on what geologists have observed with individual fields, countries, and regions, they support the opinion that the decline from the peak of world oil production will be faster rather than slower.
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Post by Alferd Packer »

Darth Wong wrote:Having said that, to be honest I actually welcome the idea of the passenger car diminishing in importance. I believe the passenger car culture has had a ruinous effect on society in many ways.
Isaac Asimov has a quote that I've always loved, which I think is very apt.
Night was a wonderful time in Brooklyn in the 1930s. Air conditioning was unknown except in movie houses, and so was television. There was nothing to keep one in the house. Furthermore, few people owned automobiles, so there was nothing to carry one away. That left the streets and the stoops. The very fullness served as an inhibition to crime.
Some writer will probably be able to plagarize that quote, replacing the 1930s with the 2030s.
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Post by Oni Koneko Damien »

I'll me-too on the lack-of-automobiles thing. I lost my car several months ago, and it's been an eye-opener seeing 1)how absurdly dangerous they are and 2) how much they actually contribute to isolation.

Now, if only TV would go the same route.
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

I'll chime in on the dislike of cars too, because I don't happen to need mine and I can't comprehend how people don't get up in arms over the number of deaths attributed to these machines when a shooting or plane crash gets far more press for lower body count.

And here's another two studies stating the task of making enough nuke reactors to even reduce GHG emissions is practically impossible anytime this century.
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I'm probably the only one that really and truly likes cars here.
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Post by aerius »

I think something which people aren't taking into account is the people side of the equation. Ok, so we want to build a thousand nuke plants, great, who's going to build and operate them? Do we even have enough qualified welders and pipefitters to put all those cooling water pipes and steamlines together? How about people to run all those new reactors, I don't think you want a Homer Simpson running your local nuke plant. It's going to take quite some time to train and educate all the scientists, engineers, and technicians required to build and run everything.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

It's going to take quite some time to train and educate all the scientists, engineers, and technicians required to build and run everything.
True. Which again makes countries with large nuclear construction sectors put in a better position than those who don't do it.

P.S. As for the loss of cars, I'd say public transportation like metro, train, et cetera are superior in matters ecology, safer and more efficient, expenditure-wise. The only problem is, America's cities are engineered for a car culture, they lack public transport and so the car decline will hit America hard.
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

aerius wrote:I think something which people aren't taking into account is the people side of the equation. Ok, so we want to build a thousand nuke plants, great, who's going to build and operate them? Do we even have enough qualified welders and pipefitters to put all those cooling water pipes and steamlines together? How about people to run all those new reactors, I don't think you want a Homer Simpson running your local nuke plant. It's going to take quite some time to train and educate all the scientists, engineers, and technicians required to build and run everything.
The is a lack of nuclear expertise today as it is, thanks to the NIMBY and enviro-nut movement since the '70s. Even at the height of nuclear plant production, France could only ever produce 8 reactors a year with maybe a slight increase if the money was there. Now my maths isn't the greatest, but that strikes me as a tad less than one a week needed to off-set the fairly minor GHG emission target oversight, not even counting the need to replace lost output from other sources of energy.

Then there's the costs to industry that I've already gone over that have caused many projects to be delayed, cancelled and many times overbudget. Uranium may be cheap and abundant with goo EROEI, but factor in the costs of construction, the dwindling numbers of people who know what they're doing in this area (most of which are near retiring age now too) and the final picture is more daunting than a simple back of a napkin calculation about how much U235 we have and how many reactors it would feed. There's one study I'm trying to find that suggested by 2020 we'd be wasting most of our gains from nuclear on dealing with the waste from past reactors needing decommissioning. Those things require a lot of work to build and then be rid of, something I doubt many factor into overall energy costs (though I've never seen a good concrete system based EROEI for nuclear, which some think ranges from 10:1 to 1000:1).
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Post by Crazy_Vasey »

This is really beginning to sound like it's coming under the 'eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow you'll either starve to death or get your skull caved in by starving rioters' territory. There has to be something that can be done. I mean, we might not be able to build thousands of nuclear reactors but do we really need that many? Britain has 14 nuclear reactors and they produce something like 20% of our electricity. And they're pretty damned old; surely modern designs would be better?
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Post by McNum »

There's one thing about Peak Oil that scares me more than anything... Why the hell isn't this being discussed in public or the media more? Seriously, there's War on Terror, Global Warming (although that is another big issue), but Peak Oil? Nope. It's only the most likely end to society as we know it, so it doesn't matter? It boggles the mind. Is this "Big Oil" doing their thing or what?

There's one aspect of the consequences that I'm a bit curious of, though. What about communication? I doubt phones, or even the Internet will die out completely, but I really hope that the ability to call someone and havea little chat won't go away. Cellphones may die out, or become less abundant. But I hope landlines will survive more or less intact.

Speaking of cellphones... plastic? That's going to become hideously expensive, too, isn't it? I think I heard something about making plastic from vegetable oil or something, but I doubt that's going to cover much of any need.

About the private car, if that going to become difficult, then I don't mind that much. When oil becomes really scarce, I support letting the important infrastructure take priority. You can get pretty far locally with a bike or on foot and, luckily, we have decent public transportation already here in Denmark for going further. We also have lots of farmland. Wanna bet Germany would like a piece of that eventually? It's not like the Danish Military would be able to stop them if they really wanted our land.
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Post by K. A. Pital »

In case of a really dire conflict for resources, all limitrophe states which have anything of value - (no offense meant, guys, but small states exist only as long as the big ones allow them to, take no issue with "limitrophe") - will be done away with, conquered or pushed into various confederacies, unwieldy alliances and "spheres of domination".
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

Crazy_Vasey wrote:This is really beginning to sound like it's coming under the 'eat, drink, and be merry for tomorrow you'll either starve to death or get your skull caved in by starving rioters' territory. There has to be something that can be done. I mean, we might not be able to build thousands of nuclear reactors but do we really need that many? Britain has 14 nuclear reactors and they produce something like 20% of our electricity. And they're pretty damned old; surely modern designs would be better?
Had it not been for Greenpeace, we'd likely be further along in Labour's new plan for nuclear reinvigoration. The plants we have today will be phased out between now and 2020 and there's no excess capacity to take the slack short of building more coal or NG fired plants (this is why a Doncaster mine has recently reopened and a new coal fired powerplant with CTL option will be built over the next decade there). Gas is already a touchy issue given Russia's political stance and how they seem to have a big industrial system for extracting it, while the US and others have shown with oil and gas extraction that, past peak, smaller independent companies made better economic and output gains than the behemoth corporate entities. Russia, despite massive reserves of oil and gas still, will be running into problems soon simply because of underinvestment, a problem shared by the rest of the world because it doesn't make sense to spend billions on new rigs and refineries when they won't have enough product to pay off their costs.

On the plus side, the UK has been looking more at renewable with the prototype wave powerplants in Scotland giving good impressions so far and the world's largest wind farm to be built soon off-shore. Solar and CHP technologies should be given more funding and subsidies and places like Woking should be emulated, since the entire national grid could go down and they'd not even notice it (I believe they're even independent for liquid fuels to power transport too). It is models like this we should stick to, not panic buying up of more of an ever rarer resource.
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Post by McNum »

We have oil. We're curently self sufficent with it. We have power and probably one of the biggest windmill/citizen ratios in the world. Short term that's good. Long term, someone else might want that. We either say "Go ahead!" or get invaded, especially if Danish North Sea oil peaks later than global. Ah well, we have experience in surrendering to Germany. We can do it again.

The best case scenario I can see is for the EU to do something useful. Even though I'm usually optimistic, I have trouble believing that the EU could agree on something this big.

I hope that the transistion after the peak is slow-ish. Human society is a lot of things, but adaptable is a big part of it. I doubt society will collapse, but it will change.
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Post by Admiral Valdemar »

McNum wrote:There's one thing about Peak Oil that scares me more than anything... Why the hell isn't this being discussed in public or the media more? Seriously, there's War on Terror, Global Warming (although that is another big issue), but Peak Oil? Nope. It's only the most likely end to society as we know it, so it doesn't matter? It boggles the mind. Is this "Big Oil" doing their thing or what?
Social conditioning. The thread I participated in on this issue over at SB.com shows up quite a few ignorant people who go for the wishful thinking cornucopian view of the world. There's no discussion, because Big Oil says everything's okay. You trust them, don't you?

Total world change on this scale is something psychologically we are ill prepared for and so 99% of the world likely doesn't even think the end of the fossil fuel age is anywhere near or that people would be short-sighted enough to let us run towards the cliff without thinking about what to do next.
There's one aspect of the consequences that I'm a bit curious of, though. What about communication? I doubt phones, or even the Internet will die out completely, but I really hope that the ability to call someone and havea little chat won't go away. Cellphones may die out, or become less abundant. But I hope landlines will survive more or less intact.
I would expect networks to exist, but in drastically cut-down forms.
Speaking of cellphones... plastic? That's going to become hideously expensive, too, isn't it? I think I heard something about making plastic from vegetable oil or something, but I doubt that's going to cover much of any need.
Plastic can be made from plant polymers, though this would involve using up a vast amount of our food to deal with any industrial scale plastic production. I'd rather we recycled using TDP and the like. Ethanol is already competing with the food industry for growing space.
About the private car, if that going to become difficult, then I don't mind that much. When oil becomes really scarce, I support letting the important infrastructure take priority. You can get pretty far locally with a bike or on foot and, luckily, we have decent public transportation already here in Denmark for going further. We also have lots of farmland. Wanna bet Germany would like a piece of that eventually? It's not like the Danish Military would be able to stop them if they really wanted our land.
That all depends on political tension in the future, which I'm not willing tp predict right now. Until the size of the shortfall is seen and the other courses of action assessed, it could turn out a whole multitude of ways.
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Post by TithonusSyndrome »

aerius wrote:I think something which people aren't taking into account is the people side of the equation. Ok, so we want to build a thousand nuke plants, great, who's going to build and operate them? Do we even have enough qualified welders and pipefitters to put all those cooling water pipes and steamlines together? How about people to run all those new reactors, I don't think you want a Homer Simpson running your local nuke plant. It's going to take quite some time to train and educate all the scientists, engineers, and technicians required to build and run everything.
I'm actually interested in venturing into a career in nuclear power, but I'm kind of at a loss as to what kind of education at which facility I'd exactly need. If anyone could point me in the right direction, I'd be incredibly grateful.

And who knows? Maybe one day, you will be too. :P
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Post by McNum »

Admiral Valdemar wrote:
McNum wrote:There's one thing about Peak Oil that scares me more than anything... Why the hell isn't this being discussed in public or the media more? Seriously, there's War on Terror, Global Warming (although that is another big issue), but Peak Oil? Nope. It's only the most likely end to society as we know it, so it doesn't matter? It boggles the mind. Is this "Big Oil" doing their thing or what?
Social conditioning. The thread I participated in on this issue over at SB.com shows up quite a few ignorant people who go for the wishful thinking cornucopian view of the world. There's no discussion, because Big Oil says everything's okay. You trust them, don't you?

Total world change on this scale is something psychologically we are ill prepared for and so 99% of the world likely doesn't even think the end of the fossil fuel age is anywhere near or that people would be short-sighted enough to let us run towards the cliff without thinking about what to do next.
I trust Big Oil. I trust them to do whatever they can to stay profitable and to insure people that Peak Oil is all doomcrying. Apart from that? I wouldn't even trust them being able to supply me with fuel.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:
There's one aspect of the consequences that I'm a bit curious of, though. What about communication? I doubt phones, or even the Internet will die out completely, but I really hope that the ability to call someone and havea little chat won't go away. Cellphones may die out, or become less abundant. But I hope landlines will survive more or less intact.
I would expect networks to exist, but in drastically cut-down forms.
Yeah, I suppose the Internet genie is out of the bottle. An idea like this won't just roll over and die like that. Slowed down? Crippled? Probably. To me communication infrastructure is one of the things I consider a lifeblood of society. All the transport in the world is useless if no-one knows where to go with it. If landlines survive then we'll be ok in that respect, the loss of cell phones would suck, but a lot of things about Peak Oil sucks worse.
Admiral Valdemar wrote:
Speaking of cellphones... plastic? That's going to become hideously expensive, too, isn't it? I think I heard something about making plastic from vegetable oil or something, but I doubt that's going to cover much of any need.
Plastic can be made from plant polymers, though this would involve using up a vast amount of our food to deal with any industrial scale plastic production. I'd rather we recycled using TDP and the like. Ethanol is already competing with the food industry for growing space.
Recyling is great and all, I know I could recycle my trash a bit better, too. But it's not going to cover enough. I wonder if materials like wood might make a comeback? I like wood as a material, as long as it doesn't rot... those wood protectors are oil based, aren't they?
Admiral Valdemar wrote:
About the private car, if that going to become difficult, then I don't mind that much. When oil becomes really scarce, I support letting the important infrastructure take priority. You can get pretty far locally with a bike or on foot and, luckily, we have decent public transportation already here in Denmark for going further. We also have lots of farmland. Wanna bet Germany would like a piece of that eventually? It's not like the Danish Military would be able to stop them if they really wanted our land.
That all depends on political tension in the future, which I'm not willing tp predict right now. Until the size of the shortfall is seen and the other courses of action assessed, it could turn out a whole multitude of ways.
I guess. The only predcatable thing about politics is its unpredicability. I hope we'll in Europe get some trading agreements, which should be easier to make with the EU than some drastic change (it was after all started as a trade group). Trade won't fix it but it may lessen the blow if we focus on what each country is good at. Still, there's little doubt in my mind that oil desperation will and have caused war. I wonder if we'll get a WWIII over oil? It'd be the stupidest thing we've done in a long time if we do. "Let's use a lot of oil fighting over scraps!" May happen, may not. Desperation has done strange things before.

In any case these Peak Oil topics sure have been a cold dose of reality to me. So... thanks... I guess. It does annoy me... why did I have to hear about this from an Internet forum named after a science fiction ship? I guess sd.net has better priorities than most media. I never really trsted Big Oil, but I did trust the media somewhat. Looks like that trust was misplaced.

I suddenly feel like I know some dark secret that threatens our way of life. A secret no one wants to hear. I guess that's not completely wrong...
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