The Duchess of Zeon wrote:
We're not going to run out of coal for substantial lengths of time, and production peaking will not be nearly as urgent an issue when production of petroleum has already peaked, forcing us to take such matters seriously. We'll have plenty of coal left (It's also easier to extract) to fuel mass conversion.
Granted, as I've said before, that's America. The UK may well be donkey-fucked.
I'd hardly call less than a century at present rates all that much time when you need to replace that infrastructure ASAP and deal with your horribly poor power grid. The UK is at least next door to the largest NG and conventional oil deposits, it just means spending more money getting it and we can see that trillions being thrown away by the US today right now hasn't ended the thirst.
Master of Ossus wrote:
The first link provides a single cryptic line with no empirical support, and then calls for a mere $10 million/year to explore the impending disaster (which from the tone of the writing and the rest of the article they're not even worried about).
Aside from the hardly cryptic remark and the debunking of the "We have centuries of coal!" bullshit, yes, hardly anything.
None of the other three links work, but assuming that the quotations you pulled from them are accurate I am unimpressed by their findings. I especially love the statement that the American anthracite reserves are vanishingly small compared to the English ones, which you seem to cite in support of a lack of coal left in the world, despite the fact that the American anthracite reserves constitute a spectacular energy resource even after being mined for well over a century (much of which at a far greater rate than they are being used, today).
The only source that you quote which even attempts to quantify the alleged end of cheap coal seems to be concerned with production trends, rather than with physical reserves (for instance, noting increased Chinese use of nuclear power), but moreover does not recognize the potential for additional production facilities to be brought online. As I have said before, the Stone Age did not end because the world ran out of rocks. Coal has simply been outcompeted by oil to such a degree that only the absolute most inexpensive coal can be economical in comparison to oil--it has nothing to do with the physical quantity that is left in the ground, or even the physical quantity that is recovered.
I cannot do anything about EU and US servers being inundated. They were working perfectly fine when posted.
Additional production which no OECD nation is doing anywhere near fast enough, you mean? If the US was so confident of this resource, you'd be helping the Chinese out a lot more with their incredible growth. As I repeatedly say, it's
production rates, not reserves that are key here. China is way over their national limit and needs to import, which is not easy with coal, as they have found out.
In any case, the more definitive report on this matter is the
EWG one published last year. The myth that we have tonnes of coal to rely on and fall back on after oil needs to be axed here and now.
But even if wrong, using coal means you're just substituting one catastrophe for another: runaway climate change. Choose your poison.