If I may field this. The EROEI argument is not about a lack of energy in the way you're thinking of it. If we are coping with less and less energy available to produce more convenient sources of energy, then this will affect economic activity, and in fact, already is. Which fuels have enabled us to use a negative EROEI in the past? Fossil fuels. They are all in rapid depletion, not just oil, and all are mandatory for production of the vast amounts we use today. There are now alternatives. None, nada. Zilch. Therefore, the idea that expending 1 barrel of oil equivalent to get 100 barrels of oil energy in return sliding down to a 1:1 ratio will still be a viable plan is simply hogwash. It will long be uneconomical before we even hit those thermodynamic brick walls.Guardsman Bass wrote:
That's what they all say. They also continually bring up the EROEI argument, which is a red herring - we have no lack of energy, and oil's main virtue was just that it was a particularly convenient form of stored energy. Besides, we take cheaper energy in one form and convert to a more portable, more expensive form with negative ERORI all the time (just look at most batteries).
Additionally, someone mentioned price spikes and how they didn't have any drastic impact on the economy. I hope this person doesn't practice economics at all (ignoring that it's also a fallacy). In any case, peak oil won't bring about a sudden economic catastrophe. Peak oil exports will. And it is doing it now in the country I sit and type this post from, so please don't pooh-pooh something that is having an impact on me already.