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life After the Oil Crash


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Very interesting/scary read. long, but worth it.........

 

 

Life After The Oil Crash

"Deal with Reality, or Reality will Deal with You."

 

Dear Reader,

 

Civilization as we know it is coming to an end soon. This is not the wacky conclusion of a religious cult, but rather the result of diligent analysis sourced by hard data and the scientists who study global “Peak Oil” and related geo-political events.

 

So who are these nay-sayers who claim the sky is falling? Conspiracy fanatics? Apocalypse Bible prophesy readers? To the contrary, they are some of the most respected, highest paid geologists and experts in the world. And this is what's so scary.

 

The situation is so dire that even George W. Bush's Energy Adviser, Matthew Simmons, has acknowledged that "The situation is desperate. This is the world's biggest serious question."

 

According to Secretary of Energy Spencer Abraham, "America faces a major energy supply crisis over the next two decades. The failure to meet this challenge will threaten our nation's economic prosperity, compromise our national security, and literally alter the way we lead our lives."

 

If you are like 99% of the people reading this letter, you have never heard of the term "Peak Oil". I had not heard the term until a few months ago. Since learning about Peak Oil, I have had my worldview, and basic assumptions about my own individual future turned completely upside down.

 

A little about myself: A few months ago, I was a 25 year old law school graduate who found out he had just passed the California Bar Exam. I was excited about a potentially long and prosperous career in the legal profession, getting married, having kids, contributing to my community, and living the "American Dream."

 

Peak Oil has caused me to seriously question how realistic this vision of my life is.

 

Whether you're 25 or 75, an attorney or an auto mechanic, what you are about to read will shake the foundations of your life.

 

Below you find a brief explanation of Peak Oil, the ramifications, and what we can do about it. For the sake of simplicity, I have designed the following explanation for somebody unfamiliar with Peak Oil. If you would like more in depth explanations with graphs, charts, and the like, please consult the extensive interviews, articles and sites I have linked to throughout this site.

 

 

What is "Peak Oil"?

 

The question is not "When will we run out of oil?", but rather, "When does oil extraction become prohibitively expensive?"

 

All oil production follows a bell curve, whether in an individual field or on the planet as a whole. On the upslope of the curve production costs are significantly lower than on the downslope when extra effort (expense) is required to extract oil from reservoirs that are emptying out.

 

For the past 150 years, we have been moving up the upslope of the global oil production curve. "Peak Oil" is the industry term for the top of the curve. Once we pass the peak, we will go down the very steep downslope. The further we go down the slope, the more it costs to produce oil, and its cousin, natural gas.

 

In practical terms, this means that if 2000 was the year of Peak Oil, worldwide oil production in the year 2020 will be the same as it was in 1980. However, while production will be at 1980 levels, consumption and cost of extraction will will be at 2020 levels.

 

While we will not run out of oil for anytime soon, it will become so expensive and rare a commodity in the next 5-15 years, that the real world effects will be as though we did run out.

 

When will Peak Oil occur?

 

The most wildly optimistic estimates indicate 2020 will be the year in which worldwide oil production peaks. Generally, these estimates come from the government.

 

A more realistic estimate is between the year 2004-2010. Unfortunately, we won't know that we hit the peak until 3-4 years after we actually hit it. Even on the upslope of the curve, oil production varies a bit from year to year. It is possible that the year 2000 was the year of peak oil production, as production has dipped every year since.

 

The energy industry has quietly acknowledged the seriousness of the situation. For instance in an article entitled “A Revolutionary Transformation,” the president of Exxon Mobil Exploration Company, Jon Thompson stated: "By 2015, we will need to find, develop and produce a volume of new oil and gas that is equal to eight out of every 10 barrels being produced today."

 

 

 

That sounds pretty bad, but I don't drive an SUV or anything. Even if gas prices get high, I could probably still make ends meet. Why should I be concerned?

 

Almost every current human endeavor from transportation, to manufacturing, to electricity to plastics, and especially food production is inextricably intertwined with oil and natural gas supplies.

 

Commercial food production is oil powered. All pesticides are petroleum based, and all commercial fertilizers are ammonia based. Ammonia is produced from natural gas.

 

Oil based agriculture has been fantastic for food production. Oil allowed for farming implements such as tractors and food storage and transport systems such as refrigerators and trucks. As oil production went up, so did food production. As food production went up, so did the population. As the population went up, the demand for food went up, which increased the demand for oil.

 

Unfortunately, we are at a point where the demand for food/oil has been rising exponentially, and is expected to continue to do so. Oil (food) production, however, is about to drop dramatically.

 

Within a few years of Peak Oil occurring, food production will plummet because of the cost of fertilizer will soar. The cost of storing (electricity) and transporting (gasoline) what little food that is produced will also soar. Unless you grow all your own food on your own local, self sustained farm, you will have to deal with the food shortage.

 

Oil is also required for nearly every consumer item, water supply pumping, sewage disposal, garbage disposal, street/park maintenance, hospitals & health systems, police, fire services, and national defense.

 

Additionally, as you are probably already aware, wars are often fought over oil.

 

Thus, the aftermath of Peak Oil will extend far beyond how much you will pay for gas. Simply stated, you can expect: war, starvation, economic recession, possibly even the extinction of homo sapiens.

 

This is known as the post-oil "die-off". The term "die-off" captures perfectly the nightmare that is at our doorstep.

 

For a humorous portrayal of the die-off, read chapter 3, "Oils Well That Ends Well" of Michael Moore's most recent book, "Dude, Where's My Country?"

 

 

What do you mean by "die-off"?

 

Exactly what it sounds like. It is estimated that the world's population will contract to 500 million during the Oil Crash. (current world population: 6 billion)

 

 

After we hit the peak, how are things likely to progress?

 

According to Proffesor Richard Heinberg:

 

1. Rising petrol prices.

 

2. Increase in cost of living.

 

3. Increase in death due to starvation (most likely to be seen in the 3rd world first).

 

4. War (pre-emptive) for resource rich areas.

 

5. Economic collapse and further chaos (mass scale starvation affecting the globe, increasing war, and potentially cannibalism due to food shortages and all that fresh meat laying around).

 

6. Restablization resulting from reduced numbers of humans and conservation of remaining resources (enough to potentially last another 100 years).

 

 

Is it possible that We have already hit Peak Oil and are now in the first stages of the Oil Crash?

 

Yes. As stated above, we won't know we have hit the Peak until a few years after we hit it. Global oil production has dipped every year since 2000, so it is quite possible we've hit the peak.

 

Ample evidence exists that we are in the first stages of the Oil Crash. In the last year (2003), the cost of food has risen 16%-25%. Health care costs have risen 15%. Education costs have risen 20%. These are often excluded from measures of inflation because they are considered "volatile".

 

As of 12/03 the "adjusted" unemployment, which has been squeezed out of as much meaning as conceivably possible, still hovers in the 6% range. However, if you factor in the quality of employment, then the real numbers are closer to 12%-15%.

 

The rolling blackouts experienced in California during Fall 2000, the massive East Coast blackout of August, 2003 and the various other massive blackouts that occurred throughout the world during late summer of 2003, while not directly related to Peak Oil, are simply a sign of things to come.

 

At the Paris Peak Oil Conference in May, 2003, Princeton Professor Kenneth Deffeyes, author of Hubbert's Peak: The Impending World Oil Shortage, explained that Peak Oil actually arrived in 2000 by noting that production has actually been declining since that time.

 

As further evidence of the production peak, Deffeyes noted that since 2000, there has been a 30% drop in stock values, interest rate cuts have not helped, 2.5 million have become unemployed and the employed have been unable to retire, budget surpluses have vanished, the middle class has vanished, and the World Trade Center has vanished.

 

 

What about alternatives like solar, wind, hydrogen etc?

 

Unfortunately, it is too late. It would take us a minimum of 50 years to develop a food delivery infrastructure based on alternative energies. Peak Oil is going to occur within five. Even if we stopped all wars, and committed ourselves entirely to energy alternatives such as solar, wind, hydrogen etc, the best we can hope for is to soften the fall.

 

Oil accounts for 40% of our current global energy supply. There are no alternatives to oil that can supply this much energy, let alone the amount of energy we require to feed a worldwide population that is increasing exponentially.

 

Deluding yourself that the energy problem has been solved or that there is a magic bullet just waiting to be discovered only guarantees that the crisis will hit you and the planet much harder in the end.

 

The end of the Age of Oil is a life and death game. You cannot afford to be cavalier about it. Do not think of prudent, but ultimately temporary, steps that should be taken to soften the blow as solutions.

 

For some important questions you need to be asking about alternative energy, read this article when you have some time.

 

In the meantime, let's briefly examine the commonly proposed oil alternatives:

 

(the following data has been extensively researched by Bruce Thompson, moderator of the Yahoo Group, Running on Empty)

 

Natural Gas:

 

Natural Gas currently supplies 20% of global energy supply. Gas itself will start running out from 2020 on. Demand for natural gas in North America is already outstripping supply, especially as power utilities take the remaining gas to generate electricity. Gas is not suited for existing jet aircraft, ships, vehicles, and equipment for agriculture and other products. Conversion consumes large amounts of energy as well as money. Natural gas also does not provide the huge array of chemical by-products that we depend on oil for.

 

Hydro-Electric:

 

Hydro-Electric power currently accounts for 2.3% of global energy supply, compared with the 40% provided by oil. It is unsuitable for aircrafts and the present 800 million existing vehicles.

 

Solar

 

Solar power accounts for .006% of global energy supply. Energy varies constantly with weather or day/night. Not storable or portable energy like oil or natural gas so unsuited for present vehicles and industry. Batteries bulky, expensive, wear out in 5-10 years. Photovoltaic solar equipment (US$4/watt) is about 15% efficient, giving about 100 watts of the 1 kW per square metre exposed to bright sunshine (enough for one light bulb). A typical solar water panel array can deliver 50% to 85% of a home’s hot water though. Using some of our precious remaining crude oil as fuel for manufacturing solar equipment may be wise.

 

Wind

 

Wind power accounts for .07% of global energy supply. As with solar, energy varies greatly with weather, and is not portable or storable like oil and gas.

 

Hydrogen

 

Hydrogen accounts for 0.01% of global energy. Hydrogen is currently manufactured from methane gas. It takes more energy to create it than the hydrogen actually provides. It is therefore an energy “carrier” not a source. Liquid hydrogen occupies four to eleven times the bulk of equivalent gasoline or diesel. Existing vehicles and aircraft and existing distribution systems are not suited to it. Solar hydrogen might be an option in some of the hot countries.

 

Nuclear

 

Nuclear is currently being abandoned globally. Its ability to soften the oil crash is very problematic due to accidents and terrorism. Many more reactors would be needed. Tons of radioactive materials to transport at risk to public. Nuclear waste disposal is still the major, unresolved problem, especially breeder reactors producing plutonium a nuclear weapon/terrorist raw material, half-life contamination is 24,000 years. All abandoned reactors are radioactive for decades or millennia. Nuclear is not directly suitable for aircraft and vehicles. Adapting nuclear to make hydrogen or other fuels would be a huge, and energy-expensive project. Nuclear fusion is still not available, after 40 years’ research and billions of dollars invested.

 

Coal

 

Coal accounts for 24% of current global energy supply. As a replacement for oil, it is unsuitable due to the fact that it is 50% to 200% heavier than oil per energy unit. Substituting coal for oil would require expansion of coal mining, leading to land ruin and increase in greenhouse gas emissions. In contrast to oil and gas fuels, fine-tuning the rate at which coal burns is difficult. It is therefore used in power stations to make electricity, wasting half of its energy content.

 

Coal mining operations run on oil fuels as do coal-mining machinery and transportation. Pollution is also a major problem. A single coal-fired station can produce a million tons of solid waste each year. Burning coal in homes pollutes air with acrid smog containing acid gases and particles. Large pollution & environmental problems: (Smog, greenhouse gases, and acid rain). Finally, liquid fuels from coal are very inefficient, and huge amounts of water required.

 

Non-Conventional Sources Such as Shale, Tar Sand, Coalbed Methane, Ethanol, and Biomass

 

These non-conventional sources currently account for 6% of US gas supply. Each of these alternatives would require a huge investment in research and infrastructure to exploit them, plus large amounts of now-expiring oil, before they could be brought online.

 

For example, in Canada about 200 thousand barrels a day are being produced in Alberta of non-conventional oil, but it takes about 2 barrels of oil in energy investment to produce 3 barrels of oil equivalent from those resources. Additionally, the environmental costs are horrendous and the process uses a tremendous amount of fresh water and also natural gas, both of which are in limited supply.

 

The major problem with non-conventional oil is that they cannot be exploited before the oil shocks cripple attempts to bring them on line, and the rate of extraction is far too slow to meet the huge global energy demand.

 

 

What about that new technology that can turn anything into oil?

 

"Thermal depolymerization" which can transform many kinds of waste into oil, could help us raise our energy efficiency as we lose power due to oil depletion. While it could help us ameliorate the crash, it is not a true solution.

 

Like all other forms of alternative energy, we have run out of time to implement it before the crash. Currently, only one thermal depolymerization plant is operational. Thousands of such plants would need to come online before this technology would make even a small difference in our situation.

 

Furthermore, whatever comes out of the process must carry less useful energy than what went into the process, as required by the laws of thermodynamics. Finally, most of the waste input (such as plastics and tires) requires high grade oil to make in the first place.

 

The biggest problem with thermal depolymerization is that it is being advertised as a means to maintain business as usual. Such advertising promotes further consumption, provides us with a dangerously false sense of security, and encourages us to continue thinking that we don't need to make this issue a priority.

 

 

I have an idea - if we do "X", followed by "Y", won't that solve the problem, at least to a certain degree?

 

I get several emails per day in which the author offers a well thought out but ultimately futile or unviable

solution to the problem. Typically, these solutions offer permutations of the energy alternatives discussed above and suffer from at least one of two deficiencies:

 

1. They are based on a serious underestimation of the importance of oil and natural gas. Our entire civilization - everything - is based on having an abundant supply of cheap oil and gas. Oil is so fundamental to our existence that even a small gap between our (ever increasing) demand and (dwindling) supply will send the economy into a tailspin that will make the Great Depression look rosy by comparison.

 

Our economy is based on expansion and growth. Growth requires energy. We get our energy primarily from oil and gas. Without a surplus of oil and gas, we don't have enough energy to grow. Without growth, our economy collapses.

 

2. The author's idea, even if it is pragmatic, would likely take 25-50 years to implement on a societal level. As stated in the previous quetion, we are out of time. Had we followed President Carter's admonition to start preparing in 1980 for the end of the oil age in 2000-2005, maybe things would be different.

 

 

There is nothing to worry about. When things get bad enough, we'll switch to an alternative source of energy.

 

If the previous three questions have not made it perfectly clear that no alternative sources of energy currently exist that can replace oil and gas, then perhaps this quote from Michael Ruppert will help crystalize the situation for you:

 

For all of the Pollyanna advocates of alternative energy who assure us that there is nothing to worry about, I suggest that they go and live in the northeast today and see how warm their windmills, solar panels, biomass and hydrogen myths keep them.

 

Where is the infrastructure to employ even the pitiful solutions that solar, wind and biomass might provide?

 

Are you saying we shouldn't even bother to pursue these energy alternatives?

 

No, not at all. Whatever civilization emerges after the crash will be powered by alternative energy. From an individual standpoint, you definitely want to look into these alternatives. However, from a societal standpoint, we have waited way too long for these alternatives to save us.

 

Put simply, if you're wandering, "Certainly, there must be a way we can stop the disaster?", the answer is "No, there isn't."

 

If your'e wandering, "Can we ameliorate the disaster?", the answer is "Maybe."

 

The following is an excerpt from Proffesor Richard Heinberg's book, The Party's Over: Oil, War, and the Fate of Industrial Civilizations., in which he explains the lengths we need to go to to handle the situation:

 

Clearly, we will need to find substitutes for oil. But an analysis of the current energy alternatives is not reassuring.

 

The hard math of energy resource analysis yields an uncomfortable but unavoidable prospect: even if efforts are intensified now to switch to alternative energy sources, after the oil peak industrial nations will have less energy available to do useful work - including the manufacturing and transporting of goods, the growing of food, and the heating of homes.

 

To be sure, we should be investing in alternatives and converting our industrial infrastructure to use them. If there is any solution to industrial societies' approaching energy crises, renewables plus conservation will provide it. Yet in order to achieve a smooth transition from non-renewables to renewables, decades will be needed - and we do not have decades before the peaks in the extraction rates of oil and natural gas occur.

 

Moreover, even in the best case, the transition will require the massive shifting of investment from other sectors of the economy (such as the military) toward energy research and conservation. And the available alternatives will likely be unable to support the kinds of transportation, food, and dwelling infrastructure we now have; thus the transition will entail an almost complete redesign of industrial societies.

 

 

What is the government doing to solve this problem?

 

It may come as no surprise to you that our leaders are doing more to exacerbate the problem then they are to solve it. Rather then developing a reasonable plan for handling the coming Oil Crash, our leaders have decided to make a last ditch grab for whatever recoverable oil is available by stealing it from the nations that have it. With control over the world's dwindling supplies of recoverable oil, they will have the ability to choose who lives and who dies.

 

If you aren't making over $200,000/year, our leaders don't care whether you live or die.

 

As an example, according to the Veterans Administration, 29% of our troops from the first Gulf War are now disabled with Gulf War Syndrome. That is the highest casualty rate of any war we have ever fought. Since the V.A.'s defintion of "disabled" is a high one, the true percentage is more likely in the 35%-70% range. You will never hear about this on the mainstream news. If the truth about GWS got into the public domain, nobody, and I mean nobody would volunteer for the military or allow themselves to be drafted.

 

The Reserve and National Guard troops that are now in Iraq have not been issued sidearms or bullet proof vests.

 

If our leaders care this little for our troops, how little do you think they care about you?

 

Furthermore, at least 40% of our Senators are millionaires. They have enough money that they will be able to feed their families even if the price of food doubles, triples or quadruples. So even if they know about Peak Oil, they're not going to be the ones doing most of the suffering.

 

Remember, these are the same people who give us a color coded chart, a roll of duct tape, and a video of a bearded, homeless guy getting a free dental exam as solutions to terrorism.

 

Folks, we're on our own.

 

The oil companies are so greedy that they will come up with an alternative to keep making money, right?

 

First of all, I question the wisdom of trusting the oil companies to save you. As our brave men and women in Iraq know far too well, the oil companies are more likely to sacrifice you than to save you.

 

The oil companies first realized in the 1970's that worldwide oil production would peak sometime around 2005, give or take 5 years. When it became obvious that all forms of alternative energy suffer from various financial shortcomings, the oil companies decided that the most profitable solution was to acquire control of our government. Once their executives were installed as our legislators and leaders, they could use the U.S. military to steal what little oil is left from the nations that have it.

 

At the Paris Peak Oil Conference, Dutch economist Maarten Van Mourik of the Netherlands Economic Institute explained that becasue of the financial shortcomings of all currently available forms of alternative energy, a sudden crash is the profitable solution for the oil companies.

 

Furthermore, according to Dr. Colin Campbell:

 

"The major oil companies are merging and downsizing and outsourcing and not investing in new refineries because they know full well that production is set to decline and that the exploration opportunities are getting less and less.

 

The companies have to sing to the stock market, and merger hides the collapse of the weaker brethren. The staff is purged on merger and the combined budget ends up much less than the sum of the previous components. Besides, a lot of the executives and bankers make a lot of money from the merger."

 

Expecting the oil companies, the government, or anybody else to solve this problem for us is simply suicidal. You, me, and every other "regular person" needs to be actively engaged in addressing this issue if there is to be any hope for humanity.

 

I think you are underestimating the human spirit. Humanity always adapts to challenges. We wil just adapt to this too.

 

Absolutely, we will adapt. Part of that adaptation process will include most of us dying if we don't take massive action right now.

 

The human spirit is capable of some miraculous things. We need a miracle right now, so the human spirit had better get its' ass in gear, pronto.

 

Unfortunately, there is no law that says when humanity adapts to catastrophe, everybody gets to survive. Think of any mass tragedy connected to war or resources such as oil, land, food, buffalo, etc. . The societies affected usually survive, but in a drastically different and often unrecognizable form.

 

 

The "end of the world" is here, once again. So what's new? Y2k was supposed to be the end of the world, and it turned out to be much ado about nothing.

 

What's new is that this is the real thing. It isn't a fire drill. It isn't paranoid hysteria. It is the real deal.

 

George W. Bush's Energy Advisor, Matthew Simmons, addressed this issue at the Paris Peak Oil Conference, stating:

 

"I think it is human nature, basically, to say that we really like to have pleasant thoughts. The one crying wolf is abandoned unless the wolf turns out to be already at the front door, and by then, the cry is generally too late. And crises are basically problems, by definition, that have gone ignored. And all great crises were ignored until it became too late to do anything about it..."

 

Peak Oil isn't "Y2K Reloaded." In contrast to Peak Oil, Y2K was an "if", not a "when". We know that Peak Oil is going to happen. The only question is at what point between 2004-2010 it will occur, if it hasn't occurred already.

 

Y2K was "announced" in the early to mid 1990's, a full 5 - 10 years before the problem was to occur. Peak Oil will occur within 1 - 6 years, and we have made no preparations to deal with it. The preparations necessary to deal with the Oil Crash will require a complete overhaul of every aspect of our civilization. This is much more complex than fixing a computer bug.

 

Furthermore, oil is more fundamental to our existence than anything else, even computers. Had the Y2K predictions come true, our civilization would have been knocked back to 1965. With time, we would have recovered.

 

When the Oil Crash comes, our civilization is going to get knocked back to 1765. We will not recover, as there is no economically available oil left to discover that would help us recover.

 

 

Why haven't I heard about this on the nightly news?

 

Peak Oil has been reported in the alternative media. If you pay close attention, Peak Oil has also been reported in the mainstream media. However, it is usually confined to the back page of a newspaper or an obscure part of a news agency's website. For instance, cnn.com recently ran an article on Peak Oilconfirming that worldwide oil reserves are 80% less than previously thought, that worldwide oil production will peak within the next 6 years, and that once production peaks, gas prices will reach "disastrous levels."

 

There are a couple of reasons why you haven't heard more:

 

1. 75% of the media (all newspapers, television and radio stations) are owned by 5 companies. Each of these companies is heavily invested in the energy industry. If they were to publicly announce the truth about Peak Oil, investment in the stock market would dry up, the economy would plunge, chaos would ensue, and the whole deck of cards would come crashing down before our leaders and corporate elite have a chance to secure their own well-being.

 

2. The ramifications of Peak Oil are so serious that it is hard for anybody, including journalists and politicians, to accept it.

 

3. The average American may not be emotionally prepared to deal with Peak Oil. Peak Oil is a literal death sentence to much of our population as well as a figurative death sentence to the energy intensive American way of life. When faced with such news, most people choose to "kill the messenger."

 

 

 

Do you think people will wake up in time for us to avert, or at least soften the crash?

 

I hope so, but I'm not betting on it.

 

According to author George Monbiot, "The only rational response to both the impending end of the oil age and the menace of global warming is to redesign our cities, our farming and our lives. But this cannot happen without massive political pressure, and our problem is that no one ever rioted for austerity."

 

 

Does This Have Anything To Do With the Wars in Iraq and Afghanistan?

 

George Bush, Dick Cheney, Condi Rice and Donald Rumsfeld are all former executives for large oil companies. They have known about Peak Oil for decades.

 

In the context of Peak Oil, the wars in the Middle East are not wars of greed. Rather, they are wars for survival.

 

You can expect the U.S. to invade Syria, Iran and Saudi Arabia within the next 2-5 years. As you watch the news, you can already notice the hints are being dropped. "Iran has WMD" or "Syria isn't cooperating in the war on terror" or "Saudi Arabia is funding terrorism". "The war on terror will last for decades." The stage is being set so that the American public will accept these future invasions.

 

(On a related note, If you want to learn more about the truth regarding 9-11, check my other site www.warisaracket.net, or Micheal Ruppert's amazing newsletter at www.fromthewilderness.com)

 

 

What's going to happen when recently industrialized China decides it needs what little oil is left as bad as the United States does?

 

World War III

 

What about other "Westernized" countries? Don't they need oil also?

 

No country is safe. For instance, several high level officials in the Bush Administration are pushing for a plan to force nations to "choose between Paris and Washington."

 

Similarly, Canada is required by NAFTA to sell 60% of its natural gas to the U.S. When Canada begins to experience the energy shortage, they may seek to change the terms of that law. The U.S.

is unlikely to allow them to do so.

 

Well at least we don't have to worry about Russia, right?

 

In October, President Putin called the US a "Rogue state" and reserved the right for a unilateral, first nuclear strike against the US. Reason: The US is not only monopolizing Russia's oil suppliers, they are also buying Russian oil companies.

 

You forget about North Korea?

 

Oh yeah, them too.

 

 

War with Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia, China, France Russia and Korea? Won't that require a reinstitution of the draft?

 

George Bush recently approved a massive increase for the Selective Service's 2005 budget. The Selective Service is currently undergoing a massive overhaul and has been told it needs to be ready to report to the president in June, 2005. This means you can expect a reinstitution of the military draft some time thereafter.

 

Essentially, every young man has been earmarked as a solider for future oil wars.

 

I have a son. How do I keep him from being drafted?

 

Check objector.org

 

Thank God I'm a woman. At least I don't have to worry about being drafted.

 

Not so fast. If you are a female and work in the medical field, you may be subject to the Health Care Personnel Delivery System, better known as the medical draft.

 

According to Lewis Brodsky, the acting director of the Selective Service System, "We're going to elevate that kind of draft to be a priority."

 

 

What type of weapons are being developed for these oil wars?

 

In "Rebuilding America's Defenses", Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz explains that the U.S. will develop "advanced forms of biological warfare that can target specific genotypes."

 

In other words, weapons that target certain ethnic groups.

 

Don't feel left out if you happen to be white, North Korea is developing an "ethnic bomb" that targets whites only.

 

China is developing truly horrific post-nuclear weapons employing "molecular nano-technology."

 

I think I'm going to be sick. . .

 

I know the feeling.

 

Guess what? It gets worse. When you have some extra time and really want to be put in a good mood, read what the U.S. Army War College wrote in 1997 regarding the military's role in the 21st century.

 

 

Does Peak Oil have anything to do with legislation such as Patriot Act I, and Patriot Act II?

 

When food production plummets, the only way to control the population will be through the institution of a fascist style police state. The passage of the Patriot Acts are the foundation of that state.

 

Does Peak Oil have anything to do with Bush's plan to go to the Moon and then onto Mars?

 

We're going back to the Moon and onto Mars for three reasons:

 

1. To Develop Advanced Oil Drilling Techniques.

 

According to Haliburton scientist Steve Streich:

 

Drilling technology for Mars research will be useful for the oil and gas industries. The oil industry is in need of a revolutionary drilling technique that allows quicker and more economical access to oil reserves. A Mars mission presents an unprecedented opportunity to develop that drilling technique and improve our abilities to support oil and gas demands on Earth.

 

2. To Develop and Deploy Space Based Weapons

 

According to the Uniton of Concerned Scientists, the first prototype space based weapon is scheduled to be in orbit by 2007 or 2008 - before the end of a second Bush term.

 

3. To Mine "Helium-3" In Hopes That It Can Be Used As Fuel

 

Helium 3 is an element barely found on Earth, but found in abundance on the moon. Researchers see it as the perfect fuel source: extremely potent, nonpolluting, with virtually no radioactive by-product.

 

Helium 3 sounds great, until you find out that a nuclear fusion reactor is needed for it to be of any use. Even after 40 years of research and billions of dollars spent, nobody has been able to build such a reactor.

 

Additionally, the economics of extracting and transporting Helium 3 from the moon are particularly problematic. Even if scientists solved the physics of helium 3 fusion, "it would be economically unfeasible . . you'd have to strip-mine large surfaces of the moon" according to Jim Benson, chairman of SpaceDev in Poway, California.

 

Furthermore, implementation of use of Helium 3 on Earth would require many technologies yet to be created. Foremost among them are super conducting magnets, plasma control and diagnostics, robotically controlled mining equipment, life support facilities, rocket launch vehicle, telecommunications, power electronics etc.

 

The fact that the Bush Administration is pursuing such an unviable source of fuel underscores how desperate the situation is getting.

 

 

Clearly, we have a real problem, but you're describing the worst case scenario, right?

 

I'm describing the most likely scenario.

 

The best possible scenario is 2-3 billion lives lost instead of 5.5 billion or more.

 

The worst case scenario is extinction, as the wars that will accompany the worldwide oil shortage will likely be the most horrific and widespread that humanity has ever experienced.

 

If we get Bush out of office, will that solve the problem?

 

Peak Oil is happening with or without Bush. In fact, you may have the Bush administration to thank for the couple extra years of cheap oil he is robbing from the Middle East. This gives us in the U.S. some extra time to prepare for the post-peak Oil Crash. (Note - I in no way feel this justifies the invasion of Iraq or Afghanistan)

 

The President, his administration, and most of our legislators have been reduced to ceremonial figureheads for the energy and defense industries. These industries control both parties.

 

None of the presidential candidates except Dennis Kucinich have publicly mentioned Peak Oil even once.

 

In other words, regardless of who gets elected, we're on our own.

 

 

I heard there is a "water crisis" on the way and it's tied into the oil crisis. Is there any truth to this?

 

According to Matthew Simmons, "without …energy, we have no sustainable water, no sustainable food, and no sustainable healthcare…"

 

I've got credit card or student loan debt. How will my debts be affected by Peak Oil?

 

When things go south, and as nations scramble for dwindling resources, debts will get called in to provide the one financial ingredient that can mitigate a serious crisis: liquidity.

 

You're not even trained in science. What makes you think you know what you are talking about?

 

I am simply taking what the true experts are saying and condensing it into a bite size format. Alot of the Peak Oil websites are not what I would call "newbie friendly." Also, many fail to explain Peak Oil in the context of recent world events. So I created this one.

 

I bet your'e some kind of raving, monomaniacal, left wing freak. Why should I think you're any more credible than every other crazy person with a website?

 

If you think I'm writing this as a result of a mental disturbance or political agenda, then ignore everything on this page and look it up for yourself on Google.

 

I'm by nature an optimist. Peak Oil sounds too pessimistic for me to accept as reality.

 

If you think that Peak Oil is too "pessimistic" for your tastes, ask yourself:

 

1. Was Winston Churchill being a "pessimist" in 1940 when he told Britain, "I have nothing to offer you but blood, toil, tears, and sweat."?

 

2. Was Albert Einstein being a "pessimist" when he told FDR in 1939 that Nazi Germany was in the process of developing an atomic bomb?

 

There is a difference between an "optimist" and a fool. An optimist is somebody who looks at bleak facts and decides to make the best of the situation that they can. A fool is somebody who looks at bleak facts and decides to ignore them because they are too upsetting.

 

This is not a case of "looking at the glass half empty." We are looking at barrel of oil, and it is not simply half empty. It is totally empty.

 

 

I'm having trouble believing that a country as powerful as the United States is on the verge of collapse.

 

Let's look at what has happened to the U.S. in just the last four years:

 

World Trade Center destroyed, budget surplus vanished, dysfunctional health care, honest elections gone, 2.5 million jobs lost, 433 publicly traded companies gone bankrupt, social security close to gone, government oversight of big business gone, weakened infrastructure, shrinking middle class, undermined civil liberties, tainted food supply.

 

Folks, we've taking a beating these last few years. Now, we're about to start losing blood (oil).

 

We won't be the first superpower to collapse. This is what happens when any civilization overshoots its resource base. It isn't a new thing. Over the course of history, the collapse of civilizations has been as inevitable as death and taxes. Any good book on the fall of the Roman Empire will gave you case of deja vu next time you watch the evening news.

 

Those of us lucky enough to live in the United States are like the cool kids who got invited to the big party. Unfortunately, the party's over.

 

How can we best deal with Peak Oil as a society?

 

Peak Oil is going to happen. People are going to die. We cannot stop it. But we may be able to minimize the amount of suffering while maximizing the chances of building a successful post-oil civilization if we immediately come together as a species and do the following:

 

1. Stop all wars and other nonessential economic activity. Dedicate all of our time and resources to developing energy alternatives.

 

2. Stop having kids. We cannot feed our current population. When the Oil Crash comes, the situation will go from bad to worse to nightmareish. More children means an increased demand for food that we cannot produce.

 

3. No more pets. They require food that needs to be used to feed people.

 

4 No more beef eating, as cattle raising is extremely energy intensive.

 

5. Drastically cut our energy consumption. This means eating produce that is grown locally, investing in hybrid cars, substituting bicycles for cars, limiting our purchase of consumer goods to those that are absolutely necessary, and no air travel unless absolutely necessary.

 

 

 

What should I do to prepare as an individual?

 

Well first of all, it is absolutely imperative that you do not allow yourself to succumb to a fear based consciousness. This may be difficult as Peak Oil is going to necessitate absolutely massive changes in our way of life. However, if we allow ourselves to be overtaken by fear, we will only exacerbate the problem and duplicate the system that has brought us into this situation.

 

Personally, I recommend the first step to be educating yourself about Peak Oil and its ramifications. Then notify as many of your friends and family as possible. Seek out like minded people and come up with some type of a plan.

 

Unfortunately, I know very little at this point regarding how to survive without the amenities of modern civilization. As I learn more, I will post what I learn on this website under Prepare.

 

 

Should I be getting a gun and hiding in the woods?

 

If a "hole-up-in-the-woods-with-guns" model of preparation appeals to you, I encourage you read as much as possible about other civilizations that have crashed and burned. While the survival model works in Hollywood, it has never worked in history. When societies collapse, the rural areas go first. Little enclaves of survivalists sitting on stockpiles of food, weapons, and gold are way too tempting a target for the bandit cultures that evolve in post collapse rural areas.

 

Speaking of bandit cultures, you can be assured that your in-laws will come looking for food and supplies if you have them stockpiled.

 

On a personal note, I won't be getting a gun. My philosophy is why bother extending my stay in hotel earth for a bit longer if I have to contribute more violence to an already violent place?

 

Gosh, this sounds like some type of Mad-Max scenario.

 

Such comparisons are problematic as they tend to trivialize the seriousness of our situation.

 

History, not Hollywood, is likely the best guide for what we should expect. Again, any good book on the fall of the Roman Empire should provide you with a reasonable approximation of what the next 5-50 years will be like. Factor in modern day weaponary, and you can see that we have a real mess on our hands.

 

I have work, school, bills, kids, traffic, etc to deal with. How am I supposed to prepare for the Oil Crash when I'm barely keeping up with life as is?

 

Join the club. You're not the only person who has day to day problems.

 

If Peak Oil is too much for you to worry about, feel free to ignore the facts and stick your head in the sand. Remember, however, that when you stick your head in the sand, you leave your ass exposed for the world to kick.

 

 

Is there anything positive about Peak Oil?

 

It's hard to say that there is a "bright side" to Peak Oil, but here goes:

 

Most of us in consumer based countries like the U.S. are actually very nice people. In our hearts, we really do believe in ideals such as equality, brotherhood, and justice. We would never abuse, mistreat, or kill somebody just to get something of theirs. However, to support our oil based lifestyle, our government goes out and does these things for us.

 

If the average American knew the amount of suffering that went into producing every piece of plastic in their home, every gallon of oil in their gastank, and every piece of food on their dinnertable, they would likely be sick to their stomach and would be willing to do whatever it takes to change things.

 

Peak Oil will force us to change things. Peak Oil does mean that the end of the world as we know it is at our doorstep. It also means that we have a chance to create a new world in which humanity lives in harmony with itself and the earth. Such a lifestyle is no longer simply "the right thing to do." It is now a necessity if we wish to survive as a species.

 

In this regard, a 1968 quote from Robert Kennedy is instructive.

 

 

Does this have anything to do with evolution and biology?

 

Quite possibly. In every species, the "over adapted" members of that species tend to die off and be replaced by simpler versions. In the case of humanity, hyper-industrialized societies such as the United States will become extinct, while simpler, more peaceful societies will continue.

 

In what may amount to a rather ironic twist of fate, Peak Oil may be evolution's way of turning the "survival of the fittest" theory on its head. Traditionally, we have defined evolutionary-social fitness by looking at things like cunning, military strength, ability to dominate etc. . However, the only societies that are going to survive the Oil Crash will be those that define fitness by looking at more benevolent traits, not the least of which is the ability to control what your leaders do with your tax dollars.

 

For instance, the U.S. dropped so much Depleted Uranium on Iraq during the 1991 Gulf War that birth defects in Iraqi babies increased by 500 percent in the next 12 years. In some cases, the radiation was so bad that 67% of American Gulf War veterans ended up having babies with serious birth defects. In 2003, we dropped so much Depleted Uranium on Baghdad that radiation levels rose to 2,000 times normal. Depleted Uranium has a half life of 4.5 billion years. Essentially, we have eliminated the Iraqi population (and many of our own troops) from the healthy human gene pool. If you want to see a highly disturbing video about the effects of D.U., watch this.

 

In light of the horrors, one could argue that Peak Oil may be evolution's way of eliminating those societies in which the citizenry is either too heartless, spineless or brainless as to not prevent their leaders from committing horrible atrocities in the pursuit of resources.

 

 

You make some good points, but don't you think you're tone is a bit alarmist?

 

We are talking about the end of industrial civilization here. Given the circumstances, I think a bit of an alarmist tone is appropriate.

 

How am I supposed to go about my daily life and maintain a positive mental attitude now that I know industrial civilization is about to collapse?

 

As an eternal optimist, I've decided to look at the future as a giant episode of "Survivor."

 

All joking aside, this is something I've struggled with considerably. Personally, the Conversations with God series of books has helped give me some peace of mind and put the whole situation in perspective. I'm writing an entire article on how I've been able to maintain my jovial demeanor and sense of humor while dealing with the harsh reality of Peak Oil. When I finish it, I will post it on this site.

 

In the meantime I suggest a good, stiff drink.

 

 

One last question, when the Oil Crash comes, do you think society will finally make good on Shakespeare's admonition to "kill all the lawyers?"

 

Uh-oh . . .

 

Source: http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/

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immediate thoughts:

 

- explains invasion of iraq

 

- now's the time to get rich so i don't starve

 

- oil companies aren't that blind as to just be content to let their industry slowly die. are they? I understand that the price of oil will slowly rise until it is a 'rich' thing, but the oil industry itself must have something in mind for the future. Be it atlernative energy or new reserves, they can't be that blind.

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it was bound to happen....i just didnt think so soon..

 

 

 

 

im moving in with the tribes of africa..

 

 

 

but first im gonna kill some people.

 

 

 

or kill myself.

 

nono..kill some people, then if i cant get to africa...kill myself.

 

all that school for nothing..goddamnit..i wish i was born in the 20s or something.

 

 

 

 

im fucking scared...it all makes sence...im really fucking scared.

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we are sitting on our own gas station now. it doesn't matter.

 

we OWN the 2nd largest oil fields in IRAQ. We own *ALASKA*

we can invade mexico if necessary ( a few billion more barrels.)

 

The county turning into a fascit police state? Why would that happen if there is no oil? Totalitarian states require technology to survive and if technology is powered by oil. Then how can you have a fascist police state without oil?

 

And etchnic bio -weapons are a current reality, they are developed and done. Israel has anti-arab bio weapons.

 

People can always survive by resorting to traditional methods of survival, such as agragarian lifestyles, etc.

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“The county turning into a fascit police state? Why would that happen if there is no oil? Totalitarian states require technology to survive and if technology is powered by oil. Then how can you have a fascist police state without oil?”

 

 

 

There will still be oil around…just enough to protect the rich.

 

None of this is a surprise, and it will for sure go down. Too bad my country doesn’t think it necessary to beef up it’s military.

 

Stiff drink is right.

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THAT WAS A HUGE PIECE OF THE PUZZLE I WAS MISSING. IT WAS SOOTHING TO READ THAT EVEN IF ITS SCARY AS SHIT.

 

ENJOY YOUR TIME .... MAKE THE MOST OF IT ... AND WE ALL HAVE THE POWER TO WRITE SOME OF THIS SHIT UP FOR THE MASSES STILL SLEEPING !!! HELP OUT WHO YOU CAN AND MAKE YOUR PEACE WITH YOUR SPIRITUAL SIDE.

AFTER THAT JUST ENJOY THE SHOW !!!

 

 

i am an optimist .........

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The next great war will stave away some of our food shortage problems,

I promise. All we have to do is let a plague loose in China, then

repopulate it with immunized humans. I'm sorry.. I have nothing against

the Chinese but billions of people? Come the fuck on.

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if that happens i predict massive nuclear power stations all across the world. a moblization towards renewable energy.

besides that this article totally fails to account for the economics side of oil. as oil becomes more expensive people will seek cheaper solutions. capitalism simply regulates finite resources by applying a price for it. the price is the determining factor in how resources are allocated. obviously the more expensive something is the less people use it, and therefore they seek alternatives. alternative technology would become a profitable investment vehicle...and our dependance on oil would lessen once these new technologies are developed.

has anyone heard of hemp powered vehicles? thats one example. home heating could be solarized, theres always wood + coal, etc, etc.

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Guest im not witty

^did you not read the whole thing? the article doesnt fail to mention alternatives, theres a whole section deovted to them but it DOES mention numerous times that our infrastructure is so built around oil, that were fucked regardless. even if we stopped right now and worked towards new sources of energy it would take decades to build a whole new kind of system that doesnt use oil. we dont have decades. shit is going to get hectic f'real.

bottoms up.

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the whole purpose of this article is to scare people and get attention. It's based on opinion, which it disguises as valid points because -the author said- they were valid points. overexagerated. and the bell theory works if you factor out the oil in n. and s. america, alaska, and africa that is reserved for when we suck asia dry. It also only works if it were a signle company by itself processing the oil which it isn't. this is just another michael moore 'scare to get attention' tactic.

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mmmk...lets say the worst case sinario FINALLY goes down....

 

that is going to be the most BADASS WAR EVER. think about it.. the earth is on its final resorces for survival..and the supercountrys will be going at whats left for them to live.

 

fuckin chinas gonna send like...nucular powered troops over..and we meet in africa to fight...n like we sent bio troops over and its like....ROBOT WAR...then like...WE develop something ....that makes....ZOMBIES! so like china gets fucked cuz they have zombies to deal with...so they fucking bomb us with .....MUTATO BOMBS and we all mutate into like....weird things..nstuff.

 

then like we fight crazy for like 30 years...and drop all sorts of crazy ass bombs..and destroy both supercontinents....and iceland cuz bejork is stupid..

 

then australia is like WTF?

 

and zombies rome the earth devowering the survivors..

 

 

and japan.....japan was like FUCK THIS and they turned themselvs into those osio robots and live in tunnles only to merge when the chemicles and bad shit on top finally dissipate...and the robots come up and set up these self powered machiens that the japs made befor going down..the are these artificial wooms..and the robots start setting up buldings using the resorses and purifying the earth while the fetuses grow...

 

and so the robots like ...totaly purify the earth by like burning it down and digging up new soil..and the plant all this cloned shit....

 

so any way..like the fetuses grow and the robots rais them and when they teach them and they grow up...the go back into the grownd for the next wave to reproduce itself...

 

and we get FUTILE JAPAN!!!!

 

and its gonna be like those ninja animes that are all crazy..

 

 

BEST STORY EVER!

 

i would rize from the dead to watch a documentary about that war or read a book about it..

 

 

also..."if" this is true WHOS gonna write that book?

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  • 2 years later...

Hell yea. Bring it on.

 

Fucking move to a cabin in the woods on my boys land..fish,hunt cook my food over a fire,build my home,have a family..life would be good to me. Im kind of at peace with the thought of the world collapsing because of the oil shortage thats bound to happen.

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