Imminent peak oil could burst global economic bubble: study

acri1

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Imminent peak oil could burst global economic bubble: study

By Nafeez Ahmed, The Guardian
Wednesday, November 20, 2013 7:31 EST

Gasoline-pump-via-AFP.jpg

Topics: Major industrial sectorspeak oiluniversity of maryland

Major industrial sectors are at risk without a swift transition to a more resilient, post-carbon economy

A new multi-disciplinary study led by the University of Maryland calls for immediate action by government, private and commercial sectors to reduce vulnerability to the imminent threat of global peak oil, which could put the entire US economy and other major industrial economies at risk.

The peer-reviewed study contradicts the recent claims within the oil industry that peak oil has been indefinitely offset by shale gas and other unconventional oil and gas resources. A report by the World Energy Council (WEC) last month, for instance, stated that peak oil was unlikely to be realised within the next forty years at least. This is due to global reserves being 25 per cent higher than in 1993. According to the WEC report, 80% of global energy is currently produced by either oil, gas or coal, a situation which is likely to continue for the foreseeable future.

The new University of Maryland study, in contrast, conducts a review of the scientific literature on global oil production and argues that the bulk of independent, credible studies indicate that a “production peak for conventional oil [is] likely before 2030″, with a “significant risk” it could occur “before 2020.” Unconventional oil such as Canadian tar sands is “unlikely to expand enough to fill the gap”, and this also applies to “shale oil and gas.” Shale wells, the study argues, “reach their maximum production levels (peaks) much earlier than conventional ones and are therefore difficult to operate profitably.”

Although US Geological Survey (USGS), Energy Information Administration (EIA) and International Energy Agency (IEA) estimates project that the decline of conventional resources will be more than compensated by ‘yet to be developed’ and ‘yet to be found’ fields, other scientific studies find that these “projections are overly optimistic.”

The new study is published in the journal Global Environmental Change (GEC) by the leading academic science publisher, Elsevier. GEC is the most influential geography and environmental studies journal in the world.

Mapping out the key sectors most vulnerable to the impact of peak oil, the paper concludes:

“Given that there is substantial evidence that Peak Oil is imminent, the paucity of research looking at the potential economic impacts of this phenomenon is surprising.”

The study notes that “oil shortages pose a high risk for economies” and points to evidence that high oil prices were a “partial cause” for the 2008 global financial crisis. Focusing on the US economy – the biggest consumer of oil and oil-based products in the world – the study found that all major industrial sectors were at risk, including food and food processing, primary agriculture, metals and metals processing, and transport:

“Because such sectors contribute substantially to US GDP, and because they connect to so many other sectors, they could put the entire economy at risk in the case of Peak Oil or other supply interruptions. The present economic system relies strongly on them and their output may become significantly more expensive due to oil price increases.

The IMF has calculated that for the global economy to grow by 4% in the next five years, oil production must increase by 3% per year. This looks increasingly unlikely.

Last year, a paper in Nature co-authored by Sir David King, the UK government’s former chief scientific adviser and currently the government’s climate change envoy, concluded that a “tipping point” in the global oil supply had been reached since 2005, with global conventional production hitting a ceiling of around 75 million barrels per day (mbd) despite price increases of 15% a year. That paper also noted that production at shale gas wells can drop 60 to 90% in the first year of operation.

There are two prime ways to adapt to these potential risks, according to the new study. One is to decrease the vulnerability of critical sectors:

“Examples may include curbing the strong dependence on artificial fertilizers by promoting organic farming techniques, or reducing the overall distance traveled by people and goods by fostering local, decentralized economies.”

The other is to identify substitutes for vulnerable sectors with outputs from less vulnerable sectors.

The problem with the latter approach is that “our society is reaching limits in the possible global production flows of many natural resources” including coal, phosphorous, uranium and other minerals. However, the risks mapped out here could help “in designing a roadmap toward a post-carbon economy.”

Dr Nafeez Ahmed is executive director of the Institute for Policy Research & Development and author of A User’s Guide to the Crisis of Civilisation: And How to Save It among other books. Follow him on Twitter @nafeezahmed

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/11/20/imminent-peak-oil-could-burst-global-economic-bubble-study/


Well, that's not good. :merchant:
 

ill

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Mother Russia & Greater Israel
We can only hope it happens. Our species will be better in the long run.

Why yes, lets bring more chaos into this world during our lifetime so somewhere down the line things may get better :stopitslime:

Peak oil has been screamed for decades. The article doesn't mention anything that could change it. You know, like solar technology, nuclear power, electric cars, etc. All of these things become more financially feasible as the oil supply drops and prices go up. There will be a shift down the road from oil into electric power and it will negate any possible economic loss brought upon by oil. Humans are the smartest animals on this planet. We always find a way to survive. We've run on oil for what 100-200 years? If its "peak" is now, then we still have another 100-200 years to perfect other energy solutions that are sustainable and won't burst the global economies bubble.
 

Richard Wright

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Exxon will always be the most profitable company in the world. They just want another excuse to raise prices.
 

ill

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We can only hope it happens. Our species will be better in the long run.

Yes, that's precisely what I said.

It is precisely what you implied. That our society will be better if peak oil hits and a global economic bubble gets popped setting the entire world back 100 years. Thats pretty much chaos and a free for all. What are you so disenfranchised from that you want to press the reset button?
 

Type Username Here

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It is precisely what you implied. That our society will be better if peak oil hits and a global economic bubble gets popped setting the entire world back 100 years. Thats pretty much chaos and a free for all. What are you so disenfranchised from that you want to press the reset button?


I literally meant "that's precisely what I said". That was exactly what I was advocating.

The reason the threat of chaos and free for all exists is because of this primitive system we live in. It's unsustainable. We keep putting band aids on it, going from bubble to bubble and keeping the people in power who commit these crimes against society. It's insane.
 

ill

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I literally meant "that's precisely what I said". That was exactly what I was advocating.

The reason the threat of chaos and free for all exists is because of this primitive system we live in. It's unsustainable. We keep putting band aids on it, going from bubble to bubble and keeping the people in power who commit these crimes against society. It's insane.

Gotcha.

I think you're looking at it very short term. Society has progressed and moved forward perpetually. As our society grows, it gets better. Look back on history and tell me of a time that was better than now. No one said the road is a straight line nor that there is such a thing as utopia. IMO, humans keep improving with every generation and this trend will continue past our time. Throwing everything away ala Fight Club style would set human progress back hundreds of years. How is that sustainable?
 

Type Username Here

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Gotcha.

I think you're looking at it very short term. Society has progressed and moved forward perpetually. As our society grows, it gets better. Look back on history and tell me of a time that was better than now. No one said the road is a straight line nor that there is such a thing as utopia. IMO, humans keep improving with every generation and this trend will continue past our time. Throwing everything away ala Fight Club style would set human progress back hundreds of years. How is that sustainable?


How do you know that? The problem is our entire system of living is predicated on money. Money that doesn't even really exist. People bet money on money. People bet money on how much something might cost. Just outright greed that has potential to bring society to a complete standstill, even worse than anything I'm advocating. Instead of punishing these people, we bail them out, refuse to prosecute them and tell our children that being this type of person is some sort of virtuous position in society. We take pride in how much we invested into the same system that works to keep us down. We keep putting bandaids on cuts while ignoring the gangrene spreading throughout the body. These same institutions keep holding us back from progressing.

Like I said in another post, it's no coincidence to me that after the Depression in the 30s, we had unparalleled progressive economic policies in this country. People really got a taste of how toxic the greed was. How much power so few people had to ruin their lives. How criminal banks and wall street had become. They suffered but their suffering led to some real change.

Bubble this and bubble that. We live under a threat of economic terrorism where the only solution is to forgive criminal behavior and bail out the criminals. I say fukk it, let it come. Maybe we'll learn to build it better the next time.
 

88m3

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If it happens, it happens...

They've been saying this since my mom was a kid though...
 

Mr. Somebody

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The higher the prices go the more ingenuity takes over and causes friends to invent more cost effective ways to live without oil. Thank God for the youth and their we're not taking this anymore attitudes. :blessed: Doomsday warriors will lose.
 
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