Moderator: Pops





Pickens is quite the Swift-Boat supporter as well. $2,500,000.00 later and it got us Bush as president.
Despite this, he is the lowest of the low and people like him are responsible for their share of mis-information, price driving, and fear mongering.



shortonoil wrote:This is what’s happening to the oil industry world wide. They are starting to work the shit and the world had better have a big roll of toilet paper.


you are on in the "peak oil" debate.
Published: September 10, 2005
"We're halfway through the hydrocarbon era," my old friend T. Boone Pickens has been saying for the last couple of years. You may remember Mr. Pickens as the most famous corporate raider of the 1980's, but he has spent his life in the oil patch. A geologist by training, Mr. Pickens founded Mesa Petroleum at the age of 26 and ran it for the next 40 years. Now, at 77, he works the oil patch in a different way, running a pair of energy-oriented hedge funds in Dallas.
A folksy line like Mr. Pickens's - it sticks with you. But I hadn't realized until recently that it also meant Mr. Pickens had taken sides in a surprisingly heated debate. He subscribes to what is being called the peak oil hypothesis, which holds that there simply isn't very much new oil left to be found in the world. As a result, we are currently in the gradual process of draining the more than a trillion barrels of proven reserves that are still in the ground. And when it's gone, it's gone.
The best-known "peakist" these days is Matthew R. Simmons, who runs Simmons & Company, an investment bank and consulting firm in Houston specializing in energy companies. Mr. Simmons's essential belief, he told me recently, is that energy demand is about to exceed supply significantly. And that was pre-Hurricane Katrina - before the storm damaged refineries, pipelines and offshore rigs all along the Gulf Coast. "I would argue that we are in a serious energy crisis," Mr. Simmons added. He forecasts increasing oil prices.




SupplyConcerns wrote:That's what I don't understand about the economists... they speak only of the supply/demand surface of the issue without critically thinking about a world of "demand destruction". Oil is NECCESARY for life as we know it. If people can't afford to use it for their needs, the economy could collapse.

skyemoor wrote: Addicts don't NEED heroin, and people don't need to waste as much oil as we are now wasting.

MonteQuest wrote:No they don't, but how high would unemployment need to go to stop the waste in our use of energy? How much would real wages need to drop? Or, how far would the overall standard of living need to decline?skyemoor wrote: Addicts don't NEED heroin, and people don't need to waste as much oil as we are now wasting.

FatherOfTwo wrote:Unemployement will almost certainly rise significantly, but it isn't like most of those people can't be retrained. Given the current levels of debt, I'm sure most will be plenty motivated to get retrained. Given our current over reliance on oil and the need to build out new infrastructure and switch energy usage patterns, there will likely be a great number of jobs that need filling.MonteQuest wrote:No they don't, but how high would unemployment need to go to stop the waste in our use of energy? How much would real wages need to drop? Or, how far would the overall standard of living need to decline?skyemoor wrote: Addicts don't NEED heroin, and people don't need to waste as much oil as we are now wasting.

MonteQuest wrote:Retrained to consume what? The energy you just saved?
See, this is the paradox of eliminating waste to reduce consumption. It doesn't matter how the energy is used if you don't have enough of it.
If you cut out the waste, then the displaced workers must be absorbed by the remaining work force, but not at the same wages. If 10 people are making $10 an hour, now 20 people will make $5.
They are re-employed but at a lower standard of living. Why? Because you must prohibit a return of the consumption you just reduced.
It doesn't matter whether the energy is wasted or not, it provides employment. You cut out the waste, you must lower the standard of living to prevent the energy you saved from being re-consumed. Remember, we are looking for a net reduction, not a transfer from one use to another.
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Retrained to consume what? The energy you just saved?
See, this is the paradox of eliminating waste to reduce consumption. It doesn't matter how the energy is used if you don't have enough of it.

OilsNotWell wrote:Perhaps a better (and appropriate in many ways) analogy to oil would be to food. Some folks eat too much and get fat. Some folks don't have enough to eat. Some even starve. Some folks (the fat ones, can and should eat less). They start losing weight. Pretty soon, they are starving too. Pretty soon, some of them die, too.

FatherOfTwo wrote: In your scenario you are assuming a continuing net loss in total available energy with a continuing increase in population. If that is the case, I agree.
But you don't consider the scenario where other sources of energy begin taking up the slack (or population declines, which is less likely in the forseeable future). Energy gains can come from... here comes the N word: nuclear. (I can hear Monte groaning now)
