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Richard Heinberg: Resilience scripts

This is the first of a series of 22 short videos that explore the interrelated crises of the twenty-first century, and what we as citizens, students, and community leaders can do to respond to them.

Over about four hours total, we’ll do the following:

1.     We’ll examine the interrelated crises themselves, in four main spheres: energy, ecology, economy, and equity.

2.     We will learn to think in systems. This means understanding the

  • boundaries,
  • inputs,
  • outputs,
  • energy and information flows, and
  • feedbacks

in whatever system you happen to be studying—an ecosystem, an economy, a community, or an industry.

3.     We’ll learn the necessity of reinventing culture—moving from a consumer economy to a conserver economy. We’ll see why deep and lasting cultural change often starts with a shift in our relationship with nature. And we’ll see what neuroscience has to teach us about how humans either change, or resist change.

4.     As the title of this series suggests, a great deal of what we will learn has to do with resilience. We’ll explore the science of ecosystem resilience, and how our understanding of nature’s ability to adapt to change can help human societies navigate the rough waters ahead. And we’ll look at why it’s especially important to build resilience in our communities.

5.     Then we’ll apply that basic understanding throughout the sectors of society, exploring ways to build community resilience in transportation, food systems, urban design, buildings, water systems, energy systems, and even financial systems. In each case we’ll explore at least one example of how resilience thinking is already being applied.

Here are a few thoughts on how to best use these videos. Bingeing on them is acceptable—it’s fine to watch the whole three hours at one go. But you’re likely to get more benefit if you stop and think about the material after watching each video. Also, these mini-lectures work well as catalysts for group discussion. If you’re not in a classroom setting, consider forming a discussion group.

From time to time during each video, resources in the forms of websites, or the titles of books or articles, will appear on-screen. All of these resources are also listed, with links, on the website that supports this series. Please search out these additional resources and read as many of them as you can.

You’re more than welcome to look for contrasting points of view. Use this course as an opportunity to develop your critical thinking skills. If you disagree with some of what’s presented, look for outside materials that support your contrary view—but also look for flaws in your own view by searching out materials that criticize it. We’re all in the process of learning, and there’s a lot to learn. We at Post Carbon Institute, the producers of this series, are happy to receive your feedback. You can contact us at the address on the screen.

On a personal note, I’d like to say a few words about why I was motivated to help produce this video series. I’m a baby boomer who has reached retirement age. I’ve spent the last two or three decades studying, writing, and speaking about the environmental, social, and economic issues confronting humanity. Frankly, I think my generation did a pretty terrible job tackling those issues, and now climate change, economic inequality, and resource depletion are far more serious and immediate threats than was the case when I was a student. I feel I owe it to today’s young people to take what I’ve learned—not only about the problems, but about the best strategies being developed to address them—and to put that information in an easily digestible form, so that viewers can get a head start on the work that will inevitably shape and inform the rest of their lives.

I wish you every success in building a more just, resilient, and sustainable world.

Now prepare yourself for a deep dive into the most important and interesting of topics. Set aside some time for viewing, reading, thinking, and writing. Let’s go.

PART I: OUR CONVERGING CRISES

2. Energy

We’re starting this series with the subject of energy, and for a good reason. Energy is key to everything—it’s an essential driver of the natural world and of human societies, and it will also be pivotal to the societal transformations we’ll be experiencing in the 21st century and beyond. Energy is what enables us to live, and to build civilizations and thriving economies. But it’s even more fundamental than that. Without energy, literally nothing can happen.

Physicists define energy as “the ability to do work.” Energy exists in several forms—including thermal, radioactive decay, kinetic, mechanical, and electrical—and its form can change. The energy in sunlight is captured by green plants in photosynthesis and converted to energy that’s chemically stored in the form of carbohydrates. Animals eat those plants, and some other animals eat those animals. In this way, sunlight energy gets distributed throughout the living world.

We humans get our biological energy from plant and animal foods, but we also derive energy in other ways. For example, the sunlight energy chemically stored in coal millions of years ago can be released as heat through combustion. That heat can be used to boil water, creating steam at high pressure, which can flow through turbines that spin magnets to produce an electric current. The electric current is then passed through transformers and wires into homes, offices, and factories, where it is available to power computers, lights, and appliances.

Energy cannot be created or destroyed, and it tends to move from areas of high concentration to low concentration. Just observe what happens to the heat energy in a cup of coffee that sits for half an hour; it dissipates through the air and the table on which it’s sitting. When we drill an oil well or put up a solar panel, we are not actually creating energy; all we are really doing is getting energy that already existed as a static stock (in an oil deposit) or an ongoing flow (such as sunlight) to do some work for us as it’s in the process of being dispersed.

Archaeologists and historians tend to categorize periods of human history based on technological or political developments—the Iron Age, for example, or the Han Dynasty. But the truly great transformations in human history are a result of changes in the ways we harnessed energy.

First came the use of fire, starting hundreds of thousands, maybe millions of years ago. Fire not only provided warmth but also enabled us to cook food, increasing the efficiency of our internal, metabolic energy systems.

About 10,000 years ago the Agricultural Revolution began, increasing our ability to harvest energy from the land.

Then, only about 250 years ago, our expanding use of fossil fuels ushered in the Industrial Revolution.

For over 99 percent of our history as a species, we had harvested solar energy concentrated in firewood and wild or cultivated foods, and we exerted energy through muscle power. But during the last couple of centuries we’ve found ways to use ancient sunlight stored in coal, oil, and natural gas. These fuels have given us energy that’s even more highly concentrated, that’s easily transported, and that’s available in quantities that dwarf what we used previously.

Think of it this way. If you had to push your car thirty miles, it would take you weeks of hard work. But a single gallon of gasoline, costing just a couple of dollars, will do the same work in just a few minutes. That’s cheap, concentrated energy.

During the past century, per capita global energy use has increased 800 percent. And we’ve invented an astonishing variety of machines to take advantage of all that energy—machines to heat and cool us, to transport and feed us, to enable us to process information and communicate, to extract raw materials, and to manufacture consumer products.

Agricultural machinery has largely replaced human labor. Before fossil fuels, at least three-quarters of the population had to work at farming to provide food for everyone else. In contrast, mechanized agriculture requires about one percent of all labor in industrialized countries. It has freed an enormous number of people to engage in other pursuits, including manufacturing, advertising, banking, sales, and marketing. The result has been the explosive growth of the middle class.

However, energy is also central to our current global sustainability predicament, due to two problems:

  • depletion, which means that over time we are exhausting the economically useful, easy-to-get fossil fuels;
  • and pollution, one of the effects of which is climate change.

We’ll talk about each of those two problems in more detail later in this video series. But what’s important to understand for now is that these two inevitable consequences of burning more and more coal, oil, and natural gas make it imperative that we make a transition from fossil fuels to alternative energy sources as quickly as possible.

The fossil fuel era has been transformative, but it is destined to be brief in historic terms, maybe just 300 years in all. And its last chapters are beginning to unfold right now.

What will be the energy sources of the future? Some say nuclear power—but we’ve had a few decades of experience with nuclear plants and they’ve turned out to be expensive and risky.

Realistically, our best bets are solar and wind. But these have very different characteristics from the energy sources that modern industrial society was built around. Solar panels and wind turbines produce electricity, which is high-value energy, without having to burn fuels and create pollution. But sunlight and wind are only available intermittently—the sun doesn’t always shine, and the wind doesn’t always blow.

We will have to design new energy systems and retrofit existing ones to account for the different characteristics of renewable energy. In practice this means we need to invest in a combination of

  • large-scale energy storage (using large batteries, for example),
  • capacity redundancy (where we build much more electricity generation capacity than we actually need most of the time), and
  • demand management (using energy when it’s available rather than any old time).

Currently only about 20 percent of the energy we use is in the form of electricity, so we will have to adapt transportation and a wide range of industrial processes to these new energy sources. Some of these adaptations will be easy: instead of heating most of our buildings with natural gas as we do today, we could insulate our buildings better and provide heat with electric heat pumps, a technology widely used in Japan and Europe. Other adaptations will be a challenge: the best renewable energy options for airplanes and container ships will likely be very expensive substitutes for the oil-based fuels we currently use. The extremely high heat necessary for making cement, steel, and other industrial materials and products will also probably be expensive to produce without cheap fossil fuels.

In some ways, the challenges of the transition to renewable energy are best exemplified by the electric car. We can replace vehicles that run on internal combustion engines with ones that run on electric batteries. And those batteries can be charged with renewable wind or solar energy. But, in order for us to get to a 100 percent renewable energy economy, the lithium in those batteries, along with hundreds of other raw materials, will somehow eventually have to be extracted without enormous, diesel powered excavators and trucks. Parts now made from byproducts of fossil fuels—including tires, seats, and dashboards—will have to be manufactured from some other materials. And millions of miles of roads and countless parking structures currently made from asphalt, concrete, and steel will need to be made or repaired using alternative materials, or with concrete and steel somehow made using only renewable energy. The more detailed our analysis of the car and its support infrastructure gets, the more challenges to a completely renewable automotive transport system we uncover.

Moreover, because we will be substituting out our current energy sources, rather than just adding new energy supplies to existing ones, it is very likely that we won’t have as much energy available at the end of the transition as we did when we started.

That has enormous implications for economic growth and globalization—implications we’ll be exploring in later videos. Our future may very well be slower-paced and more localized.

Energy is at the center of our century’s predicaments, and the transition away from fossil fuels to other energy sources is probably humanity’s most important project for the 21st century. But, as we are about to see, it’s certainly not the only challenge we should be paying attention to.

3. Population and Consumption

We humans have certain advantages over other animals. Our larger brains have enabled us to develop language, which in turn helps us coordinate our behavior over time and space. Also, our opposable thumbs allow us to make and use tools. Many other animals communicate through sounds or gestures, and a few make tools, but humans are far and away the champions at both communication and tool-making.

Some of our tools—like weapons for hunting, and clothing for staying warm in cold climates—enabled us to expand our range into new habitats as we left Africa over 100,000 years ago. Control of fire enabled us not only to cook food but also to alter ecosystems so they could produce more of the food we liked. Wherever we went, we tended to take over habitat from other creatures; we also hunted some large game animals like mastodons to extinction.

Our adoption of agriculture, starting about 10,000 years ago, entailed harder work, but also produced food surpluses that allowed groups of us to build permanent communities. Storable food surpluses also led to full-time division of labor, which in turn led to writing, money, and the development of even more new tools. Meanwhile, more people could be supported per unit of land area.

Eventually we developed cities, and thus, civilization. Cities became centers of knowledge-sharing, administration, and resource consumption. They drew food, firewood, pelts, ores, and people from the countryside, often leaving cleared forests and depleted soils around the urban periphery.

Civilization was evidently a perilous social development: after all, early civilizations had a tendency to collapse. We’ll discuss that inherent instability in video 9.

The development of agriculture caused a pulse of human population growth, but otherwise our numbers ebbed and flowed through the millennia, with a very small long-term trend toward growth. Population dynamics for humans were still largely subject to the same forces as in nature. Let’s examine those forces and dynamics briefly.

Take the field mouse. Its numbers in any given area vary according to the relative abundance of its food (typically small plants), and that in turn depends on climate and weather. The local mouse population size also depends on the numbers of its predators—which include foxes, raccoons, hawks, and snakes. A wet year can result in heavy plant growth, which temporarily increases the land’s carrying capacity for mice, allowing the mouse population to grow. This growth trend is likely to overshoot the mouse population level that can be sustained in succeeding years of normal rainfall; this eventually leads to a partial die-off of mice. Meanwhile, during the period that the population of mice is larger, the population of predators—say, foxes—increases to take advantage of this expanded food source. But as mice start to disappear, the increased population of predators can no longer be supported. Over time, the populations of mice and foxes can be described in terms of overshoot and die-off cycles, again tied to external factors like longer-term patterns of rainfall and temperature.

Using tools, language, and agriculture, humans gradually found ways to overcome some of these natural checks and balances. With our weapons we could kill off our predators, like lions and tigers. Now the only direct challengers we had to worry about were other humans. We could expand into new territories. We could adapt to using new and different resources. These were the reasons for our long-term population growth trend.

Still there were limiting factors, one of which was energy. As long as we depended on firewood for fuel, our numbers were limited by the availability of trees. Ancient civilizations consumed forest after forest—indeed, one of the oldest known human stories, the Epic of Gilgamesh, revolves around the hero chopping down trees—and the resulting deforestation was sometimes associated with the decline of civilizations. But in the last few centuries—and especially the last decades—fossil fuels began to substitute for firewood. And this soon enabled a massive increase in the global human population.

With so much energy now available, we have developed far more tools to use it. We’ve used some of these tools—like those related to sanitation and medical care—to lower the human death rate. At the same time, we have developed artificial fertilizers, tractors, and other tools to increase food production. We also developed ways to transport resources and goods longer distances, from places of abundance to places of scarcity, so that people can live in even the most harsh and barren environments. In effect, we have dramatically and quickly increased the carrying capacity of Earth for humans.

Especially during the past century, our population growth has largely escaped the overshoot and die-off cycles that characterize population dynamics in other species. In mid-nineteenth century, the global human population stood at about one billion; in the century-and-a-half since, it has grown to well over 7 billion. Our current rate of growth is 1.1 percent per year. That may not sound like much, but any constant rate of increase is unsustainable over the long run: at once percent compounded growth, any quantity will double in about 70 years. If our numbers were to continue growing at just one percent per year, our population would increase to over 115 trillion during the next thousand years. Of course, that’s physically impossible on planet Earth. So one way or another, our population growth will end at some point.

Currently, on a net basis (births minus deaths, that is) we are adding about 80 million new people to the planet each year. Think of that as the populations of New York City, Los Angeles, Tokyo, and Mexico City added together. Each year we must find ways to feed, house, and otherwise care for that many more of us. It’s the highest annual number in human history. That’s because, even though the percentage rate of population increase is slowing, it is now a percentage of a very large number. The United Nations predicts that world population will reach more than 11 billion by 2100—and most of the growth will be in the less-industrialized countries.

Demographics is the statistical study of population; demographers speak of a “demographic transition,” which describes the tendency for population growth rates to decrease as nations become wealthier. Can we reduce population growth by increasing per capita wealth throughout the world?

This is how most people would like to solve the problem of unsustainable population growth. However, growth in per capita consumption is also unsustainable over the long haul. During the past few decades we have accelerated the rate at which we consume commodities and products of all kinds—everything from water, steel, plastic, and copper to smart phones and cars. Indeed, increasing consumption is, in effect, how we’ve come to measure progress.

But our planet’s nonrenewable resources—like minerals, metals, and fossil fuels—are finite. There’s only a certain amount, and once these are gone they’re gone forever. We also use renewable resources like forests and fish, but in many cases they are being harvested faster than they can replenish themselves.

Ecological footprint analysis measures the human impact on Earth’s ecosystems. Our ecological footprint is calculated in terms of the amount of land and sea that would be needed to sustainably yield the energy and materials we humans consume. According to the Global Footprint Network, at our current numbers and current rate of consumption we humans would need 1.5 Earths’ worth of resources to sustainably supply our appetites. At the U.S. standard of living, we would need the equivalent of four Earths to sustain us. Of course, we don’t have four or even one-and-a-half planets at our disposal—yet we are still using more than one Earth by drawing down resources faster than they can regenerate—in effect, reducing the carrying capacity that would otherwise be available to future generations.

Human impact on the environment results not just from population size, and not just from the per capita rate of consumption, but from both together.

Clearly, different countries’ per capita rates of consumption vary greatly: the ecological footprint of the average American is almost eleven-and-a-half times as big as that of the average Bangladeshi. And within a nation like the United States, there is also a great deal of economic inequality—and thus vastly different levels of consumption. Later in this series we will examine some of the historical, political, economic and military reasons behind this inequality.

But first, we are going to dig deeper into the subject of resource depletion, to see whether this is an issue that concerns us now, or whether it’s merely a theoretical problem for future generations to worry about.

4. Depletion

Imagine you’re at a big party. The host wheels out a tub of ice cream—the giant ones they use at ice cream parlors—and yells, “help yourselves!”  A few people grab scoops, spoons, and bowls from the kitchen and start digging into the frozen top. As they work the tub and it warms up, the ice cream becomes easier to scoop; more people bring spoons and bowls, and ice cream flies out of the bin as fast as people can eat it. When the ice cream is over half gone, it becomes harder to get at; people have to reach in farther to scoop, and they’re bumping in to each other. The ice cream isn’t coming out as fast anymore, and some people lose interest and turn their attention to the cake. Finally a small group of the most intrepid scoopers are literally scraping the bottom of the barrel, resorting to small spoons to get the last bits of ice cream out of the corners.

That’s depletion. The faster you scoop, the sooner you arrive at the point where there is no more left.

Like our hypothetical tub of ice cream, Earth’s resources are subject to depletion—but usually the process is a little more complicated.

First, material resources come in two kinds: renewable and non-renewable. Renewable resources like forests and fisheries replenish themselves over time. Harvesting trees or fish faster than they can replenish will deplete them, and if you do that for too long it may become impossible for the resource to recover. We’re seeing that right now with many global fish stocks.

Non-renewable resources—like minerals, metals, and fossil fuels—on the other hand, don’t grow back at all. Minerals and metals can often be recycled, but that requires energy and sometimes the resources gradually degrade as they’re cycled repeatedly. When we extract and burn fossil fuels, they are gone forever.

Another complicating issue is resource quality. Our hypothetical ice cream is the same from top of the barrel to the bottom. But most non-renewable resources vary greatly in terms of quality. For example, there are rich natural iron deposits called magnetite in which iron makes up about three-quarters of the material that’s mined; at the other end of the spectrum is taconite, of which only about one-quarter is iron. If you’re looking to mine iron, guess which ores you’ll start with. High-grade resources—the “low-hanging fruit”—tend to be depleted first.

Defining which resources can be considered “high-grade” is also a little complicated. We’ve just discussed ore grades. But there are also issues of accessibility: how deeply is the resource buried? And location: is it nearby, or under a mile of ocean water, or in a hostile country on the other side of the planet? There’s also the issue of contaminants: for example, coal with high sulfur content is much less desirable than low-sulfur coal.

Let’s see how issues of resource quality play out in the case of one of the world’s most precious resources, crude oil.

Modern oil production started around 1860 in the United States, when deposits of oil in Pennsylvania were found and simple, shallow wells were drilled into them. This petroleum was under great pressure underground, and the wells allowed that oil to escape to the surface. Over time, as the pressure decreased, the remaining oil needed to be pumped out. When no more oil could be pumped, the well was depleted and abandoned.

Exploration geologists soon discovered oil in other places: Oklahoma, Texas, California, and later in other parts of the world, particularly the Middle East. During the century-and-a-half that we humans have been extracting and burning oil, hundreds of thousands of individual oil wells around the world have been drilled, depleted and abandoned.

Oil deposits are generally too big to be drained from a single oil well; many wells drilling into the same underground reservoir are called an oil field. Oil fields are geological formations where oil has accumulated over millions of years. Some are small, others are huge. Smaller oil fields are fairly numerous. The super-giant ones—like Ghawar in Saudi Arabia, which in its glory days of the 1990s yielded nearly ten percent of all the world’s oil on a daily basis—are very rare. Like individual oil wells, oil fields also deplete over time.

Today, most of the world’s onshore crude oil deposits—often called conventional oil—have already been discovered and are in the process of being depleted. The oil industry is quickly moving toward several kinds of unconventional oil—for example the tar sands in Canada, deepwater oil in places like the Gulf of Mexico, and tight oil (also known as shale oil) produced by fracking in North Dakota and Texas. Unconventional oil resources are either of lower quality, or are more challenging to extract or process, compared to conventional oil—therefore production costs are significantly higher, and so are the environmental impacts and risks.

As fossil fuels are depleted, their energy profitability generally declines. It takes energy to get energy—it takes energy to drill an oil well, to mine coal, or even to build a solar panel. But we expect an energy profit in the long run: our energy resource will give us much more useful energy than was required to develop it. But as we move to lower quality fuels or ones that are harder to extract, the ratio of Energy Returned on Energy Invested (or EROEI) falls. In the early days of the oil industry, energy returns of a hundred-to-one were routine; in today’s petroleum industry, returns of ten-to-one are more common. That means more and more of society’s overall resources have to be invested in producing energy. It also means oil prices are likely to become more volatile.

During the past century, our transportation systems were built on the assumption of continually low prices and growing supplies, and the petroleum industry was structured to anticipate low extraction costs. Now that extraction costs are going up because we’re relying more on unconventional resources, there is no longer an oil price that works well for both producers and consumers. Either the oil price is too high, eating into motorists’ disposable income, reducing spending on everything else and thus making the economy trend toward recession; or the oil price is too low, bankrupting the oil producers.

This suggests that the free market may not be capable of managing non-renewable resources in a way that meets everyone’s needs over the long run—especially those of future generations, who don’t have a voice in the discussion. In theory, when a resource that’s in high demand becomes scarce, its price rises to discourage consumption and encourage substitutes. But what if poor people need that resource, too? What if the entire economy depends on ever-expanding cheap supplies of that resource? What if a substitute is hard to find, or fails to match the original resource in versatility or price? What happens to producers if costs of extraction are rising rapidly, but a temporary surge in supply or a fall in demand causes prices to plummet far below production costs? In just the last decade, we’ve seen all of these problems begin to play out in oil markets.

The main alternative to market-based resource extraction and distribution is for governments and communities to collaborate on a program of resource management. We’ve done this with renewable resources, for example by establishing quotas on fishing or by protecting old-growth forests. However, conservation efforts have seldom been undertaken in the case of non-renewable resources like fossil fuels. Humanity’s collective plan evidently is to extract and use these resources as quickly as possible, and to hope that economically viable substitutes appear in time to avert a future economic catastrophe.

In agrarian societies the most crucial depletion issue is usually the depletion of soil nutrients—nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, which together make soil fertile enough to grow crops. In farming societies, soil fertility largely determines population size. To avert population declines, successful agrarian societies like the ancient Chinese learned to recycle nutrients using animal and human manures. In contrast, modern industrial societies typically get these nutrients from non-renewable resources: we mine phosphate from large deposits in China, Morocco, and Florida, and ship it around the world. And we produce artificial nitrogen fertilizers from fossil fuels like natural gas. Since both phosphate deposits and fossil fuel deposits will ultimately be depleted, industrial agriculture will have to find ways to break its dependence from these non-renewable resources to become sustainable over the long term. Meanwhile, our ability to supply plant nutrients artificially has enabled us to largely ignore the depletion of topsoil itself, of which we are losing over 25 billion tons per year globally.

In short, the depletion of renewable and non-renewable resources is a very real problem, one that contributed to the collapse of societies in the past. Today we consume resources at a far higher rate than any previous civilization. We can do this mainly due to our reliance on a few particularly useful nonrenewable and depleting resources, namely fossil fuels. Energy from fossil fuels enables us to mine, transform, and transport other resources at very high rates; it also yields synthetic fertilizers to make up for our ongoing depletion of natural soil nutrients.

This deep dependency on fossil fuels of course raises the question of what we will do as the depletion of fossil fuels themselves becomes more of an issue.

 Richard Heinberg



38 Comments on "Richard Heinberg: Resilience scripts"

  1. Boat on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 12:20 pm 

    Huge Transmission Line Will Send Oklahoma Wind Power to Tennessee

    A deal that would create the largest clean-energy transmission project in the United States was announced yesterday, a $2.5 billion effort to build a high-voltage, direct-current (HVDC) power line that would take wind energy produced in Oklahoma’s windy Panhandle region to the Memphis, Tenn., area.

    When the line is fully operating, sometime in 2020, it would carry electricity that would cut power plant emissions by 13 million tons of carbon dioxide and reduce the need for 3.4 billion gallons of water that would ordinarily be used to cool nuclear and fossil fuel-fired power plants in the South and Southeast. These units would no longer produce as much of the region’s power load.
    The imported wind power, coming from a DC conversion point in Guymon, Okla., will be enough to serve 1 million homes. It is 4,000 megawatts, the equivalent of the output of four large nuclear power plants.

  2. eugene on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 12:27 pm 

    And when the wind doesn’t blow?

  3. Boat on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 12:49 pm 

    eugene,

    Were gonna find out maybe by 2020. Iowa will be up to 85 percent wind. How much back up energy they will need and how much it costs will be put to the test.

  4. rockman on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 2:10 pm 

    “…the largest clean-energy transmission project in the United States was announced yesterday, a $2.5 billion effort to build a high-voltage, direct-current (HVDC) power line…”.

    Small correction: Perhaps the SECOND LARGEST. Some years ago the state of Texas spent $7 BILLION to upgrade our transmission system to take advantage of our world class wind power.

  5. rockman on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 2:22 pm 

    “How much back up energy they will need and how much it costs will be put to the test.” And for good or bad another advantage Texas has: we’re not abandoning any of out nuke or fossil fuel sources. The wind farms are just supplements. And I’ll remind again about the odd circumstance when our wind backed up our fossil fuel fired system when two NG fueled plants went down as a result of an Arctic blast. For a while wind supplied almost 40% of the TOTAL state demand. The state that’s the largest electricity consumer.

  6. peakyeast on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 2:44 pm 

    “This suggests that the free market may not be capable of managing non-renewable resources in a way that meets everyone’s needs over the long run—especially those of future generations, who don’t have a voice in the discussion”

    Actually future generations do have a voice. They even have a nickname because they are so cute: Doomers.

    Doomers are the only people with enough sense and empathy to both identify with future generations and other life on earth.

    Which makes them one of the best groups of humans that are existing today.

    Yep – I have no shame. None at all.

  7. tahoe1780 on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 3:32 pm 

    This was new to me. Pretty comprehensive given 2010. http://www.global.ucsb.edu/climateproject/publications/pdf/Morrigan_2010_Energy_CC4.pdf

  8. peakyeast on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 3:56 pm 

    @tahoe: Thanks a lot! Love reading books! 270 pages of yummy. At page 42 now – so far its good.

  9. tahoe1780 on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 4:02 pm 

    @peaky: I forwarded it on to our mayoral candidates. The one who teaches ethics at the local college seems interested…

  10. makati1 on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 4:15 pm 

    Rockman/Boat: Texas… Bug Hat – No Cattle. Toast. History. Soon to be overrun by millions of Latinos from the south.

    The Texas blowhards are gonna be among the most shocked and decimated when the SHTF and their little state is NOT what they dream it is. When the oily business is totally gone from their lives and plain survival is utmost. Electric will not matter if they cannot eat, no matter the source.

    Maybe a few more super storms will deflate their egos? Nah! They’ll claim it is good for their wind mills. They sure have enough hot air flowing from their orifices to offset the doldrums. LMAO

  11. makati1 on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 4:22 pm 

    Good article for the clueless or the uninformed. I skip read enough to know there is nothing new here and not worth a lot of my time. I just gave away a number of his books that had little to justify their cost.

    I guess, if you have no useful skill, you have to do what you can for a buck. But a writer is dependent on advertising, production, distribution, display, and a sufficient number of people with money to buy their product. The last requirement is fast disappearing. I hope he has a fallback skill that is a necessity.

  12. peakyeast on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 4:53 pm 

    @tahoe: Nice doing! I am too cynical to believe he will get in, but trying to help is important.

    Only at page 54 (have to take care of a small boy also), but I think it is getting better. I really like all their detailed references and their quotes from various sources.

  13. peakyeast on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 4:54 pm 

    @mak: Try reading Tahoes link to pdf file. While there is a lot we already know – there is a lot of very nice details and explanations.

  14. efarmer on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 5:23 pm 

    Richard Heinberg once again provides great inpu and tools rather than fear and despair and is a very appreciated voice and source.

  15. Boat on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 5:26 pm 

    mak,

    Once again your 70 sources per day have let you down. The illegal population in the US has dropped over 1 million over the last few years. The high was 11.2 m and now around 9.8. Google is your friend. Try it.
    No need for a wall. Explain that to your brother Trump who obviously can’t google either.

  16. makati1 on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 5:47 pm 

    Boat, Reality is NOT your thing is it? LOL

  17. makati1 on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 6:20 pm 

    Peaky, I went there and read the “Solutions” and the “Conclusions”. I surmised that the rest of the 270 pages would be just supporting the end. I was correct. Much of his ‘guesses’ from the 2010 publication date were way outdated, as I assumed they would be. Some were close or spot on.

    “A managed “de-growth” is impossible, because effective mitigation of peak oil will be
    dependent on the implementation of mega-projects and mega-changes at the maximum possible
    rate with at least 20 years lead time and trillions of dollars in investments.”

    The last sentence said it all:

    “One way or another, the ending of the Age of Oil is the beginning of very uncertain times.

  18. Boat on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 6:22 pm 

    mak,

    Your like Trump, lots of lies and trash, little substance. You both thrive on hate and division. The US will let you talk hate and division. It will let you vote hate and division. When hate and division win elections, is when we lose free speech.
    So scour your 70 websites and present your trash. I’ll fact check it for you.

  19. peakyeast on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 6:32 pm 

    @mak: Since I have read a good part of the book in the order it is written I cannot fully answer you.

    But what I recommended was reading the details from experts. They are really good.

    I would say the solutions and conclusions are probably the least interesting part – since it is my belief that we here on PO and theoildrum (how I miss it) has discussed most of the possible solutions, conclusions and timelines.

  20. rockman on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 6:44 pm 

    Mak – “Soon to be overrun by millions of Latinos from the south.” First, what do you mean “soon”? LOL. We already have a significant number of Hispanics. And we have even a much greater number of part Hispanic…like the Rockman. The Rockman’s mamma was a Vierra.

    Second, what makes you think Hispanic Texans are much different then non-Hispanic Texans? FYI: they ain’t. You do understand that much of the population of the once independent COUNTRY of Texas were Hispanic, right? Some of the biggest early ranches in Texas were land grants to Hispanics. I get the sense that you think the great majority of non-Hispanic Texas have some concern about Hispanic Texans. Why would they? We’ve all lived, worked and intermarried with each other for over 170 years. You might demographically separate us into different groups but remember we are all TEXANS. And you and the rest of the world ain’t. LOL.

  21. Boat on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 7:22 pm 

    rock,

    You might demographically separate us into different groups but remember we are all TEXANS. And you and the rest of the world ain’t. LOL.

    That was funny.

  22. makati1 on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 7:57 pm 

    Rockan, I know American history and how the US stole the state you call Texas from Mexico. Along with all of the oil. It is your luck to be part Latino. I’m part German, Italian, English, Black, and probably many more blood lines. My family tree, which I am lucky to have that covers the last 280 years, has a lot of different country origins. So what? Most Americans are a bit of everything. No special privileges.

    Tank god I am NOT an arrogant Texan. My comment “Big hat – No cattle” is more true than ever. I’m from Pennsylvania, but I make no special claims for that. It is just one of 50 and no better or worse then the other 49. Ditto For texas. No better. No worse.

  23. antaris on Sun, 6th Nov 2016 8:18 pm 

    So you guys, if Mister I’ll build a wall and they will pay for it gets in, where will he build the wall ? Will Texas be inside or out?

  24. rockman on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 7:02 am 

    Mac – “I know American history and how the US stole the state you call Texas from Mexico.” You make it sound like we snuck into the chicken coop and stole Texas in the middle of the night. LOL. We didn’t: we Texicans (anglos + Mexicans) told the govt we weren’t going to put up with its crap anymore. And then we kicked the Mexican army’s ass at the Battle of San Jacinto in less the 20 minutes and captured El Presidente. The Mexican govt gave the land north of the Rio Bravo (that’s the Rio Grande to you whities) so we would neutralize the indians who Mexico STOLE the land from in the first place. The US govt played no part in the war…it was fought solely by local “terrorists”. LOL.

    After a number of years the independent country of Texas negotiated a deal with the govt to join the US. They did so because the Texicans were under the threat of having the county (that it took away from the Mexican govt which took it away from the indians) being invaded by Mexico or by another country.

    And the negotiations: why we have a different set of rules then the other states that were once territories (lands that were originally stolen from the indians). Such as Texas is the only state that owns the near offshore and why we were able to grant the first offshore wind power leases: the fed govt had no control. And why we have no BLM (Bureau of Land Management) controlling land in Texas as it does in other states. And little things such as Texas has the right, unlike all other states and territories, to fly our state flag at the same height as the US flag. But we seldom do that as a matter of respect for the US military.

    So you see now you should brush up on you American history. You should have a variety of history books available in the Philippines in English. And Spanish, the language of the foreign power that stole the country from the locals. Interesting that you try to make a distinction between the Texas terrorists that fought for independence from Mexico and your local terrorists that fought for independence in the Tagalog War, the conflict fought between the people of the Philippines and the Spanish colonial authorities. Interesting that Texas became a sovereign nation about a half century before the Philippines.

    As far as “Big hat – No cattle” goes we got the “cattle”, bubba: the fossil fuels, refineries, jobs opportunities, agriculture, the largest sovereign fund, world class alternative energy, etc, etc.

    How’s that Philippino “hat” fitting these days? Of course you’re having your problems with some armed locals just like Mexico had with the Texicans back in the day. The Moro insurgency has now been joined by the BIFF, the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, a breakaway group from the Moro Islamic Liberation Front. Latest numbers indicate that since 2000 you’ve had about the same number killed as the US lost on 9-11.

    Your govt needs to be careful: some day it may have its own “Battle of San Jacinto” and be forced to give back some of the lands “stolen” from those locals. LOL.

  25. Boat on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 7:11 am 

    mak,

    To add to your history lesson.

    http://www.history.com/topics/mexican-american-war

  26. rockman on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 7:12 am 

    Antaris – Who knows: in time any “wall” might surround all of Texas. LOL. So far we’ve been nice and accepted millions of US citizens who have migrated here. But as life eventually gets more difficult for everyone we might not be able to be so “generous” in the future and a lot of folks might be left on the outside looking in. But I’ll make sure we have at least one spot available for my buddy makati should he ever need it. LOL.

  27. Davy on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 7:28 am 

    You can’t build such a wall physically but you can build a systematic wall of denial to this unrestricted invasion. Immigration is now a disease. It is not a disease because of the immigrants. We are all immigrants. Most of these immigrants are hardworking and motivated people or they would not take such a big risk to leave home. This is a disease because we are in overshoot to carrying capacity especially ex abundant fossil fuels and a healthy socio-political-economic society. I am not against who is here or how they got here if it is not illegal. What I am against is anymore coming so we don’t make it harder to survive when the worst of “SHTF” starts happening. At least we should make it more difficult and less desirable to allow what is currently nearly unrestricted immigration. We are in a global world so you can’t build a wall and be global but you can make it difficult and a matter of policy. This should not be a racist issue and it is. This should be an issue of reality of a country sinking deeper into collapse and an attempt to mitigate and adapt to that collapse.

  28. Boat on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 7:59 am 

    Mexican unauthorized immigrant population continues to decline

    After rising for decades, the number of unauthorized immigrants in the U.S. who are from Mexico began to decline from a peak of 6.9 million in 2007. Though the overall U.S. unauthorized immigrant population has stabilized since the recession ended in 2009, the total number from Mexico has continued to shrink and is now more than 1 million below its 2007 peak.

    Unauthorized immigrants accounted for 3.5% of the overall population and 26% of the nation’s 43.6 million foreign-born residents in 2014. The U.S. foreign-born population also included 19 million naturalized citizens, 11.7 million lawful permanent residents and 1.7 million lawful residents with temporary status (such as students, diplomats and so-called “guest workers” in the technology sector). In total, immigrants represented 13.6% of the U.S. population in 2014.

    http://www.pewhispanic.org/2016/09/20/overall-number-of-u-s-unauthorized-immigrants-holds-steady-since-2009/

    Given these numbers why would anyone think a wall is needed?

    To keep illegals in? Trumps argument is entirely senseless.

  29. Ghung on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 9:06 am 

    “…the total number from Mexico has continued to shrink and is now more than 1 million below its 2007 peak.”

    Peaked during the Bush Years? Funny republican idiots keep insisting Obama isn’t tough enough on illegal immigration. Or maybe the economic disaster Bush left us made it less profitable for illegals to make the journey. Either way, some sectors, especially agriculture, continue to suffer from lack of workers willing to do the crap jobs.

  30. Mark Ziegler on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 9:30 am 

    Where is the 22 short videos?

  31. rockman on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 10:36 am 

    Ghung – “Peaked during the Bush Years? Funny republican idiots keep insisting Obama isn’t tough enough on illegal immigration”. Since you’re fairly tuned into the realities of life I suspect you understand that many Texas business owners (the majority of which are R’s) are not opposed to illegals but are more then ready to take advantage of them. The last thing tens of thousands of US businesses want to see is a large potion of their cheap work force deported.

    As I’ve pointed out for YEARS the US could end the use of illegals overnight for almost no cost: sentence several hundred business owners to 10 years in prison for tax code violations since virtually everyone breaks the laws that deal with employment.

    The D politicians would never do it because they want as many of those potential D party voters as possible. And the R politicians would never do because they want to keep biz owners who want as much cheap labor as possible. Which is also why the R party isn’t that keen on the legal immigration of educated/skilled foreigners who would demand fair salaries.

    See: no wall needed…except for a few surrounding a federal prison. LOL.

  32. Ghung on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 12:13 pm 

    Rock; With as many as 5 more States voting to legalise the use and cultivation of weed, I’m betting more Mexicans will be out of work. Seems the drug cartels are major employers, and at least some of those out-of-work folks will head north looking for ‘honest’ employment, eh?

    I have a friend who’s a builder that bitches all the time about Obama’s immigration policies. He says he can’t get enough good help now that building is back in our area.
    Life is tough all around it seems.

  33. peakyeast on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 12:20 pm 

    @Davy: I concur – and feel we have the same situation here in Europe.

  34. boat on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 12:53 pm 

    Many businesses love cheap labor that can pay $10-15 per hr. No paper work, no added costs. Of course we all get those costs for roads, education, health care etc.
    In Houston I can’t think of anything the illegal haven’t taken over in construction. Except one trade, Asians control tile. lol, why? No clue but they do a fine job.

  35. rockman on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 1:33 pm 

    Ghung – “I have a friend who’s a builder that bitches all the time about Obama’s immigration policies. He says he can’t get enough good help now that building is back in our area.” Exactly what “Obama immigration policies” is he bitching about???

    “President Barack Obama has often been referred to by immigration groups as the “Deporter in Chief.” Between 2009 and 2015 his administration has removed more than 2.5 million people through immigration orders…”.

    OTOH the folks at Pew estimate about 3 million illegals entered the country during the same period. Which is why the number of illegals in the US stabilized during Presidernt Obama”s two terms essentially near the ALL TIME RECORD HIGH LEVEL. And at an number higher then the average during President Bush’s two terms.

    http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2016/11/03/5-facts-about-illegal-immigration-in-the-u-s/

    Maybe he just needs to pay a bit more and stop whinning like a child. LOL

  36. makati1 on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 5:18 pm 

    Legals. Illegals. Soon it will not make a difference as ALL Americans will be on the same level. The bottom. Except for the 1%, of course. None of us here are even close to that top “exceptional” level.

    How low can it go? Well… World median HOUSEHOLD income is about $10,000 per year. Can your family live on that? I can, easily, and do. But then, laborers here make $10 per DAY. Haircuts $2. Etc. The per capita PPP here in the Ps is about $7,500/yr and growing. Bottom moving up. Upper moving down. Where will they meet? We shall see.

  37. peakyeast on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 5:48 pm 

    @mak: 99.99% of the population in the U.S. could get 3 strikes and be put away for 40 years this very moment if the government was insane enough to use all their information.

    I would say any country with laws so all pervasive that all citizens are criminal are nothing but dictatorships of the worst kind – far worse than actual openly acknowledged dictatorships. Perhaps they only currently use their power against people that are outstandlingly annoying to the establishment, but that could change any moment.

    Which means all countries.

  38. makati1 on Mon, 7th Nov 2016 6:22 pm 

    peaky, of course they could but they won’t. Laws are there to give the government power. They are political, not moral.

    The US has a lawyer for every 250 citizens. Laws are ‘make work’ for all those legal beagles. Only one symptom of the crumbling house of cards called America.

    Laws are for you and I, not TPTB. We break at least one every day, if we live in the U$. Probably more. But, I don’t live in the U$ and while I may not know all of the laws here in the PS, I doubt that I break any. A good feeling.

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