Geologist: In Terms of Supply and Demand, the Oil Peak Is Past [View article]
I agree with most of what Chris said. Even if Peak Oil is not happening in the next 5 years (it WILL happen... even the most optimistic analysts see it happening in the next 20-30 years at the MOST), the sooner we get OFF oil, the better we will be.
The free market is starting to move in the right direction, but if peak oil happens by 2010 as seems most likely, then it will be too little too late. As much as I prefer laissez faire policies in general, this is one that is too important to everything-- our economy, our national security, our prosperity, even our survival-- to leave solely in the hands of the whims of the market. The government should have been leading the market in the right direction 20 years ago, with a much more aggressive energy policy that promotes renewables and discourages waste.
We don't have 20 years so the best we can do is get aggressive now. Yet even now people want to deny what is going on.
On talk radio, I hear fairy tales of a "trillion barrels of domestic oil" that we could tap now if only the "radical environmentalists" would get out of the way. This is, to put it mildly, wishful thinking. For example, they claim the Bakken formation may have 400 BILLION barrels of oil. However, the USGS came out and pretty much said that's a myth. Their estimate of technically recoverable oil is 4.3 billion-- nothing to be sneezed at, but nothing that will save us either.
It's time to bite the bullet. It's time for electric cars and improved public transporation. It's time for solar and wind, nuclear, geothermal, and everything else that we can pursue. Postponing what we must eventually do anyways only heightens the risks.
Geologist: In Terms of Supply and Demand, the Oil Peak Is Past [View article]
The free market is starting to move in the right direction, but if peak oil happens by 2010 as seems most likely, then it will be too little too late. As much as I prefer laissez faire policies in general, this is one that is too important to everything-- our economy, our national security, our prosperity, even our survival-- to leave solely in the hands of the whims of the market. The government should have been leading the market in the right direction 20 years ago, with a much more aggressive energy policy that promotes renewables and discourages waste.
We don't have 20 years so the best we can do is get aggressive now. Yet even now people want to deny what is going on.
On talk radio, I hear fairy tales of a "trillion barrels of domestic oil" that we could tap now if only the "radical environmentalists" would get out of the way. This is, to put it mildly, wishful thinking. For example, they claim the Bakken formation may have 400 BILLION barrels of oil. However, the USGS came out and pretty much said that's a myth. Their estimate of technically recoverable oil is 4.3 billion-- nothing to be sneezed at, but nothing that will save us either.
It's time to bite the bullet. It's time for electric cars and improved public transporation. It's time for solar and wind, nuclear, geothermal, and everything else that we can pursue. Postponing what we must eventually do anyways only heightens the risks.