159 comments on Revisiting the Olduvai Theory
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159 comments on Revisiting the Olduvai Theory
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GAIA Host Collective
It is very interesting how individuals cling to algae, wind energy, sea wave motion, cow dung, aboitic methane or whatever fad is popular to help keep their delusional idea that this lifestyle can and will continue. Well, it all ends when the phat oil lady sinks.
I wonder do these folks ever think about the infrastructure and resources all these wonderful technologies will devour? Just look at the interstate-highway system. Maybe if we had one tenth of the roads....maybe...and I mean maybe...could we keep them functioning for 50 years. Does anyone realize the resources used up just for that purpose...of course not. We sit on our computers punching neat logarithms on the screen (saying from Kunstler), having no clue of the real world.
It might be more advantageous to get a few books on gardening, orcharding, or one on Living on less, than wind energy or algae for dummys.
Heading out...I just wanted to say....great job.
We are going to be hard-pressed to maintain our current infrastructure, let alone build all new, as would be required for hydrogen, coal gasification, nuclear, etc.
As I drive past endless tracts of suburbia all roofed with asphalt shingles, I wonder about that little detail as a weak link among many weak links in our chain of infrastructure. Once a roof starts leaking, it is a quick trip to decay of the building. When 100 million roofs made to last 15 years all start to break down and leak just at a time when the building trades have run out of gas and material to repair them, those miles and miles of homes are all going to start to implode in slow-mo.
-Matt, former residential carpenter turned high school teacher, DC burbs
Comparing highways with renewable energy is not the smartest thing to do. Renewables can and will help just because they are renewable.
As for highways you're prabably right, my post shows how hard the gap will be to fill. Even with a steady increase in production from other energy sources the comsumption rates of today aren't likelly to prevail for long.
I'm not saying that you're wrong, the math is on your side, I just hope for a better future.
Renewables and reparing and replacing current infrasture will be in competition for ever depleting resources at ever increasing costs. I am an optomist...but being pragmatic today might save more skins.