64 comments on Sudan, Chad, Oil and Genocide
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64 comments on Sudan, Chad, Oil and Genocide
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Unless Tanzania is a large net food importer (something I doubt they can afford) I suspect they may remain quite unscathed - the country is pretty much unindustralised as far as I can remember - most of the roads are barely passable by your average vehicle - and the locals by and large get by on a subsistance agriculture economy - kind of a twisted version of a relocalisationist's vision of the future (but with a lot of malnutrition and disease).
As an aside, I've got to say that I like Tanzanians - the country seems to have a hierarchy based on height - on entering the country I found myself at the back of a queue of maybe 500 people waiting for processing by the immigration officials. I immediately found myself hauled up to the counter (wondering frantically what offence I'd caused), had my passport stamped rapidly and was sent on my way - the most emphatic queue jumping I've ever performed.
That sort of thing happened repeatedly - even out in the middle of nowhere tribal chiefs would make a beeline for me to shake my hand and congratulate on my noble bearing (in their limited vocabulary).
Great country - though its a shame the snow is disappearing from Kilimanjaro (if it isn't gone entirely already)...
Fuel prices go up in Tanzania
The Tanzania I'm thinking of largely consists of people who don't consume oil at all though - no fertiliser, no pesticides, no transport - maybe some cooking oil if they are a bit luckier than most - it really is one of the poorest places on the planet.
If these people are dependent on food aid to get by (and I'm not sure they are) then maybe that segment of the population (and its a large one) may notice peak oil - but I think the only thing they'll notice is fewer vehicles driving through the areas they live in.
Thxs for responding. Never been to Africa, just googling whatever info I can. Everybody will be affected by Peakoil to some degree. True, many Africans use none to very little detritus, but eventually they won't even be able to afford metal for hoes, shovels, or machetes. The inevitable decline of complexity will reach every societal level.
Bob Shaw in Phx,AZ Are Humans Smarter than Yeast?
Some of the people I'm thinking of are already at that level.
At the risk of boring everyone with my anecdotes this reminds me of a rafting trip I did down the Zambezi once. The river guides took along a small packet of fish hooks with them, which I vaguely assumed they intended to fish with.
It turns out they were actually for a trading - as you got out into the Zambian boondocks the locals never saw anything metallic - and a fishhook was considered a valuable item - so they'd trade quite a lot of their agricultural produce for a single hook (presumably they also traded for fishing line), which made some of the rafters very happy.