47 comments on Public interest, peak oil and global warming
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47 comments on Public interest, peak oil and global warming
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http://www.princeton.edu/hubbert/current-events.html
I feel a little shocked by the 2025 statement.I remember in his book that he would not go the get guns route .I am also shocked only one response( TOD), YES Liz, this deserves it's own thread. I have always thought electrictiy is more fragile than most seem to believe(except Duncan of Olduvail Theory). We had our lines replaced lately- they used a lot of energy.
What I see happening now is a load of propaganda coming from the government, politicians, and oil companies that our future is GREEN and RENEWABLE.. That's the message the sheeple are getting and they believe everything will be OK..
I for one, didn't even know about peak oil until about may 2005. SO until TSHTF, most people are satisfied to go about their daily lives not thinking about what tomorrow brings..
The sheeple never wander there.
It sounds to me that he has truly become discouraged by his numbers.
We should not be discouraged by the "sheeple count".
Bottom line is that more people in control of industry and government are waking up and seeing the approaching tsunami.
Hell, "addicted to oil" made it into this year's State of the Union Speech. Never mind the speaker's motives, it was still there. Who would have predicted that 2 years ago?
Even General Motors (GM !) is kind of admitting that Houston we have a problem.
Tom Friedman is talking about energy independence in his editorials.
John Tierney is provacateering about it in his.
You've come a long way baby.
http://omrpublic.iea.org/
Something like solar Stirling dishes could make the difference. There are enough 7-11's in Orange county that you could probably power a good fraction of greater LA if you just shaded all their parking lots with them. Meeting California's peak demand would take a few million of the things, not difficult for a nation which builds millions of vehicles a year.