115 comments on Thursday morning at Clean Tech 2007
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I am surprised at the Jiminy Cricket, wish upon a star, mentality that many here seem to espouse. Wishful thinking does not produce energy. The best that can come from engineering is improved efficiency. That's it. Period. Engineering will not put more oil, coal, gas, or uranium in the ground.
WE WILL PEAK AND RUN OUT.
That's a fact. It is not "doomer" talk to point out the physical truth of a universe ruled by physics. No amount of cheerleading for the "engineers" will overthrow the physics of the universe. Won't happen.
My feeling is the cornucopians, which does include the engineers, are doomers, the worst kind. Rather than face up to the simple physics of a sphere in space, they prefer to blow air up the credulous's skirts, telling them they can keep growing the population, keep driving their bloatmobiles, and just ignore reality. By telling the hoi polloi these happy tales of plenty, the engineers, the true doomers, are setting people up for a really hard bitch slap from reality. The "doom" that people like myself shop around serves as warning, helps them, hopefully, to realize that fossil fuel is finite and that if they want to back out of the techno cul de sac and head down a more realistic road while the fuel is still cheap, now is the time.
The tech we need to be studying is complementary tech that works with nature rather than short-circuiting it. We should develop a heirarchy:
First level: pure nature. Just harvest from the most complex, well-researched machine we will ever see -- Earth.
Second level: guiding tech that shifts nature into a particular natural course. For example: Where non-native plants have disrupted the eco-system, remove them and reestablish as best as possible the pre-existing biome.
Third level: Tech that disrupts nature but will ultimately lead back to a stable natural environment.
This siimple ranking will prove helpful.
Hi Cherenkov,
Thanks for your comments.
1) re: "The tech we need to be studying is complementary tech that works with nature rather than short-circuiting it."
I'm interested in your example in "2". Could you possibly give examples for the other levels you mention?
Also, I'm wondering what you suggest, given:
A. The current infrastructure that exists today in the real world. How would you apply your principles here?
B. The current economic arrangements of money, debt, etc. Can you reconcile these with your three guidelines?
At first glance, it seems to me that simply doing things like "no more road, no more airport expansion", "more wind, solar, and research" are examples which fill the criteria of your major point, namely, "...if they want to back out of the techno cul de sac and head down a more realistic road while the fuel is still cheap, now is the time."
Still, not sure exactly how these would fit with current assumptions, so wondering how you see it.
2) re: "Just harvest from the most complex, well-researched machine we will ever see -- Earth."
How would you you incorporate avoidance of over-harvesting?
Unfortunately, virtually everyone in the engineer camp always seems to ask the same questions:
Given that we have invested in all of this infrastructure, how can we possibly abandon it?
Well. I can imagine a fellow on Easter Island looking up at the last tree, listening to the local doomer who wants the fool to preserve the tree in order to harvest the seeds and replant the island. That fool then looks about at all the really big heads and says, "How can we give all this up?" And he starts chopping.
Money and debt are created under a fiat system that presumes that population and energy aquisition will grow forever. This is, of course, bollocks. Complete economist spoo. But, as long as the oil can be found and the population run up, the pyramid scheme will work right up until it doesn't. Then what? Catastrophe, I expect. Runaway inflation. Lives ruined, businesses crushed, hopes dashed. You know, doom. That anyone would be concerned about money and debt when real actual work in the real actual world needs to be done speaks volumes about the human spirit. Think of all the people who have died trying to enrich themselves. The miners who die every day for a bit of yellow metal. Think about it!! Ahhhhhh. That's human idiocy hard at work there.
How will economics work in the future? Here. I have an orange. You have a tin whistle. Trade? See. That ain't so hard, darling.
As far as the current infrastructure, tear it down. I can't remember which economist suggested it, but he said we might as well bury money and pay people to dig it up. Money is conceptual. In a post-oil economy, especially a chaotic humongous clusterfuck of an economy, you want to employ people to do the work we need to do to restore the earth. Restore the wetlands. These are very, very important. Enrich the soils using techniques that do not stripmine nutrients and create deserts. Get people out on the farm.
If you really want to see what we need to do, go to Communitysolutions.org. They have a lovely film on what Cuba did when it went through peak oil. Now, if we follow in their footsteps, we may have a chance. But we cannot stop there. We need to devolve the tech world as much as possible. We need to relocalize.
You ask, "How would you incorporate avoidance of over-harvesting?"
As best you can. Unfortunately, nature already has a plan for that. It's called -- starvation. Works quite well. In no time we will reach a stable population, or at least a bouncy range, and lots of our problems will be solved.
I do not expect any engineer to want to participate in the deevolution of the tech paradigm. That would go against his or her character. It just saddens me to see people who make some sort of claim for rational thinking make such boneheaded, magical-thinking mistakes as the lot here seems to make on a daily basis.
I understand why. They compartmentalize. The man who invented asbestos never stopped to think, "Is this healthy for humans?" No, that was not his problem. His job was to make a good fireproofing material. The man who financed it did not worry about the health problems associated with it. Nor did the marketer, the salesperson, the architect who used it, the boilermakers who loved it. No. It was another scientist, specializing in health, who realized, "Wait a minute. This crap is highly toxic." Of course by then, it was too late. Many people died extremely horrible deaths by the time it was banned. Thousands of buildings were contaminated, school children put at risk.
Why? Because engineers have tunnel vision. They do not think holistically. While at Cessna, I never once heard an engineer wonder about the toxicity of methyl ethyl ketone. Nor wonder about the effect of contrails on the upper atmosphere. Nor about their contribution to global warming. They could give a damn about sealer poisoning those who sealed the wings. No. They worried about this or that screw, or whether a mis-drilled hole would result in the scrapping of a wing.
Until engineers stop thinking they can fix things with more half-assed, non-holistic, measures that end up causing more problems than they fix, we are screwed.
I think chimps make great engineers. They take a part of nature, a stick, and use it to fish termites from termite mounds. Once sated, the chimp drops the stick and goes off for a nice nap. No harm, no foul.
That is some primo engineering there.
Thanks, Cherenkov.
I thought the mean IQ was a little too high here at TOD also, so your intelligent comments certainly helped in the regression while broadening the sigma. But that's just some dumb-ass chimp,..I mean...Ph.D. physicist, talking. Didn't you mention something about physics?
BTW, what's with this chimp stuff?
Thanks, John Macklin.
More irony at work here. Never seems to stop. You take a swipe at my intelligence and then reveal you fail to understand what I say.
Primo irony. Thanks. I needed the laugh.
Love to take the time to talk you off the bridge you mounted, but been there and the reception's poor. Hey, let's thank the dumb-ass ee's who created this web thing so we can commune and, as we said in the seventies, express ourseves.
And what's with the chimp thing?
I see you still fail to understand. After a bit, such irony is no longer fun. It's just sad.
Yes, let's thank the people at Cern who invented this thing.
Let us pray:
Our scientist, who art in the lab, hallowed by thy name. Let us not challenge him lest he make fun or feel responsible for bad things. Let us not ask questions that are not technical in nature, lest he grow angry and start throwing around sharp jargon. Let us not enter into his sacred sanctuary, THE INTERNET, ommmmm, lest he brand us as hypocrites.
Oh, great scientist, who paves over eden, please forgive us our sins. Give us this day our daily carcinogen, that we may partake and know of your creation.
Oh, great scientist please do not smite us when we challenge your godhood. Please let us gather at your feet and shout hosannahs for all you have done for us. You deserve our worship. For without you we would be lost in the wilderness.
"Um, what is wilderness?"
"Shut up, Jimmy. Don't question the priest. He might smite you and make you quit using THE INTERNET, oommmmmmm. You know how sensitive they are when you challenge their almighty authority."
"Yes, mommy."
Amen.
Hmmm. I like that prayer. Pretty creative, Cherenkov. BTW, john macklin is my name, and you can google, pubmed, or any other search engine to see where I've been and what I do. Would you like to bare your soul, no, name, so we're at some parity.
I still want to discuss this chimp thing.
Thanks.
Why do people argue with credentials rather than with actual words aimed at the argument?
Kinda like Pons and Fleischmann telling their detractors to go google their creds as if that somehow legitimates cold-fusion.
No. I'm not even going to bother checking your creds. You want to impress me? Argue my points. Do so logically, answering my concerns about the long-term future of a technological society in light of finite resources, global climate change, the oceans dying, population growth, and fresh water shortages. Present a good argument that is not filled with wishful thinking, and I will gain respect for you.
No free lunch. Not even for Phd. scientists.
Cherenkov asked another poster,
"You want to impress me? Argue my points. Do so logically, answering my concerns about the long-term future of a technological society in light of finite resources, global climate change, the oceans dying, population growth, and fresh water shortages. Present a good argument that is not filled with wishful thinking, and I will gain respect for you."
Can't say I want to impress you, and your respect is not going to put any potatos on my plate, but you did throw down such an interesting line of reasoning (of a sort).....why does it follow that a "technological society" must lead to "global climate change, the oceans dying, population growth, and fresh water shortages."? That's a clever rhetorical trick, by the way, showing you may not retain amateur status at this ;-), to group into a congeries "finite resources (a given, if you leave out solar), global climate change (a given, it happens anyway {though man could have a serious effect}, the oceans dying {the whole ocean? Did I miss my Greenpeace newsletter for one month too many?!), population growth {always a problem, and technical society seems to have the opposite effect, the technically advanced nations driving down birthrate) plus provides the only tools outside of chastity, infanticide, or abortion to deal with it}, and fresh water shortages {again, maybe a given, maybe not, and caused by...(which? Population growth, {obviously}, climate change (depending}, the oceans dying (that's salt water, hard to clearly make the connection}, finite resources (well, yeah, fresh water!}...
We could go on and on, but why waste the time. What we see is a rhetorical device, in which a "congeries" of catastrophe is treated as a "catagory".
The idea of grouping a "catagory" is that they have some clearly definitional characteristics and interrelationships in common. Otherwise, there is little point in grouping "technical society" into a congeries with a laundry list of "bad bad things", some related to "technical society", some in a negative way, some in a positive way, and some not at all, and treating it as catagory, unless....your trying to fool somebody that does not know better ;-)
In which case the question would be" Why?
Roger Conner Jr.
Remember, we are only one cubic mile from freedom
Roger Conner says, "why does it follow that a "technological society" must lead to "global climate change, the oceans dying, population growth, and fresh water shortages."? That's a clever rhetorical trick, by the way."
Well, once again, poor reading skills rears its ugly head. I asked about technology in light of these disasters. Though the IPCC has clearly found we are responsible for global warming, I did not say so. What I am asking is what are the knock-on consequences of tech? This requires very deep thought, inquiry, and an open-mind (something often lacking on this site.)
This is not a rhetorical trick. These concerns actually exist. These are problems which affect technological decisions right down to the decision to go ahead with a technology. If you fail to consider technology without considering the world around you, you are a fool.
Your attempts at caging my argument through your semi-intelligent understanding of the rhetorical arts is amusing, but ultimately does not argue the point.
The question remains. What is the long-term future of a technological society in light of finite resources, global climate change, the oceans dying, population growth, and fresh water shortages?
Cherenkov,
Now feeling all warm and fuzzy with a boost of confidence by you evaluation of my post as evidence of a "semi-intelligent understanding of the rhetorical arts" that is at least amusing, I could not resist a reply, and one to say that I found in your reply post evidence that I do agree with you a bit more than you may think (I would not dare say that "we agree" knowing that saying you agree with anyone would be presumption on my part).
I agree absolutely with your sentence, "If you fail to consider technology without considering the world around you, you are a fool."
Exactly true.
The inverse of it is also true by the way: "If you fail to consider the world around you without considering technology, you are a fool."
Because if technology can be used, someone, somewhere WILL try to use it, and thus the effects of their technology will have to be calculated into the effects on your world. You or I alone do not get to make the decision as to "whether or not" to go ahead with a technology. Isn't it fun sharing a planet?
"What is the long-term future of a technological society in light of finite resources, global climate change, the oceans dying, population growth, and fresh water shortages?"
Cherenkov, you must see why I viewed the question as rhetorical: If you make a list of five bad items, then ask, "what is the sum?", there is only one answer isn't there? bad X 5=bad. The structure of the question gives no other possible answer. It is the nature of a rhetorical question that the question itself provides the answer.
But if we take each point individually, and allow for more items to be added to the list, or some to be discounted for the moment while we deal with the ones we can have the greatest effect on, we have not a dead end rhetorical argument, but possible improvements in the situation, at least for a foreseeable amount of time, and by the way, we have to put a time frame on things. I do not know if you can, but I cannot deal with the variables 500 years from now, the conditions will almost certainly be too far removed from any reality I can know (Columbus did not spend a great amount of time thinking about the effect of traffic jams on North America when he found it!)
Just to play around though, and assuming you intended the question to be real and not rhetorical, let's look at "the question" remaining:
"What is the long-term future of a technological society in light of finite resources, global climate change, the oceans dying, population growth, and fresh water shortages?"
Let's look at the next century, out to about 2107, that being about the end of lifetime for even a baby boomers grandchildren, easily midlife for his or her great grandchildren.
Now we have some tough questions on the issues you describe:
Finite resources-This is a given. But we don't know how finite. Should we attempt to find out? We don't know where they are? Should we stay hard at work on international arrangements to find out and fairly distribute resources? Notice that both of these questions sound rhetorical! The answer seems to be yes to both, at least to most people. But both would require at least some degree of technology, for communications and Earth science monitoring, wouldn't they? Recycling to avoid waste? One would think so. Alternative methods of construction and production to reduce consumption of resources to do the same job? One would think so. But again, we are into some elegant technological solutions if we can find them.
The Earth's rescources are indeed limited. However, we do recieve a major outside source of energy from the sun. Can it be used to help us? One would think so. Can solar energy can be used in combination with Earth bound resources? One would think so. Would it be possible to do at all if we dismantle anything similiar to a technical society? Not on any scale to make life decent for billions of people.
Climate change: We play the same game out: The climate changes with or without human activity, science tells us this, but human activity can make it worse and exceed what the Earth can adjust to. But does it have to? If technology can be developed that is for the most part (it will never be perfect) carbon neutral, would it be acceptable, or would it be renounced on philosophical grounds that it is, in fact, technology?
Population growth: Is it a given? It is always interesting that Malthusian intellectuals show a graph, something like "population growth since the discovery of oil", and sure enough, up it goes. However, medical and chemical birth control was born only in the 1960's (!). Population growth is a RISK, but not a given over the long haul. What will the populatin growth curve look like as real and modern birth control makes it's way throughout the world for the first time in human history (!)? Who knows.
Ocean's dying and fresh water shortages: I have grouped these together for one reason: Most of the damage to fresh water and oceans seems to be as much a problem of bad or lacking technology, not technology in general, and most have been caused by stupidity and greed. There is no real indication yet that these are not easily technically managable if we want to make the effort. We may not do it. We may choose, as we have done up to now, to treat oceans and freshwater sources as dumps. That is not a technical problem, it is an issue of choices made by humans for political and economic reasons.
_____
Note that I have not went off on any "Buck Rogers" fantasies. But space is still out there. Humans have proven they can go. The deep oceans are still out there. Humans are proving they can go. Fusion does work in nature. Can humans harness it? Who knows, and it may not happen quick enough to be of real help, inside our 2017 window.
But as you can see Cherenkov, we have enough "homework" assignments to keep us busy for the weekend! Or, do we want to act the role of the child, and throw the work on bunk bed, and go do something more fun, like tow the boat to the lake and water ski, or jet over to the islands to chase some skirts (as if there are not plenty of bored and lonely gals in our own hometowns), do we want to say as a society, like the child says to homework, "This is tooooo HARD!" "This isn't going to do any good!!" "This is a waste of time, it won't help!"
"Why do I have to learn this crap, I'm not going to do this for a living, let somebody else learn it!"
The modern societies may try to dress up their love of neo-primitivism and anarcho deep green primitivism in intellectual and rhetorical arguments.
But the truth is, it is really the philosophy of the pouting child. "I CAN'T"!"
As as the old guys used to say, "Can't never did shiit."
Roger Conner Jr.
Remember, we are only one cubic mile from freedom.
Yes it is. It is a question that you yourself cannot even begin to answer, and it alone makes a mockery of your use of Cerenkov's name. And the implicit claim of "catastrophe" is trivially refuted because I can point to an existence proof to the contrary.
That existence proof is photosynthesis, a "technology" (in the same sense that evolution is "intelligent" as it generates options and selects the superior ones). It's been around for the better part of a billion years now, and shows no signs of losing its usefulness. Some of humanity's best courses of action involve optimizing our use of existing photosynthetic organisms and creating new ones.
Photosynthesis isn't the end. We can already beat the 10% efficiency of algae with 27% efficient silicon PV cells, and if we can't use quantum dots to break the 50% barrier in PV maybe we can learn enough about the quantum behavior of chlorophyll to turn it into an electric converter instead of a chemical one. The photonic energy conversion efficiency of human devices is already well above that of higher plants, will soon exceed that of single-celled plants, and may boost the planetary product of captured solar energy far beyond what Nature managed to do for herself.
One product of the last three centuries of unsustainable industrial revolution was a huge amount of an undepletable resource: knowledge. Knowledge cannot be used up, and its usefulness increases more rapidly than it accumulates. On the one hand, we learn to capture more and more renewable energy (algae, PV, photochemistry); on the other hand, we learn to do more with the energy we have. Eventually we'll reach another plateau like photosynthesis more or less topped out before, but it'll be at a substantially higher level and it'll all be ours.
I have to quote Roger here:
Truer words were never written.
Fresh water is not a finite resource. It is part of a cycle of evaporation, condensation, precipitation and percolation. The fresh water problem is one of people not being where the fresh water is and the miserly, militaristic attitudes of the very wealthy. Aquifers could be recharged during periods of heavy rain and stored for use during droughts years later. Fresh water could be manufactured from the ocean and saline aquifers via desalination and recycled from sewage using similar processes. Fresh water can be extracted from even desert air. It is just a matter of capital investment and compassion for the poor. Fresh water can also be used more efficiently especially by agriculture. Hydroponics could greatly improve the efficiency of water used in food production as well as producing more food closer to the point of use.
...and we could genetically alter the human head so that it would be flat and would give standing room for people with that increased carrying capacity of this shuddering world. Water is not a finite resource? Have you ever thought of talking to Rube Goldberg? You might just catch him there in his box of infinite time. But then does time have an end (another finite resource?) in an infinite universe, or is the universe warped and blowing smoke up it's derriere (allusion courtesy of J Kunstler) and finite as well? Oh mystery upon mystery. What fun.
Of course the Earth is finite but the the moon still has time to orbit the Earth another 60,000,000,000 times. Fresh water has gone through billions of cycles in the lifetime of the world and will go through billions of more cycles. Some of that H2O will be split by photosynthesis to make sugar and free oxygen. Later respiration will
oxydize that sugar and recombined water will be released.
Rube Goldberg has been dead for many years and I missed meeting that very imaginitive man in person. Problems need solutions and solutions come from imagination and scientific analysis of those imaginings.
No they don't.
They come, if at all, from first defining the problem.
Dear John,
Chimp thing? Seems simple enough, maybe this is not what Cherenkov means, it is what was brought to my mind. In a finite system there is no solution to over-use of that system to be made though making the 'stick' ever more complex.
Engineering makes the simple complicated, that is the beast's nature. To make life easy engineering produces complexities that make the likelihood of life on the planet impossible. Worse we can't put the stick down. We don't stop digging.
As far as this net thing, Phoo I would rather talk person to person but we have been engineered into a hermit style of life that separates and destroys any civil life. Why are you here john macklin, if engineering makes all so lovely why aren't you doing things with your wife and friends,, your tribe, instead of stuck here on this engineered box of half life? Same as me I think. The tribe has been dissolved, all much too busy sucking on individual ding dongs of tech. No wonder Western birthrate drops.
Money and debt assumes no such thing. Money has no fixed relation to population or energy, or anything else.
I'd be interested to know why you think otherwise?
Post move down.
Cherenkov, I would like to add my two cents' worth to your perspective.
As a nod to the technophiles, I would be delighted to see our "leaders" actually lead, and put the kind of money being squandered on a military response to PO into renewables. Wind and tidal electricity utilized by electric rail are probably worth a try as stopgap measures. However, IMO these would still be at best a way to ease humanity's transtion to a truly sustainable future.
I concur that a sustainable future must utilize the "well-researched machine" that has been perfected over a billion years or so:
1) human population must come WAY down,
2) humans need to learn to be satisfied with the production from the self-repairing, self-replicating, no-non-biodegradeable-waste solar collection system the planet has already perfected - photosynthetic plants.
PLAN, PLANt, PLANet
Errol in Miami
Does it ever occur to you to wonder, as an English professor, how well positioned you are to lecture engineers and physicists on the implications of, well, physics and engineering? If I were in your position, I might display a little bit less certainty that I surely knew much more than the people who had actually spent some time studying those disciplines..
As a physicist, you should consider our friend "irony." He is hard at work here. I know it is an "English" term, but it would describe the delicious fun we are having quite well.
For, you see, that an English instructor has a better grip on physics than the lot here does, that's irony.
There is no free lunch. I believe I've heard many a physicist say that. Am I incorrect? Energy is not the sole problem on a finite sphere in space, am I correct? Let's name a few things that engineers and physicists cannot pull out of their collective wazoos. Land. Water. Aluminum. Iron. Tantulum. Iridium. Uranium. Fish. Bio-diversity. As you can imagine, on a sphere in space, the list of things that are finite on said sphere must, now correct my grasp of physics here if I am off, necessarily include EVERYTHING. So, if we run out of Iron, we can't just run to the lab and whip some up, can we? So, let's say we do find that magical energy bullet. We will call it, Nukcoabiowinshalidium. Having applied the bullet, we now have plenty of energy to use up the rest of the necessary ingredients to life. Land, who needs it!! We can just boil up some algae!! Clean drinking water? Bah, we'll just desalinate the oceans! (Never mind the effects on the biota there.) Out of copper? Why we'll just use plastic for our pipes!!
These overarching issues never seem to figure in the conversations held here. No one ever runs the problem out to its logical conclusion or examine everything that said "solution" will affect and how. The holistic view of reality seems to escape the engineer tribe. You see, I do not need to know any formulae, or how to use a graphing calculator, or how close we are to finding the Higgs particle. That is your tunnel vision at work. That is the scientist/priest mentality hard at work. It is the presumption that knowing how to put on the blinders in order to achieve tunnel vision is somehow a good thing. All I need to know is the fundamentals. Sphere. Finite.
I guess the real question is: What is your endgame, Stuart?
How many people? 6.8 billion? 10 billion? 1 trillion?
Will this be a mobile society traveling around the planet in planes and trains and automobiles? Will we all be hooked up to our crackberries sending text messages to each other about our wonderful lives now that there is no drinking water? That the oceans are dead? That we live in a runaway greenhouse effect? Will we be living close to the land? If so, how did we get there? Do you see a world with bio-diversity, or are we shooting for pure dominance -- to become the ONLY species on the planet?
My guess is, like so many of this tribe, your thinking extends only about as far as ten years from now. Maybe twenty. After that, what do you care?
Have you ever heard of the Heechee?
Hmmmmm. I think, Houston, we have a problem.
For an English instructor to believe he has a better grip on physics than the lot here does, that's self-delusion.
Fictional creatures in the "Gateway" series of novels by Frederik Pohl (I read them avidly). Fiction is something I would expect you to know about, but telling the difference between technology and balonium isn't... and so far your substitution of handwaving for calculation makes my bets look pretty good.
I agree totally with Stuart about mitigating PO on both the supply and the demand side, and that the doomers are plain wrong. Dooming (PO & GW) is a mood. Perhaps it’s a displaced emotion from the growing sense of mortality of the 60’s kids (of which I’m one). From boomer to doomer...
Remember 20% of oil is still used for electricity production which gives a big cushion. On the supply side sunlight dwarfs all other energy sources and this industry is only getting started. The solar industry is charging scarcity prices at the moment because of the shortage of silicon. Costs will come way down when the volume gets serious. A solar farm is a machine that turns capital into cash flow; get the numbers right and literally trillions of dollars will come your way.
On the demand side the scope for energy savings is vast. All the technology exists for zero net energy buildings. We don’t need 200hp moving 2 tons of steel for transport. It’s just something you do at a particular 'price of oil/price of time'.
Let’s take a look at one aspect of oil demand.
The following table shows oil production, consumption and imports in millions of barrels per day and the population for North America. The last column is daily consumption * 365 / population giving barrels per person per year. Obviously Mexico has some catching up to do.
Source: Oil, BP Statistical Review 2005 data; Population, Wikipedia 2005 data. Values are rounded.
Now let’s look at the comparable figures for Western Europe. I’ve deliberately left out the countries in Eastern Europe to arrive at the worst case in both regions.
Source: Oil, BP Statistical Review 2005 data; Population, Wikipedia 2005 data. Values are rounded.
Notice the wide variability of oil consumption in both regions. A few points:
1. Belgium and Luxembourg consume more oil per person than the US. I would love to hear Washington using these numbers back at Belgium the next time the eurocrats harangue the US about oil and global warming.
2. You can still drive your 1001hp Bugatti Veyron at 250mph on the German autobahns so it’s not all micro cars over there (here for me). Think of all those 400hp BMWs, Mercedes and Porsches, not the mention the 600hp Ferraris and Lamborghinis. Of course these are ‘top’ cars for ‘top’ people so that’s ok.
3. There is similar degree days. Norway, Finland Sweden and Central Europe in winter, Italy, Greece and Spain in summer.
4. I believe we do comparable miles but haven't found any figures.
Now let’s see what happens if we give the whole of North America the same oil consumption per person as Western Europe. We are going to be really generous to Mexico by giving them the same consumption as Canada and the US. I’m sure they could handle it.
The following table shows North American consumption at European rates and the resulting imports. The consumption column is EU barrels/person/year * population / 365 giving millions of barrels per day.
This leaves net oil imports of 1.741 million barrels per day. Ethanol and biodiesel can cover that easily. Obviously Mexican production is down since 2005 but Canada is up.
What we are looking at is major US policy failure. That may be because the lobbyists are producers who equate oil with revenues. Consumers, who equate oil with cost, are not nearly as well organized. And someone should be treating oil imports as a cost to the economy but trade deficits aren’t fashionable subjects on Wall Street at the moment.
Peak oil will not be the end of the world so get over it. Just let the price mechanism and the engineers do their stuff!
A very interesting post.
Thanks Andy. I just see so much that can be done. A few more recent examples:
1. The Melbourne city government has just built an office block that uses 85% less energy.
2. 8% of UK electricity consumption is running electronic stuff on standby. Why don't they fit a battery, solenoid and a bit of circuitry so the remote actually turns the thing on and off?
3. I saw the Vectrix electric motorbike in London a couple of weeks ago. Recharges cost 3 pounds ($6) for 1000miles. A bit pricey at 7000+ pounds for the bike but cheaper than a petrol scooter after 3 years. Electric vehicles are exempt from road tax, congestion charge and parking fees in London.
It just goes on and on. There is enough existing technology to see us through the next 30 years. The really big risk is reduced food production from climate change but that's a different story.
"Now let’s see what happens if we give the whole of North America the same oil consumption per person as Western Europe."
And then, let's see China, India, Africa, and the rest of the world also have the same oil consumption per person as Western Europe.
Hmm...not quite a rosy picture anymore.
I agree with you that a lot can be done in the U.S. (unfortunately, our whole infrastructure based on the car will make sure that any such transition would be in decades, not just years). However, look at the rest of the world. I always have a sad chuckle when people point to overpopulation and say, "people in developing countries don't use nearly as much fuel as Americans do, so overpopulation is not a threat...We just need to cut down." (Not that you, yourself, have said anything of the sort.) That presupposes that Africans do not want a better life, or that Americans somehow can bring their lifestyles willingly down to that of Africans. And then when the population doubles yet again, we'll again have the same problems, only with double the people to share in (and create) the misery.
Although I know that the U.S. COULD somehow bring its use of oil down in the next few decades (even with a vast supply), I sadly think that instead, other countries would just use more oil and become more like Western Europe like I said above. However, yes, I'm sure that we could do with less oil than we have now (for a time, and to an extent). That's what we did in the early 1980s, for example...
No offense. I'm all for science helping us solve problems. But we can't ONLY rely on science. Those who are doomers no matter what and those who think that anything is possible are both needed in this world, because there ARE great opportunities on the horizon, but there also has to be some idea that not everything is possible. As for science that makes the earth a better place, I'm all for it. Bring on any ideas!
I agree that you do have an infrastructure problem in the US but that does have a depreciation rate. I live in a small town in England and can walk to the shops or to the railway station from where I commute to London. I'm also old enough to remember a single coal fire to heat the whole house. It was lit once a day. Now I wear a T-shirt inside in winter.
The economist John Maynard Keynes is famous for saying 'in the long run we are all dead'. That was in reply to people who said the 1930's depression should be allowed to run its course. I'm curious where the doom and gloom really comes from. I suffer from it myself at times but put it down to age. I know I wouldn't be this way if I was young, rich and beautiful with a blonde at my side.
Instead, I try and look at the numbers on total available energy available. 160 x 160 miles of concentrated solar thermal can provide all the electricity the world uses. There is much more desert than that so 10 billion humans really could have decent lifestyles, especially when you add in a 3 fold improvement in energy efficiency which looks possible.
When predicting a variable it's necessary to keep all the other parameters the same but real life isn't like that. The automobile as it is, is a creation of the oil industry as it is. If one changes the other will too. 100 years ago most automobiles were battery powered. The future oil supply situation will modify demand, change relative prices so efficiency becomes profitable and so on.
I have to go now. Will check back later.
Alan provides a perfect example of the magical thinking that pervades this site.
He points to the amount of solar energy available, the amount of desert unused by said solar panels, then extrapolates that to mean why of course we could have ten billion people on the planet. Just a few thousand problems with that. What about fresh water?
(I guess I should answer the wingnuts who think that a water cycle is the same as an infinite supply of water. You see, Thoman Deplume, we do only have x amount of fresh water. However, when you have an increasing population that uses an increasing amount of water that gets stored in our little water sac bodies, that water gets taken out of circulation for a while. More importantly, the water is simply unavailable as you suggest. For instance, in the Southwest United States, water is not so abundant. Hmmmm. Perhaps they should apply for a permit to plug into the water cycle and siphon off more of it? Then there are the aquifers. The Ogallala aquifer is immense, but its level is dropping precipitously, so much so, it is not clear that farmers in the high plains will have enough water to continue raping the land. Sad, really. If you go to the Middle East, you will find that water is an extremely valuable and hard to come by substance. If you go to China, you will find that they are already peaking in their water supply. Industry also takes water out of the cycle so it is no longer available to humans or animals and plants. All of this despite the "water-cycle.")
Back to Alan. More of the thousands of problems with his magical thinking: What about land? Fertile land? We are destroying land at an impressive rate not only in third world countries, but in the first world. I know that agrichar is advocated, and may even prove useful enough to make a difference in a smaller more locally oriented society such as the Amazonian tribal societies who first used it. But, I suspect that this will prove to be too energy expensive to do on a centralized basis. This means we are back to local.
What about metals? You have read the reports in the "New Scientist" detailing the quite simple and inevitable fact that we are running out of the metals that make high tech society possible? Haven't you?
What about the oceans? They are dying. Scientists now estimate that over half of all fish in the ocean will be dead in a few years. Have you see the dead zone from an airplane over the Mississippi delta? I have. Quite impressive. Have you watched the delightful film produced by the Australian Broadcasting Company about the story of crude? If you do, then you might see the disastrous result of an anoxic ocean.
Then, of course, there is global warming. Many people have their best fits of magical thinking when it comes to this particular nightmare. Yes. Let's sequester carbon. Let's do. Does this cost energy? Does it? Of course it does. What are we going to do? Burn coal to find the energy to do so? Set up nukes everywhere? What about the radioactive nukes that have to be subsequently decommissioned?
Damn people. THINK. Nothing happens in a vacuum. NOTHING.
Finally Alan brushes up against what I'm saying in his closing remark: When predicting a variable it's necessary to keep all the other parameters the same but real life isn't like that.
Yes, that is my point. It works on paper, it works in the lab, it may even work for awhile in the real world. The question is what are the knock-on effects? What about the energy not being absorbed by the sand? Where does that go? Is it like reflective sea ice or are the wavelengths different? Will it change local weather patterns? Will the energy costs of mining the materials, moving the materials, building the trucks to move and mine the materials, building the plant equipment to make the cells, mining the material to make the plant equipment, building the trucks to mine the material to make the plant equipment, pumping the water for the process, lighting the building, moving the workers around, shipping the cells, installing the cells, maintaining the cells----can all of these energy needy processes be paid for energy-wise by the energy produced by these cells and by these cells alone? After all is said and done, how much surplus energy is left? What about the growing population? Doesn't it want just as much energy as everyone else?
In ALan's post we see a clear example of what I call "Engineer Tunnel Vision," or ETV. In this post, he focuses only on what can be done. He does not consider at all any of the ramifications. Particularly interesting is the statement, "100 years ago most automobiles were battery powered." This harkening back to the past to show that things change and we soon have bigger, better, faster, as if this is a good thing, is another symptom of ETV. They see technological history as a train track shooting through time. First comes this discovery, which leads to that discovery, which builds to this widget, which leads us to personal robots who speak like British butlers. They do not see the sides of the track where we see the detritus of tech's remorseless trek. He does not see the pollution, the global warming, the poisoned streams, the foul air, the trash, the plastic floating in the ocean. No. He sees the track ahead. The shiny new track leading to the shiny new future.
That is ETV.
Largely the product of too-inefficient technologies. Nitrates, other pollutants, warming and CO2-driven acidification are changing conditions faster than sea life can adapt. The solution is to use better tech and change conditions back again.
All the product of excessive nitrate runoff from the Midwest cornfields. Terra preta may solve that problem in one go; by trapping excess nitrate before it can run off, it might slash fertilizer costs at the same time that it cleans up the water.
That particular technology was invented as much as 2000 or more years ago in the Amazon basin, but the knowledge was lost. Now that we've regained it, we can press it into use in places that its inventors could not have dreamed of.
Such innumerancy. You cannot just add up averages and come up with a per capita consumption rate. The averages for each continent is the total cunsumption divided by the total population. Bad math destroys your credibility.
The maths is CORRECT. Barrels per day * 365 = total 2005 oil / total population. How do you think BP arrived at barrels per day if not by dividing total consumption by days?
US 25 barrels per person versus 12.8 in Western Europe and don't think you have a higher average standard of living. You don't. That's the extent of US policy failure.
We'll peak and run out of what, exactly?
Sunlight for the thermal plants and the PV's made from the new cheap silicon?
Wind for the wind turbines? There's several times current human energy consumption in wind alone.
How about charcoal for the DCFC's? I can see the supply going up and down a bit as weather affects the growing season, but run out?
I get the distinct feeling that you want a collapse to happen in the worst way (double entendre intended) and engineers are threatening to both take your dream away and make utter fools of you and your ilk at anthropik.net. Pardon me if I have no sympathy for you.
Engineer-Poet,
Once again you fail to run out the simulation. You seem to think the population has stopped growing and that all other resources are infinite. Your solution is operating in a vacuum. Where are the rest of the variables?
No, I do not want the collapse to happen in the worst way. I want it to happen in the BEST way!!!
There will be a collapse. The only question is will we be smart enough to use the remaining cheap energy supplies to work our way back to a more sustainable lifestyle or will we stupidly keep trying to save the failed paradigm?
What do you want? If you want automobiles, then you want the entire ball of polluted, earth-destroying wax. Remember, new autos mean using up our resources, our finite resources. Is there enough stuff -- iron, aluminum, copper, etc. to build this new generation of autos? What about the next generation? Correct me if I'm wrong, but most auto's do not last forever. You do realise it costs energy to make autos. You do realize it costs energy to maintain roads? You do realize it costs energy to recycle said autos? All of this energy is going to come from photo-voltaics?
My dream is of a green earth with blue skies. Is that not your dream? I dream of oceans filled with fish and not gigantic gyres the size of Texas where our plastic crap revolves slowly. Is that not your dream? I dream of trout streams with actual trout in clear, clean water. Is that not your dream? I dream of clean drinking water. Is that not your dream? I dream of my children eating enough to avoid starvation. Is that not your dream? I dream of cropland that increases in fertility. Is that not your dream?
In my dream, there is no intervening, competing vision that calls for some part of the earth to die in order to satisfy a macho need to control. In my dream we are not the reason the earth exists. We are simply lucky to be alive on such a beautiful, well-designed entity.
I have dreams. Good dreams. Don't ever accuse me of not wanting the best for humanity. I suggest you look into your own soul first.
I have the same dreams, but I try not to go at people like a raving idiot. You know, it puts people off. We are all in this together.
Engineers can't control population growth. You will have to talk to the 6 billion non-engineers about that.
Yeah, it's all about your procreative ability, isn't it? You sir, are the problem.
Now, that's irony.
Yes, I had children. Would you like their address so you can go kill them?
I find that remark very offensive, on several levels.
BobCousins,
The future of the planet is important. Not letting those who would destroy it get a free pass is important. Calling people magical thinkers when they are magical thinkers, that is important.
In fact, it is so important, not to get upset by these destroyers would be criminally immoral.
You keep patting each other on the back while the house burns down around you. Keep smiling through your magical thinking and techno posturing.
And above all, keep pushing away the idea of a clean, verdant planet. That REALLY makes sense.
Population has in fact stopped growing in many places. The idea that population is in a irreversible growth trend is false. Maybe we need an article on this.
The energy problems we face, while large, are tractable. We can and will solve them by tying efforts together across different engineering disciplines. Collapse is a possibility but only a remote one. This is the mundane reality of our situation.
I wonder why our population wouldn't grow right to the limit that any new alternative energy systems can support too?
Cherenkov said:
It takes energy to overcome entropy. Since a renewable system has to supply the energy to repair itself, a huge population to support will limit the extra energy needed to keep the system going. Uh oh.
You are not simulating, you are handwaving. Why do you demand of others what you have not done — and probably cannot do — yourself?
I've got a flash for you: European indigenous birthrates are now well below replacement, so is Japan's, and the US would be stable if it was not for rampant immigration (most of it illegal). As for resources, we're turning things like silicon dioxide (glass) and CHON materials (from phenolic to epoxies and carbon fiber) into major parts of our society. How do we run out of the raw materials for Buckytubes?
My solution is for the US and Europe to deport the unassimilable or otherwise troublesome aliens (including the removal of "birthright citizenship" in the USA) and then deal with the remaining issues using the breathing room created thereby.
Deporting the Mexicans from the US, where they have a TFR of about 4, back to Mexico where they have a TFR of about 2.4, may collapse Mexico but it will reduce the overall size of the problem considerably.
And on that note I'm shutting down and leaving Kentucky. See all of you later.
The technology equals lower populations argument is one of my favorite magical thinking canards.
Let's run this little scenario out to its logical conclusion.
Since most of the world does not enjoy our standard of population growth killing tech, then I assume you would spread our profligate ways to the rest of the world? That means a billion Chinese all driving autos, trucks, etc. This means 750 million Indians all driving autos, trucks, etc. It means they will all use just as much energy as we do through nukes, coal, natural gas. This means they will use as much or more of our peaking metals. This means that people formerly employed in peasant activities, such as growing food in a non-energy intensive way, will have to leave the farm to get jobs to pay for their autos and extravagent energy lifestyles. This means farms will have to be mechanized. This means tractors. This means more energy being used. It means chemical fertilizers. It means less diversity in the environment.
BUT, most importantly, it means someone, somewhere must go without. Why?
And I quote, "About 15 percent of the world's population resides in industrialized countries, yet the people of these nations consume 85 percent of the world's resources.
It would require the equivalent of three planet Earths to sustain the current population at the standard of living of most industrialized countries like the United States. This figure increases to six Earths in the event of a doubling in the current population with the same living standard—12 Earths if both the population and standard of living double."
This would be obvious to anyone who cares to actually spark up a few brain cells, but it always seems to elude the techno-worshippers. Why is that? Is it an inconvenient truth?
Does this mean then that you are advocating we somehow meet in the middle?
You do realize that if technology equals decreasing populations, then we will eventually die off. At some point, you must ask yourself, why are populations shrinking in industrialized countries? Is it the estrogen mimics in the environment? Is it the pollution? Is it the stress? Is it the poor quality of the industrial food supply? Is it what some people call the psychotic meme?
Is it because in an environment where you no longer need children to farm your land, you forgo those children?
Hmmm. If so, then who farms your land? Without natural fertilizer produced on the farm by careful management of animal waste and the recycling of biomass, the farm goes dead. Since everyone abandoned the land to feed their autos, who feeds the cows? Feedlots. So, we need to add annhydrous ammonia to the soil to make it perform. Thus we kill the soil. Eventually, the land becomes sterile. Then the natural gas feedstock runs out. Then, I presume, the population crashes further.
I see!!!! This is your plan to kill off the world's population!!! Give them all industrial technology and they will poison their environment to such an extent they will die off!!!
Wow. You are FREAKIN' BRILLIANT.
I guess my next question would be who would want to be among the last few standing in the stinking ruins of your crashed industrial society?
Long term, the cirlce must be closed. Human society must live within the constraints of a limited planet and a renewable resource stream. Long term I think we would all like to preserve our natural patrimony, with most of our species still alive and our ecosystems healthy. Most of us would also like to preserve as much of our cultural patrimony as possible -- the books the libraries and museums, the arts and music and artifacts that have enriched our lives. Most of us would prefer to not have to totally abandon and forget about all the scientific and technological advances that have improved human life, even if we do need to figure out how to make and run them on tiny energy and material inputs.
Note that the above future does not necessarilly imply billions of people tooling around at high speeds in cars weighing tons. It does not imply exponential rates of growth in populations, economies, or any other statistics. It does imply something better than absolute misery and deprivation.
The question is: how to get from here to there?
First, we need to build general societal consensus that the above "there" is where we want to go. Presently, such consensus does not exist, as the above exchange illustrates. Absent such a consensus, and effective leadership to move society in the right direction, we'll just drift. We won't just magically get to the above "there" by the invisible hand of the free market; the free market doesn't care where we end up or how we get there.
There are some technologies that will be more helpful than others for building the pathway from here to there. Some technologies will not be helpful at all, even counterproductive. Our main problem, however, is not primarilly a technological problem -- it is a political and social problem.
How do we get from here to there? I don't have the answer. I do know that each of us can decide to be part of the answer, or we can each decide to continue to be part of the problem.