Stories tagged with "olduvai"
Olduvai Theory: Toward Re-Equalizing the World Standard of Living - Richard Duncan
Posted by Nate Hagens on July 4, 2009 - 8:37am
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: geodestinies, olduvai, richard duncan, walter youngquist [list all tags]
This is a guest posting of Richard Duncan's latest "Olduvai" update, which is an essay that explores energy use and population and as with previous updates arrives at some rather grim conclusions.
On a side note, the paper Richard Duncan wrote with Walter Youngquist in 1999 (when oil prices were in $10-$15 range and stock markets were at all time highs) predicting a 2007 world oil peak was not only prescient and ahead of its time using oil forecasting heuristics, but was part of the core readings from 2003 that caused me to leave the Wall St path to study resource depletion full time.
(I encourage those who have not done so to read it: Encircling the Peak of World Oil Production).

Figure 5. Toward Re-Equalizing the World Standards of Living
The Global Energy Crisis and its Role in the Pending Collapse of the Global Economy
Posted by Euan Mearns on November 3, 2008 - 10:25am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Policy/Politics
Tags: bio fuel, ccs, climate change, credit, deflation, einstein, energy efficiency, energy poverty, eroei, gdp, hydrogen, inflation, ipcc, lia, olduvai, opec, original, production decline, united kingdom [list all tags]

When my talk to the Royal Society of Chemists was first arranged this summer, oil cost over $130 per barrel, and we wondered where the price would be in October. Since then much has happened. The credit expansion bubble was pricked in part by inflation stemming from high energy prices, and the global banking system is teetering on the brink of collapse, reprieved only by the spread of social ownership throughout the OECD.
Olduvai 2008 movie
Posted by Luis de Sousa on March 1, 2008 - 11:30am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Alternative energy
Tags: alternative energy, movie, olduvai, peak coal, peak fossil fuel, peak natural gas, peak oil [list all tags]

As an addendum to the Olduvai 2008 post there's a movie available that digests the main ideas presented there.
This was an original idea of Nate Hagens and Chris Vernon to somehow broaden the TOD readership spectrum to people with busy schedules and/or short attention spans. This new Olduvai assessment seemed a good place to start, although in the future the objective is to have more concise and direct movies, targeted for people who are not so savvy on fossil fuel depletion.
The budget was €0, so this piece of media is far from perfect, to which we ask for your understanding.
You can watch the movie using these links:
Olduvai revisited 2008
Posted by Luis de Sousa on February 28, 2008 - 11:15am in The Oil Drum: Europe
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: alternative energy, energy per capita, olduvai, peak coal, peak natural gas, peak oil, population [list all tags]
Revisiting the Olduvai Theory
Posted by Heading Out on March 6, 2006 - 2:54pm
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: coal, energy production, gas, hydro, nuclear, oil, olduvai [list all tags]
The Olduvai Gorge Theory was laid out by Richard Duncan in 1989, after seeing that world energy per capita (WEPC) has been declining since 1979. Although others had seen this, Duncan felt that they missed the point that if it kept falling, modern civilization would collapse.
Duncan defined the Electrical Civilization as the way-of-life enabled by widespread and abundant electricity, and set its limits as the period where WEPC is above 30% of its peak, i.e. the period beyond 1930.
The Olduvai Theory assumes that after peaking, WEPC will decline at a rate that mirrors its growth. This brings the Electrical Civilization to an end after 100 years. Duncan defined the idea without using a model, but his concept has been built into other models. Of these, the Meadows team's World3 is probably the most famous, giving the Electrical Civilization a lifetime between 100 and 105 years in all three reference simulations, 1969, 1989, and 1999.
And thus the Olduvai Theory evolved to:
Electrical Civilization can be described by a single pulse waveform of duration X, as measured by average energy-use per person per year. It has a life-expectancy of less than one-hundred (100) years.


k Nation (Jim Kunstler)






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