http://www.nytimes.com/2005/08/21/magazine/21OIL.html?oref=loginPeak Oil Gets Cover Page of NYT
8/22/2005 1:44:06 PM
http://www.saudiaramco.com/bvsm/JSP/home.jsp
8/22/2005 1:46:50 PM
I wonder if the new york times rule applies to this.[Edited on August 22, 2005 at 3:02 PM. Reason : ]
8/22/2005 2:59:17 PM
This is not the first time that the world has 'run out of oil. It's more like the fifth. Cycles of shortage and surplus characterize the entire history of the oil industry.
8/22/2005 3:09:00 PM
yeah, all 100 and some change years of it but it'll be recycled, right lonesnark? nothing more to see here! it might actually be renewable!
8/22/2005 3:18:29 PM
We need to funnel a lot more money into R&D and develop a new energy source. Until then, the middle east has got the industrialized world by the nutsack. I guess you could argue that we have them by the sack too...
8/22/2005 4:09:34 PM
8/22/2005 6:11:11 PM
IRONIC YOUR USER NAME IS FUEL AND YOU'RE STANDING UP FOR PETROL
8/22/2005 6:53:52 PM
more nuclear power => less dependance on oil.its really not a bad solution.
8/22/2005 10:36:23 PM
EXCEPT THAT THE TURRISTS WILL STEAL ALL OUR NUCULAR FUEL AND TURN THEM INTO THOSE DEVASTATING THINGS KNOWN AS DIRTY BOMBS! Seriously, though, I'm all for nuclear power. I wish it'd be more widely adopted. I can't wait for fusion to take off, though.[Edited on August 22, 2005 at 10:41 PM. Reason : fu...sion.....HAA!]
8/22/2005 10:40:51 PM
8/22/2005 11:05:37 PM
If somebody wants fusion to work they need to figure out how hydrolysis works in an efficient manner.God damnit, Keanu Reeves knows kung fu, he was there when they discovered the secret to hydrolysis. SOMEBODY GO MAKE HIM TALK![Edited on August 23, 2005 at 12:29 AM. Reason : I might... be ranting... about fuel cells... Too late for that now...]
8/23/2005 12:29:01 AM
What does hydrolysis have to do with fusion? Are you saying that we break water down to get hydrogen to fuel the fusion process?Granted, it would take a good amount of initialization energy, but once the fusion reaction gets going, it's pretty much self-sustaining. Point is, once we've got a reaction going, we can use the energy generated from that to break down water, thus producing hydrogen, thus keeping the fusion process going. Rinse and repeat. The only trick is getting the fusion reaction to last long enough to get any appreciable juice from it (my understanding is that the best fusion reactors can only currently keep up the reaction for, like, 10 seconds, after which the magnetic fields that contain the reaction mysteriously break down.)
8/23/2005 1:20:22 AM
http://www.smartcommute.org/Stop wasting my grandson's oil, bitch.Walk if you can...and carpool if you can.Don't rev up your V8 engine just cuz your lardass cannot walk to the McDs 2 blocks down.
8/23/2005 1:22:02 AM
Then again, I'd hate to see a fusion power plant have a melt down.
8/23/2005 1:47:02 AM
8/23/2005 1:50:26 AM
8/23/2005 8:21:56 AM
8/23/2005 8:36:39 AM
There were a couple of people on NPR talking about peak oil yesterday and how they think that Saudi Arabia, and by extension the World, has already reached it.Apparently people are starting to whisper that Suadi fields aren't as healthy as the Saudi gov. claims.
8/23/2005 10:25:07 AM
To be producing as much oil as the fields are with as little investment as there has been, they sould pretty damn healthy to me. They are only spending $4 for every barrel produced, just imagine how much oil they could produce if they started spending $25 a barrel!
8/23/2005 12:42:39 PM
8/23/2005 4:47:10 PM
Lonesnark seriously man.I don't want you to think I'm a dick when I say you have no idea what peak oil is.
8/23/2005 4:59:47 PM
WTF LoneSnark
8/23/2005 5:01:03 PM
8/23/2005 5:09:09 PM
I was alluding in my first post about alexander the great in connection with history today. Allusion is a form of persuasive argument. While my message didn't cover all of history the issue remains the same. Conquest in the middle east has brought nothing to the world ecept more wars.
8/23/2005 5:16:48 PM
i don't see where i screwed up the facts. i just didn't want you saying that the middle has been in turmoil since the time of alexander the great. it makes the situation look far more helpless than it really is and it glosses over much more current and relevant history.
8/23/2005 5:21:24 PM
Thats just the thing. The situation is helpless. When something is helpless it is not harvestable. In other words we cant fix something that is unfixable through aggressive means. What is being "glossed" over is the current situation in the middle as it relates to history. Its called fucking logic.[Edited on August 23, 2005 at 5:25 PM. Reason : .]
8/23/2005 5:25:14 PM
so it's helpless because you say it is. i understand. you ever think of having some reasonable evidence?
8/23/2005 5:29:53 PM
Almost 1500 dead and counting, and you want reasonable evidence.[Edited on August 23, 2005 at 5:31 PM. Reason : jesus h christ]
8/23/2005 5:30:32 PM
i don't think invading iraq will or has saved the middle east. but i also don't think the situation is helpless. keep trying.
8/23/2005 5:31:08 PM
In my argument i said, and i repeat myself,
8/23/2005 5:33:29 PM
i guess you to because that's all you've been speaking[Edited on August 23, 2005 at 5:35 PM. Reason : .]
8/23/2005 5:34:53 PM
End of argument[Edited on August 23, 2005 at 5:35 PM. Reason : sheesh]
8/23/2005 5:35:12 PM
you no longer warrent any response from me, good day
8/23/2005 5:37:19 PM
so by aggressive you mean a war or you mean aggressive action? because i think aggressive action needs to be taken. not necessarily in the form of war. sheesh. and to keep things straight i was just correcting you on the alexander the great thing. and saying that the situation isn't helpless. i never said war was the answer. i never really disagreed with you on that point.
8/23/2005 5:37:40 PM
The EIA officially is stating that oil demand will outstrip supply in the fourth quarter of this year, as well as in Q1 and Q4 of 2006http://theoildrum.blogspot.com/2005/08/more-eia-demand-will-outstrip-supply.html
8/24/2005 11:47:28 AM
Interesting... If the EIA is to be believed, the new higher prices are reversing the "Peak Oil Trend" that enviro-nuts were so excited about. As of 2006, US Domestic Oil Production will be increasing, reversing the 1980s downward trend. It is amazing what a little investment can do. As for your comments about outstripping supply, you are merely noting the seasonal shift in oil demand. Oil companies want to pump continuously throughout the year, people only want to heat their homes in winter. Therefore, as with any other consumer good, stockpiles are built up and drawn down in various quarters. This fact has nothing to do with Peak Oil unless is says year 2006 will produce less oil than 2005, which it clearly does not.
8/24/2005 12:03:11 PM
don't look at raw pumping volumelook at the ratio demand/supply.... is next year's ratio going to be greater than this years? [Edited on August 24, 2005 at 12:19 PM. Reason : s]
8/24/2005 12:19:04 PM
Check out Steven Levitt's response to the NY Times article. (i know, i'm a few days late on this)http://www.freakonomics.com/2005/08/peak-oil-welcome-to-medias-new-version.html
8/24/2005 3:23:22 PM
I'm definitely in accord with Levitt on this. I feel the whole Peak Oil Catastrophe Boogeyman is a lot of hype.
8/24/2005 3:25:08 PM
8/24/2005 3:27:51 PM
8/24/2005 3:35:27 PM
8/24/2005 4:54:20 PM
The alternative fuels exist already, but their popularity is what is keeping them from the mainstream market. We as a country always call on more production to meet our increasing demand. What is keeping us from lessening the demand? Biodiesel, vegetable oil, and ethanol are all viable alternatives to petroleum fuels. The main things keeping these from being viable alternatives are the infrastructure to distribute them, the oil companies themselves, and vehicle fuel system components that are incompatible with the alternative fuels. I know I'll open up a new can of worms with this post, but the technology is there; the investment isn't in R&D it is in implementation. Brazil has been running 100% ethanol automotive fuel for quite a long time now and they are doing just fine. Someone on another forum said that E85 (85% ethanol 15% gasoline if you don't know) was cheaper than regular 87 octane by a good amount (at the time, 87 octane was $2.18/g and E85 was selling for $1.87/g). I'm sure that margin will grow as petroleum keeps increasing in price. Farms can produce ethanol quite easily from waste products, which would harvest energy from something that otherwise would just decompose out in a field. In Brazil they make ethanol from sugarcane, and it takes less energy to produce than is used from the ethanol. Gasoline takes more energy to produce than is used from burning gasoline. There are plenty of options, most are available now, they are just not demanded enough for people to start implementing them.I agree with DirtyGreek, that in general, everyone bitches about the price of gasoline, but very few actually do anything to decrease how much of it they use.[Edited on August 24, 2005 at 5:39 PM. Reason : ]
8/24/2005 5:37:03 PM
^ I also recall someone saying that ethanol was less efficient than gas, so the savings per gallon are squandered by the relative inefficiency...
8/24/2005 5:48:51 PM
For what it is worth (I don't know anything about economics, so I am not defending any side here) :http://arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=68940&d=24&m=8&y=2005
8/24/2005 6:14:45 PM
8/24/2005 6:47:33 PM
someone answer me ^ please. thank you.
8/24/2005 6:50:02 PM
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2005/08/24/national/w134322D04.DTL
8/24/2005 6:51:06 PM
http://www.wtrg.com/prices.htmOil prices are controlled by the OPEC
8/24/2005 6:54:14 PM