Despite the fact that Katrina (and to a lesser extent Rita) demonstrated how weak our nations energy infrastructure is, who thinks that we will change?I am taking bets that people will allow oil to run out (then panic) before a real plan is put in place to find alternative sources for energy.
9/26/2005 8:05:00 PM
I really hope oil runs out in my lifetime.I'm sure it will fucking blow and pandemonium will set in as well as panic, but I think it'll be the only thing that will force the world to change energy sources.
9/26/2005 9:50:34 PM
^i hope i live a shorter life than this guy
9/26/2005 9:55:24 PM
the oil won't run out for a hundred of your lifetime
9/26/2005 9:55:41 PM
^ I doubt our current rate of consumption is sustainable.Oil is not in an underground lake, it is in rocks and once a site is at "peak oil" it is all downhill from there. The extraction of the remaining half of the oil becomes exponentially more expensive.
9/26/2005 10:02:03 PM
people are already starting to panic.But they are also taking seriously plans to use alternative energy sources.
9/26/2005 10:36:22 PM
We will wake up one morning and there will be no oil. Luckily I have been saving oil in my basement for like 9 years. I dont know how to turn it into gas though.
9/26/2005 10:41:24 PM
9/26/2005 10:51:28 PM
Not again, damn it. What is with some people? You make an idiotic thread, spread disinformation, and when reasonable people turn up to reveal the truth you go away for a month or so and start another thread to try it all again. How did Katrin demonstrate weakness of our energy infrastructure? The absolute worse-case scenario occurs and everything works out pretty well. Actual shortages were rare, only affecting geographically isolated markets.
9/26/2005 11:24:24 PM
because we can sustain this rate of oil usage indefinitely
9/27/2005 1:25:52 AM
someone's got a hardon for oil...
9/27/2005 1:41:36 AM
Thanks to Smath74 and Luigi for point out that LoneSnark completely missed the point.Maybe we can talk the short bus into backing up a little and letting him hop on.[Edited on September 27, 2005 at 8:57 AM. Reason : n]
9/27/2005 8:52:58 AM
9/27/2005 9:28:35 AM
9/27/2005 9:38:48 AM
9/27/2005 9:39:41 AM
9/27/2005 9:43:18 AM
^ Then the govt really needs to get out of the oil business.
9/27/2005 9:44:47 AM
too bad the gov't isn't "in the oil business"
9/27/2005 9:51:28 AM
9/27/2005 9:59:43 AM
Ok, so your objection is not with subsidies, just who they went to, great Would you be satisfied if all we did was get the government out of the energy business? (you know, as a compromise)US Peak Oil criticism from wiki:A key criticism is that American oil production may have peaked because it was cheaper to extract and import oil from elsewhere, most notably Saudi Arabia, and so the peak in production had nothing to do with any lack of supply in the ground.[Edited on September 27, 2005 at 10:23 AM. Reason : .]
9/27/2005 10:15:12 AM
9/27/2005 10:41:30 AM
9/27/2005 10:51:19 AM
9/27/2005 12:04:06 PM
^^ Sounds reasonable to me. ^ As for you, sir, that is a rather oversimplified argument. I believe the element you have overlooked is this: althought building the necessary infrastructure to transition from oil would cost more as the price of oil increased, the expected profits too would skyrocket. It strikes me, that since the "construction" aspect of the alternative industry would be an up-front fixed cost, where-as the expected profits are over time, ever higher oil prices would make such systems ever more likely to be constructed.
9/27/2005 1:29:00 PM
I don't see why investment in alternative energies would yield higher profits than investment in oil since, in this scenario, there is no infrastructure for alternative energies so the creation of them requires oil, making them proportionatly more costly than oil. So the "upfront fixed cost" isn't really fixed, it's determined by the cost of oil.Also, investment in alternative energies would be more risky since it's not completely clear what we mean by alternative energies. There doesn't seem to be one clear-cut best alternative to oil and people will lose a lot of money betting on the wrong horse. It seems like most investors would tend to stick with the safer bet on oil.
9/27/2005 2:01:07 PM
http://abcnews.go.com/Business/CSM/story?id=1140560New story from ABC News:
9/27/2005 2:01:41 PM
yea, I guess my argument is that we should start making the switch now, while we have plenty of cheap oil and the cost of switching is lower than later on when it will be much more expensive.
9/27/2005 2:13:40 PM
^ agreed. But see, the cost is lower to US, not to the oil companies who run the country.
9/27/2005 3:09:08 PM
9/27/2005 3:16:47 PM
Because ethanol is still more expensive than $60 oil. So is biodiesel. [Edited on September 27, 2005 at 3:32 PM. Reason : D]
9/27/2005 3:31:49 PM
9/27/2005 7:55:45 PM
I would say that the govt is in the grain business.If you look at all of the ways that the govt influences the production, harvest, storage and trafficing of grain then there is actually quite a bit of control. As a nation we are not in a crisis for food and there is no reason to 'tighten the ropes' on the industry.If there were to be a crisis then you would see how much influence there is on that industry and oil is the same way. If you overlook the control and influence the govt has over a wide variety of interests then you are blind.
9/27/2005 8:41:19 PM
9/27/2005 10:57:31 PM
9/27/2005 11:43:06 PM
maybe its just me, but when I think of someone being "in the X business," I think of them as actually selling X. Subsidizing X is not the same to me as selling X.
9/28/2005 12:37:18 AM
^^ that's a good point. Were you including regular production cost though? The upfront cost would be building the infrastructure, the regular production cost would be the cost of growing the corn or whatever, processing it, and shipping it (which would probably initially be dependent on oil prices). I'm not sure how much it costs to produce ethanol per unit, but it seems like, with the price of oil affecting your cost at so many different points, your total cost (infrastructure+production) might never be cheaper than oil. I mean, eventually it would, but at that point we might have already suffered a massive blow to the economy.
9/28/2005 10:53:41 AM
Your objection is valid, you are just looking at it from the wrong angle. The problem you are describing is not the fundamental economics but the inability to predict the future. If it takes a whole year from the day you begin construction to begin production, then you need to know whether the price one year from now is going to be $2.50 or $5 (linking back to my earlier example). If it is going to be $2.50, then you will lose money the first year. If it is going to be $5, then you will make all your money back plus more in the first year. The problem is, you need to decide to begin construction today in order to enter the market one year from now. If you believe it is going to be $2.50 you may abandon the project even if one year from now you discover it is $5. Conversely, if you begin construction today and discover it is only $1.50 a year from now, then you have lost your entire depreciated investment. As such, for society to prosper the pool of capitalists need to accurately predict the future, otherwise both they and society suffers.
9/28/2005 1:59:48 PM
GOD WE NEED MR. FUSION.
9/28/2005 2:09:27 PM
9/28/2005 2:15:03 PM
At least we all agree we should not be in either business. [Edited on September 28, 2005 at 2:30 PM. Reason : .n]
9/28/2005 2:30:34 PM
9/28/2005 2:35:59 PM
dude, biodiesel is made from leftover cooking oil, lye, and alcohol. it is NOT more expensive than oil in large quantities at all. Hell, some people reprot making it for $1 / gallon at home.
9/28/2005 2:37:06 PM
Why are you guys even worrying about this crap?The free market will take care of everything.
9/28/2005 2:44:13 PM
^^ Then why aren't you using the stuff? If it works, go do it. If it is cheaper in large quantities than oil, then you need to go open a chain of grease stations accross the state so people can partake of the cheapness. Until you do that, the facts are on our side. People are not using your fuel in droves, hence it must not be significantly better than regular gasoline or diesel.
9/28/2005 4:39:13 PM