I found this linked to DrunkNLoaded's oil citationhttp://www.energybulletin.net/14416.htmlsummary: you're an oil consumer. you eat oil for breakfast. and lunch and dinner. and the amount of energy in the oil you consume at meals is anywhere from 2 to 10 times the caloric value of the meal itself. and guess who''s next? China and India. They want to eat Oil for Breakfast, too.
5/25/2006 2:56:21 AM
I'm doing my part. I don't eat breakfast.
5/25/2006 7:16:12 AM
There are also a lot of dead animals in your breakfast too. Do you have any idea how many animals get run down by trucks every year?
5/25/2006 9:11:42 AM
this is from 2003, another article on oil and agriculture.problems with agriculture, total energy productivity of the plant, how our consumption increases, and how our efficiency is decreasing
5/26/2006 12:52:37 AM
Ted Nugent is all for it.
5/26/2006 12:54:26 AM
Even if it is true that mankind dominates the planet's "primary productivity" this author has excluded important information. As in countries, not all plants are of equal efficiency. The vast majority of the planet's biomass is rediculously inefficient, ranking in at a paltry 0.1% efficiency. Meanwhile, you see something completely different when it comes to the plants harvested by humans. For example, one of the most efficient plants on Earth is sugar-cane, meansuring in at a whopping 8% efficiency, 80 times the average. Meanwhile, our other crop plants still manage 1 to 2% efficiency, 10 to 20 times normal for plant's in nature. http://www.life.uiuc.edu/govindjee/whatisit.htmGet this, for every square foot occupied by sugar-cane field, just to match the human race would require 80 square feet of natural biomass. As such, even if we do consume 40% of the earth's "primary productivity" it is because natural plants do not care about productivity, they are too busy just surviving. Meanwhile, human farmed plants don't need to worry about survival because humans will provide all the necessary protection, all these plants need to do to be selected by humans for survival is become more productive. Thus, land farmed by humans will tend to produce more "life budget" than land that is allowed to go natural. Thus, in a world occupied by some land that is farmed and other that is fallow it is only surprising to see how little of the "life budget" we humans are producing.[Edited on May 26, 2006 at 3:29 AM. Reason : lnk]
5/26/2006 3:29:04 AM
Oh wow, and here I thought that my breakfast just magically appeared out of nowhere into my kitchen.Sure that article goes into detail, but any idiot should realize to some degree what enegery is expended to get him/her those things. Whats next, a breakdown of energy spent bringing our clothes to us? I better hurry up and learn how to knit for myself.
5/26/2006 1:28:29 PM