Why Dems and Republicans Are Agraid of Two Words: Peak Oil

topic posted Thu, May 22, 2008 - 3:35 PM by  Tedster
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Why Dems and Republicans Are Afraid of Two Words: Peak Oil
By Kelpie Wilson, TruthOut.org
Posted on May 22, 2008, Printed on May 22, 2008
www.alternet.org/story/85841/

In 1956, M. King Hubbert, a petroleum geologist with Shell Oil, presented a paper to the American Petroleum Institute that predicted US oil production would peak in the early 1970s and then follow a declining curve, now known as Hubbert's curve. But Hubbert almost didn't get to give his paper. He got a call from his bosses at Shell, who asked him to "tone it down." His reply was that there was nothing to tone down. It was just straightforward analysis. He presented the paper, unedited. You can read the whole story here.

Since that time, the oil industry and its political supporters have done everything they can to tone down the message that oil is a finite resource and that we will run out of it some day. Why would they do that? To further the short-sighted, short-term pursuit of profit. In 2004, Shell finally got caught in a lie about the size of its oil reserves. The company had inflated the stated size of its oil reserves to keep stock share prices high because who wants to invest in a company -- or an industry -- that is going the way of the dinosaurs?

Since 1956, the world economy has proceeded under a sort of oil company spell that has woven the illusion all around us that oil depletion is so far into the future that we don't need to worry about it. That belief was essential to support the aim of an endlessly growing economy. There have been a few hitches in that strategy.

In 1972, just as oil production in the United States reached its all-time peak, a group of computer modelers from MIT released a study called "The Limits to Growth." They predicted a steep decline in natural resources of all kinds. Because reserve numbers for many minerals, including oil, were not accurately known back then, they looked at different scenarios. Some showed us running out of oil before 2000 and some showed the peak occurring toward the middle of the 21st century.

The pro-growth faction reacted quickly and scathingly to the idea that there could be limits to growth. The MIT scientists were treated like Cassandras in academia and in the press. This strategy of killing the messenger, the bearer of bad news, soon permeated American politics. Jimmy Carter tried to grapple with the energy crisis in the late 1970s with support for energy alternatives and conservation, but he was ridiculed by the media and American consumers were not able to hear the message. Ronald Reagan walked away with the presidency and promptly tore the solar panels off the roof of the White House. Ever since then, it has somehow been "not polite" to talk about limits to growth.

Today, despite skyrocketing oil prices, most politicians still avoid the term "peak oil." Most of the media still treat peak oil advocates with skepticism, using epithets like "fringe" and "so-called"to describe peak oil theory. To be clear, peak oil is often misunderstood. The date that the world reaches peak oil is not the date we actually run out, but the date that we stop increasing production. This is followed by a "plateau" where oil production is flat.

Eventually, oil production will decline. Even a plateau is a big problem for a world economy that is based on growth. In a world where 850 million are still going hungry and 3 billion out of 6.5 billion live on less than $2 a day, stagnant oil production means an end to development models based on economic growth. The statistics show that oil production has been flat for more than two years now. These facts are simple. As Hubbert said back in 1956: "Nothing sensational about it, just straightforward analysis."

And yet the most powerful institutions in our society continue to do everything they can to avoid confronting the truth. Fortunately, a vast network of independent citizens, academics and renegade oil company employees has kept probing at the truth and attempting to educate the public about peak oil. You can find their work online at sites like energybulletin.net and theoildrum.com.

These networks have not only exposed the real statistics about oil production constraints, but they have begun to grapple with how the world should respond to this unprecedented crisis. Anyone who is interested in a firsthand encounter with the intrepid "peakists" might check out an upcoming conference. The International Conference on Peak Oil and Climate Change: Paths to Sustainability takes place from May 30 to June 1 in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Michigan Congressman Vernon Ehler will launch the conference. Ehler is a member of the House Peak Oil Caucus, which was founded by another Republican, Roscoe Bartlett of Maryland. The Peak Oil Caucus is co-chaired by Democrat Tom Udall, but it has only 15 members in all. There is no similar group in the Senate and very few other politicians will use the term peak oil. None of the current presidential candidates have made peak oil an issue. Bartlett's press secretary, Lisa Wright, said that Bartlett has talked about peak oil with John McCain but not with Obama or Clinton. When I asked if McCain would take on the peak oil issue, Wright said, "I would not describe Senator McCain as being nearly as knowledgeable or committed as Representative Bartlett on the issue."

When speaking of energy issues, politicians will often use the euphemism of energy security, acknowledging that the US has only three percent of the world's oil reserves and warning that most of the rest of it belongs to unfriendly or unstable governments. While there is truth to this type of statement, it sets up a framework for conflict by creating the perception that there is plenty of oil left but bad people are keeping it away from us.

Both Democrats and Republicans buy into this view. In this election season, some Democrats seem even more willing than Republicans to play the oil fear card and promote quick-fix measures that are ineffectual or downright ridiculous. First there was the gas tax holiday proposed by John McCain and seconded by Hillary Clinton. Barack Obama distinguished himself by resisting the idea.

The economics of it make no sense. It would at best save the average motorist about $30 over a summer of driving, and at worst the increased demand would drive up gas prices. Obama's position shows he understands that oil supply is not meeting demand, even if he has not used the words "peak oil."

In the last two weeks, Congress has seen a slew of silly proposals from both sides. Democrats want President Bush to twist Saudi arms to get the kingdom to produce more oil. If that doesn't work, they want to cut off their arms -- weapons that is. Senator Reid plans to bring an expedited resolution to the Senate floor that would block $1.37 billion in arms sales to the Saudis unless they increase oil production by one million barrels a day.

Peak oil educator Richard Heinberg warns where all this confrontation might lead: "[S]uppose we get tough with the Saudis and end up destabilizing the kingdom so that forces unfriendly to us take over. Then we will feel more or less forced to invade in order to maintain access to our national drug of choice. Where would it end? Does any of this help?"

Meanwhile, what Democrats would do to the Saudis, Republicans want to do to the polar bear and the caribou. Republicans are generally in favor of drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR) despite the fact that even at peak production it would meet only two percent of American's oil demand. But not all Republicans favor drilling in ANWR. Peak Oil Caucus Co-Chair Roscoe Bartlett thinks we should save the Arctic oil for a real emergency. Speaking in opposition to drilling, he said "I am having trouble understanding how it is in our national security interest to use up our little bit of oil as quickly as we can. If we could pump ANWR tomorrow, what would we do the day after tomorrow?"

Bartlett takes this position because he is operating with the knowledge that oil is finite and that the world is nearing or has surpassed peak production. If all members of Congress were operating within this framework, then we would see some very different policy proposals. I asked Lisa Wright why Bartlett's office thinks the peak oil issue has gotten so little traction in the media and with politicians. Wright blamed a human psychological condition known as cognitive dissonance, "the phenomenon that you only hear what you're interested in hearing."

"Hard truths are hard to talk about as well as hard to absorb," she said. "It's much easier to believe people who say that if we just have more American production then we wouldn't have to worry about foreign imports, without explaining that we're already pumping our minute portion of world reserves three or four times faster than the rest of the world. But we can't drill our way to self-sufficiency because you can't pump what's not there."

When asked if she saw peak oil becoming an issue in the presidential campaign, Wright said, "It will become a campaign issue if candidates make it an issue and candidates will choose to make it an issue if it shows up as being a motivating issue for voters." But, she said, "It's a chicken and egg conundrum. To the extent that voters become informed and aware through media, you'll find that candidates will follow. That's generally the way American politics works."

After years of toning down the message of peak oil in public discourse, voters need to let candidates know that now is the time to tone it up.

Kelpie Wilson is Truthout's environment editor. Trained as a mechanical engineer, she embarked on a career as a forest protection activist, then returned to engineering as a technical writer for the solar power industry.
© 2008 TruthOut.org All rights reserved.
View this story online at: www.alternet.org/story/85841/
posted by:
Tedster
SF Bay Area
  • There is no such thing as peak oil.
    The phrase is a fairly meaningless expression. I might have some application to describe the pauses in oil recovery methods when technological changes are needed to get more oil but that's about it.

    In the really really bad old days about 348 AD the Chinese drilled as deep as 800 feet.
    Between 1264 and 1735 surface seep and tar oil was the most common way to get it.
    In the early 1800s in PA they got oil when they were frilling for Brine.
    In 1848 The Russians drilled for oil in the Aspheron Peninsula north-east of Baku
    In 1849 geologist Dr. Abraham Gesner figured how to get Kerosene from oil. That ended the age of wale oil and brought on the whole new age of oil~!!!!!

    Most of the wells in the 1800's in the US Canada and Europe were only about 50 or 60 feet deep. Oil was under hydraulic pressure. It would squirt up all by itself.
    Eventually the era of the Gushers ended.


    They had to build brine pumps to pressurize the deeper reservoirs.
    Then they had to build better bigger pumps and derricks and from steel.

    It's been that way for a while A long while.


    Each state was a "peak" of sorts.

    Now the "peak" ( such as it is) is that oil is simply harder to get.
    What you have to do to get oil now is (1) drill in difficult places like deep ocean; (2) drill in places where the idiot left will howl and cry; (3) refine oil from shale and tar sands - etc.

    It's just harder. That's all.
    • Unsu...
       
      No Cliff, it's more energy consuming than it is energy producing, and that's what peak oil is.

      It's a problem of demand outpacing production, not a supply problem and as such is really an economic problem.

      The US and Europe are constantly increasing their demand, while China and India have increased theirs by a factor of 6 in a mere 10 years..meanwhile production has maxed out. To keep up with the demand, more energy has to be put in for a lower yield than before. Oil prices rise which hits cars, transport, plastics, agriculture...everything in the modern world.

      This panics fiananciers and devalues currencies BEFORE the real effects of peak oil are felt...

      Your comparisons to the 19th century are retarded, because the demand was a fraction of what it is today and if you think the industrial age has not created a web of intractible appetite for space and energy, you shouldn't be walking around without a helmet.
      • Basing an economy's success on a constant need for growth in a closed, finite system (Earth) is a fool's game.
        • Just wait until next year when the supply of oil will go down faster. If the current economic problem doesn't officially have a recession now, You will find a more serious problem in that year.
          • B
            B
            offline 118
            One of the real problems right now is that it is hard based on the financial system in place for oil to tell how much of the price of oil is based on peak oil and how much is based on greed and profit.

            Peak oil is not a myth, why even Dick Cheney understands and has acknowledged that many years ago. Maybe not to the hoards of mindless minions that do his and this administrations bidding but to industry executives and the moneyed interests that put him in power.

            But confusing the prices right now is the huge amount of money in speculation (i.e. futures trades). Also the fact that until last week (or was it this week) Bush helped keep the price high by pumping hundreds of thousands of barrels a week into the SPR. Buy high must be his motto (unless it is medical attention and a GI Bill for veterans).

            So the case for peak oil can’t be made just from the price. But it can be made from geological reports, the cost of exploration, the fact that no new super fields have been found in decades.
      • **No Cliff, it's more energy consuming than it is energy producing, and that's what peak oil is. It's a problem of demand outpacing production, not a supply problem and as such is really an economic problem.************

        OK if that's your definition. I rather think that it's not a good one preferring to speak about supply and demand in plain terms instead of buzzwords. But semantics aside, you are correct that demand is about 2 billion barrels out of sinc' with supply.

        ***********The US and Europe are constantly increasing their demand*********

        Actually you are wrong. The US has reduced it's demand. We are still the world's largest but we have in fact reduced demand.


        ********, while China and India have increased theirs by a factor of 6 in a mere 10 years***********

        Yah and growing and with the elections in India and the olympics in China and their disaster you won't see them curring subsidies any time soon - they both already have gasoline lines like we did in the 70's.

        **************..meanwhile production has maxed out. To keep up with the demand, more energy has to be put in for a lower yield than before. Oil prices rise which hits cars, transport, plastics, agriculture...everything in the modern world.************

        There is lots and lots of oil in the US. Montana Dakotas Green River, Colarado. There is lots and lots of oil.

        ***********This panics fiananciers and devalues currencies BEFORE the real effects of peak oil are felt...**********

        I rather think that speculators and the dollar are not much of a factor at all. I'm sure they factor in but, the real problem is supply and demand. When ( as you said) there isn't enough to go around the sellers can and will charge more.

        ***********Your comparisons to the 19th century are retarded**********

        I didn't make any comparisons. I merely articulate MY definition of the expression "Peak Oil" as any of those stages where it requires more technology or money or effort to get the oil because the straw you have been using to drink isn't long enough.

        Should I berate you for you not knowing how to read? Or were you merely stretching to find a way to toss an insult~?

        Here is the problem: tinyurl.com/5bt245



        • I highly recommend the book, "Last Days of Ancient Sunlight," by Thom Hartmann on this subject. Very concise and understandable, even for the conservative mind who may not be willing to accept the totally obvious.

          It lays out the fact that our prodigious efforts over the last hundred years have been based on our use of stored sunlight in the form of carbon based fuels. Because we have been using tens of millions of years of sunlight energy, we have been able to expand far beyond previous constraints imposed by the natural limit of that energy acquired from the sun on a day to day basis.

          Hubbert's Peak may move slightly forward in time with new finds of oil reserves but there is no such thing as a limitless resource. However, I believe that Global warming will end our comfortable habitat long before we have exhausted all the oil in the ground. I really fear that there is still TOO MUCH oil left on Earth for our own good. It would be nice if Hubbert's Peak would rescue us from ourselves but I see that as highly unlikely.
          • >>>>>>>>>>>I really fear that there is still TOO MUCH oil left on Earth for our own good. It would be nice if Hubbert's Peak would rescue us from ourselves but I see that as highly unlikely.

            But here is the rub. The earths capacity without oil will be about one billion people. That is going to be a lot of dead people. The food riots, which actually have been going on for a little while but is now increasing is largely due to the fact that we now have hit the ceiling. And yet we drive to a couple of miles for a gallon of milk. I don't think I have to bring up about the issue of the problem with ethanol, which is already in your gas tank. So when somebody is driving an SUV down the highway, that is your food that person is burning, driving up food prices for everybody. The just deserts about it is that trade in values for SUV's and other low millage vehicles, including luxury class vehicles are declining much faster than your economy class car.

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