And if it was semi-log it would LOOK flatter still. Degree of flatness by playing games with the scale is not the point. The point is that Hirsch once defined the plateau as a 4% swing, and noted it back right around the time that reality discredited him.SleeperService wrote:If that graph was scaled from zero on the vertical it would look a lot flatter than it does.
See that 85, give or take, climbing to 90+? Whaddaya think, 5%+? Almost 6%?
Sorry Robert, back to the salt mines for you.
SleeperService wrote:
From the last quarter of 2004 there has been an increase from ~84 million barrels a day to ~90 at the start of 2012. A modest increase compared to the growth in demand
While the definition of peak oil has often changed to accommodate all the things people wanted to jam into it, plateaus when peaks didn't work, kick the can when one claim or another didn't work, peak price instead of production when production continued to increase, there is one thing for certain. The definition doesn't encompass demand.
Wiki wrote: Peak oil, according to M. King Hubbert's Hubbert peak theory, is the point in time when the maximum rate of petroleum extraction is reached, after which the rate of production is expected to enter terminal decline.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peak_oil