Depends on where you are.vtsnowedin wrote:If world extraction of fossil fuels is suddenly reduced to one third of present levels as proposed above, how many of the present seven billion people will die before adequate renewable substitutes are available to sustain the remaining population?
If you're in the USA, which consumes about a quarter of all fossil fuels (with only 4% of global population!) then your chances could be slim, particularly considering the gun problem.
I reckon Singapore, Hong Kong and Japan would also be fecked along with some middle-eastern countries, who have populations 100% dependent upon FF.
There are loads of places that don't rely on FF, so their chances would be good. Places like Cote d'Ivoire, Ethiopia, Zambia etc. Seemingly 'poor' to us but in many cases rich in food and community.
Brazil, they have ethanol, until the US invades.
Sweden and Finland, they have hydro, less tempting to invade. Same with Paraguay, Iceland, Switzerland a few others.
Nigeria - plenty of oil, but they do the 'sensible' thing already and export it. Which means their population aren't hooked. Chances: good.
Nepal - fewer than half the population has electricity, never mind FF - so they'd survive.
Kenya: loads of food but lacking in organisation and too much dependency on export, so nothing much would change for them without FF.
Burma: the junta keeps the 1% in a permanent state of poverty so, providing the US didn't steal their minerals and oil, they'd manage without FF as they've done for 1000s of years.
And so on. Just random examples. The proportion of people who would die as a result of a two-thirding of the supply of FFs would not be as large as you hope and would definitely not be where you hope.
PS
Dublin would not be happy but it's not really Ireland: it's like saying London and Yorkshire are in the same country. Less travel would mean more time to grow food.