maudibe wrote:In reply to 5thcolumn...
Ah, you are stating that we just need to replace the 'missing' element...but there are two issues here:
1 / you are assuming demand remains as is at circa 80mbbl
No I'm saying demand will not rise massively above oil supply for two reasons:
1. Demand destruction: a lot of oil use is discretionary.
For example: I can forego flying to hawaii to save money or I can decide to get groceries once a week or I can decide to grow some vegetables myself.
2. Substitution. Many variants of models for "what will happen after peak oil" say substitution either doesn't exist or will make no appreciable difference. I beg to differ. e.g. I am taking the bus even though it can be -35C in the winter. I'm doing it out of choice right now. I can certainly do it if it costs $300 a barrel and I can't afford to run a car off of diesel or petrol.
These are the softcore options for reducing demand. There are hardcore ones too that the government could implement if it chose to. We're not there yet.
2/ decline is cumlative - is the discovery and aquisition?
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This gets into the whole EROEI thing. The doomers argue that since the EROEI of available oil is declining once you hit a barrel of oil energy equivalent to get a barrel of oil out then you'll stop doing it.
I say wrong: if there is DEMAND for the oil AND you have a higher EROEI feed energy source then you WILL suck out the oil. Examples of requirements for oil will be oil based transport in the period between moving from oil to electrical transport.
You may think that this isn't answering your question but it is:
There is MUCH MORE lower EROEI stuff than there is lower EROEI stuff (just ask RGR) so if we need it, we e.g. build some windmills and pump it out or process it (like the oilsands) or whatever.
or am I missing something?
Not anymore.