Explaining Peak Oil as an idea.
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Explaining Peak Oil as an idea.
A good few years ago when I first read Matt Savinar's frontpage on Life After The Oil Crash, there was a handy explanation of how PO worked with an increasing population, using the metaphor of a Petri dish and bacteria. It made perfect sense to me.
I was wondering if others have come across similar metaphors to explain Peak Oil or have thought of their own metaphor
Here's one I've been thinking about.
There's a very VERY big apple tree. For a person standing on the ground, the lower branches, weighed down with fruit are easy to reach and you can pluck as many apples as you could want.
But the apple tree is the only one. And, as more people would like apples, all the lower branches are quickly stripped of the juicy easy to reach apples.
The people, now growing in number and hearing about this fruit tree decide to build a ladder to prop against the trunk. The apples on slightly out of reach branches are more abundant and can feed more people. There seems to be enough for everyone. But...
The middle branches soon get stripped of all the apples, so, the people being very fond of the apples decide to build a bigger ladder to reach the top most branches. A lot of time, expense and effort went into building the ladder by the apple-mad people.
Of course the apple tree doesn't have so many apples on the upper branches and they're hard to get at.. some have been pecked at by birds and are hardly worth eating....and the people start to squabble over the remaining apples.
I know it's not a perfect metaphor, but it's an example of what i mean.
I was wondering if others have come across similar metaphors to explain Peak Oil or have thought of their own metaphor
Here's one I've been thinking about.
There's a very VERY big apple tree. For a person standing on the ground, the lower branches, weighed down with fruit are easy to reach and you can pluck as many apples as you could want.
But the apple tree is the only one. And, as more people would like apples, all the lower branches are quickly stripped of the juicy easy to reach apples.
The people, now growing in number and hearing about this fruit tree decide to build a ladder to prop against the trunk. The apples on slightly out of reach branches are more abundant and can feed more people. There seems to be enough for everyone. But...
The middle branches soon get stripped of all the apples, so, the people being very fond of the apples decide to build a bigger ladder to reach the top most branches. A lot of time, expense and effort went into building the ladder by the apple-mad people.
Of course the apple tree doesn't have so many apples on the upper branches and they're hard to get at.. some have been pecked at by birds and are hardly worth eating....and the people start to squabble over the remaining apples.
I know it's not a perfect metaphor, but it's an example of what i mean.
Learn to whittle now... we need a spaceship!
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Like I said, it's not a perfect metaphor... maybe if you said the apple tree was the only one in the world.. and it only ever fruited once... it'd make slightly more sense.JohnB wrote:The only trouble with that is that more apples will grow next year. That may be kind of true of oil, that in a few million years there may be more of it, and if any humans are still alive there might be another oil based economy, but how do you explain the time scale using an apple tree?
But as a rough metaphor I think it kinda works.
So.. does no one have any others?
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Erm, how about milkshakes?postie wrote: So.. does no one have any others?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dsQcS0zr4tM
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No more oil I'm afraid. It was a one shot dealJohnB wrote:The only trouble with that is that more apples will grow next year. That may be kind of true of oil, that in a few million years there may be more of it, and if any humans are still alive there might be another oil based economy, but how do you explain the time scale using an apple tree?
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How about just trying to explain Peak Oil? I see it like this
You are in a football stadium with 80,000 others and there is a guy in the middle with 2 buttons, red and green. He is going to press one and asks the crowd to choose. One kills everybody and the other lets everybody live. The crowd is chanting GREEN GREEN GREEN but you know its the red button that lets everybody live. How do you convince the other 80,000 people to change their minds?
You are in a football stadium with 80,000 others and there is a guy in the middle with 2 buttons, red and green. He is going to press one and asks the crowd to choose. One kills everybody and the other lets everybody live. The crowd is chanting GREEN GREEN GREEN but you know its the red button that lets everybody live. How do you convince the other 80,000 people to change their minds?
That's a worse analogy than my apple tree.ziggy12345 wrote:How about just trying to explain Peak Oil? I see it like this
You are in a football stadium with 80,000 others and there is a guy in the middle with 2 buttons, red and green. He is going to press one and asks the crowd to choose. One kills everybody and the other lets everybody live. The crowd is chanting GREEN GREEN GREEN but you know its the red button that lets everybody live. How do you convince the other 80,000 people to change their minds?
A full footballl stadium however could be a decent metaphor...
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