I think you've missed the point, and I suspect you've missed it on purpose, but I'll give you the benefit of the doubt.Halfbreed wrote:Cheap oil?JavaScriptDonkey wrote:Peak oil isn't about running out of oil.
Peak oil is about running out of cheap oil.
In that context economists are exactly the people you need to be talking to.
"Peak oil 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
So, once it looked like the internetz weren't quite up to snuff, I tried the originator of the idea.
http://www.energybulletin.net/stories/2 ... ssil-fuels
and he didn't say cheap either. Did you have someone specific in mind who created "peak cheap" rather than "peak production"?
What JSD is saying is that the relevance of peak oil - economically, politically and historically - is that it marks the end of the era of cheap oil and the start of an era of ever-more expensive oil. JSD was responding to a mistake made by peak oil newbies, and also by the wilfully-ignorant and the propagandists who have no genuine interest in understanding this topic. That mistake is to equate peak oil with "oil running out".
Two things can be expected to happen as we pass peak oil - and both have already become a reality. The first is an increase in exploration/production from ever-more expensive fields (those in deep water, deep underground, or both, and/or in remote/hostile locations.) This keeps oil production ticking over (doesn't increase it much, but does make up for some of the declines in conventional production from old fields), but it drives up the price (if it did not do so then the oil companies wouldn't bother). The second is "demand destruction" as people choose, or are forced, to consume less of oil-derived products.
The net result of both of these things, economically, is that the underlying value of oil, and consequently the price of other forms of energy and of food, will continually be driven upwards, leading to long-term economic decline. From the POV of economics, it is pretty simple: every time it looks like the global economy is pulling out of the current depression (because that's what it is, and only money-printing and near-zero interest rates are hiding this fact - sort of) then the price of oil/energy will head northwards, which in turn will snuff out the recovery. This will continue until there is some sort of major change/catastrophe alters the way our civilisation operates.
In short: our existing global economic system is broken, and peak oil ensures that it cannot be fixed.
Peak oil = economic ruin for the industrialised world.