my only problem with this is the thought that if the current global technological civilistation collapses, the survivors on their lifeboats end up back in the stone age with no conceivable way of ever getting out of the stone age - all the high quality natural resources which are workable with stone age technology were used up a very long time ago. Scavenging the ruins and rubbish dumps would be possible, but for how long?isenhand wrote: Don?t we? I have an idea where I would like the lifeboat to head. A land of networked communities where each community is in balance with the ecosystem and cooperates with other communities so we maintain the highest standard of living for the longest time possible.
Personally I'm not all that interested in the die-off/collapse/lifeboats scenario. If the world's coming to an end , I'm going with it. Scratching a living in the dust with a pointy stick and no access to modern dentistry or an Odeon multiplex does not appeal. Not that I think collapse is likely, just possible. Several decades of quite unpleasant re-adjustment is I think more likely as global oil production ramps down at 2% per annum on the other side of a decade long bumpy plateau that we may just be approaching... (just a guess - most oil is onshore so it wont be a steep decline like the North Sea, and there will be a high effort to slurp up what is left. I imagine most of the worlds oilfields will be covered in the same density of stripper wells as Texas in 30-50 years time. There are hundreds of thousands of wells in the USA (the worlds most mature oil province), many of course now defunct, and only 5000 or so in Saudi Arabia )
A large slice of the industrialised worlds disposable income will of neccesity have to be redirected into lifestyle change, efficiency improvements, and alternative energy. The future is going to be part nuclear, part coal, part windmill and part living locally using more energy efficient technology - no more budget airlines or holidays on the Costa Blanca! ( I have a feeling that the British coastal resorts that fortunately can mostly still be reached by train are going to see a resurgence this century)
Look at the enormous numbers the IEA is talking about as neccessary investment to meet anticipated demand for oil... (not that it will ever happen!) That order of investment and more will be required by the alternatives. People are not going to like it one little bit as a lot of it will have to be forcibly removed from their pocket by the govt. This I think will need a lot of govt intervention. The playing field will have to be severly tilted in favour of alternative energy, efficiency technology and conservation in order to 'prime the pump' I dont think the markets are up to the job of thinking far into the future. What this will involve politically, god only knows, but I'm not looking forward to it.
Carreers advice: General mechanical or electrical engineering. Alternative energy in all its forms is (allowing for the normal ups and downs) obviously a longterm growth area. Anybody who can install and maintain these systems will be in high demand. ( You think its hard to get a plumber now? Try getting somebody in to repair your solar water heating panels in 20 years time) Bicycle repair man (obviously!) . Specialist market gardener - If you can manage to grow locally some of the exotics that will not in future be coming in from New Zealand or Zimbabwe, you'll be quids in. The rich, like the poor, are with us always.
Exactly how the future will pan out, I've no idea. Nobody ever gets it right. Biotech will undoubtedly have a huge unpredictable influence in both food and energy production. If a resource or technology is available, people will use it when the going gets tough, no matter how much environmentalists might rant. People will avoid dieing of cold by burning coal if they have no alternative (no matter how much the head of Greenpeace might wish them not to) , even if at the same time it is giving them respiratory disease and killing their forests with acid rain. So theres the problem - how to minimise the inevitable effects af fossil fuel usage, and in the long term phase in relacements... My only regret is that I'm unlikely to be around in 50 years time to see how things turned out.
I'm sort of pessimistically optimistic. Humans are very ingenious, technological development will continue, and its amazing how little people can survive on. Just look at some parts of Africa.
Hopefully I will not be reduced to the lifestyle of the average Eritrean - losing a portion of my familly every few years in a famine is the bit I would really not like - and will still be Googling ( or its equivalent) in 20 years time.