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Less than 15 years ago,Who, waiting in one of those gas lines in 1977 in a 150 HP 4,500 lb. slug that got 13 MPG on the highway, or an 88 HP six cylinder "economy" car that got 15 MPG on the highway, would have predicted that 40 years later there would be so much product on the market the prices would have collapsed back to 1960's prices when adjusted for inflation. The energy industry had been communized by the government with the allocation program where a fuel outlet was only given only 80% of what its amount had been a year earlier. It created the panics just like in Russia with its shortages of everything. People didn't want their gas gauges to go below 3/4 full, so they would fill up every chance they got. But at 13 MPG, they still had to refuel more often and wound up sitting in interminable lines. No one would have guessed then that there would be 260 net HP cars that could go 0-60 in less than ten seconds and still get 20 MPG on the highway.
In a finite world, debt, like anything else, cannot keep growing.
This, gentlemen, is the real Peak Oil.
It took millions of years to create fossil fuel and at this rate we may have a few more HUNDREDs of years left of the stuff in the ground.
Who ever said that assumed it takes Millions of years at sea level atmospheric pressure. The pressures beneath the crust at the bottom of the Ocean are 1000's of atmospheric pressures.
pewed out into the bottom of the Ocean but never made it to the top and it isn't lingering on the sea bottom. Where in the fuck did it go? Nobody knows that answer.
Oil-consuming bacteria ate most of it, I believe
Peak Oil is the Leftist "Gold to $30,000/oz"
Germany is now facing billions upon billions to remove those ineffective Windmills they built.
Without massive subsidies and tax breaks, they are completely infeasible.
By mid-century, conservatives will thank the Global Warming alarmists for pushing renewable energies adoption so hard.
Except the early investments mean prices are collapsing.
Earlier this month, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) released the latest iteration of its annual Wind Technologies Market Report, which pulls together a wealth of data to track trends in the cost, performance, and growth of wind energy.
Ppl. I suspect that by the next century, we'll have highly efficient solar stations in space, able to harness the sun's energy and microwave it back to earth, supplying virtually unlimited power. As one can guess, there are no clouds in the magnetosphere.
Not sure what you mean.
But that wont solve our plastics, lubrications and composite needs. We will still need to refine just as much Oil as we do today, just to keep up with the essential Oil by Products demand.
"You know if people don't buy gas, they can't keep refining Oil. Because they'll run out of storage for the refined Petrol, and you can't just burn it!"
It took millions of years to create fossil fuel and at this rate we may have a few more HUNDREDs of years left of the stuff in the ground.
I am with you more than you realize, civilization has 100 or at most 200 years left before environmental annihilation.
Proven oil reserves keep going up and not down
In the meantime that nasty waste product that new technology will replace will just stockpile. What do you suppose we should do with billions of gallons of Petrol Gasoline a year. Dump it in the Ocean, Burn it or dump it in the ground?
The Carbon Fiber blades can't be incinerated and are incredibly toxic and carcinogenic
So true! There are several other products beyond gasoline and diesel from refining. Plastics, fertilizer etc... I've been wondering what happens if/when electric vehicles really takes off.
Gas planets have methane, but moon and rocky planets have more than trace carbon?
The bacteria are likely deriving a significant portion of their food from pollution that sinks from the ocean surface. But scientists also found evidence that some of the hydrocarbons are sourced from below.
“To our surprise, we also identified biologically produced hydrocarbons in the ocean sediment at the bottom of the trench,” said UEA researcher Nikolai Pedentchouk. “This suggests that a unique microbial population is producing hydrocarbons in this environment.”
In addition to providing sustenance, researchers suspect the hydrocarbons help microbes survive the crushing pressures of extreme ocean depths.
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