View Full Version : I dont get it
Gawain of Orkeny
06-11-2007, 04:19
Ok Im tired of these threads on Global warming. Why cant we in the US at least all get along. I mean in general liberals want us off fossil fuels because we are polluting the air and causing global warming. Conservatives say we need to get of fossil fuels because of national security interests. Yet nothing gets done. Should this not be priority one for the US? Think about the advantages we would have if we were energy independent. Think about the difference it could make in our international policies.
Im not much on conspiracy theories but something here smells rotten to me. All this cozing up with the Saudis who are the main guys behind all this terrorism yet they are supposedly our friends. Its mighty confusing. Is their a global oil conspiracy that controls much of what goes on in the world? How can it be that we are not working to get off of oil? Is nuclear energy that dangerous? If we put our minds and hearts to it could we not accomplish it with in a decade? Would this be better than tstudying global warming and making up useless proto calls like Kyoto.
A couple of supplementary thoughts:
In terms of pollution (and greenhouse gases, sure) coal-fired electricity plants are a much bigger deal than vehicle emissions. So the disproportionate focus on cars and trucks when it comes to GW chat kind of leave the lemur scratching his prehensile tail.
Energy independence is a worthwhile goal, possibly the biggest strategic goal within the next hundred years. I would love to see the U.S.A. shifting toward nuclear power in a big way, but some of the regulatory and legal hurdles will have to be removed to make that happen. And Yucca Mountain (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yucca_mountain) had damn well better open.
In truth, there's a lot of common ground between the Global Warming theorists, Christian stewardship believers, Paleocon pragmatists and your basic Greens. If these different groups ever get it working together, our easily purchased Congress might have to do something.
KukriKhan
06-11-2007, 04:53
Yeah, energy independence has been talked about since the Nixon/Ford/Carter (http://www.reason.com/news/show/34845.html) years. I agree with Gawain: I smell a rat.
English assassin
06-11-2007, 10:17
Its David Icke's giant lizards
But seriously, the rat may be working in what it thinks are your interests. Who is going to have energy independence when the saudis have extracted their oil, and the US has left its reserves (partly) in place?
Mind you when I last suggested that DC said I was giving your politicians way too much credit, and he may be right.
As for big G's other point, believing whatever it takes to get your (and our) CO2 emissions down is fine by me. I don't think we need to postulate a conspiracy though, right now, the cheapest energy is still oil. As we largely have a market system oil carries the day. Until you build other considerations into the price, be they pollution (my take on it) or strategic security (big G's take) oil will continue to carry the day.
Gawain of Orkeny
06-11-2007, 13:26
Ive been hearing for decades that people have invented things like engines that get 90 miles to the gallon and that the oil companies buy up the rights. Lots of stuff like that.
Who is going to have energy independence when the saudis have extracted their oil, and the US has left its reserves (partly) in place?
Yes that seems to ne our plan. Use the rest of the worlds supply and save our own. I think it its stupid. We are not running out of oil. The oil companies dont claim we are. Does anyone think that we wont have an alternative long before we run out? Im telling you we could do it in a decade. It should be the next great American project like building the interstate and going to the moon. Nothing else is more important today. I dont see how any one can deny theres a huge oil kabal around the world and these guys really are the ones who run the show.
English assassin
06-11-2007, 13:41
It should be the next great American project like building the interstate and going to the moon.
Gawain and EA in complete agreement shock. :yes:
Well, delete "American" and insert "western", but otherwise, yes.
Gregoshi
06-11-2007, 14:31
Nothing else is more important today. I dont see how any one can deny theres a huge oil kabal around the world and these guys really are the ones who run the show.
You're getting warm.
Zaknafien
06-11-2007, 14:43
you mean his climate is changing.
Gawain of Orkeny
06-11-2007, 14:45
you mean his climate is changing.
No its always been the same. You just didnt discover it until now.
Well, delete "American" and insert "western", but otherwise, yes.
After the thread on our special relationship the hell with you guys :) Why the heck do you think I want us to do it first. Its not to clean up the friggin air :)
Should this not be priority one for the US?
Yes the environment should, so should energy independence. think a terrorist bomb will do damage? How about another 4-5 Katrina's a year :dizzy2:
Think about the advantages we would have if we were energy independent.
I do regularly, I dont think the world economy the way its structured now could handle the U.S. not consuming the same level of oil. To much of the world economy revolves around oil, and its consumption.
Take the biggest consumer out of it and prices drop, the laws of supply and demand prevail and people loose money.
Unless the chinese end up having 2 cars in every driveway, then the status quo will remain.
Gawain of Orkeny
06-11-2007, 15:02
How about another 4-5 Katrina's a year
Thats not caused by global warming.
dont think the world economy the way its structured now could handle the U.S. not consuming the same level of oil. To much of the world economy revolves around oil, and its consumption.
And thats why there is a kabal.
Take the biggest consumer out of it and prices drop, the laws of supply and demand prevail and people loose money.
Except for America :laugh4:
Your starting to catch on :beam:
Thats not caused by global warming.
:laugh4:
Except for America :laugh4:
Your starting to catch on :beam:
America looses too, there is a multi billion dollar industry around oil based products. Lets say we decrease oil consumption by 25%, so what happens to the gas stations that are now full service marts, coffee shops and subshops combined?
Decreasing oil consumption will have a negative effect on the U.S. economy, take that to the bank (pun intended.)
English assassin
06-11-2007, 16:03
Decreasing oil consumption will have a negative effect on the U.S. economy, take that to the bank (pun intended.)
Not necessarily. Reducing any given sector of the economy may cause difficulties in the short term, but historically it looks as if people generally find new jobs and the economy simply changes. EG the UK used to employ millions in heavy industry and mining, now it employs almost no one in those sectors, but the economic capacity has been redeployed rather than disappearing.
Of course you don't want it happening overnight.
After the thread on our special relationship the hell with you guys :) Why the heck do you think I want us to do it first. Its not to clean up the friggin air :)
Nothing wrong with wantint to make a buck Big G :beam:
The idea that there might be money to be made is all to the good: it makes it more likely that something will happen. The really big stuff (fusion, maybe) is too big and too risky to be anything other than a government project though.
Energy independence is a worthwhile goal, possibly the biggest strategic goal within the next hundred years.
:laugh4:
That's why we want to disassemble our nuclear reactors I guess, so the French can build new ones on the border and sell us the energy and make us...independent?
Gawain of Orkeny
06-11-2007, 16:07
America looses too, there is a multi billion dollar industry around oil based products. Lets say we decrease oil consumption by 25%, so what happens to the gas stations that are now full service marts, coffee shops and subshops combined?
They can all go back to the Muslim countries that they came from:laugh4: :oops: Hey maybe you can get them to check your oil, clean your windshield give you directions and free maps like they used to never mind pump the gas for you for no extra charge.
Another benifit. :beam: I believe in the open market. Hey we dont have blacksmiths anymore either. Its time to move on.
Decreasing oil consumption will have a negative effect on the U.S. economy, take that to the bank (pun intended.)
I dont think so. Its the excuse thats been used for ever. The same argument was probably used against the automobile vs the horse.
Not necessarily. Reducing any given sector of the economy may cause difficulties in the short term, but historically it looks as if people generally find new jobs and the economy simply changes. EG the UK used to employ millions in heavy industry and mining, now it employs almost no one in those sectors, but the economic capacity has been redeployed rather than disappearing.
I'll make a concession on this point, yes long term it can be overcome. Can we agree that the short term might extend longer then must due to the commoditied involved? Oil as an industry has huge world economic implications, and while I agree with your point long term, in the meantime the U.S. economy gets hurt by decreasing oil consumption now.
there really isnt an industry that can pick up the slack yet.
They can all go back to the Muslim countries that they came from:laugh4: :oops: Hey maybe you can get them to check your oil, clean your windshield give you directions and free maps like they used to never mind pump the gas for you for no extra charge.
I'd like to avoid entaglements with the ACLU, we wont be "getting" them to do anything, but there will still be fruit to pick in CA and FL once we clamp down on all the south americans. :idea2:
Another benifit. :beam: I believe in the open market. Hey we dont have blacksmiths anymore either. Its time to move on.
Point taken. Think of all the sanatation workers that were out jobs once cars came along? Those guys had no more !@#$ to pick up.
Gawain of Orkeny
06-11-2007, 16:17
I'd like to avoid entaglements with the ACLU, we wont be "getting" them to do anything, but there will still be fruit to pick in CA and FL once we clamp down on all the south americans.
Good then those Muslims who choose to stay can find ready employment :laugh4:
Point taken. Think of all the sanatation workers that were out jobs once cars came along? Those guys had no more !@#$ to pick up.
Exactly not to mention all the methane and CO2 this sewage sent into the air and the diseases it caused.
I hate to think about the cow pies I stepped in on my Grand dads farm.
Don Corleone
06-11-2007, 16:20
:laugh4:
America looses too, there is a multi billion dollar industry around oil based products. Lets say we decrease oil consumption by 25%, so what happens to the gas stations that are now full service marts, coffee shops and subshops combined?
Decreasing oil consumption will have a negative effect on the U.S. economy, take that to the bank (pun intended.)
I disagree with this. Gasoline could easily be replaced by other vehicle fuel commodities at service stations. They switched over from leaded to unleaded gasoline in the 70s. It wouldn't be all that hard to switch over to electricity, or whatever other fuel medium keeps vehicles going in the coming technological generation. EA had the gist of it, show a way to make money doing it and industry will arise, almost overnight, to serve that market segment. That's the thing about us capitalistas... we grow like weeds, in more ways than one.
As for a 'global cabal', I think we're trying to create a boogeyman because a malevolent body is less scary than the truth. Inertia, and our own short-sightedness are what hold us back. You talk about oil companies buying the rights to higher efficiency combustion engines, just to shelve them. Baloney. Do you really think Ford and GM would let themselves go under (and they are) just to keep their friends in the oil industry happy? And why are Toyota and Honda impervious from the affects of this cabal?
The truth is until it becomes painful for us to use large quantities of petroleum, we will continue to do so. As much as I hate opening my wallet, the fact is, high prices are what it takes. I live 30 miles away from where I work, in a rather rural area. Yet the price of gas was enough to make even me adopt carpooling.
But I agree with Lemur. We're all ignoring the 800lb gorilla in the room. If the goal is reduce greenhouse gasses and carbon emission, then we have to tackle fossil fuel power generation stations (and hopefully increase our use of nuclear energy). The very fact you never hear people complaining about 'big coal' suggests that if there are global cabals manipulating public debate, the coalmmen are much better at it than the oilmen. :laugh4:
As for the whole climate shift versus extreme weather patterns...are there objective numbers on 1) just how much of the global climate shift is caused by man's activities (I thought it was <5%) ? and 2) as I understand it, our climate has shifted by 1.5 degrees over the past 60 years. Now I'm old enough to remember when we went through a chilly period in the 70s/early 80s, and all the scientists were claiming we had artificially created an ice age. Is there any hard data on just how much the climate change is really impacting severe weather patterns, and are our weather patterns really more severe than they normally are? Or is this just more of the usual scare tactics?
I disagree with this. Gasoline could easily be replaced by other vehicle fuel commodities at service stations. They switched over from leaded to unleaded gasoline in the 70s. It wouldn't be all that hard to switch over to electricity, or whatever other fuel medium keeps vehicles going in the coming technological generation.
Easily Don? well I dont think so, but Im a closet environmentalist I'd be happy to be wrong. Here is an example, I have a mobile station down the street, full service auto repair/gas station/convience store/dunkin doughnuts.
Now that store would be effected by a decrease in oil consumption, its business is marketed, set up for, and taylored too consumers who drive autos with oil based products.
It also has an ethonol pump I believe, but essentially the success of the store is predicated on drivers, unless you do in fact replace the oil with another commodity that business suffers. That change isnt going to be easy, at least I dont think so.
Again the environment is one of those subjects I lean left on, or whatever party will get us to make it the number 1 priority, yet I realize that oil is the number one global commodity that makes it all go (figuritively and literally).
Eliminating even part of the conumption of oil has global economic implications, until a replacement is found I dont see it as viable.
Gawain of Orkeny
06-11-2007, 16:37
It also has an ethonol pump I believe, but essentially the success of the store is predicated on drivers,
Nobodies suggesting we get rid of cars just what fuel they run on. In fact they may well have to build all sorts of things to embrace this new technology that could lead to more jobs not less.
Again one could make the same argument you make when it was suggested that the car should replace the horse. Its true many people lost their jobs that had been in their family for generations. But look at all the new jobs it created.
Don Corleone
06-11-2007, 16:39
Easily in the sense of it will happen, not that it will happen without growing pains. Do you think energy distribution is the only industry that has to deal with evolving technologies? Look at newspapers. Those that read the writing on the wall and adapt themselves to be 'information sources' are prospering. They make their content available on the web through digital subscriptions. Those that insist on maintaining a paper-only product are going under. This doesn't mean that the economy suffered a net loss, because the newspaper company went under. For every such paper that goes under, there's a Breitbart that arises to take its place. Maybe news information isn't the best industry to use as an example, as we're moving to a 'free of cost' model. But you could look at others, like medicine or electronics. Their models have to shift to accommodate new technology and population/business trends too. Adapt or perish.
Yeah, it sucks if you work for the newspaper. But does the rest of the economy really care? I mean what do you think happened to whalers? They sat around homeless and broke in New England for the past 3 generations?
Major Robert Dump
06-11-2007, 16:56
I don't like Obama for president, but google his speech to detroit auto execs. Basically, he told them they screwed theirselves and they shouldn't deserve a fat government handout, then he backpeddled and offered some cash, were he elected, to help bail the automakers out. the automakers said his bailout would only cover 10% of their problems. hahah
the big 3 and oil companies have an unholy union, and we only helped foster it with the "buy american' campaign from the late 80s, a campiagn which, I might add, had its credibilty blown off when we saw that buy american didn't mean jobs for joe average, but rather fatter paychecks for joe stockholder.
I love watching corporate empires crumble.
Don Corleone
06-11-2007, 17:12
I'm all about watching Ford & GM go under if they continue to offer an inferior product. They're not even more expensive anymore and they're still losing market share. They made a bet that didn't pay off for them. They gambled that Americans would eventually get used to $2.50/gallon to $3.00/gallon pricetag on gas and didn't put money into R&D for higher fuel efficiency and alternate energy sources. They're years behind Toyota, Honda and Nissan, and it would take a small miracle for them to catch up at this point, government bailout or not. And I haven't even touched on expected mean value of operating life... mainly because GM at least has FINALLY started to address that issue (but as they've cried wolf on that for so long, it's not hard to understand why nobody has recognized it yet).
The nice thing about new enabling technologies is that its typically how monopolies end up getting dismantled. Government breakup didn't end end Ma Bell's stranglehold on the American telephone market, cell phones did. The Japanese need to continue to innovate or I believe they too will find themselves displaced by 'the next new thing'.
Pannonian
06-11-2007, 17:17
Easily Don? well I dont think so, but Im a closet environmentalist I'd be happy to be wrong. Here is an example, I have a mobile station down the street, full service auto repair/gas station/convience store/dunkin doughnuts.
Now that store would be effected by a decrease in oil consumption, its business is marketed, set up for, and taylored too consumers who drive autos with oil based products.
It also has an ethonol pump I believe, but essentially the success of the store is predicated on drivers, unless you do in fact replace the oil with another commodity that business suffers. That change isnt going to be easy, at least I dont think so.
Again the environment is one of those subjects I lean left on, or whatever party will get us to make it the number 1 priority, yet I realize that oil is the number one global commodity that makes it all go (figuritively and literally).
Eliminating even part of the conumption of oil has global economic implications, until a replacement is found I dont see it as viable.
Trading villages and towns have always arisen around crossroads and other hubs of trading routes. As these routes shut down, so do the communities around them. If cars were to be phased out in their current form, they'd either be replaced by electric cars which still need refuelling, or railways will become more important, which means business will move to surround railway stations instead. As long as the government doesn't abandon a geographical entity entirely, there will always be infrastructure servicing that entity, and a community living on that infrastructure. Just make the transition gradual, and it will be relatively painless.
The pain only comes when that community collapses almost overnight, as with the closures of the mines and the clampdown on fishing - both necessary as a whole, but far too abrupt for the communities to adapr to. Make things easier for everyone, and start the process now. Write to your congressman demanding higher taxes on gas.
Nobodies suggesting we get rid of cars just what fuel they run on. In fact they may well have to build all sorts of things to embrace this new technology that could lead to more jobs not less.
Again one could make the same argument you make when it was suggested that the car should replace the horse. Its true many people lost their jobs that had been in their family for generations. But look at all the new jobs it created.
Fair enough, but we are talking about a global industry around oil. I'm not imagining the numbers here, have a look at any statistic you want on the amount of barrels of oil produced per year, and multiply it times what is it now 65 a barrell?
Reduce it by whatever amount you want to cut it by, then find me the filler. Maybe Im being a little bit of devils advocate, believe me Im all for a greener world, but Oil is the one commodity we have that interconnects massive amounts of economic output.
Easily in the sense of it will happen, not that it will happen without growing pains. Do you think energy distribution is the only industry that has to deal with evolving technologies? Look at newspapers. Those that read the writing on the wall and adapt themselves to be 'information sources' are prospering. They make their content available on the web through digital subscriptions. Those that insist on maintaining a paper-only product are going under.
Good example, but what happened to the paper industry? You see there is more here then the companies that produced the newspapers.
What about the machine shops who serviced the printing presses? What about the manufacturer of the press themselves?
In terms of oil, the branches of that economic tree spread much farther.
I mean what do you think happened to whalers? They sat around homeless and broke in New England for the past 3 generations?
Fine, but equating whaling to the global industry of oil is a stretch IMHO.
However, I'm game, anyone care to take a stab at the economic ramification of eliminating part of the oil industry? How about the 25% number first, start with Nigeria, then pick any other country if you so desire, venezula, russia, Iran....
Point is consumption of Oil is perhaps the most signifigant economic force to the world economy today. Historical comparissons are nice and all, but more industry, people, and governments are dependent on oil consumption that arguably any other resource in history.
Gawain of Orkeny
06-11-2007, 17:48
Fine, but equating whaling to the global industry of oil is a stretch IMHO.
Duh. Whaling was the global oil industry until crude came along.:yes:
Trading villages and towns have always arisen around crossroads and other hubs of trading routes. As these routes shut down, so do the communities around them. If cars were to be phased out in their current form, they'd either be replaced by electric cars which still need refuelling, or railways will become more important, which means business will move to surround railway stations instead. As long as the government doesn't abandon a geographical entity entirely, there will always be infrastructure servicing that entity, and a community living on that infrastructure. Just make the transition gradual, and it will be relatively painless.
The pain only comes when that community collapses almost overnight, as with the closures of the mines and the clampdown on fishing - both necessary as a whole, but far too abrupt for the communities to adapr to. Make things easier for everyone, and start the process now. Write to your congressman demanding higher taxes on gas.
Okay, I can agree with this, but its singular view. So you get rid of cars, or even 25% of cars and we replace them with trains or electric.
So the service station who used to have oil, whose service station is trained to fix combustion engines now fixes electric? Who incurs the expense to train new individuals? Who pays for the gas stations new marketing? Who pays for the stations physical changes? (new service bay etc)?
These are real questions someone has to answer. The taxpayer? The former oil worker in nigeria? Government subsidy? Corporations?
Each rhetorical question I just asked has its own economic implication, again Oil isnt a simple matter, largely due to our own self creation.
Duh. Whaling was the global oil industry until crude came along.:yes:
Duh, there werent cars that carried workers back and forth to work.
Lets not get cute because you and I know the point I am making, oil is a major commodity in the global economy that enables trillions of dollars of income to be generated.
Thats hardly the case for Whale oil.
Gawain of Orkeny
06-11-2007, 17:53
Lets not get cute because you and I know the point I am making,
Hey I reserve the right to be cute anytime I please.:laugh4:
But whaling was indeed a major industry. Dont just poo poo it.
doc_bean
06-11-2007, 18:00
The oil sector is a major industry, but let's be realistic
1) it doesn't employ *that* many people compared to its turnover, it's one of the most profitable industries compared to how much tehy pay in wages
2) they don't employ many 'low-skill' workers: most people wouldn't have too much trouble switching jobs
3) there's still a need for oil even if we don't need it for energy purposes anymore.
Odin, you're being very protectionistic about this, almost a socialist...
Gas stations (here in the US anyway) don't make much money at all on fuel sales. Their margins right now at cut to the bone. Most of their profits come from sales in the stores, which have a nice markup. I doubt that a fuel switch would harm them that much, aside from the added costs of installing new pumping and storage facilities.
Odin, you're being very protectionistic about this, almost a socialist...
I spit up my coffee, I havent been called a socialist in a long time.
I got your point Doc, fair, it dosent employ that many people. What I hoped to do with my posting in the thread is illuminate the fact that Oil as a commodity is a major world economic driver.
Should the country who consumes the most of it decrease that consumption it would have global effect and depress the economy of many countries, which indirectly would depress the living standards of millions.
Im all for a green solution, I am also fairly nationalistic, and an isolationist, but I dont want already poor people to suffer more, for some not thought out policy. More so then ever we are connected, and to dismiss it, and not be responsible with the application of these theories is inhumane IMHO to the condition of those who depend on oil consumption for thier lives, as well as thier countries.
Now, maybe i am having a moment of weakness, that said I post the way I see it and thats how I feel about it, so rather then make something up that might support my persona, I'm laying this out there.
But dont go by me, as challenged in an earlier post, do the math, pick a nation and its oil revenues then subtract the % you want to eliminate and make up the difference.
As of yet, no one has done that. I suspect no one can, because oil, and its economic value isnt easily replaced, and a substitute has yet to be revealed.
Some statistics:
Barrells of Oil per day produced: 48.5 million (http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/ene_oil_exp-energy-oil-exports)
Price per barrell: $65 US
Total: 3.15 billion a day in oil exports.
So remove 10% due to decreased consumption, where does the new 315 million a day come from?
Thats just straight oil revenue, never mind the little industries around it, like the gas stations.
English assassin
06-11-2007, 19:15
So remove 10% due to decreased consumption, where does the new 315 million a day come from?
Depends how we acheived the 10% reduction. If our overall energy use is the same, then, tritely, by paying for whatever energy has displaced the energy we generated from oil.
If we got more energy efficient then I take the point. I am pretty sure that, in time, if we are all sitting around with spare wedge in our pockets because we are buying less oil, that money will find its way back into circulation. The cynic in me says it will find its way back into circulation by oil prices going up 10%, but in time maybe we will all have more money to spend on, well, whatever it is we do spend our spare money on. Only more, and better.
But you asked me above if I agreed that the process could be a bumpy one and the answer is absolutely yes.
Depends how we acheived the 10% reduction. If our overall energy use is the same, then, tritely, by paying for whatever energy has displaced the energy we generated from oil.
If we got more energy efficient then I take the point. I am pretty sure that, in time, if we are all sitting around with spare wedge in our pockets because we are buying less oil, that money will find its way back into circulation. The cynic in me says it will find its way back into circulation by oil prices going up 10%, but in time maybe we will all have more money to spend on, well, whatever it is we do spend our spare money on. Only more, and better.
But you asked me above if I agreed that the process could be a bumpy one and the answer is absolutely yes.
Common ground is hard to come by, so I'll take it on the "bumpy" road ahead.
That said 315 million a day into the global economy is a lot of widgets, and thats really the meat and potatos of it, no "widget" has emerged for the replacement yet.
I just dont see it happening soon, its nice to talk about it and push for change, but taken on a global impact scale the ends have yet to justify the means.
doc_bean
06-11-2007, 20:41
Some statistics:
Barrells of Oil per day produced: 48.5 million (http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/ene_oil_exp-energy-oil-exports)
Price per barrell: $65 US
Total: 3.15 billion a day in oil exports.
So remove 10% due to decreased consumption, where does the new 315 million a day come from?
Thats just straight oil revenue, never mind the little industries around it, like the gas stations.
This is faulty thinking.
Oil in itself is not wealth. What we do with teh oil to satisfy our needs is wealth, if the standard of living (well, as a rough measure, think the total 'wealth' of the world) across the globe remains the same with or without pumping up oil then no wealth is created by pumping up oil. The only thing that will happen is a redistribution of the wealth. Considering oil is a limited resource and the oil market behaves mostly like an oligopoly (I hope it's the same word in English) this is not a bad thing. The oil industry makes sure certain people get very rich, venezuela might arguably use its resources for good, but then there's also sheiks and the Sultans who don't really believe in spreading the wealth. i'm not even going into big business and the oil lobby here.
But if you care that much about the wealth of terrorist loving Saudi Arabia, freedom hating Russia or socialst Norway then that's your opinion.
Hosakawa Tito
06-12-2007, 00:36
Cellulose Biofuels (http://bio.org/ind/biofuel/) This is the technology we need to keep developing. In another article that I cannot find, it surmised that if we used all the corn we grow in the US to produce ethanol we would meet just %10 of our current fuel needs. Not very practical let alone efficient. However, developing use of the non-edible parts would be Food plus fuel instead of either or.
Evil_Maniac From Mars
06-12-2007, 02:21
For, perhaps, the first time in history, I agree with Gawain. :inquisitive:
I'm obviously dreaming. :2thumbsup:
Cellulose Biofuels (http://bio.org/ind/biofuel/) This is the technology we need to keep developing. In another article that I cannot find, it surmised that if we used all the corn we grow in the US to produce ethanol we would meet just %10 of our current fuel needs. Not very practical let alone efficient. However, developing use of the non-edible parts would be Food plus fuel instead of either or.Corn ethanol has been a complete disaster from the get-go. Forget about all these tin-foil hat oil cabals- we've got a real conspiracy right here. Corn ethanol is a terrible choice for an alternative fuel. It gets worse mileage, is incredibly inefficient to produce, and drives up food prices across the boards. It's just a big fat handout to the US agricultural lobby- plain and simple.
As for a 'global cabal', I think we're trying to create a boogeyman because a malevolent body is less scary than the truth. Inertia, and our own short-sightedness are what hold us back. You talk about oil companies buying the rights to higher efficiency combustion engines, just to shelve them. Baloney. Do you really think Ford and GM would let themselves go under (and they are) just to keep their friends in the oil industry happy? And why are Toyota and Honda impervious from the affects of this cabal?
I totally agree here, Don. If the technology for 90mpg cars exists, the reason they're not on the road is simply because people don't want them. It's only now with gas prices over $3/gallon that people are beginning to consider more fuel efficient vehicles. If prices ever drop down close to $2/gal again, people will be clamoring for their gas guzzling SUVs.
I disagree with this. Gasoline could easily be replaced by other vehicle fuel commodities at service stations. They switched over from leaded to unleaded gasoline in the 70s. It wouldn't be all that hard to switch over to electricity, or whatever other fuel medium keeps vehicles going in the coming technological generation. EA had the gist of it, show a way to make money doing it and industry will arise, almost overnight, to serve that market segment. That's the thing about us capitalistas... we grow like weeds, in more ways than one.However, I cannot agree here. Gasoline will not be easily replaced. I've heard the leaded fuel comparison before, but removing lead as an octane booster and replacing it with another chemical is nowhere on the same magnitude of replacing the gasoline itself. What it's going to take is advances in technology and high gasoline prices until we get to the point where the cost of adopting a new technology is cheaper than continuing to use gasoline. We're not there yet- I doubt we're even close.
Who killed the electric car? I did (we all did), they sucked and no one wanted one. :wink:
Gawain of Orkeny
06-12-2007, 03:18
So then whats all this nonsense we are running out of gas. And when we do switch to another source just who do you think will provide it? You guessed it the same people who supply it now. Why should they switch when theres still plenty of cheap gas around and they can fool the public into believing were running out and charge more anytime they like by controlling the output.
So then whats all this nonsense we are running out of gas. And when we do switch to another source just who do you think will provide it? You guessed it the same people who supply it now. Why should they switch when theres still plenty of cheap gas around and they can fool the public into believing were running out and charge more anytime they like by controlling the output.
We aren't running out of gas, and probably never will. All-time high demand, tight refinery capacity, and uncertainty in global oil markets all contribute to high prices. Add to that complex regulations and hefty taxes- See figure 2 here (http://www.taxfoundation.org/publications/show/1054.html) to see how much your state is gouging you on a gallon of gas. My state is already in the top 10, and Gov Rendell, in is boundless wisdom, would like to increase it another 12.5 cents/gallon. :wall:
Gawain of Orkeny
06-12-2007, 03:45
We aren't running out of gas, and probably never will. All-time high demand, tight refinery capacity, and uncertainty in global oil markets all contribute to high prices. Add to that complex regulations and hefty taxes- See figure 2 here to see how much your state is gouging you on a gallon of gas. My state is already in the top 10, and Gov Rendell, in is boundless wisdom, would like to increase it another 12.5 cents/gallon.
Your only confirming what Ive been saying. Its a cabal. Their all in on it including the government. My point is they probably have a better or cheaper source but as you say they have too much invested in oil to stop now. They will wait until its more profitable to switch. But the thing is that it could be provided to us cheaper now but then they wouldnt make these huge profits. Its an artificial shortage that they maintain. They try to make just enough.
My point is they probably have a better or cheaper source but as you say they have too much invested in oil to stop now. They will wait until its more profitable to switch. But the thing is that it could be provided to us cheaper now but then they wouldnt make these huge profits. Its an artificial shortage that they maintain. They try to make just enough.
I never said that. What I said is that there is no cheaper alternative. If there was a panacea out there, some government/corporate Illuminati group wouldn't be able to keep it under wraps. As a free-market type, you should well know that someone, somewhere along the line would exploit a cheaper alternative to screw over all their competitors and get an early jump on the new alternative.
The fact is, cheaper, effective alternatives don't exist. Ethanol is a joke, hybrids are still expensive and arguably more environmentally damaging than current cars and fuel cells are still in the development stage. Personally, I like diesel- if it's feasible to do so, my next car will be a diesel- but it's hardly a new technology and it's certainly not being stifled by some elitist cabal.
Gawain of Orkeny
06-12-2007, 05:10
never said that. What I said is that there is no cheaper alternative. If there was a panacea out there, some government/corporate Illuminati group wouldn't be able to keep it under wraps.
I dont think your getting my point. Lets say for instance that manure could be used as fuel. It would be real cheap to make. Lets also assume they oil companies and car companies know how to do it. As you and other have eluded to they have too much invested in oil technology to change while theres still plenty left. Thats why its not profitable not because it would be more expensive to produce. I say burn up the damn oil as fast as we can. Lets run a sale on it and move on.:laugh4:
Necessity is the mother of invention
I dont think your getting my point. Lets say for instance that manure could be used as fuel. It would be real cheap to make. Lets also assume they oil companies and car companies know how to do it. As you and other have eluded to they have too much invested in oil technology to change while theres still plenty left. Thats why its not profitable not because it would be more expensive to produce. I say burn up the damn oil as fast as we can. Lets run a sale on it and move on.:laugh4:
Necessity is the mother of invention
Right, the problem isn't the amount of oil left- it's sucking it out of the ground and refining it quick enough to meet demand. Arbitrarily lowering prices would only lead to shortages though.
Edit: Now, if you're talking about drilling offshore or in ANWR- I say let's go for it. :yes:
This is faulty thinking.
I find this to be rather insulting, but your entitled to your opinion.
Oil in itself is not wealth.
the sale of oil is income, which can create wealth.
The oil industry makes sure certain people get very rich, venezuela might arguably use its resources for good, but then there's also sheiks and the Sultans who don't really believe in spreading the wealth. i'm not even going into big business and the oil lobby here.
Maybe this is true, but like it or not Oil revenue supports a large part of the world economy and secondary spending from the revenue derived is hard to valuate.
But if you care that much about the wealth of terrorist loving Saudi Arabia, freedom hating Russia or socialst Norway then that's your opinion.
This part i find very insulting, hence my particpation with you on this subject is terminated.
doc_bean
06-12-2007, 12:35
I find this to be rather insulting, but your entitled to your opinion.
it wasn't meant as an insult :embarassed:
the sale of oil is income, which can create wealth.
But the money has to come from somewhere else. Again, if oil can be subsituted by another product at the same cost than no wealth is created or lost (except possibly due to transfer effects).
Maybe this is true, but like it or not Oil revenue supports a large part of the world economy and secondary spending from the revenue derived is hard to valuate.
Again: someone has to pay for the oil. Just because we aren't pumping up oil doesn't mean we're losing money. People will just spend an equal amount of money on the substitue product (if it has the same price per use). If there is a subsitute than no moeny will be gained or lost to society.
This part i find very insulting, hence my particpation with you on this subject is terminated.
I really got to work on bringing my sense of humour across better :embarassed:
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