woof woof wrote on Jul 29
th, 2012 at 2:28pm:
Just tackling a very interesting financial article about all things that run the world none being more important than oil.
Now what happens when we run out of oil. The USA uses 18 million barrels of oil a day.
Has anyone stopped and thought just how reliant we are on it?
Sure we got coal to burn in power stations for electricity but how do you get the coal out of the ground if we got no petrol to power the heavy machinery?
How do you get it to the power stations if we have no petrol?
Basically life as we know it is finished when oil runs out if another source of power is not found, why aren't they spending sums of money trying to get another power source? Why aren't all cars being made to run on LPG?
There will be no trucks delivering food to the shops, no power at home to cook, no farmers able to farm stock or produce.
How in 150 years have gone from living by candle light to the life we now know and then back to where we were?? Wonder what life was like before cars and electricity??? how far away are we from that life again??
Wonder how long we've got till the oil runs out??
We used to spend 1 barrel of oil to recover 100 barrels, now we spend 1 barrel to recover 3 barrels.
All the easy oil is gone and we are now trying to extract the really hard to get at oil??
Nuclear is no good as we only have about a 30 year supply of uranium in the ground.
Maybe we should be hanging onto all of our LPG LNG supplies for future power??? rather than sell it to China for a bowl of rice?
After all it will be much more valuable in 20 years than it is now?????
There are plenty of alternative vehicle fuels that we could change to very quickly if required. With relatively minor modifications, most existing petrol vehicles can run on hydrogen. The downsides are the cost and energy requirements. Most existing diesel vehicles can run on an assortment of renewable biofuels, the downside being growing enough crops to supply the fuel.
The gradual move to alternative fuels has already begun, with electrics, hybrids, hydrogen-fuel-cell etc cars now on the market. There's plenty of people making their own biodiesel from old frying oil, and biodiesel is sold retail in several locations now. It will take a while, but renewables/alternatives will continue to grow.
BTW, there's no point changing to LPG as a oil-saving measure, because it's a product of oil (Liquid
Petroleum Gas). NG will also run out eventually, and much sooner if we suddenly used it as a major transport fuel.
For all the above reasons, my main concern about the eventual disappearance of oil is not vehicle fuel, but all the by-products that come from oil. Essentially every synthetic polymer is made from oil by-products.
Now, try to imagine life without plastics.... nylon, polyester, PVC, perspex, polycarbonate, polystyrene.....
Scientists are working on bioplastics, but replicating the specific properties of what we have now will be a challenge, plus bioplastics come from growing plants so their implementation will put further pressure on food crops.