| ▲ | slashdev 4 days ago | |||||||
No I don't think so. The oil industry is very good at discovering and developing resources previously thought to be out of reach. People have been talking about peak oil for decades, as long as I can remember, and it never happened. I think we're technologically capable of extracting more oil, coal, and gas than we would ever want to. We would cook ourselves with the damage we'd do to the climate. I think that's the real constraint - and I hope we pay attention to it. | ||||||||
| ▲ | fsterneder 3 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Conventional oil actually peaked around 2005–2006, but the shale oil revolution in the U.S. and technological advances have certainly postponed peak oil itself. Here comes the kicker, though: we obviously extracted the easy-to-access resources first. While there may be counterexamples, looking at ore grades makes it clear that this is not particular to oil. What happens next is that the economics of the wells are getting worse, which means we need a higher oil price for them to be viable. This also results in a lower energy return on energy invested (EROI), which reduces the surplus energy available to transform our environment. Consequently, this implies slower growth in the economy. Which I think is pretty obvious in the west and would explain the explosion of debt. | ||||||||
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