Peak Oil - Jun 7
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
Another evolved psychological trait is the drug-like reward Men's attractiveness is largely correlated with their status or with characteristics likely to lead to status such as humor, intelligence, speaking ability, athletic prowess, political dexterity, or business acumen. Given these factors, it makes sense us guys would disproportionately choose to stand on our Peak Oil soap boxes. (As I do with this site.) If we are effective at "sounding the alarm" or offering seemingly workable normative mitigation agendas, the prospect of increased social status (attractiveness) awaits us. Typically, this increase in status flows from attention received via interviews in the media, public speaking engagements, leadership roles in politics, acclaim for well written articles, book deals, etc. These evolutionary mechanisms (or God's gifts, depending on your belief system) are as much at work within the subconscious of the local activist writing an article for his town's newspaper as they are within the mind of a nationally known author doing an interview on CNN. As both individuals are members of the same species, their central genetic wiring is virtually indistinguishable.
This is the best deconstruction of the There-Is-Plenty-of-Nonconventional-Oil argument I have seen, since instead of handwaving of the Kunstler type ("nothing will save us") it patiently and sympathetically reduces the optimist scenario to a financial absurdity. (hat tip LATOC) -AF
Viktor Khristenko, Russian's energy minister and guardian of 5pc of the world's oil reserves, declared that motorists and business would have to learn to live with expensive fuel because "the era of cheap hydrocarbons is over". He also made it clear that any intervention by EU states if Russian firms sought to buy their European rivals would be regarded as unfriendly. Russia has served a double warning over the price of oil and intervention to block attempts by its energy firms to move into EU markets. Viktor Khristenko, Russian's energy minister and guardian of 5pc of the world's oil reserves, declared that motorists and business would have to learn to live with expensive fuel because "the era of cheap hydrocarbons is over". He also made it clear that any intervention by EU states if Russian firms sought to buy their European rivals would be regarded as unfriendly.
Professor Kemp, a leading oil expert with the university's Department of Economics, said that a "striking feature" of the prospects for undeveloped fields was their relatively small size, with the average size of the probable and possible fields estimated at under 15 million barrels of oil equivalent. He said: "The long-term future of the UKCS depends on the successful development of large numbers of small fields and enhanced oil and gas recovery schemes. The remaining reserves are large but they are mostly located in relatively small accumulations." (5 Jun 2006) |
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