Fossil fuels at peak (11-part series)
by John Rawlins
Part 1: A Personal Peak Oil Discovery Process Part 1a: Part 1b: One of the more bizarre aspects of this entire discovery process is the reactions we experience from others when we try to share our knowledge... These reactions helped us decide to change our retirement plans - we will stay right where we are rather than move into the city of Bellingham where obtaining enough food and staying warm in the winter could be real problems a few years from now. Cities that do not plan and begin preparations for this future could soon become very unpleasant places to live. Part 2: Predictions and Current Status There appears to be no near-term combination of techo-fixes for the transport problem — which means we'll drive ever less, spend ever more and use ever more mass transit — at a rate of change of about 5 percent per year averaged over the world. That translates to half of today's oil use 14 years after peak, and one-quarter of today's oil use after 28 years. Because of considerations related to world oil available for export, the reality will likely be even more severe in the U.S. — we could be facing the one-quarter mark 20 years after peak. Part 3: Peak Food and Population Overshoot Part 4: Indirect Impacts of Peak Oil and Climate Change? Part 5: Resource Wars, Water Shortages and Famine Part 6: Sustainable Food Production, Is Permaculture the Answer? Part 7: How Other Cities Are Planning for Energy Descent Part 8: Portland, Oregon, First U.S. City to Plan for Oil Decline ...If we are to survive through the 21st century, we must make strong moves toward sustainability, ...If you want to participate in lobbying our local city and county council to follow the Portland process of planning for oil and natural gas decline, e-mail me at: john235mary@earthlink.net. Include in your e-mail subject line the words "petition signature" and I will let you know when and where you can go to sign a simple petition to that effect. That is exactly where the Portland initiative began. Part 9: How the County Can Prepare for Energy Descent It is nevertheless important for citizen activists aware of peak oil and natural gas to urge their governing bodies to develop a plan such as the Portland one, titled "Descending the Oil Peak: Navigating the Transition from Oil and Natural Gas." Part 10: Whatcom County Energy Descent Part 11: Nuclear Power: No Solution to Peak Oil No country in the world has yet succeeded in actually disposing of any spent fuel or high-level nuclear waste. The U.S. spent-fuel-disposal program chose disposal criteria that I believe are inherently impossible to meet. ...The current fleet of reactors will begin shutting down around 2020 and will be largely gone by 2050. At present, nuclear power is responsible for nearly 20 percent of the country's electricity production (more like 10 percent in the Pacific Northwest). A new generation of nuclear reactors appears to have little future in the existing U.S. political and economic situation. In any case, it cannot help mitigate a near-term peak in oil supply. John Rawlins has a B.S. in physics and a Ph.D. in nuclear physics. He retired in 1995 from the Westinghouse Hanford Co. at the Hanford site in Eastern Washington. Currently, he teaches physics and astronomy at Whatcom Community College. Editorial NotesContributor DM writes: |
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