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August 11, 2008

Thirty Reasons Why Organizations Must Get Off Petroleum Now

by Charles Cresson Wood

Don't get me wrong -- I am very concerned about global warming and climate change. In the long run, that's one of the most serious challenges that humans face as a species. But in the short run, the world is no longer able to produce petroleum in sufficient volume to satisfy its demand. Soon it will not be able to produce petroleum in sufficient volume to satisfy its needs.

Reflecting this, a majority of the world's major oil producing countries now see that their production is in decline. These post-peak producers include the United Kingdom, Norway, Denmark, Venezuela, Mexico, Nigeria, Canada and the United States. Likewise, the world's discovery of new fields peaked in 1965, and it generally lags production by about 40 years. That means that total world production will decline sometime soon, if it has not already.

What's more, the price of crude oil has risen 95% over the last year, and this reveals that worldwide supply can no longer keep up with worldwide demand. Peak oil and its impacts will seriously affect us much sooner than climate change will, although the sooner we stop burning fossil fuels, the soon we take care of both of these very serious problems.

Although global warming gets a lot of press these days, the major media are strangely silent about peak oil. In a culture that makes it a habit to be short-term in its focus, it is astounding that more Americans are not seriously concerned about peak oil. In this brief piece, I list 30 reasons why we all must immediately start to transition away from petroleum. Although a great deal of transition-related work remains to be done, we now have eleven commercially available alternative fuels that can stand-in for petroleum. Although it looks as though all-electric cars are going to be the long-term winner, depending on the circumstances, a wide variety of other alternatives may be appropriate, at least as transition fuels. The other options include ethanol, butanol, di-methyl ether, bio-diesel, straight vegetable oil, bio-methane, natural gas, propane, hydrogen and synthetic liquid fuel.

Don't take my word for any of this. Look it up on the web or ask the retired expert geologists who used to work for the oil companies, such as Dr. Colin J. Campbell. Read some books such as Richard Heinberg's The Party's Over, or Dale Allen Pfeiffer's The End Of The Oil Age. When you really see the big picture, you will no doubt agree with me that a reorientation away from petroleum, towards renewables, is absolutely required, and it is required now.

By making the transition away from petroleum-based fuels, organizations can or will:

1. Respond to the increasing publicity about, and moral pressure favoring, the adoption of alternatives to petroleum. In the process, they will note that staff morale and public support can be augmented when an organization shows that it is in fact acting in an ecologically-responsible way.

2. Reduce and mitigate the adverse environmental impacts related to the use of oil. These impacts including air pollution from refineries, poisoning of flora and fauna when oil is produced in wilderness areas, and damages done by oil spills on land as well as in the sea. Note that burning fossil fuels contributes about 80% of the worldwide emissions of carbon dioxide.

3. Benefit from government incentives, such as loans, subsidies, and special tax credits. Organizations should expect that these incentives will become not only more common, but also considerably more compelling in the years ahead. The current U.S. alternative fuel vehicle tax credit of up to $4,000/vehicle is an example.

4. Exploit new business opportunities in alternative energy. Many progressive companies, such as General Electric and Siemens, see the transition away from oil as a significant business opportunity. These companies have invested a great deal of money in the development of new products and services to support this transition.

5. Take advantage of the marketing opportunities afforded to those organizations that paint themselves as green. Polls show that consumers are willing to pay considerably more for products and services that are indeed better for the environment.

6. Go beyond the massive spin campaign now underway to obfuscate the peak oil message. Countries such as Saudi Arabia conceal the real numbers about their available petroleum reserves and there is ample evidence that many producing countries are over-estimating these reserves. It is time for organizations to go beyond the "we need to study this" or "the jury is still out" phase, and time for organizations to enter the "begin transitioning right now" phase.

7. Show real thought leadership and catapult the organization into a position of public prominence. The U.S. government is clearly resisting change when it comes to transitioning away from oil, in fact there is ample evidence of gridlock in Washington on these issues. As a result, individuals, communities, and organizations need to all initiate their own plans for the transition away from petroleum.

8. Prepare for government-dictated mandatory changeovers to alternative energy sources, and away from petroleum. Recent research indicates that the world has, at most, thirty years to get the gasoline completely out of cars, and to otherwise stop burning fossil fuels. So while there are no current laws or regulations that require a complete conversion to new transportation technologies, for certain types of organizations, there are already partial mandatory conversion laws and regulations in place (in the U.S., one such law is the National Energy Policy Act of 1992).

9. Limit the likely future damage caused by government fuel rationing. They should expect that there will soon be rationing because even conservative organizations like the International Energy Agency (IEA) have developed plans to impose rationing via the authority of the United Nations. 

10. Avoid restrictions in the petroleum-based fuel supply created by government-imposed price controls. In an effort to look as though they are doing something about the rapidly increasing price of petroleum-based fuels, many governments will impose price controls, as Richard Nixon did on oil in the 1970s. But the record is clear that these price controls do not work — they in fact create shortages.

11. Avoid a black market in petroleum-based fuels and the related government corruption. Government interventions (price controls, rationing, etc.) in the oil market will become increasingly common in the years ahead. The real-world experience in countries, such as Nigeria, shows that fuel adulteration, political bribes for favors, and related corruption problems will soon follow.

12. Prepare for a new business environment where energy is scarce. Reflecting the difficulties that we as a species are having when it comes to transitioning to renewable energy systems, over the next decade, the total amount of available energy, on a per capita basis, is likely to be considerably lower than it is today. In large measure this is because the available quantities of fossil fuels will be considerably reduced. Politician claims about the "American way of life being non-negotiable" don't in any way change this fact of life.

13. Recognize that conversion will take years of sustained and dedicated effort. Warnings about peaking world oil supply were issued more than 30 years ago, so we have had plenty of time to prepare. Unfortunately, very little has been done, and we are now in an oil crisis. Nonetheless, it still takes years to establish the new technologies, the new infrastructures, the new habits, and the new economic systems needed to fully support and exploit alternatives.

14. Begin to recreate themselves so that they are truly independent from oil, so that they open up new and previously unappreciated options. Oil is now used, in one way or another, in just about every industrial product produced (such as paints, carpets, detergents, food additives, fertilizers, and pesticides). Organizations are more likely to see and create new possibilities, such as organic and natural products, when they move away from their dependency on oil.

15. Formally acknowledge just how many of their internal costs have been oil dependent. An examination of the income statements for many organizations over the last several years will indicate that fuel has been a relatively minor and immaterial cost. But this will dramatically change in the years ahead, as the airlines and trucking firms are already coming to appreciate. 

16. Lower the future cost of goods sold and/or future overhead costs. By moving to alternatives, organizations can at least partially unhook themselves from the direct correlation between the increase in the price of oil and the increase in the price of other goods. For example, studies show that a 33% increase in the price of oil translates to a 0.6% to 0.9% increase in the consumer price of food.

17. Insulate themselves from volatile oil prices caused by increasing political involvement in the oil market. Uncertain future supplies of petroleum are making prices for oil volatile, and we can expect that this volatility will get worse in the near future. This volatility will be made worse by the maneuvers of certain governments, such as that of Russia, as they attempt to gain greater power and influence using their energy resources as weapons.

18. Insulate themselves from volatile oil prices caused by speculators participating in the oil market. While speculators have recently been blamed for the run-up in the price of oil, the presence of speculators is really only a reflection of the widespread belief that there is major money to be made in the futures market and similar commodities exchanges. While speculators may be able to change the price of oil in the short run, in the long run they are not able to affect the market price, because they do not change the underlying supply and demand. Organizations transitioning away from oil can thus eliminate the need to be in competition with speculators for a dwindling supply of oil. 

19. Expect that real oil prices will significantly increase because governments will add new taxes, and eliminate the existing subsidies that have encouraged the consumption of oil. While many countries, such as Iran and the United States, have subsidized both the oil industry and consumers using oil, as global supplies become tighter in the years ahead, governments will change their policies to discourage the consumption of oil. These same organizations will thus avoid having to pay the much higher cost of future petroleum-based fuels. Note that a full-costing analysis recently done by Milton Copulos at the National Defense Council Foundation indicated that the true cost of American gasoline is now US $8/gallon (this includes government subsidies, the cost of the war in Iraq, etc.).

20. Anticipate that government attempts to buffer the volatility in the oil market will diminish and soon cease. Many governments such as China and the U.S. have invested in "strategic petroleum reserves" to help buffer their domestic markets against oil shocks in the world market, but these and related approaches will soon become too costly and as a result they will be abandoned. The world is facing a shortage of certain raw materials, such as oil, and no measure of government meddling can protect consumers of oil from that fact.

21. Prepare for carbon taxes intended to reduce greenhouse gases and deal with climate change. Western Europe is currently setting an example for the rest of the world in terms of adopting laws and regulations to discourage carbon dioxide emissions. The approaches found there (including cap-and-trade systems) are likely to be found in many other countries in the years ahead. So organizations that have adopted certain alternatives, such as electric vehicles, will be well prepared for these new laws and regulations.

22. Set their organizations free from the traditional link between economic growth and inexpensive oil. The recent economic growth of both China and India has been inextricably tied-up with, and enabled by, the availability of relatively inexpensive fossil fuels. But in the future, when these fuels are much more expensive, economic growth will still be possible when renewable alternatives are employed.

23. Achieve freedom from the oil supply problems occasioned by the super-sensitivity of the oil market to small disruptions. The oil embargo against the United States in 1973 provided an example of how a relatively small reduction in the supply of oil can cause a profound impact, and although the world has changed since then, the panic and impact associated with such disruptions will still be quite serious. For example, Dr. Henry Kissinger called this oil embargo "the most threatening event for the world's developed economies since World War II."

24. Obtain freedom from oil supply problems caused by trouble in the complex oil transportation network. The routes taken to deliver oil from producing country to consuming country are often long and complex, and because the buffers in the system are now so small, relatively small disruptions in that highly tuned system, perhaps caused by terrorist incidents, can cause serious supply disruptions for the consumers of oil.

25. Avoid damage from fuel supply interruptions caused by resource wars. Research by Professor Michael T. Klare indicates that the cause of recent wars and violent conflicts has in many cases been competition for resources, often petroleum. Without question, the struggle for control over these scarce and valuable materials will worsen in the years ahead.

26. Obtain freedom from supply shortages caused by the long time it takes to build new oil production facilities. Many oil producers have been under-investing in infrastructure in the recent years. It can take five years or more before new wells are able to produce oil. This means that even if there are vast and economically accessible reserves of oil locked under the ground or ocean, it will still be many years before this oil can be brought to market. 

27. Limit fossil fuel supply interruptions occasioned by refinery upgrade problems. The further we go beyond the world peak in supply, the more undesirable the quality of the oil will be (tar sands are a good example). This is because the most desirable oil was produced first because it was more easily obtained, less expensive to process, etc. The less desirable oil produced in the years ahead requires that refineries be retooled so that they can process heavier oil, oil containing more sulfur, and the like. Delays associated with this retooling may lead to local shortages.

28. Avoid having to scramble at the same time that nearly everyone else is scrambling to transition to alternatives. By transitioning now, organizations can take advantage of commercially-available alternative energy products and services, rather than coping with delays when everyone else is attempting to transition at the same time (when an even more severe petroleum crisis occurs).

29. Off-load gas guzzlers and other petroleum-dependent equipment while there is still a market for these machines. At a certain point, the decline in the availability of petroleum will be quite rapid, especially for those consumers in oil-importing countries. Those consumers who get rid of their gas guzzlers and related equipment now will at least receive some money for these machines, while they may receive nothing after the rapid decline takes place.

30. Help to assure that their workforces are able to get to work. As gasoline and petro-diesel prices soar in the years ahead, the poorest segment of an organization's work force may be forced to quit their jobs because they can no longer afford to commute long distances from remote suburbs. So an organization that helps its workers transition to alternatives (including public transportation) will then be more likely to retain these same workers in the years ahead. Reflecting this, a recent Business Week survey indicated 26% of workers were considering quitting their jobs to get a better commute, and 65% thought that their employers should step-up and take the lead in dealing with this problem.

So if your organization isn't already seriously planning for its transition away from petroleum-based fuels, talk to your department manager about it, talk to your firm's Chief Operations Manager about it, talk to the organization's Contingency Planning Manager about it and/or start an employee brown-bag discussion about it. Within your community, write your legislators, meet with your city council representatives, mention it to your neighbors and otherwise help to shift people's consciousness so that they will soon move away from petroleum. The first step is widespread awareness that this transition must in fact take place now; the resulting actions will follow naturally from that awareness.

Charles Cresson Wood is an alternative fuels management consultant with Post-Petroleum Transportation, in Sausalito, California. His latest book is Kicking The Gasoline & Petro-Diesel Habit: A Business Manager's Blueprint For Action. For more information about the book, as well as a mechanism to contact him, go to www.kickingthegasoline.com.

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The information and views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on its Web site and other publications.

Reader Comments (21)
 
No image available
August 11, 2008
For the most part, you're arguments are just wishful thinking - or to be more blunt - a bunch of bunk. Renewable energy will only supplement petrol.
Comment 1 of 21
No image available
August 11, 2008
Whoa! Hold on there..."Peak oil and its impacts will seriously affect us much sooner than climate change will, although the sooner we stop burning fossil fuels, the soon we take care of both of these very serious problems." Wow, there's a lot of controvery packed into that one sentence. 'Not sure who you're targeting with this list: political activists? Legislators?
Comment 2 of 21
No image available
August 11, 2008
In response to Jeff's comment that "renewable energy will only supplement petrol," I agree that for at least the next decade, renewable energy will be used at the same time that petroleum will be used. But the price of petroleum will be trending up, and the availability of petroleum will be trending down. The world will be forced to get off of petroleum, and this article explores some of the reasons why that will happen. Al Gore's new challenge to get off of fossil fuels over the next 10 years reflects this imperative.

In response to Robert Marston, the article is targeted at organizations, as the title indicates. All medium-sized and large business firms, government agencies, and non-profit organizations should be considering how they are going to get off of petroleum in the years ahead. If you'd like more information about the immediacy of the peak oil problem, you can go to www.odac-info.org, which is The Oil Depletion Analysis Center, an independent charity committed to raising awareness about peak oil.
Comment 3 of 21
No image available
August 12, 2008
There are many hidden facets to global warming that are not discussed much in the press, but need to be considered when we think of the future of mankind on this planet.

For instance, what will happen to mankind when the polar bear becomes extinct? For instance, it would be bad marketing to put the picture of a species made extinct by human greed and folly on the wrapper of a product you are trying to create a positive image for, we'll need to change the logo.

Of coarse, you'll want to depict a species that is highly successful, adaptable and resilient. We don't want to be having to change the picture every year, that is bad publicity and doesn't fit the product image you want to plant in people' mind's.

So, maybe we'd better take off the polar bear from the logo and replace it with a cockroach.

What would YOU do for a Klondike bar?
Comment 4 of 21
No image available
August 12, 2008
Will we have "Pidgeon" brand facial soap beauty bars?
Comment 5 of 21
No image available
August 13, 2008
People fail to realize that Petroleum is a renewable fuel. It is not stuff made from rocks. Algae Oil is the bi-product of black crude, with a few other plant oils mixed in. Our idea that we need to get off Oil is driving a new business which is creating newer alternatives...or the Alternative Energy Economy. The 30 reasons by Mr. Wood further reinforces the new Alternative Economy. What he doesn't mention is that there will be much work done in mass producing Algae Oil. Interesting that Black Crude wrecks water coastlines during a spill, but Algae Oil actually helps and protect coastlines, while growing its reserve of oil for man to harvest. It also lowers water temps. by absorbing sunlight thereby reducing global warming. Just think..growing Algae for Oil in Artic waters, so to keep waters from warming up. How it shakes out in comparison in crude oil pollution is anyones guess. I suspect it is a bit lower. In any event Algae Oil is coming. I don't think we know what Peak Oil is in this day and age. When we start growing more of it, I think Peak will climb right off the charts.
Comment 6 of 21
No image available
August 13, 2008
People fail to realize that Petroleum is a renewable fuel. It is not stuff made from rocks. Algae Oil is the bi-product of black crude, with a few other plant oils mixed in. Our idea that we need to get off Oil is driving a new business which is creating newer alternatives...or the Alternative Energy Economy. The 30 reasons by Mr. Wood further reinforces the new Alternative Economy. What he doesn't mention is that there will be much work done in mass producing Algae Oil. Interesting that Black Crude wrecks water coastlines during a spill, but Algae Oil actually helps and protect coastlines, while growing its reserve of oil for man to harvest. It also lowers water temps. by absorbing sunlight thereby reducing global warming. Just think..growing Algae for Oil in Artic waters, so to keep waters from warming up. How it shakes out in comparison in crude oil pollution is anyones guess. I suspect it is a bit lower. In any event Algae Oil is coming. I don't think we know what Peak Oil is in this day and age. When we start growing more of it, I think Peak will climb right off the charts.
Comment 7 of 21
No image available
August 13, 2008
Re: the price of crude oil has risen 95% over the last year, and this reveals that worldwide supply can no longer keep up with worldwide demand.

Actually this reveals what happens when speculators are unleashed and their investments go from $13 billion to over $200 billion.

Anybody notice the price of oil has gone down in recent weeks in spite of
a tropical storm in the Gulf and over Houston?

Workers will not quit jobs because they live in the suburbs. They will quit the burbs first. We are in for challenging times.
Comment 8 of 21
No image available
August 13, 2008
One point that appears to dominate all future scenarios is the almost total concern with replacing gasoline as a transportation fuel with something else, ethanol from any source, hydrogen and now "carbon-free electricity". This is supposed to insure energy independence from importing 'foreign' crude oil. Since less than 50% of a barrel of crude oil is turned into gasoline,44 to 48 percent, the remaining 50+percent provides refinery gas, propane, butane,aviation gasoline, jet fuel, kerosene, diesel fuel, home heating oil, lubricating oils /greases for both transportation and industrial applications, feed stocks for petrochemical, detergents, plastics and rubber industries, fuels for marine shipping, asphalts for our roads and highways and last but not least military specification petroleum products. Are the anti-drilling , anti-oil contingent proposing to have the US become an importer of the above mentioned petroleum based products?(To be Continued)
Comment 9 of 21
No image available
August 13, 2008
(Continued)
Those who oppose drilling for oil also oppose the use and development of coal, shale, dams, nuclear and even wind mill(NIMBY Liberals) as energy sources all of which would be provided by investments by corporations while preferring to place their hopes in investing tens of not hundreds of billions of dollars wrested from taxpayers in the hopes that sometime in the future energy sources will be developed that will not only replace the today's energy sources but will keep up with increasing demand of the future. The ultimate source for this future energy world be it sun, wind, crops or waves is dependent on the fickle whims and fancies of mother nature an often brutal and unforgiving taskmaster. Both Newton and Einstein used a 'thought' idea to set up and think through a problem and there doesn't see to have been much thought given to to possible problems and unintended consequences of an all electric world when hurricanes, tornados, earthquakes, floods, droughts, hail, snow/ice storms or enemy actions wreck havoc on the power transmission systems.
What sre the sources of needed petroleum products mentioned above and what happens when hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes, floods, droughts, hail, snow/ice storms or an enemy's EMP attack wreck havoc on the power transmission and electronic systems? Think about it!
Comment 10 of 21
August 13, 2008
"NIMBY Liberals" is certainly an oxymoron.
Thinking enough about fear scenarios will make them real.
Heating living space and DHW is a practical step "right now" with solar thermal devices using current sunshine! How many of you have actually done it?, seen it in your neighborhood? As long as we avoid longer term planning and insist on living from pocket to profit center(not yours), very little will change. Poor little Jon Q.P. cannot rely on government bailouts or certainly leadership on this one. Govt responds to constituent pressure anyway, and right now that means money, because with enuf money they can spin anything for a dependent public.
Why push for carbon capture when there is no will for current solar capture?
Comment 11 of 21
August 13, 2008
Good for you!, Charlie Wood!
Amazing how some don't like to have their dream life shaken.
Why not carbon capture AND solar capture?
Do we really need the abundance of liquid or gaseous fuels for automobiles?
Question everything.
Support your local solar thermal provider. They just may have a solution for you. http://web.mac.com/manke2
Comment 12 of 21
No image available
August 13, 2008
Good article Charles,
The race has just begun and we cannot wish away Renewable energy and the roles they'll play as we march further into the next decades, Centuries and Millenia!
Africa is usually left behind but I am working on a concept- "Off-Grid Alternative Green Electricty Generation" (OAGEG) -that would drive this paradigm shift here in Africa, using the continents most populous country -Nigeria, as a launch pad. Among some other objectives of I hope to achieve are::

• To demonstrate to corporate organizations and high net worth home owners that in the long term, renewable electricity is cheaper than fossil fuel generators (Initial cost vs. Integral cost).

• To mount moral pressure on corporate organizations to adopt "Off-Grid Alternative Green Electricty Generation" (OAGEG) as Real Corporate Social Responsibility.

Driving the change in mentality of this magnitude is a passion for Schrodinger Nigeria Limited and in this cause, we are irreversibly committed!

Stanley Ijeoma
CEO
Schrodinger Nigeria Limited
Abuja,FCT.
+234-806-2344-178
+234-805-5511-776
schrodinger.limited@gmail.com

"Creativity Beyond Intelligence"

www.schrodingerr.com
Comment 13 of 21
No image available
August 13, 2008
I find it amusing whenever anyone suggests we are going to have to learn to subsist on lower availability of energy. (That helps em keep the price and demand for slimy oil up!) The whole damn universe is saturated with energy, and it can not be destroyed. We drip with it! But because our simple ancestors could only imagine old logs burning, we seem to follow their lead. Wake up people. Wind, solar, and even simple hydrogen have the capacity to replace fossil fuels 1000 times over. Things will be so much better when the old codgers die off and we can move on ...
Comment 14 of 21
No image available
August 13, 2008
The real and compelling reason for eliminating our dependency on oil is to eliminate a large number of the conflicts in the world, the support for terrorism and the abuse of their own people by oil corrupted governments. I give you:
1)The war in Iraq which had very little to do with Sadam and everything to do with America's oil supply.
2) The support of terrorists by oil rich countries using their discressionary income in order to buy off the terrorists.
3) The present interferance in Georgia by the Americans because Georgia is a major supply rout for petroleum products.
4) The abuse of Nigerian citizens by the ruling oil rich mafia.
You can Probably think of 10 more without straining your grey matter.
With the elimination of the reason for these conflicts, the legs will be cut off the American industrio-military complex and they will wither on the vine. And.... this is one compelling reason why we won't move any time soon to free ourselves from oil dependency. The Bomb makers realize full well that their continuing existance depends on us all needing oil and their bombs to protect the supplies and they have enormous power in America. Our best chance is that some small country develops a totally domestic electric car fleet with the supporting infrastructure. With our global culture, once one country has shown the way, electrification of domestic fleets will spread like wild fire despite all the efforts of the oil barons and bomb makers. It will only take demand to fall a little below supply to cause the price of oil to plummet. And then we will be back thinking that there is an abundance of oil. Lewis Carol would love it. There's a hole in my bucket dear Liza dear Liza........
Comment 15 of 21
No image available
August 14, 2008
Stop using oil and coal? You might wells say, "stop using electricity," "stop watching TV," "stop going to work," "stop using tp," I could go on and on.
Humans are consumers.
What are we consuming?
The Earth's natural resources.
Let me say that again. The Earth's natural resources.
It is our arrogance that makes us believe it is all ours to do with as we please.
There would seem to be a push in the effort to reach the planet Mars and learn what can be exploited from it.
I predict that the human race is going to learn a sad truth about itself and the planet Mars as time goes by. Pity about Mars.

Its not hard to imagine that there was once a diverse abundace of life on the planet Mars. But as its molten Iron core beagn to cool, causing its magnetosphere to weeken, This allowed more of the Sun's radiant energy to "sand blast" away the life of Mars. I guess it some ways this could have been worse.
Take the planet Earth for example. On the planet Earth, there are these creatures that are pulling as much of the natural resource as they can away from Earth, and consuming them, leaving behind a polluted Earth where the air, water, and land are becoming more and more toxic to life on Earth. These creatures can honestly say they are not doing this by choice. Its simply the shear numbers of these creatures.
More than 7000 years to reach 2 billion.
But in only the last 100 years, with the advent of electricity, 4.5 billion more.
Pity about Earth.
Comment 16 of 21
No image available
August 14, 2008
------"What are we consuming?
The Earth's natural resources."-------

It does not matter if we consume resources.
So long as we replace the resources we consume.

We are running out of oil becuase we do not replace the oil we use.

Biofuels do anything and everything that oil does---and they do it better.

And we can make and use as much as we want. We do not have to change the infrastructure. We can use the same vehicles we have right now. We can go right on doing everything we have always done. But we can do the same things without damaging and polluting the earth. The earth will provide us with everything we need or want, we just need to take care of the earth.
All we need to do is change where we get our energy from. Oil is not renewable. Biofuels are renewable, we can make and use as much as we want. They do not cause greenhouse warming----and they are already being used to reduce pollution caused by petroleum.
All we need to do is switch to biofuels. They have been around and in use for over 100 years. The switch can be made very quickly---and it will cost us less to switch to biofuels than it will to drill for more petroleum.
Comment 17 of 21
No image available
August 14, 2008
The same thing for coal. There is no such thing as "Clean Coal". We've already spent over $50 Billion and spent 40 years trying to make "clean coal" and we have nothing to show for it. And even if you do clean up the smokestacks, coal still comes out of stripmines that destroy the earth and the watersheds for thousands of years. It is wasteful, inefficient and just plain stupid. There is only ONE explaination for why we even continue to use coal at all----greed. $$$$ Why would we even have supposedly intelligent scientists working on all sorts of Rube Goldberg plans to make coal "clean" it is not? Even a 7 year old child can figure that out---get rid of coal. All it does is make heat. We have better ways to make heat.
Here is a simple and easy plan to get rid of coal and still provide all the energy we need and more. It is not expensive, in fact it will end up costing us less in the long run. And we will even be able to use some fossil fuel and still reduce the effects of greenhouse gases. Global warming will no longer be an issue. Air quality will no longer be an issue.

http://groups.msn.com/BreakingTheChains/general.msnw?action=get_message&mview=0&ID_Message=166&LastModified=4675684812479648420

Getting rid of oil is easy, fast and can be done in a seamless intergrated way making full use of our current infrastructure and ways of doing things. It will be less expensive for us to change to biofuel use than it is to continue to use oil.
Getting rid of coal is easy, can be done in steps so that we will barely even notice the difference except that the air is getting cleaner and we have more money to spend because we will have a more efficient system of energy production. We can easily do it ten years or less, and it will cost us a lot less money in the long run.
Comment 18 of 21
No image available
August 14, 2008
The problem is not that we are consumers, we can consume all we want, so long as we put back what we consume. We have ways to do anything we want to do, and we can do them cost effectively, and quickly. It is completely false to stand around and moan and goan, "Oh, we cann't do that it will take too long and it will be too expensive."................that is wrong on both counts. The longer we wait, the more time it takes. What we are doing right now is inefficient and expensive. The longer we wait to change, the more it costs us every day.

You'll find a map of where to go and how to get there on the link above. If you want to ask me questions, join the forum and post your question.
Comment 19 of 21
No image available
August 14, 2008
-------"For the most part, you're arguments are just wishful thinking - or to be more blunt - a bunch of bunk. Renewable energy will only supplement petrol.
"------------------

Other way around. Petroleum can not possibly compete with renewable biofuels. Petroleum is running out. We've past peak oil, and petroleum will only continue to get more expensive and difficult to extract as time goes on. Biofuels can be manufactured from cheap and readily available raw materials and are cheaper than oil now, and will only get even more so as production capacity increases.

Petroleum is a dead end that cann't possibly compete with biofuels in the long run. The longer we delay producing and using biofuels, the more expensive it gets.

You cann't win a race with a thoroughbred riding a dinosaur.
Comment 20 of 21
August 15, 2008
Hi WH: Post #15, right on the money.... times 100...
I think it is possible that in a couple of hundred years, historians will look back at the "oil" age of the 20th century and conclude it was one of the worst things that could have happened to the world and particularly the USA, one of the major causes of why the government failed.... and yes that was put in the past tense... democracy replaced by corpocracy...

.....Bill
Comment 21 of 21
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