I posted the following and Dynamical disagreed, repeatedly. I was never able to get a satisfactory answer about what he disagreed with, perhaps you can do better.
[snip]
The conditions for the second half of that curve would be that oil gets replaced by some other cheaper energy source. At the moment that doesn’t appear to be happening, so we can’t be at a Hubbert peak.
[snip]
Your lack of satisfaction notwithstanding,
my response was to ask how well that applies to the peak of US production, and what cheaper energy source it was that replaced all that domestic oil. Your answer: imported oil.
At that point I decided to overlook some details which I felt unnecessarily complicate the matter: imported oil was
not cheaper than domestic oil during the years that followed the peak of US production. In fact, partly due to price controls implemented as a response to the 1973-74 embargo and partly due to OPEC's attempts to artifically maintain high prices by twiddling production, it was
more expensive.
As I said, I chose to ignore that mess and accept your basic premise that imported oil is cheaper (to extract) than is domestic oil, and then invited you to explain why that is. Your response was one I found... not very satisfactory:
chirping crickets.
The conclusion I was hoping to lead you to is that imported oil became the cheaper energy source
after US production peaked, and as a
result of that (not before, and as a cause) because the energy cost of extracting oil was becoming prohibitively high in the US. Unfortunately, you dropped out of the discussion at that point without answering my question. Now here you are back, complaining that you've been forced to fill in the blanks,
despite my having already posted this:
Maybe we both ought to try to clarify. I'll go first:
As far as I can see, very few of the "real geologists" appear optimisic about the prospects for maintaining (let alone increasing) the rates of extraction we've seen in recent decades. On the other hand, none of them predict a sudden and dramatic decline in production, either. I therefore predict a peak in production (possibly a lingering at a peak plateau) followed by a decline which, being neither a vertical cliff nor a gentle downward slope, would conform reasonably well to a Hubbert curve at a low level of resolution while at a higher level of resolution reflecting a lot of market volatility (as I noted at the top of page three in this thread).
Which
itself refers (in the bolded sentence) to
another, earlier post in which I had
already stated my position.
This "Oh, I just don't understand what Dymanic is saying" bit is getting old, and I'm not buying it anyway. If you really are too dense to grasp what I'm saying by now, then perhaps you are simply out of your depth with this entire discussion. I suspect, however, that like TCS you are merely being disingenuous. (I'll bet you could even spell my screen name correctly if you wanted to).
If you find yourself unable to make your case without resorting to such tactics, you might consider rethinking your position.