Will the internet survive energy contraction?

I kind of like the whole intellectual exercise of "What would you do in the event of the collapse of civilization?"

Granted, it's sort of like playing "What would you do if the zombies over-ran the earth?" but it's still fun.
 
I kind of like the whole intellectual exercise of "What would you do in the event of the collapse of civilization?"

Granted, it's sort of like playing "What would you do if the zombies over-ran the earth?" but it's still fun.

It's a fun game. As with most games, the trick is to define the rules well enough, and that's part of the problem with the Great Green ArchFool's pronouncements.

The end of cheap oil is not the end of oil. The end of oil is not the end of energy. The end of energy is not the end of technology. So to get from "we're running out of oil!" (we're not, but we will eventually, so I'll give the GGAF half credit for this one) to "OMG no one will be able to build a fire!" is rather silly.
 
But, those methods sound very experimental, and I'm not sure how much time we have to get them commercially/industrially viable.

Here is one point where we are seeing the problem completely differently. I think that these new forms of electrical power will become commercially viable when they are the cheaper alternatives to oil, even if they are more expensive than what we are using now. To me, more expensive oil will guarantee it; the only question is how long it will take. But for you, and at the risk of putting words in your mouth, the question of time is a question of how long before industrial-scale manufacturing world-wide hits an imminent brick wall of having zero oil available to anyone. Am I misunderstanding how you think this will play out?

I don't see Peak Oil as "no oil left", but rather as a situation with more customers clamoring for oil, and extractors not being able to draw more oil up to satisfy all of them. The result is price increases, which not everyone can afford. Where people can, they will change personal and business behaviors. Where they can't they will have to do without.


I think by 2011, we'll see a defined crash of the united states economy.

Okay, that gets us away from the original post. That might damage a lot of the Internet. But you'll have to back up your reasons for that initial assumtion. And even if you did, you should remember that recessions (not to say anything about depressions) ease demand for oil. And then you'd have to remember the "inter" part of "Internet". It's an international network of networks, so it would still work somewhere. Remember why it was built in the first place.


By 2012, oil will have peaked to the point where there's not enough for the car culture left. By 2013, empty freeways.

Again, here is that key point where we seem to be thinking about this problem completely differently.

Peak oil refers to the point at which the largest amount of oil is extracted in a single year, with smaller quantities in every year after that, due to limitations in the available supply within the ground. It does not mean that all of the wells stop producing all at once. You probably know this already, but your comments seem to demonstrate a confusion of these two scenarios as well as their different consequences.

If I could permanently stop all oil extraction today, sure, we probably would see a collapse of industrial society around the world. Except maybe for Iceland. But this is not in the cards.

Instead, each year will see a little bit less oil produced than in the previous year. As a result, the price increases. Those who can afford the more-expensive and slightly-smaller quantities of oil will continue to buy it. Whose who can't will conserve or do without, just as we already have since 1973, 1979, and 2003. Eventually, the logic of substitution will affect even the rich.

Price increases do change behavior when the increases are seen as permanent. From 2003, oil prices dramatically increased and gasoline doubled over four years. Yet we still have cars. At the same time, the "car culture" of mindless resource-guzzling took a hit when people stopped buying light trucks for routine driving, it took another hit when their used trucks stopped selling, another hit when they increased their cycling and their use of public transit, and another hit when they stopped driving so fast. For more details see the aforementioned PDF and here. But the freeways still have cars on them.

The recession has also suppressed demand even with lower gasoline prices, and kept us (in the U.S.) from returning to the more-profligate ways. Highly-expensive oil may mean more recession. I'd be more confident forecasting a couple of dismal decades like the 1970's, than forecasting a brick wall for civilization. But that would also delay the day the oilwells run dry.

As prices stay high, or rise, year after year we will use less oil for transport. I suspect that electric vehicles will expand, de-emphasizing oil use for transport. The smaller petroleum pie will be weighted more toward heating, where it's harder to replace equipment with non-oil infrastructure.


By 2018 industrial civilization around the world collapses, violence in the big cities ensures, die off emerges, and a hand full of Monticello style communities are the only ones left thriving.

But (ignoring what I wrote above) where would this happen first? Rising oil prices make this scenario more likely to happen in the Global South than in the North, and more likely to happen in the South first. You and I will probably face fewer difficulties in this transition than the people there will because we can afford more-expensive fuel. But, of course, they don't use oil as much as we do, so maybe it will be a wash.

And maybe some of them will get lucky and leapfrog over car culture to go directly to a smarter all-electric infrastructure.


But do we have that time? I think you're being way too optimistic on how much time we have left.

And vice versa. Tell me, have you seen anyone forecasting the annual decline in oil production after peak AND the annual increase in oil price? A realistic forecast would make it easier for us to explore reactions and other consequences.

Please bring us numbers.


That may be true that I would have used less oil in 1980s...

It's possible. Driving habits were different, people commuted shorter distances than today, they were dealing with the second oil shock, and more compact smaller cars were available (a growing market after the first shock in 1973).

Also, world-wide oil production in 1980 was less than today. In fact, in 1980 the world produced about about 14 million barrels per day less than it did in 2005, the year with the highest daily production (as estimated by the U.S. Department of Energy). Actually, it's been bouncing up and down in the last six years, more of a plateau than a peak (if this really is the peak, mind you). Look at this chart: http://www.eia.doe.gov/aer/txt/ptb1105.html


...but we're heading towards a point where we won't even have about 10% of the energy we need for even a light industrial "advanced" society. Right?

Sort of. We are approaching a point where we won't have 10% of the oil we currently need for light industry. However, (1) oil is not the only source of energy, (2) we need to pass through the 95%, 90%, 80%, and 70% points first, (3) we will find that we don't need that much oil for such work, and (4) we will find that we're better off doing that work and so much more by not using fossil fuels.

Let me ask you this: What reasons are there for not expecting the decline in production to follow a similar curve down as it followed up?

If Hubbert's curve is symmetrical, the world will have as much daily production in 2035 (twenty-five years after the end of my hypothetical plateau) as it had in funky fresh 1980 (twenty-five years before the beginning of my hypothetical plateau). There was plenty of industrial activity then, including an Internet, disco, and work on the new Space Shuttle Columbia. Looking further out, there would be as much oil produced circa 2045 as the world had when Armstrong walked on the moon, and as much in 2055 as it had when Yuri Gagarin became the first human being in space.

Even if production declined at double speed, we would still have 1960 levels in 2033, which is more than a quarter of what we use and produce today. With such a rate of decline, there would be a lot of hardship and conservation. But people would be jumping to non-oil alternatives out of sheer necessity. Someone, the slowest adopters and the hardest-to-change activities, will still be using that oil, until their more-efficient competitors undermine them.


Maybe for a while, but that suggests humans are adaptable to crisis scenarios.

But we are adaptable. Gas prices doubled between 2003 and 2007, and Americans (of all people!) adjusted. Reasons for change may be complex, but it really does happen.


Maybe he's said that, but he does believe our best chance is a 1800s agrarian civilization powered by Green Wizardy.

I can see such a society as well, as a subculture or as a network of experimental communities from which the rest of us non-participants might (maybe) learn a thing or two. I don't think it's for everybody, and fortunately for everybody it probably won't be the only option.

Even more fortunately (and part of the reason for this conclusion), the global civilization of next century will by necessity be more sustainable than today's, especially regarding energy. Ecotechnic tools and methods will come from more places than the green wizards' backyards. The rest of us have our own ways which work just fine, and possibly more-reliably.


But Petroleum is needed to make the computers themselves, along with transportation. Have to factor those in as well.

Sure, but you also need to factor in substitutions. How do you think computer manufacturers will make their machines differently after sustained increases in the price of oil? Would they use non-petroleum-based plastic for parts? Would the UPS and FedEx shipping fleet have switched to non-petroleum fuels?


If you could find the Sci American about that, please forward it my way.

The big cover story was the January 2008 issue, focusing specifically on solar energy. The web version begins here:
http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=a-solar-grand-plan More articles follow off of that page.


I'm surprised you don't like nuclear, most people of your ilk seem to.

What do you consider this ilk to which I allegedly belong? I'm not one of the conservative engineers on this board. I'm probably more like you than you realize. There are more perspectives than the "doomer" and the "cornucopian".


What do you think of TheOilDrum and EnergyBulletin?

I don't read the Oil Drum, except maybe Jerome a Paris if I happen to see an interesting citation elsewhere. I occasionally look at Energy Bulletin. You already know that I prefer Big Gav's blog, and WorldChanging.

What do you think of "Peak Oil Debunked"? That blogger accepts peak oil (despite the blog's name), but he no longer accepts the doomsday case. You might find it interesting.
 
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One who lacks the practical technical knowledge shouldn't run around pretending they do.

I'm not sure that TFian is making any such pretence. He's simply accepting that the Great ArchFool does have the practical technical knowledge, when it's obvious to the rest of the readership of the forum that he doesn't.
 
Whoa, way to get the thread going again. I appreciate your endurance, TFian, but I still think you're wrong.

But how are these OLPC laptops made? My guess it needs a fossil fuel heavy globalized system to make and distribute.

Right now the OLPC rather piggybacks off of the production facilities that serve the first world. What it shows, though, is that you can build computers sturdy enough for people living the agrarian (disease-ridden, famined, conflict-plagued) utopia right now. You can do so cheaply in terms of resources, and they'll do hand cranked email.

In the event of "catastrophic energy contraction" you could build them even lower-specced and with an engineering goal of even better longevity. But that's beside the point, as even today's OLPC beats old school methods of communication in efficiency by a wide margin.

Maybe for a while, but that suggests humans are adaptable to crisis scenarios.

Yes, I hope so. It seems to me you and Greer agree?

In any case, I am convinced that sudden energy contraction on the scale you're talking of, is a fiction. And the point still stands - if you're in a society that can't even manufacture these sub-OLPCs and some length of fiber-optic cabling, then you're well below the crucial point I'm talking about.

At that point, if you're not living in Mad Max, then you're living in the dark ages. Your life will consist of extreme hardship if not outright serfdom, and you'll probably die of malnourishment or a simple infection before you hit 35. That is, if you're not killed with a spear in some local warlords' squabbles over land and resources.

Then there's this:

Things like fusion, fission and space based solar are fantasies, that have no basis in reality.

Try going to Hiroshima and telling the people there that fission is a fantasy.

(Hint: Both the atomic bomb and today's nuclear power plants work on the principle of fission. Humans have used it for real-world power generation since 1954.)

And this:

I think by 2011, we'll see a defined crash of the united states economy.

By 2012, oil will have peaked to the point where there's not enough for the car culture left. By 2013, empty freeways.

By 2018 industrial civilization around the world collapses, violence in the big cities ensures, die off emerges, and a hand full of Monticello style communities are the only ones left thriving.

What will it mean to you and your personal beliefs if the 2011 prediction does not come true? The 2012 one? Those are pretty close dates.

I'm asking not to be snarky, but because I sometimes see people hold on to a dearly held belief or failed prophecy for a long time after it's been discredited. Now, they should of course believe what they want, but in my experience this doesn't make for particularly happy people. The dissonance mostly only leads towards the more genuinely delusional and removed from the world.

The prime example of this would be Jehovah's Witnesses, who have been waiting for the apocalypse since 1877.

Again, I only ask you to consider these things with all the data you can gather.
 
I also notice Greer makes absolutely no mention of hydrogen.

The most abundant element in the universe.

The element with nearly 4 times the energy density of gasoline.
 
I also notice Greer makes absolutely no mention of hydrogen.

The most abundant element in the universe.

The element with nearly 4 times the energy density of gasoline.

Yeah, but I'd rather not use it for personal use unless I have to. It goes boom in a very big way.
 
Minor detail.

I don't think you'll mind if civilization is collapsing :p
 
I also notice Greer makes absolutely no mention of hydrogen.

The most abundant element in the universe.

The element with nearly 4 times the energy density of gasoline.

Well, being the most abundant element in the universe isn't really that helpful, is it? The universe is a long way away.

I mean, "the universe" could be completely filled with pizzas orbiting every visible star more than five light years away at a density of one pizza per cubic meter, and I'd still have nothing in my freezer.
 
.14% of the Earth is hydrogen.

.03% of the Earth is carbon

Fossil fuels are made of....
 
Well, being the most abundant element in the universe isn't really that helpful, is it? The universe is a long way away.

I mean, "the universe" could be completely filled with pizzas orbiting every visible star more than five light years away at a density of one pizza per cubic meter, and I'd still have nothing in my freezer.


Or, as the guide states:

Douglas Adams said:
Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly, hugely, mind-bogglingly big it is. I mean, you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space, listen...
 
.14% of the Earth is hydrogen.

.03% of the Earth is carbon

Mostly in an already oxidized state, which makes them less useful as energy resources. You can't burn the hydrogen in seawater, or more accurately, it's already been burned (which is why it's seawater), it would take as much energy to separate the hydrogen to make it burnable as it would yield, and it's hellishly hard to fuse ordinary hydrogen.

I think we can rule out hydrogen-based energy mining for planning purposes.
 
Count me in -- I am very good at soldering!

I want in as well, and if it's not to be as a gross hauler I shall have to challenge you to a soldering iron duel for the position. Or maybe I can just noodle around with programming and generally slacking off with the sub-OLPC you'll eventually build.

I kind of like the whole intellectual exercise of "What would you do in the event of the collapse of civilization?"

Granted, it's sort of like playing "What would you do if the zombies over-ran the earth?" but it's still fun.

Yes. Yes it is. Reminds me a bit of Dwarf Fortress.

Anyway, what do you think of my plan:

Salvage enough steel (from the local shipyard or something) to smelt into a biofuel-powered Wankel engine. Then, set up as the local miller and let the others do the hard work of tilling the soil: I'll refine the fruits of their labour using parts of it as fuel, take a generous cut of the grain and have them thank me for it on top. Make them all depend on me, then launch a political career on the back of that. Run for mayor or prince or archduke or whatever is the highest office in the village at the time.

Or I guess I could do landscaping and interior decorating.
 
Well, being the most abundant element in the universe isn't really that helpful, is it? The universe is a long way away.

I mean, "the universe" could be completely filled with pizzas orbiting every visible star more than five light years away at a density of one pizza per cubic meter, and I'd still have nothing in my freezer.

Elegant illustration there.

Anyway, hydrogen being the most abundant element is not exactly a non-controversial statement. Witness:

Frank Zappa said:
Some scientists claim that hydrogen, because it is so plentiful, is the basic building block of the universe. I dispute that. I say there is more stupidity than hydrogen, and that is the basic building block of the universe.

:D
 
Anyway, what do you think of my plan:

Salvage enough steel (from the local shipyard or something) to smelt into a biofuel-powered Wankel engine. Then, set up as the local miller and let the others do the hard work of tilling the soil: I'll refine the fruits of their labour using parts of it as fuel, take a generous cut of the grain and have them thank me for it on top. Make them all depend on me, then launch a political career on the back of that. Run for mayor or prince or archduke or whatever is the highest office in the village at the time.

Your plan sounds good, until it runs into my plan: To gather all the guns, ammunition, and Kevlar vests I can get, along with supplies of gunpowder (and the chemical constituents thereof) along with tools to mold lead and reloading supplies. Then, once you do all the work to get your distillery running, I can take it over, forget about running for anything, and use my loyal minions to enforce my self-declaration as Grand High Emperor for life.

If you surrender willingly, I'll name you Imperial Advisor on Morale, though :D
 
Heh, I was more thinking basic grinding of flour, but now that you mention it a still does sound attractive...

Bear in mind that I'm writing this from largely gun-free Scandinavia, and that I have a leg up here in that I have messed around a bit with bows and such. I believe that both the right pen and the right tongue should be mightier than any weapon; I start any CRPG by putting all my points into Charisma.
 
Heh, I was more thinking basic grinding of flour, but now that you mention it a still does sound attractive...

Bear in mind that I'm writing this from largely gun-free Scandinavia, and that I have a leg up here in that I have messed around a bit with bows and such. I believe that both the right pen and the right tongue should be mightier than any weapon; I start any CRPG by putting all my points into Charisma.

Yes, but the right pen, the right words, and a few battalions of infantry are even mightier ;)
 
I mean, "the universe" could be completely filled with pizzas orbiting every visible star more than five light years away at a density of one pizza per cubic meter, and I'd still have nothing in my freezer.

I like the way you put funny pictures in my head.
 
Things like fusion, fission and space based solar are fantasies, that have no basis in reality.

Seriously? Nuclear fission, at least, is providing a significant amount of our world's power today.

No, it's not a cult, he's the leader of a legitimate religion. And he's not the only one I listen to anyway.

"Legitimate religion"? That makes him qualified to talk on matters of science how, exactly?

Why? What's "kooky" about it?

If you can't see it, then I can't explain it to you. That he's pulling stuff out of the D&D Player's Handbook (or is it Unearthed Arcana?) should give you a clue.

Druids aren't allowed to use axes. "Club, dagger, dart, quarterstaff, scimitar, sickle, shortspear, sling, and spear."

:drinkspit:
 

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