The real problem isn't peak oil production, its peak oil pricing. When the price of oil gets too high, it causes recession and drops demand, and the price gets low, which helps recovery, then price gets high, and......
We're at 70. At 80 the transportation companies will stop purchasing capital again to pay for fuel. At 90, they start looking at layoffs again. Consumers stop going to movies and stop driving where they don't need to. I think we could have another dip in this recession due to oil pricing.
Hate to sound really pessimistic here, but working for a fortune 500 transportation company and seeing those hard decisions being made has really opened my eyes. I'm really disappointed that this president seemed to have cruised through the past summer without learning a thing. He really seems to be asleep at the wheel on oil production. Even the token female with the deer in headlights look grokked the need for stable oil pricing. Obama seems to be looking 20 years down the road, but forgetting that we need to prosper in the years in between. His solutions are all on the conservation side.
Its too late to do anything about pricing this summer. We had a lame duck Bush with a an uninterested congress and now a president who is blind to the issue.
I really fear an economy that basically keeps going stop/go on oil prices. I have a feeling the administation will be reactionary and try windfall taxes and other political scapegoating instead of using the pressure to do something productive.
I guess you could say I have been thinking about this problem lately (since my line of work is the first to be affected by it before the economy at large).
Could someone just whack the people on CNBC on the heads every time they pump oil prices? Could someone tell JP Morgan to fricken quit it? Beam me up Mr. Speaker.
Corplinx, we can't do anything about the pricing. Presidents can intervene to smooth over temporary hiccups in the economy, Congress can alter tarriffs and trade.
But peak oil is peak oil. At some point it will just not be economically feasible to sell oil for a certain price, which makes certain industries economically non-viable. Since oil will NEVER be cheaper once peak oil is passed, barring amazing technological innovation that is on no one's horizon (oil from bacteria or somesuch), then those industries will NEVER be viable.
It's like being a typewriter salesman as the personal computer started to hit. You can subsidize the typewriter as much as you want, and prop it up, and bail out the salesmen, but they just don't have an economic reason to exist anymore.
The really funny part is we saw this coming ages ago. We could have stopped it. Mid 1980s? Perfect time. United States, world leader in technology. Reagan could have invested in alternative energy sources, and started research decades ahead of today. Nothing. Bush I? Nothing. Clinton? Nothing. Bush II? Nothing.
Well here we are now. Entertain us. What shall we do at this stage? Our ability to soften the market impact is zero. What we NEEDED to do was prepare for peak oil 10 years ago so the technologies we need would be rolling out today. Instead environmentalists have been called crazy, insane, nuts, foolish, shortsighted, etc. (look at the dumb tar sands argument, above, for details). At this point we need technologies that take 10 years to develop - today.