What if there is no Global Warming?

Re: Re: Re: Re: What if there is no Global Warming?

Drooper said:
Being finite does mean it will run out.

Iron ore, aluminium, silica, copper etc, etc, etc. There are loads of finite resources that we are using in ever increasing amounts. We are not going to run out of those either.
Why not ?

Finite resource, positive consumption rate. Sooner or later it's going to run out.
 
Badly Shaved Monkey said:
Good old Google.



Pausing only briefly to note that Drooper's answers show exactly the correlation that my OP posited, hence vindicating the linkage of the two issues,

You sound more like interesting Ian with every marginal contribution

Badly Shaved Monkey said:
I found the following link;

http://www.ncpa.org/pub/bg/bg159/index.html#c

which states that although oil resources are in strict terms finite, in practical terms they are not.

NOw why didn't you do that in the first place? And why did you get on you hooby horse when I asked you to provide the evidence for your initial claim, which you have now satisfactorily found counter evidence?


Badly Shaved Monkey said:
Would those posters who think that humans are not responsible for an element of global warming also find themselves in agreement with that ncpa policy backgrounder? If so, that would suggest that in answer to my OP's questions it is likely that those who see no reason to conserve fossil fuels because of Global Warming also see no need to do so for the management of the resource either.

Maybe "those posters" consider the issues and evidence on the subject Anthropogenic Global Warming and draw some conclusions and then seperately consider the issues and evidence on the subject of "Fossil fuel depletion" and reach some conclusions on that.


Badly Shaved Monkey said:
I wonder if they can explain that spooky coincidence of opinions, while at the same time still share Drooper's surprise that I would suggest they are linked.

Try something less spooky and to appreciate this you need to turn the question around. Is there an obvious reason (anecdotal) why "certain people" might by strong proponents of the Anthropogenic Global Warming theory and also tend to support the myth that we are using up the world's natural resources (especially oil).

Hooraayyy. Yes, its all about politics.

Now here is where you have to be careful, because there is a potential fallacy pit into whic one may fall.

Those of the extreme political right are more likely to be "anti AGW" and "pro oil". Hence anyone who is "anti AGW" and "pro oil" reached their opinions due to their political persuasion.

And we can play that both ways.

Those of the extreme political left are more likely to be "pro AGW" and "anti oil". Hence anyone who is "anti AGW" and "pro oil" reached their opinions due to their political persuasion.

What to do? I have an idea. Let's discuss the data, evidence, issues and not try to make tenuous link between issues and people's positions on those issues.

I claim that is what I did in my first post. I presented responses to standard AGW claims and then asked you for the evidence that we are running out of fossil fuels. No epithets, no insults, no insuation.

Badly Shaved Monkey said:
Intriguingly, Drooper is sort of right, each is not a logical prerequisite for the other, but I do observe that they tend to go hand in hand in politics. I am interested in why they should co-exist like this.

Don't go there. There be logical fallacies, there be. (see above)

Badly Shaved Monkey said:
This leads to a corollary to be answered by those same people. If fossil fuels do not cause global warming and there is no practical end to their reserves should we simply be aiming to maximise extraction in order to achieve the most rapid possible expansion of the world economy with untold benefits? Is there no limit to the growth we can achieve while still bound to the Earth's surface?

OK now we've shifted the issue.

I can give you chapter and verse on eonomic growth. It is not as you appear to perceive it. The rate at which we extract and employ resources, such as oil, is a function of the capacity of the economy to expand, not the reverse as you imply here.

In other words. If you happened to be king of the world and the economy was centrally planned (remember nobody orders oil to be extracted at certain rates, it is just done to demand at prevailing and expected costs and market prices) and said "extract all the oil", you would just be left with lots and lots of surplus oil.
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: What if there is no Global Warming?

The Don said:
Why not ?

Finite resource, positive consumption rate. Sooner or later it's going to run out.

Read about Malthus.
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: What if there is no Global Warming?

Drooper said:
Being finite does mean it will run out.

Yes it does unless it is being made faster than we are using it. The question is solely one of timescale: long or short.
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: What if there is no Global Warming?

Badly Shaved Monkey said:
Yes it does unless it is being made faster than we are using it. The question is solely one of timescale: long or short.

My bad [typing] Of course that should have read "does NOT mean it will run out".

Of course I don't think we'll be using a lot of oil in 100 years time and it ain't going to runn out in that time scale.
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: What if there is no Global Warming?

Drooper said:

What you presented was a hobby horse of epithets.


I have no settled view on these issues. Bizarrely enough that was why my OP created questions. All I did was lay out some of the arguments and ask for information. So far all I have received is polemic.

As part of that polemic I have been told that a finite resource will never run out. This is curious.
 
Drooper said:
And why did you get on you hooby horse when I asked you to provide the evidence for your initial claim, which you have now satisfactorily found counter evidence?

As I have already explained, I can't get on my hobby horse about this because I don't have one. I really was looking for information and really am undecided on these issues.

Drooper said:

Hooraayyy. Yes, its all about politics.


OK now we've shifted the issue.


If you read the OP, it was about the motivations of people holding the views I was describing. So, no shift of issues. It was probably a question of politics from the outset. Here, let me parse the OP for you;

Badly Shaved Monkey said:
See, made you look!!

Jokey intro

I know there are voices, including some here that deny that human activities are making a significant contribution to global warming. I also know that the oil industry in the US lobbies heavily against moves to curtail fossil fuel use.

Uncontestable facts

What I don't understand is that this seems to be a proxy fight that simply ignores the more fundamental and uncontroversial fact that fossil fuels are a finite resource.

Statement of my opinion based on observation coupled with fact that the resources are finite. You have now mooted an idea that demand will decline so that the reserves will asymptote to a non-zero value. I'd like to see some substantiation of that

Regardless of their contribution to global warming, fossil fuels will run out and at some point we need to get used to that fact.

See above based on finiteness versus continued use. See above

So, are the Global Warming refuseniks also denying that we'll run out of fossil fuels, or do they think we'll run out of them eventually but depletion will occur on a much slower timescale than any voluntary curtailment of use that is being asked for to control global warming, or is that lobby just temporising in the face of the demands to reduce fossil fuel use without any conscious thought about their ultimate finiteness?

Do I really have to use smileys every time I use a funny word? Notwithstanding the absence of smileys, this is asking someone who does not believe in GW to explain how that relates to a disbelief in the need to conserve fossil fuels to preserve stocks given taht both views are, in my experience, typically held by the same people at the same time

Given that oil will run out, don't the giant oil companies have a long term financial incentive to help reduce oil consumption thereby hiking prices and preserving their profitable exploitation of that resource for as long as possible?

Reasonable question based on its initial premise. So far not answered

30 years ago the oil was going to run out in 30 years.

Simple observation, which also accords with what I found being reported in that ncpa briefing. In other words, before you started accusing me of being on a hobby horse against your view, I was already taking as read that for some reason the horizon of oil depletion seems to be receding

It hasn't yet, but it will do.

Based on its finiteness and unless you can prove that demand will decline this is simply true. See previous comments.



Better. :)
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: What if there is no Global Warming?

Badly Shaved Monkey said:
I have no settled view on these issues. Bizarrely enough that was why my OP created questions. All I did was lay out some of the arguments and ask for information. So far all I have received is polemic.

As part of that polemic I have been told that a finite resource will never run out. This is curious.

You presented claims:

Given that oil will run out...

I asked for evidence:

You made the claim, where is the credible evidence?

Where is the polemic? You keep adding fuel to this by making additonal unsubstantiated claims in every post.

And could you point out where exactly I say that "finite resources will never run out"
 
BSM, old chap, just be glad you haven't got Diamond and some of his other mates in here as well. Look what happened to me when I tried to find out what the actual arguments of the global warning deniers were. (That post is the start of a pretty unedifying spat which got nobody anywhere.)

I don't think it's possible to have a rational discussion about this subject on this forum, and perhaps anywhere.

Rolfe.
 
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: What if there is no Global Warming?

Drooper said:
And could you point out where exactly I say that "finite resources will never run out"

It's a necessary implication of what you have said.
 
Badly Shaved Monkey said:
As I have already explained, I can't get on my hobby horse about this because I don't have one. I really was looking for information and really am undecided on these issues.



If you read the OP, it was about the motivations of people holding the views I was describing. So, no shift of issues. It was probably a question of politics from the outset. Here, let me parse the OP for you;



Better. :)

No really.

You said:
fossil fuels will run out and at some point we need to get used to that fact

How is that a fact?

You said:
Given that oil will run out

A statement of claimed fact. And used that as a premise to pose a question that you say I haven't answered. Why bother answering a question based on false premise?

You said:
It hasn't yet, but it will do.

Statement of fact, which is incorrect.


And as for this smilie business. No, you don't have to use a smilie every time you say something. But neither will the use of a smilie successfully disguise the use of ad hominem to colour people who hold a particular point of view on a particular subject.


You may not being robustly countered on you claims here, or havnig flaws in your logic poiinted out, but you are not alone in this area. Nowhere did I post anything that merits a response that you gave here:

Now, if you'd like to apologise and answer more reasonably I'd be grateful

In fact that shoe is on the other foot, as here:

Oh, for pity's sake, get a sense of humour and get over yourself.
 
Rolfe said:
BSM, old chap, just be glad you haven't got Diamond and some of his other mates in here as well. Look what happened to me when I tried to find out what the actual arguments of the global warning deniers were. (That post is the start of a pretty unedifying spat which got nobody anywhere.)

I don't think it's possible to have a rational discussion about this subject on this forum, and perhaps anywhere.

Rolfe.

You seem to shift the goalpost on what you perceive as rational, given that this is what you contributed in the very thread you quote here:
it appears to me that the global-warming-denialists look like wish-fulfillment fantasists who either don't want to have to change their lifestyles, or simply can't cope with the implications about what's very likely to be the medium-term future for humanity.
 
Drooper said:
How is that a fact?

"Statement of my opinion based on observation coupled with fact that the resources are finite. You have now mooted an idea that demand will decline so that the reserves will asymptote to a non-zero value. I'd like to see some substantiation of that"

I can't believe I seem to be conversing with someone who cannot see any end to the supply of oil, but that is what is happening.

I have said elsewhere already that there are a couple of get-outs from the idea that we will run out of oil. Please state explicitly which it is: is oil infinite or will we stop using it?

As to my evidence that it will run out: 1. we are using it and 2. I don't know of mechanisms creating it faster than we are using it, but enlighten me, perhaps it is being made sufficiently fast somewhere.
 
Drooper said:
You seem to shift the goalpost on what you perceive as rational, given that this is what you contributed in the very thread you quote here:

Not that Rolfe needs me to carry her bags on this, but what you quoted was not irrational. It was emotive. But, it was a fair reporting of her personal observations of those who deny the existence of human-influenced global warming. It might offend, but it does not offend logic.

Being irrational would require the assertion that a finite entity will not be ultimately be depleted by consumption without advancing any mechanism by which it would be replenished or showing that the consumption must necessarily cease before the entity is completely depleted.
 
Badly Shaved Monkey said:
"Statement of my opinion based on observation coupled with fact that the resources are finite. You have now mooted an idea that demand will decline so that the reserves will asymptote to a non-zero value. I'd like to see some substantiation of that"

Actually, this is fairly easy to substantiate, and largely irrelevant. Oil will only be used as long as it is more cost-effective than other equivalent goods; if we were to see (for example), a substantial drop in the cost of wind-based electricity, people would start using wind power instead of oil-based electricity, which would reduce the use of oil and hence the rate of consumption. Similarly, as the reserves dwindle, the decreasing supply will raise the cost until it becomes less expensive to use wind-based power -- this will probably happen at some point before the reserves actually dwindle to zero.

As an analogy, consider the fact that there are still whales left. The demand for whale oil has essentially vanished, because whale oil is more expensive than petroleum. But we haven't run out of whales.

On the other hand, whether the reserves left are zero or a number too small to be cost-effective to pump is largely irrelevant to the larger question of what we are going to do when the economically viable reserves have dropped to zero -- which is (provably) going to happen.
 
new drkitten said:
Actually, this is fairly easy to substantiate, and largely irrelevant. Oil will only be used as long as it is more cost-effective than other equivalent goods; if we were to see (for example), a substantial drop in the cost of wind-based electricity, people would start using wind power instead of oil-based electricity, which would reduce the use of oil and hence the rate of consumption. Similarly, as the reserves dwindle, the decreasing supply will raise the cost until it becomes less expensive to use wind-based power -- this will probably happen at some point before the reserves actually dwindle to zero.

As an analogy, consider the fact that there are still whales left. The demand for whale oil has essentially vanished, because whale oil is more expensive than petroleum. But we haven't run out of whales.

On the other hand, whether the reserves left are zero or a number too small to be cost-effective to pump is largely irrelevant to the larger question of what we are going to do when the economically viable reserves have dropped to zero -- which is (provably) going to happen.

Quibble accepted.

The question is whether "when the economically viable reserves have dropped to zero" occurs after we don't care any more because we have replaced oil with something else, or whether it occurs right in the middle of us still needing loads of it.
 
new drkitten said:
As an analogy, consider the fact that there are still whales left. The demand for whale oil has essentially vanished, because whale oil is more expensive than petroleum. But we haven't run out of whales.


In fact that's a better analogy, I think, than you originally intended because whale species could have gone to extinction had not action been taken for reasons outside their economic value. Economics did not seem to be saving them.
 
Badly Shaved Monkey said:
In fact that's a better analogy, I think, than you originally intended because whale species could have gone to extinction had not action been taken for reasons outside their economic value. Economics did not seem to be saving them.

I'm not entirely sure this is correct. The heyday of whale oil consumption was in the 1850s and thereabouts; the consumption of whale oil had dropped significantly as early as the 1890s, once petroleum (and particularly kerosene) had been developed. In fact, I think that whale oil was actually cheaper, in both real and nominal money, in 1900 than it was in 1820 -- but kerosene was cheaper yet. Whale protection legislation didn't start happening until the 1930s and 40s (for example, the IWC was created in 1946).

I would argue that, in fact, the only reason that whales could be protected at all is because the whaling industry had largely been overtaken by events, and their economic value had dropped to the point where whaling could be foregone without significant consequences.
 
Re: Re: What if there is no Global Warming?

Drooper said:

<snip>
Running out of fossil fuels.

I would make the same demands of you that I would to Andrew Wakefield on the issue of MMR causing autism. You made the claim, where is the credible evidence?

I am throwing my self into a bees nest here, but what the hell...

I think these guys got i quite right. But I really don't know. Oh well, that's how science works...

Oh but wait: Those guys most be nitwits, stupid, and and and Swedish, and we swedes don't know ◊◊◊◊ about oil or anything else for that matter.
 
"It is ridiculous to assume that the use of ivory might lead to the extinction of elephants in Africa. If the number of elephants declines, it will be harder to hunt for them and it becomes more and more expensive to produce ivory. As it becomes more expensive, alternatives will become cheaper in comparison. A rather clever chap in Belgium already invented an alternative called 'bakelite' that might be used for billiard balls and piano keys instead of ivory. It is not yet economical to use now, but if ivory becomes more expensive it will be. At some point it will be uneconomical to use ivory, and then we'll stop using ivory."

Funny thing happened in a 100 years or so. It is true, we stopped using ivory for many things it was once used for. It is true that ivory became more and more expensive. Governments started to protect elephants, increasing the price of ivory even further.

But it never became uneconomical to hunt elephants for their tusks. Poachers are now willing to risk being shot on site by government officials to get the ivory. They are willing to do this, because the price they can get for it is higher than ever before. And the price is still increasing, while there are now fewer elephants than when ivory was replaced with artificial substitutes. Extinction may no longer be imminent, but it is still a threat.

The price is high, but there are people willing to pay it.

Claiming that something will at some point be uneconomical assumes that there is a fixed amount that people are willing to pay for a product and that at a higher price people will prefer something cheaper. But it doesn't always work that way. For some products the desire for it depends on the price: the higher the price, the more status it gives the buyer who can afford it, the more the buyer is willing to pay for it.

A product that becomes expensive, can become a status symbol and very desirable. For some products, there is no limit to what people are willing to pay for it, because the more expensive it becomes, the more desirable it is.

Just as it is unknown how much oil actually exists in the ground, it is equally unknown how much people in the future will be willing to pay for it. There may not be a practical limit to either of them. It may be true that if oil becomes more expensive, it will become a status symbol to have a car still guzzling petrol and the rich and famous will be willing to pay such ridiculous amount for it that is still economically viable to pump it up.

We already see something like this happening. It is possible to buy cars that are more economical then ever before, and prices at the pump increase continually (at least in the eyes of the average consumer. Adjusted for inflation it looks quite different) so what do the rich and famous do? They buy Hummers. Increase the price of oil, and it will only be more interesting to waste it: champagne is quite expensive, so what better way to flaunt your wealth than to shake the bottle and pop the cork?

Just because something becomes more expensive does not mean it gets any closer to a point where people are no longer willing to pay the price for it. If the desire for something increases when the price increases and if that thing is a limited resource it is entirely possible that people will use it until it is gone.
 

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