"Peak" is not the same as "run out." There's enough coal in the US to last another 200-300 years.
Patzek's paper doesn't dispute the size of the coal reserves. His model is based on the assumption that the current wild push for sequestration will negate any gains in coal plant efficiency. I see where he's coming from, but without reading the paper I don't know if I really agree with the conclusion.
Current usage is roughly 1 billion tons of coal a year. Estimated reserves at active coal mines are around 17.1 trillion tons.
Then 200-300 years assumes a pretty sharp increase in consumption?
Are you sure there'd be no energy for making paper? We made paper for far longer than we had electricity...
Current usage is roughly 1 billion tons of coal a year. Estimated reserves at active coal mines are around 17.1 trillion tons.
The current usage of coal for the US is about 1 billion tons, but the EIA estimates of reserves for active mines is 17.9 billion tons with total reserves about 488 billion of which 261 billion are recoverable.
Yes, I know the internet will not be shut down *right away*, the question is will contraction eventually shut the internet off.
After reading a bit more about (and by) John Greer -- "the Archdruid" in OP, -- I've come to conclusion that he WANTS civilization to be doomed, and willfully ignores all evidence to the contrary because contiuation of industrial society is just repugnant to him. He assumes people ARE immobilized like deer in the headlights, because if they are not, then he is irrelevant.As already noted, "energy" is not limited to oil, and the way your source talks about energy obscures the role of electricity. There are many ways to generate electricity that don't rely on oil or other fossil fuels.
Your source is also assuming that in the meantime, we aren't doing anything about our energy infrastructure. Fortunately, people are not immobilized like deer in the headlights, peak oil or no peak oil. We are building new electric-generation infrastructure that uses renewable resources. Maybe you just haven't been keeping up with recent developments:
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I recommend it to you as a reminder that we are not doomed.