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Bottom of the barrel
George Monbiot on the peak of petroleum production, and the
foolishness of continuing on our petroleum addiction - why
are we building for an auto-centric Lake Street?
The world is running out of oil - so why
do politicians refuse to talk about it?
George Monbiot
Tuesday December 2, 2003
The Guardian
online at http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,3858,4809694-103677,00.html
The oil industry is buzzing. On Thursday, the government
approved the development of the biggest deposit discovered
in British territory for at least 10 years. Everywhere we
are told that this is a "huge" find, which dispels
the idea that North Sea oil is in terminal decline. You begin
to recognise how serious the human predicament has become
when you discover that this "huge" new field will
supply the world with oil for five and a quarter days.
Every generation has its taboo, and ours is this: that the
resource upon which our lives have been built is running out.
We don't talk about it because we cannot imagine it. This
is a civilisation in denial.
Oil itself won't disappear, but extracting what remains is
becoming ever more difficult and expensive. The discovery
of new reserves peaked in the 1960s. Every year we use four
times as much oil as we find. All the big strikes appear to
have been made long ago: the 400m barrels in the new North
Sea field would have been considered piffling in the 1970s.
Our future supplies depend on the discovery of small new deposits
and the better exploitation of big old ones. No one with expertise
in the field is in any doubt that the global production of
oil will peak before long.
The only question is how long. The most optimistic projections
are the ones produced by the US department of energy, which
claims that this will not take place until 2037. But the US
energy information agency has admitted that the government's
figures have been fudged: it has based its projections for
oil supply on the projections for oil demand, perhaps in order
not to sow panic in the financial markets.
Other analysts are less sanguine. The petroleum geologist
Colin Campbell calculates that global extraction will peak
before 2010. In August, the geophysicist Kenneth Deffeyes
told New Scientist that he was "99% confident" that
the date of maximum global production will be 2004. Even if
the optimists are correct, we will be scraping the oil barrel
within the lifetimes of most of those who are middle-aged
today.
The supply of oil will decline, but global demand will not.
Today we will burn 76m barrels; by 2020 we will be using 112m
barrels a day, after which projected demand accelerates. If
supply declines and demand grows, we soon encounter something
with which the people of the advanced industrial economies
are unfamiliar: shortage. The price of oil will go through
the roof.
As the price rises, the sectors which are now almost wholly
dependent on crude oil - principally transport and farming
- will be forced to contract. Given that climate change caused
by burning oil is cooking the planet, this might appear to
be a good thing. The problem is that our lives have become
hard-wired to the oil economy.
Our sprawling suburbs are impossible to service without cars.
High oil prices mean high food prices: much of the world's
growing population will go hungry. These problems will be
exacerbated by the direct connection between the price of
oil and the rate of unemployment. The last five recessions
in the US were all preceded by a rise in the oil price.
Oil, of course, is not the only fuel on which vehicles can
run. There are plenty of possible substitutes, but none of
them is likely to be anywhere near as cheap as crude is today.
Petroleum can be extracted from tar sands and oil shale, but
in most cases the process uses almost as much energy as it
liberates, while creating great mountains and lakes of toxic
waste. Natural gas is a better option, but switching from
oil to gas propulsion would require a vast and staggeringly
expensive new fuel infrastructure. Gas, of course, is subject
to the same constraints as oil: at current rates of use, the
world has about 50 years' supply, but if gas were to take
the place of oil its life would be much shorter.
Vehicles could be run from fuel cells powered by hydrogen,
which is produced by the electrolysis of water. But the electricity
which produces the hydrogen has to come from somewhere. To
fill all the cars in the US would require four times the current
capacity of the national grid. Coal burning is filthy, nuclear
energy is expensive and lethal. Running the world's cars from
wind or solar power would require a greater investment than
any civilisation has ever made before. New studies suggest
that leaking hydrogen could damage the ozone layer and exacerbate
global warming.
Turning crops into diesel or methanol is just about viable
in terms of recoverable energy, but it means using the land
on which food is now grown for fuel. My rough calculations
suggest that running the United Kingdom's cars on rapeseed
oil would require an area of arable fields the size of England.
There is one possible solution which no one writing about
the impending oil crisis seems to have noticed: a technique
with which the British and Australian governments are currently
experimenting, called underground coal gasification. This
is a fancy term for setting light to coal seams which are
too deep or too expensive to mine, and catching the gas which
emerges. It's a hideous prospect, as it means that several
trillion tonnes of carbon which was otherwise impossible to
exploit becomes available, with the likely result that global
warming will eliminate life on Earth.
We seem, in other words, to be in trouble. Either we lay
hands on every available source of fossil fuel, in which case
we fry the planet and civilisation collapses, or we run out,
and civilisation collapses.
The only rational response to both the impending end of the
oil age and the menace of global warming is to redesign our
cities, our farming and our lives. But this cannot happen
without massive political pressure, and our problem is that
no one ever rioted for austerity. People tend to take to the
streets because they want to consume more, not less. Given
a choice between a new set of matching tableware and the survival
of humanity, I suspect that most people would choose the tableware.
In view of all this, the notion that the war with Iraq had
nothing to do with oil is simply preposterous. The US attacked
Iraq (which appears to have had no weapons of mass destruction
and was not threatening other nations), rather than North
Korea (which is actively developing a nuclear weapons programme
and boasting of its intentions to blow everyone else to kingdom
come) because Iraq had something it wanted. In one respect
alone, Bush and Blair have been making plans for the day when
oil production peaks, by seeking to secure the reserves of
other nations.
I refuse to believe that there is not a better means of averting
disaster than this. I refuse to believe that human beings
are collectively incapable of making rational decisions. But
I am beginning to wonder what the basis of my belief might
be.
-- The sources for this and all George Monbiot's recent articles
can be found at www.monbiot.com.
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