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By Rod Dreher
The Dallas Morning News
Sunday 25 November 2007
It
cost more than $40 to fill up my Honda Accord last week. That's a pain,
but not one I have to suffer often. Not only does the Honda get good
gas mileage, I live close to my downtown job, so I put maybe 6,000
miles a year on the car. The price of oil will have to go up a lot more
before my wallet feels the burn - at the gas pump, at least.
But
the price of oil affects far more than our daily commutes. Our entire
consumer economy is built on the idea that oil will be relatively
inexpensive and infinitely available.
A
reliable and affordable supply of oil makes globalization possible.
Wal-Mart, for example, wouldn't be able to fill its shelves with
consumer goods made for less in overseas factories if not for the
ability to ship these products inexpensively. Within our own borders,
food is cheap and plentiful in large part because oil is. One reason
we've built bigger houses - the average house size has doubled since
the 1950s - is because we can afford to heat and cool them.
In fact, cheap oil has made development in Dallas and the entire Sunbelt possible.
But
what if it's ending? The authoritative International Energy Agency
recently warned that the price of oil would remain high for the
foreseeable future because of supply shortages. China and India are
developing rapidly and consuming vast amounts of oil.
World
supply can barely keep up with demand - a problem the IEA blames
primarily on human failures. IEA forecasts that China and India alone
will add about 13 million barrels a day to the global demand by 2030.
But
the IEA forecasts world oil supply at 116 million barrels a day by
2030, up from 85 million barrels a day now - enough to meet expected
demand. Some top oil company CEOs disagree. Christophe de Margerie,
chief of the French oil giant Total, said in late October that a supply
level of even 100 million barrels a day - barely enough to cover
anticipated growth from China and India alone - is "optimistic."
"It
is not my view. It is the industry view, or the view of those who like
to speak clearly, honestly and not ... just try to please people," Mr.
de Margerie said.
And
ConocoPhilips CEO James Mulva told a financial conference earlier this
month: "Demand will be going up, but it will be constrained by supply.
I don't think we are going to see the supply going over 100 million
barrels a day, and the reason is: Where is all that going to come
from?"
That's
the question adherents to peak-oil theory ask. They argue that the
world either has or soon will have reached the maximum output level of
its oil reserves and that supply can only decline from here on out -
even as demand skyrockets.
Though
some dismiss them as crude-oil Cassandras, the peak-oilers are not
wild-eyed pessimists. Their number includes men like T. Boone Pickens,
the Dallas oil tycoon, and Houston's Matt Simmons, who founded the
world's largest energy investment banking company. They point to hard
data indicating that the world is quite simply running out of oil and
doing so quickly (www.theoildrum.com and www.energybulletin.net are two good Web sites compiling peak-oil news, analysis and information).
If
they're right, peak oil poses a far more critical challenge to our
civilization than global warming. The modern industrial world cannot
function in any recognizable form without cheap and plentiful oil. Stu
Hart, a Cornell management professor, warned on public radio recently
that "we're in the midst of the crash of the system" - meaning that
absent breakthroughs in the way the world meets its energy needs, we
are in for rough times.
What
would life after peak oil mean for Dallas and its surrounding suburbs,
a metropolis created by the availability of cheap energy?
Cars
would be an unaffordable luxury for most, making life in suburbia
difficult, perhaps impossible, to sustain. Likewise, air travel and
shipping likely would be sharply curtailed as too costly, causing
Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, a major regional economic
engine, to slow substantially.
Truck
transport, too, would diminish, causing a sharp slowdown in the
consumer economy and, crucially, making the kind of grocery-store
bounty we now enjoy a thing of the past. And with a general rise in
energy costs blasting electric bills into the stratosphere, we may all
have to get used to - wait for it - life without air conditioning.
Jeffrey
Brown, a Richardson geologist who has been active in the peak-oil
debate, advises far-sighted folks to abandon the outlying suburbs and
exurbs and move closer to the city center. "The smart money has been
moving in," he said. "The closer you are to job centers, the more
stable the property values have been. That will continue."
Post-peak-oil
conditions would reverse globalization, forcing a return to intensely
local agriculture and local manufacturing. The stores and services that
communities need in order to carry on everyday life would emerge in
neighborhoods, as in the pre-automobile era. Cities would empty out,
with rural areas and small towns in agriculturally rich areas reviving.
Culturally, all Americans would have to undergo a Great Relearning of
skills and social habits that our ancestors developed to survive in
community.
"My
hopeful view is that we'll be living like we did at the turn of the
20th century, but with computers," Mr. Brown said. And he's right:
Americans have done this before and can do it again, if scientists
don't come up with a solution before the oil spigot starts to sputter.
But
no one should be under the romantic illusion that life would be easy
then or that the transition would be smooth. We will be poor. Our sons
probably would be sent overseas to fight resource wars. Back home,
regions of America where tens of millions of people live will be
uninhabitable - especially the Southwest and much of suburbia. The
economic contraction and social dislocation will be, in many cases,
nothing short of catastrophic and will produce political upheaval.
Radical conditions easily could produce radicalism.
Which
could explain why so many people aren't paying attention to peak-oil
concerns; we have a financial and emotional investment in the status
quo.
As
Matt Simmons pointed out at a peak-oil conference in Houston this fall,
if global warming predictions prove out, it won't be a serious crisis
for the planet until many decades into the future. If peak-oil fears
prove out, the crisis could be upon us in very short order - and indeed
may already have begun.
It
is possible that we haven't reached peak oil yet - nobody can say for
sure, because governments and oil companies keep much data confidential
- but the signs of the times are not encouraging. Now is not the time
for survivalist panic or denial-based paralysis.
It
is time, however, for discerning people - not only decision-makers, but
every one of us - to start talking about and urgently planning for a
peak-oil future. It may come sooner, it may come later, but it's
coming.
Rod Dreher is a Dallas Morning News editorial columnist.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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