Part 1 of 3
Oil powers more than engines. For over a hundred years, it's been driving various versions of a myth. Version 1: The world will soon run out of oil. Version 1.1: the world will soon run out of cheap oil. Version 6: Oil production will soon peak; rising demand will clash rapidly diminishing supply; prices will shoot up. Result: economic catastrophe.
A century of
growing world oil production and reserves and a hundred years of being wrong have
not stopped the myth-makers. All resources are finite. But some are more
finite than others. There is a great deal of oil in the world - with an
estimated a trillion barrels of ultimately recoverable reserves in Saudi Arabia
alone - that's about 35 years of global consumption at present rates. One fourth
of that is proven reserves. Iraq has a hundred billion barrels of proven
reserves and that much more in undeveloped areas. Persian Gulf proven reserves
cost less than a nickel a gallon to pump out of the ground.
If the world
had higher oil prices driven by true oil depletion, the world would quickly
move to using natural gas, gasified coal, liquefied coal, even to hydrogen from
wind energy. The hydrogen potential from wind energy in the 12 mid-western states
of the United States alone is 50 percent larger than the entire oil output of Organization
of Petroleum Exporting Countries, and that includes the whole Persian Gulf
region.
We will run
out environment long before we run out of oil and its equivalents. The
capacity of Mother Nature to absorb all the technologically marvelous ways in
which we can inject carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is already being
overwhelmed. That's not a theoretical problem in the future. There is
overwhelming scientific consensus that it is here already. Glaciers are
melting, millions of acres of forest are dying, extreme climate events, like
severe droughts and floods, are increasing in frequency.
Crying wolf
about oil running out is a dangerous pastime. I will argue in my next
commentary that panicky focus on the idea that oil is running out diverts
attention from really serious problems associated with the entire modern energy
system: the severity of global climate change, nuclear power security and
accidents, plutonium-related proliferation problems, AND THE PROBLEM OF TOO
MUCH CHEAP OIL.
For more
information about oil and energy see the website of the Institute for Energy
and Environmental Research, www.ieer.org.
This is Arjun Makhijani.
Listen to this commentary (requires Real Audio)
|