Keep
Your Eyes On The Prize: It's Always And Ever About Energy
Chris
Martenson
4
January, 2015
At
the essential center of the framework of the Crash Course is the
almost insultingly simple idea that endless growth on a finite planet
is an impossibility.
It
is so simple it could be worked out by a clever 4 year-old. And yet
it must not be
so simple because the main narrative of every economy in every corner
of the globe rests on the idea of endless, infinite growth.
Various
rationalizations and mental dodges are made in people’s minds to
accommodate the principle of endless growth. Some avoid
thinking of it all together. Some think that perhaps we will
escape into space, and continue our growthful ways on some other
yet-to-be named planet(s). Most simply assume that some new
wondrous technology will arise that can allow us to avoid pesky
limits.
Whatever
the rationalization, none stand up well to simple math and cold
logic.
At
the very heart of endless growth lies the matter of energy. To
grow forever requires infinite amounts of energy. Growth and
energy are linked in a causal way.
If
you want mountains to grow higher you need tectonic forces to push
them there. If you want a child to grow taller, food energy is
absolutely required. If you want more people building more
houses, driving more cars, and wearing more clothes, you need energy,
energy and more energy.
Perhaps
because long-term thinking is not one of humanity’s greatest gifts,
very few can appreciate just how we’ve fashioned an entire economy
and related set of belief systems around fossil fuel energy that has
only been with us for a scant few hundred years.
Even
more importantly, because we are consuming a few percent more of it
with every passing year, 75% of all fossil fuel energy has been
consumed in just the past 50 years. And we’ve been burning
coal and drilling for oil for well over 150 years…boy, those
stadiums fill up quick towards the end, don’t they?
The
mistake is to think that those past 50 years are just the new normal
and the even bigger mistake is to overlook the central and essential
role of fossil fuel energy in creating the world we see around us.
The Dчissipating Organism
Forget
everything we know about technology and oil and gas and coal and all
the rest. Set that aside and step over into the role of being a
dispassionate observer from another planet.
As
you look upon all the life forms on earth and classify each according
to it’s main role – predator, prey, scavenger, parasite, and so
on – what role would you assign to humans?
To
perform this classification you would observe, very carefully, the
main activities of each species to see what they spent that majority
of their time doing.
As
you watch from a great height you’d notice humans moving about, 24
hours a day, 365 days a year, in a great flurry of activity.
From a strictly biological and scientific perspective they seem to be
doing one thing with the most focused and determined energy; they are
taking concentrated forms of energy and naturally occurring elements
and dispersing them at vastly less concentrated levels.
Humans
may have other features and functions, but their primary one is
'dispersal agent.'
Oils
and coal and natural gas are dispersed as waste heat. Silver is
mined, refined further, and then lost atom by atom in various
innumerable processes. Rich soils with thousands of years of
carefully accumulated major and minor minerals are mined one crop at
a time and then irrecoverably diluted into the seas.
As
I view any of the hundreds of beautiful videos on Vimeo showing
time-lapse traffic patterns from cities around the world, I
cannot avoid seeing them as elegant expressions of a species
seemingly intent on turning fossil fuels into waste heat an carbon
dioxide as fast as they possibly can.
24
hours a day, 365 days a year, in every major city around the world,
there are cars and trucks jamming the roads. There is no
'night-time' in this story when the world completely rests. One
side takes a few hours off while the other side takes over.
Whether
we call this progress or folly is merely an indication of which
internal belief system we happen to have installed. Let’s
pretend the value judgment is an irrelevant distraction to the main
point. It doesn’t matter at all how we judge the situation.
The
main point is that 80% of all human economic, political and cultural
organization, specialization, and even collective biomass are simply
expressions of energy consumption. Whether that’s folly or
progress does not alter the fact that currently 7.2 billion humans
exist in the arrangements they do because of fossil fuels.
Fossil
fuels provide 80% of all our current energy. That's a whopping
high percentage and the hundreds of quadrillions of BTUs represented
by that number will not be easily or cheaply replaced by any
combination of alternative energies that we currently could deploy.
In fact, there are exactly zero credible plans for completely
replacing fossil fuels to be found anywhere in the world.
Everybody has the same plan; continue obtaining the majority of their
energy needs from fossil fuels while growing their economies.
That’s
the plan and if it does not make
you uncomfortable on some level, then I would gently suggest that
some more time ought to be spent studying energy’s role in
supporting life, and especially complex arrangements of life.
The Race
If
there’s a dominant belief system installed across the developed
world it is a faith in technology.
Some
of that is very well placed faith. Technology has delivered
incredible advances, efficiencies and understandings that just a few
short decades ago would have been indistinguishable from magic.
We
are making advances all the time, and for as long as we have a
complex society that can support advanced technology we will continue
making advances.
There
are, however, a few keys to understanding how and when we
have misplaced faith
in technology.
One
key point lost on many people is that technology
cannot createenergy.
It can only transform it. Perhaps we’ll someday be surprised
by a breakthrough in low energy nuclear reactions (LENR) or
zero-point energy or some other fantastical breakthrough, but until
then we have to go with what we know to be true.
Technology
has not yet, ever, in the long history of humans, createdenergy.
The laws of thermodynamics rule over us like gravity itself, always
there exerting and imposing their all-encompassing embrace on every
energy transaction.
Energy
can neither be created nor destroyed, only transformed. Oil
(concentrated) becomes waste heat (diffuse) + work (if harnessed).
So
that’s the first limitation of technology….it cannot create the
hundreds of quadrillions of BTUs of energy we currently extract and
need from fossil fuels. It can help us use it more efficiently,
find more of it, get it out more cheaply, and other fun things, but
it does notcreate the
energy.
The
second key point is that technology is really only as useful as the
culture is advanced. There are obvious signs that our
cleverness with inventing technology exceeds our cultural maturity to
use it wisely.
GPS
is one of the greatest inventions ever, and I love it and use it
constantly. I doubt I would visit twisty, uninuitively
laid out Boston nearly as confidently or as often without GPS.
But
it also allowed fishing trawlers to steam out 100 miles and drop
their massive and destructive drag nets precisely 6 inches to the
side of where they left off last week leaving no accidental hiding
spots and fisheries were ruined.
That
is, the technology allowed us to do things that we lacked the ability
to self-regulate properly. It also has routinely had many more
unanticipated consequences than we seemed to appreciate.
The
first humans with concentrated radioactive substances were about as
safe as monkeys with guns. We learned, but that came after the
accidental deaths.
As
I see it, nearly all of the difficulties we have with technology are
due to the fact that we push technology into service before we really
appreciate all of its pros and cons.
It
has been said that most technology was designed to address the
problems caused by prior technology, and there’s some truth to
that.
I
am often asked if I would be thrilled if humans did get their hands
on unlimited clean energy, and I have to give an unequivocal ‘no’
at this point because it seems to me that we’d merely use it to
continue on our present path of growth at any cost.
Maybe
in the future once we have the cultural ability to self-regulate our
seemingly insatiable desire for ‘more’ endless clean energy would
be a fantastic thing. But right now we don’t even know how to
slow down a fishery before it completely collapses, which is a
trivial thing compared to managing to live in balance with entire
ecosystems.
The
race, then is between technological development, cultural
advancement, and declining resources. Can we bring appropriate
technologies on line fast enough to prevent the loss of the societal
complexity required to support that same technology?
That
is the question, and I’m not clear on the answer yet.
I
do note that we have the capability to build light, high-mileage
vehicles but we cling to the large, heavy and fuel inefficient
vehicles in many parts of the world.
We
have the capability to heat nearly all of our water using the sun but
instead we typically use fossil fuels. Not because they are
cheaper over any reasonable frame of time, but simply we don’t
yet do it differently.
That
is, we lack the cultural awareness and urgency that would mandate
solar hot water heaters. We do this because we still have a
narrative of technological prowess and the recent (and temporary)
shale oil victory to comfort our core beliefs.
There
are literally thousands of better technologies out there that make
economic, energy and ecological sense but we don’t really use them
except at the margins.
Faced
with this observation the usual response is to say that ‘the market
will take care of that’ implying both that the market is a rational
place and that the market has enough time to work things out.
To
my mind, neither assumption is correct.
The Looming Oil Crunch
The
good news is that shale oil has bought us some time in the peak oil
story, but the less good news is that it bought us no time
in the PeakCheap Oil
story.
The
best news for the Peak Oil story was an unprecedented decline in oil
demand brought about by the twin conditions of too
much debt and
high oil prices. The loss of demand in Europe and the US
handily outpaced the gains in US shale production and therefore was
the larger contributor to balancing the supply/demand equation.
Again,
we do not beat the allegedly dead horse of Peak Oil because we cannot
let go of an idea, but because it remains just as vital today as when
it was first described back in the 1990’s. Even more so
because we have more data to work with and we are that many years
closer to its eventual arrival. Adding to the urgency is the
fact that no major government besides Sweden’s has even uttered the
phrase ‘peak oil’ let alone begun to publicly plan for its
eventual arrival.
There
are a number of combining forces that will cause future oil price
spikes.
The
current price of oil at under $80 per barrel for Brent crude is
insufficient to support any of the newest unconventional projects out
there.
Ultra
deepwater, tar sands and all but the very best sweet spots in the
very best shale plays are uneconomic at current oil prices. The
way we can detect that this is true is by the slashing of capital
budgets in all the oil majors that are committed to these projects,
something that began last February even when oil was some $30 per
barrel higher.
With
shale oil helping to contribute to today’s lower oil prices it has
caused the cessation of development within countless other large and
expensive oil projects.
While
not immediate, the loss of these projects will certain constrain
future oil supplies 2-3 years down the line.
For
every single oil exporting country with the sole exception of
Russia, what is also true is that their domestic demand is
rising even as their production (in many cases) is falling.
Rising
demand and falling production provide a double squeeze on exports
which are, after all, the only thing that oil importing nations
really care about. Who cares how much the world is producing?
All that matters to an importer is how much is for sale, and at what
price?
On
the demand side, oil demand growth continues in the developing world
and Asian countries. So much so that it’s possible to project
a time in the future when China and India alone will import 100% of
all available exported oil.
Obviously
that won’t happen without some form of price war or shooting war,
but it tells us something about the trajectory we are on. If it
looks, feels and smells like there’s no serious planning for the
future, then that’s probably the case.
Recently
the International Energy Agency put these same sorts of dots together
an issued a warning:
U.S. Shale Boom Masks Threats to World Oil Supply, IEA Says
Nov 1, 2014
The U.S. shale boom masks threats to global oil supplyincluding Middle East turmoil, conflict in Ukraine and the difficulty of unconventional oil production beyond North America, the International Energy Agency said.
“The global energy system is in danger of falling short of the hopes and expectations placed upon it,” the IEA said today in its annual World Energy Outlook. “The short-term picture of a well-supplied oil market should not disguise the challenges that lie ahead as reliance grows on a relatively small number of producers.”
Global oil consumption will rise to 104 million barrels a day in 2040 from 90 million barrels a day in 2013,driven by demand for transport fuel and petrochemicals in developing countries, the report said.
To meet that growth and replace exhausted fields will require about $900 billion a year in investment by the 2030s as oil companies develop fields from Canada’s oil sands to the deep waters off Brazil, the IEA said.
(Source)
There’s
a lot to unpack in those statements from the IEA, so let’s begin
with the punchline...the IEA has only projected world demand for oil
to grow from 90 million barrels per day (mbd) to 104 over the next 27
years.
That’s
a rate of growth of just 0.5% per year!
Never
in modern economic world history has there been a period of low
oil growth of such length. Never. My prediction is
that if we did only achieve that 0.5% rate of oil growth the world
economy would be in a shambles long before 2040.
Economic
growth requires energy,
oil specifically and high net energy oil even more specifically.
This
brings us to point number two. The IEA has projected that some
$900 billion a year will be required to bring on enough incremental
(expensive) oil to even achieve that paltry rate of 0.5% growth.
Let’s
really look at that for a moment, shall we? If it’s going to
take $900 billion to deliver what pencils out to an additional
483,000 barrels per day of oil growth, that means the yearly
incremental new flow to the world will be 176 million barrels (= 365
* 483,000).
Hmmmm…but
at $900 billion that means the world will effectively be investing
$900 billion more but getting 176 million new barrels so those
incremental barrels are costing some $5,100 each.
I
know this is an odd way to look at it because in reality the $900
billion will be bringing vastly more oil to the table than the 176 M
barrels, but existing oil is declining at the same time so
the net oil
to the world is going to cost a huge amount compared to historical
efforts.
The
bottom line here is that when the IEA casts about and looks at the
reality of oil projects across the world they see that only a very
heavy and sustained program of investment approaching one trillion
dollars a year has any chance of (barely) offsetting existing
declines.
And
that new oil, excepting only whatever Iraq and Iran have left to
bring to the party, is vastly more expensive than in times past.
Which
brings us to the IEA's conclusion which is that shale oil is
actually doing two things; driving the price of oil down below
the price required for this massive investment program, and masking
the supply issues by temporarily providing extra oil.
Emphasis
on ‘temporary’ because the average shale field in
the US peaks about ten years after the drilling begins in earnest and
all US shale fields are currently projected to peak somewhere around
2020.
The
risk the IEA sees is that shale oil, coupled to a generally weak
global economy, could conspire to keep oil prices down below the new
project threshold long enough to cause real trouble in the future.
My
personal bottom line, though, is that the $900 billion yearly oil
spent to achieve an underwhelming 0.5% yearly supply increase is not
going to provide the necessary economic growth required to justify
the mountains of debt already on the books, let alone expanding that
pile robustly as the financial sector seems to need.
More
subtly, but even more importantly, the new oil that $900 billion will
bring is lower net energy oil, the sort that has far less surplus
contained within it that the world can use to maintain its current
complexity and order.
Think
of current oil as having 100 arbitrary units of net energy stored
within it that society can use however it wishes. Then imagine
that the new oil only has 50 units of net energy in it. As we
blend ever-increasing amounts of ‘50’ oil with ever-shrinking
quantities of ‘100’ oil, the amount of net energy steadily sinks
towards the ‘50’ mark.
One
day people wake up and notice that they seem to be able to support
less, accomplish less, and that fewer types of jobs that pay less are
available. This is what we’d expect to see in a world of
declining net energy.
Conclusion
If
technology requires a complex society to build and maintain it, and
our dreams and hopes are pinned on even more complex and useful
technology in the future, but net energy from new oil plays is
shrinking, then it might not be wise to pin all our hopes on
technology. Perhaps there should be some other plans in the
works too.
Given
sufficient energy sources I am convinced that technology would simply
continue to advance, and eventually our ability to live with and
manage it would catch up to the technology.
But
I imagine that process taking decades, centuries even, because
cultures change slowly.
However,
according to the best oil data available, we don’t have decades and
centuries to fiddle about and hope.
The
US shale plays are going to peak in 2020, give or take a year or two,
and that’s practically tomorrow in the grand scheme of things.
Other relentless declines in existing fields are continuing even as
you read this.
24
hours a day, 365 days a year. And that process is speeding up,
not slowing down, as the developed world joins the fray with stunning
quickness.
A
lot of things could go wrong with the IEA forecasts, and they’ll
certainly get some things wrong. It’s the nature of the
business.
Demand
could be higher than 0.5% per year and so supplies will either fall
short of investments or prices will need to go higher to support even
higher spending on oil exploration and development. Future
finds may be less robust than they imagine and therefore more
expensive. Existing fields may decline faster or slower than
they have modeled which will throw things off quite a bit.
But
through all that uncertainty we can note the obvious trend; oil is
getting harder to find and more expensive to produce.
And
humans, being the dissipating agents we are, will continue to gobble
up this magical substance with relentless focus every minute of every
day until it is gone.
All
of this is why I continue to regret the degree to which the western
media has gone out of its way to portray the energy predicament as
nothing more than a problem which can be easily addressed through a
program of investment and being ever-more clever.
Instead
I wish we could simply note that oil has no scalable substitutes, we
support billions of people by growing food with it, and that every
political, financial, portfolio, and institutional entity has the
same underlying assumption; the next twenty years are going to be
exactly like the past twenty years.
Somehow,
magically, more oil will be there, it will be affordable, and nobody
will have to make any adjustments to their main habits of spending
more than they have, and consuming more next year than this year. We
can just keep borrowing more than we earn forever, and therefore
current stock and bond markets are reasonably priced.
To
a scientist like myself, the energy story is everything.
If you get that, you are armed with the information you need to
understand the general direction of things.
The
only thing we don’t know is what our respective cultures will
choose to preserve as we are forced to jettison various unproductive
habits and livelihoods.
As we slip down the energy cliff, we cannot know exactly what each culture will decide to jettison as 'unnecessary' activities. Some decided to cut down trees and erect giant stones right to the end. A different culture would have chosen some other activity.
The question to ask is, what are our equivalents of giant stones? What will *not* disappear as the green area shrinks?
My best guess is that we'll cling to technology as the last things to erect before we succumb to reality. Maybe that's just talking my own book, as they say on Wall Street, because that would imply the internet will be salvaged/preserved at any and every cost.
So
that’s the question before us, what are our ‘giant stones?’
Answer that and you’ll know which jobs, investments, and products
will be relatively secure and which won’t.
just to say that LENR is not an hypothesis, but a fact heavily supported by scientific, and now industrial and business evidences.
ReplyDeleteyou cans tart there
http://www.lenr-canr.org/acrobat/StormsEcoldfusiond.pdf
http://www.amazon.com/Science-Energy-Nuclear-Reaction-Comprehensive/dp/9812706208
http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/RothwellJtallyofcol.pdf#page=6
http://lenrftw.net/are_lenr_devices_real.html
http://elforsk.se/LENR-Matrapport-publicerad/
http://animpossibleinvention.com/
Until now the denial side have never proposed something serious to face the evdiences availble... that it is a consensus can be explained easilu by groupthink effect, caused by the pathetic failure that will be uncovered when facts are accepted.
now about life beeing as dissipative agent, that is not new.
however under scarcity agents know how to save energy mostly by efficiency (optimizing also space and time, ), some by reducing activity.
http://iccf9.global.tsinghua.edu.cn/lenr%20home%20page/acrobat/BeaudetteCexcessheat.pdf#page=35