Our
Delusional Economy Is Poised To Slam Into The Brick Wall Of Reality
Will
you thrive, merely survive, or fail?
by
Chris Martenson
28
September, 2018
While
life has always been uncertain, today our choices matter more than
ever. The decisions each of us make today will determine if we
thrive, merely survive, or fail during the future time of upheaval
ahead.
The
window of opportunity to change course for humanity is all but
closed.
There’s simpply no more time to hope that somehow,
magically, the world's entire energy complex will suddently evolve to
a bountiful and sustainable new plane -- whether by market forces, by
maverick billionaires like Elon Musk, or by happy accident.
As
we hammer home constantly here at Peak Prosperity, energy
is everything. Without it, our society simply can't
function.
And
it's critical to appreciate that it takes an investment of energy to
migrate from energy solution to another.
Imagine
you heat your house with wood, but want to switch to a forced air gas
furnace. Is there energy involved in doing so? You bet
there is. Besides the obvious new need for natural gas, there’s
a huge amount of embodied energy in the manufacture and installation
of your new furnace, all the duct work, and the delivery lines that
will bring the gas to the furnace. Further, there will be
electricity required to force the air from the furnace, through the
ducts, and into your house.
The
same is true when making transitions at the national level. What’s
involved in the much larger projects of switching industrial
agriculture away from the fossil fuel driven process of plowing,
planting, fertilizing, irrigating, harvesting, drying or cooling, and
then transporting food from the field to your table?
At
each stage there’s an enormous amount of energy infrastructure that
needs to be rebuilt and reconfigured to run on “something else.”
Let's examine the current dream that we'll switchover to powering all
of our farming needs with electricity.
The
manufacture of the tractors and their thousands of components all
have to be completely reconfigured to run on electricity -- from the
act of mining and smelting the metals used all the way through
assembly and delivery to the farmer. At present, oil and other
fossil fuel inputs are pretty much 100% of that process. The
same is true for all of the other equipment and tools currently used
in farming.
Could
we do all this using electicity instead? Yes, of course.
Will
it happen all on its own while we wait for “market forces” to do
the job? Nope. Not a chance.
Why?
Because it's far cheaper, faster and easier to use fossil fuels. And
humans are nothing if not lazy. Give us a cheaper and easier
option and we’ll take it every single time. Which is no
different really from a cheetah selecting a lame or slower gazelle
over a faster and stronger one. It’s just how Nature works.
Waiting
for “market forces” to magically replace an already-embedded,
cheaper and easier energy source is hopeless. Absent a crisis
that forces us to, as a society, we’d have to proactively decide to
make that transition a top national priority and become deadly
serious in our pursuit of it. And if we actually were to do this, it
would certainly be a painful process for a good while.
Huge
job losses and dislocations would result, as whole categories of jobs
become irrelevant and vast swaths of the labor force go through
re-skilling. Our economy's “growth forever” model would
come tumbling down because it’s been heavily subsidized by cheap
surplus fossil energy. That would no longer be the case. So stocks,
bonds and real estate would tumble, ruining the retirement dreams for
many.
It
would prove difficult to run a top-notch military (which burns
through oil and other critical resources like nobody’s business),
feed everyone, travel as we do, and heat and cool everything.
We’d probably have to make material sacrifices across each -- or
give up one or more of them entirely.
The
point here is that, in the ten years I have personally been banging
on the drums of logic and reason, I can honestly say that virtually
no progress has been made towards developing a credible action plan
for weaning the global economy off of fossil fuel. Humanity
seems fully committed to its current trajectory: the cheap and easy
path. At least, until something forces our hand.
Which
makes us no different from any other biological organism. No
different than the simplest bacterium in a petrie dish that
multiplies until it has consumed its food supply, then is suddenly
faced with starvation.
The
outcome of our current "cheap, fast and easy" trajectory is
the same as a car hurtling towards a brick wall at a very high rate
of speed. It will come to a predictable, sudden, and painful end:
One
of the saddest elements of this story is that we've had many chances
to reform ourselves along the way. Economically, we could have
(and should have) used the crisis of 2008 to allow a bunch of
literally useless financial firms bite the dust. But didn't; we saved
them all. And now have a Too Big To Fail system that’s
even "Too Bigger" than before [sic].
Or
we could have starting planning for a move away from fossil fuels
back in 1957 when Admiral
Hyman Rickover noted:
The earth is finite. Fossil fuels are not renewable. In this respect our energy base differs from that of all earlier civilizations. They could have maintained their energy supply by careful cultivation. We cannot. Fuel that has been burned is gone forever. Fuel is even more evanescent than metals. Metals, too, are non-renewable resources threatened with ultimate extinction, but something can be salvaged from scrap. Fuel leaves no scrap and there is nothing man can do to rebuild exhausted fossil fuel reserves. They were created by solar energy 500 million years ago and took eons to grow to their present volume.
I suggest that this is a good time to think soberly about our responsibilities to our descendants - those who will ring out the Fossil Fuel Age. Our greatest responsibility, as parents and as citizens, is to give America 's youngsters the best possible education.
We might even - if we wanted - give a break to these youngsters by cutting fuel and metal consumption a little here and there so as to provide a safer margin for the necessary adjustments which eventually must be made in a world without fossil fuels.
One final thought I should like to leave with you. High-energy consumption has always been a prerequisite of political power. The tendency is for political power to be concentrated in an ever-smaller number of countries. Ultimately, the nation which control - the largest energy resources will become dominant. If we give thought to the problem of energy resources, if we act wisely and in time to conserve what we have and prepare well for necessary future changes, we shall insure this dominant position for our own country.
Such
amazing and easily understood insights by one of the most intelligent
accomplished people in US history. And that was just a very
small set of snippets from a longer speech (you can read his full
speech in PeakProsperity.com's Essential
Articles section).
In
thes few paragraphs above, Rickover lays out that:
- The Earth is finite.
- Fossil fuels are not renewable.
- Burn them and they are gone.
- A little self-sacrifice today would go a long way in the future.
- Energy output creates political power.
- Therefore conserving and controlling energy are determined by political will.
Most
of the world is still behaving as if these simple points are too
confusing to digest. As if there were some other, more hopeful,
outcome to our reckless behavior of frittering away such a valuable
and non-renewable resource on such blind pursuits as expanding the
world’s population to some eventual maximum, destroying topsoil and
ecosystems, and selling as many SUV’s and trucks as humanly
possible in any given quarter.
There’s
only one outcome for any organism that grows until it slams into the
limit of its energy boundary: Collapse.
Is
there any evidence we're in danger running into that boundary soon?
Absolutely.
Important
warning signs we'd expect to see in the oil space would be declining
discoveries and increasingly desperate attempts to scrape the bottom
of the barrel.
Both
signs are upon us with vigor these days.
First,
we see that oil discoveries are at their worst over the entire data
series stretching back to the early 1950’s:
The
white dotted line in the above chart indicates that, four years
excepted, the level of discoveries has been well below consumption
since 1980. And the yearly gap has been growing over that timeframe.
Consuming
more of a non-renewable resource than you're finding? It
doesn’t take a geologist or a math whiz to work out the
implications of that story.
Next,
for warning sign #2, take a look at these photos I shot on a recent
trip as my plane was landing in Dallas:
Each
one of those little white squares is a one to two-acre
drill/production pad. The earth is scraped away, the drill rig
brought in, then the fracking and finishing trucks arrive – some
1,200 truck trips in all – just to poke a single hole that will
(hopefully) produce a few hundred thousand barrels of oil.
Here’s
a drill pad on close look as the plane was landing, showing also an
associated waste pond where the fracking fluid that blows back up the
drill hole is captured for later disposal. These ponds need to
be big, because millions of gallons of wastewater is produced at
first, often laced with highly toxic compounds.
The
above are perfectly good warning signs that we’re out of the good
options.
The days of gigantic deposits of easily-extractable
oil are gone. Now we’ve got this stuff. It's smaller, lower
quality, and requires a *lot* more energy/effort to get out of the
ground.
Of
course, that's not stopping us from going after it. And I’m not
(necessarily) against that, as long as we admit to ourselves how
extreme these measures are, and what this means for our future.
Where
the Romans had their omens and auguries, the rise of oil fracking is
an important portent of what lies ahead for modern society. Art
Berman refers to the current shale bonanza not as a "revolution",
but as a "retirement party" -- and he’s right.
What
happens after someone's retirement party? Life winds down. The energy
of their youth is no longer with them. The same is coming true today
for America.
Conclusion
Nothing
grows forever. Cancer tries, but always defeats itself in the
process. Yeast parties until all the sugar in the vat is gone
or it pollutes itself out of an active existence.
Can
humans do better? The jury is still out on that.
But
so far, the signs say that, as a group, we lack the ability to
organize effectively against big, complex challenges. Especially if
doing so requires us to willingly choose to live a life of less.
We're simply too addicted to more.
Admiral
Rickover suggested that living within our means would be a smart and
honorable thing to do for future generations. But his speech
represents something of a high-water mark for conscientious thinking
at the government official level.
Here’s
the thing: Unless
there’s a very sudden and rapid change in how we are approaching
the looming brick wall of resource shortages, the future is going to
be quite difficult.
Most
people will be caught unprepared. As a result, many of them will
suffer, and possibly fail completely to continue on.
A
smaller few will survive, stoically soldiering on.
But
an even smaller percentage -- those who heeded the warning signs and
prepared prudently in advance -- will be positioned to thrive through
the coming adversity.
Where
I have lost my faith in large groups of people, I have more faith
than ever in those prospects for "awake" individuals and
small groups. I'm inspired by the number of people I’ve met
who are taking smart, regenerative, innovative steps to align their
personal actions with the big picture realities discussed above.
To
those already pursuing resilience: I know it’s not easy staying
focused and on track. The Powers That Be have poured
considerable resources and effort into painting the illusion that
"All is well". They’ve poured $trillions into the
stock and bond ""markets"", in part to send a
false signal of comfort, so that people will not spook and instead
continue to borrow and buy. They, along with the compliant
corporate-controlled media, have committed vast sins of commission
and omission in the narratives that they choose to promote or
suppress.
Bubbles
are powerful social signaling devices. Staying out of them and out of
harm’s way is really difficult, especially as the party rages
hardest right before its end. One of the responsibilities we at
Peak Prosperity take most seriously is reminding you of the dangerous
seduction of asset bubbles. Don't get taken in. Don't be the
"greatest fool" who capitulates and jumps in right before
the crash (remember: even
Isaac Newton got suckered by
the South Sea Bubble).
And
in Part
2: What I Am Personally Doing To Prepare Right Now,
I detail what I am doing in my life right now to make good decisions
in difficult times. Many of you have been asking about which specific
steps I'm prioritizing these days. Well, I'm answering.
Look,
someday this ridiculous era of the Everything Bubble will be over.
First, it’s going to get a little bumpy -- and
then, really bumpy.
When
that time comes, hope the preparations you've made in advance will be
enough to see you through, and hold fast. Then hang on for as long as
you can.
Click
here to read Part 2 of
this report (free
executive summary, enrollment required
for full access
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