[Mb-hair] Something You Should Read

Michael Butler michael at michaelbutler.com
Fri Mar 25 21:42:58 PST 2005


Michael Dailey sent this. It is a sobering point of view. Don't just dismiss
it.
Michael
Here's a thought provoker of an article...MD

The Long Emergency 
By James Howard Kunstler
The Rolling Stone 
Thursday 24 March 2005
What's going to happen as we start running out of cheap gas to guzzle?

 
A few weeks ago, the price of oil ratcheted above fifty-five dollars a
barrel, which is about twenty dollars a barrel more than a year ago. The
next day, the oil story was buried on page six of the New York Times
business section. Apparently, the price of oil is not considered significant
news, even when it goes up five bucks a barrel in the span of ten days. That
same day, the stock market shot up more than a hundred points because, CNN
said, government data showed no signs of inflation. Note to clueless nation:
Call planet Earth. 
Carl Jung, one of the fathers of psychology, famously remarked that "people
cannot stand too much reality." What you're about to read may challenge your
assumptions about the kind of world we live in, and especially the kind of
world into which events are propelling us. We are in for a rough ride
through uncharted territory.
It has been very hard for Americans - lost in dark raptures of nonstop
infotainment, recreational shopping and compulsive motoring - to make sense
of the gathering forces that will fundamentally alter the terms of everyday
life in our technological society. Even after the terrorist attacks of 9/11,
America is still sleepwalking into the future. I call this coming time the
Long Emergency. 
Most immediately we face the end of the cheap-fossil-fuel era. It is no
exaggeration to state that reliable supplies of cheap oil and natural gas
underlie everything we identify as the necessities of modern life - not to
mention all of its comforts and luxuries: central heating, air conditioning,
cars, airplanes, electric lights, inexpensive clothing, recorded music,
movies, hip-replacement surgery, national defense - you name it.
The few Americans who are even aware that there is a gathering global-energy
predicament usually misunderstand the core of the argument. That argument
states that we don't have to run out of oil to start having severe problems
with industrial civilization and its dependent systems. We only have to slip
over the all-time production peak and begin a slide down the arc of steady
depletion. 
The term "global oil-production peak" means that a turning point will come
when the world produces the most oil it will ever produce in a given year
and, after that, yearly production will inexorably decline. It is usually
represented graphically in a bell curve. The peak is the top of the curve,
the halfway point of the world's all-time total endowment, meaning half the
world's oil will be left. That seems like a lot of oil, and it is, but
there's a big catch: It's the half that is much more difficult to extract,
far more costly to get, of much poorer quality and located mostly in places
where the people hate us. A substantial amount of it will never be
extracted. 
The United States passed its own oil peak - about 11 million barrels a day -
in 1970, and since then production has dropped steadily. In 2004 it ran just
above 5 million barrels a day (we get a tad more from natural-gas
condensates). Yet we consume roughly 20 million barrels a day now. That
means we have to import about two-thirds of our oil, and the ratio will
continue to worsen.
The US peak in 1970 brought on a portentous change in geoeconomic power.
Within a few years, foreign producers, chiefly OPEC, were setting the price
of oil, and this in turn led to the oil crises of the 1970s. In response,
frantic development of non-OPEC oil, especially the North Sea fields of
England and Norway, essentially saved the West's ass for about two decades.
Since 1999, these fields have entered depletion. Meanwhile, worldwide
discovery of new oil has steadily declined to insignificant levels in 2003
and 2004. 
Some "cornucopians" claim that the Earth has something like a creamy nougat
center of "abiotic" oil that will naturally replenish the great oil fields
of the world. The facts speak differently. There has been no replacement
whatsoever of oil already extracted from the fields of America or any other
place. 
Now we are faced with the global oil-production peak. The best estimates of
when this will actually happen have been somewhere between now and 2010. In
2004, however, after demand from burgeoning China and India shot up, and
revelations that Shell Oil wildly misstated its reserves, and Saudi Arabia
proved incapable of goosing up its production despite promises to do so, the
most knowledgeable experts revised their predictions and now concur that
2005 is apt to be the year of all-time global peak production.
It will change everything about how we live.
To aggravate matters, American natural-gas production is also declining, at
five percent a year, despite frenetic new drilling, and with the potential
of much steeper declines ahead. Because of the oil crises of the 1970s, the
nuclear-plant disasters at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl and the acid-rain
problem, the US chose to make gas its first choice for electric-power
generation. The result was that just about every power plant built after
1980 has to run on gas. Half the homes in America are heated with gas. To
further complicate matters, gas isn't easy to import. Here in North America,
it is distributed through a vast pipeline network. Gas imported from
overseas would have to be compressed at minus-260 degrees Fahrenheit in
pressurized tanker ships and unloaded (re-gasified) at special terminals, of
which few exist in America. Moreover, the first attempts to site new
terminals have met furious opposition because they are such ripe targets for
terrorism. 
Some other things about the global energy predicament are poorly understood
by the public and even our leaders. This is going to be a permanent energy
crisis, and these energy problems will synergize with the disruptions of
climate change, epidemic disease and population overshoot to produce higher
orders of trouble. 
We will have to accommodate ourselves to fundamentally changed conditions.
No combination of alternative fuels will allow us to run American life the
way we have been used to running it, or even a substantial fraction of it.
The wonders of steady technological progress achieved through the reign of
cheap oil have lulled us into a kind of Jiminy Cricket syndrome, leading
many Americans to believe that anything we wish for hard enough will come
true. These days, even people who ought to know better are wishing ardently
for a seamless transition from fossil fuels to their putative replacements.
The widely touted "hydrogen economy" is a particularly cruel hoax. We are
not going to replace the US automobile and truck fleet with vehicles run on
fuel cells. For one thing, the current generation of fuel cells is largely
designed to run on hydrogen obtained from natural gas. The other way to get
hydrogen in the quantities wished for would be electrolysis of water using
power from hundreds of nuclear plants. Apart from the dim prospect of our
building that many nuclear plants soon enough, there are also numerous
severe problems with hydrogen's nature as an element that present forbidding
obstacles to its use as a replacement for oil and gas, especially in storage
and transport. 
Wishful notions about rescuing our way of life with "renewables" are also
unrealistic. Solar-electric systems and wind turbines face not only the
enormous problem of scale but the fact that the components require
substantial amounts of energy to manufacture and the probability that they
can't be manufactured at all without the underlying support platform of a
fossil-fuel economy. We will surely use solar and wind technology to
generate some electricity for a period ahead but probably at a very local
and small scale. 
Virtually all "biomass" schemes for using plants to create liquid fuels
cannot be scaled up to even a fraction of the level at which things are
currently run. What's more, these schemes are predicated on using oil and
gas "inputs" (fertilizers, weed-killers) to grow the biomass crops that
would be converted into ethanol or bio-diesel fuels. This is a net energy
loser - you might as well just burn the inputs and not bother with the
biomass products. Proposals to distill trash and waste into oil by means of
thermal depolymerization depend on the huge waste stream produced by a cheap
oil and gas economy in the first place.
Coal is far less versatile than oil and gas, extant in less abundant
supplies than many people assume and fraught with huge ecological drawbacks
- as a contributor to greenhouse "global warming" gases and many health and
toxicity issues ranging from widespread mercury poisoning to acid rain. You
can make synthetic oil from coal, but the only time this was tried on a
large scale was by the Nazis under wartime conditions, using impressive
amounts of slave labor.
If we wish to keep the lights on in America after 2020, we may indeed have
to resort to nuclear power, with all its practical problems and
eco-conundrums. Under optimal conditions, it could take ten years to get a
new generation of nuclear power plants into operation, and the price may be
beyond our means. Uranium is also a resource in finite supply. We are no
closer to the more difficult project of atomic fusion, by the way, than we
were in the 1970s. 
The upshot of all this is that we are entering a historical period of
potentially great instability, turbulence and hardship. Obviously,
geopolitical maneuvering around the world's richest energy regions has
already led to war and promises more international military conflict. Since
the Middle East contains two-thirds of the world's remaining oil supplies,
the US has attempted desperately to stabilize the region by, in effect,
opening a big police station in Iraq. The intent was not just to secure
Iraq's oil but to modify and influence the behavior of neighboring states
around the Persian Gulf, especially Iran and Saudi Arabia. The results have
been far from entirely positive, and our future prospects in that part of
the world are not something we can feel altogether confident about.
And then there is the issue of China, which, in 2004, became the world's
second-greatest consumer of oil, surpassing Japan. China's surging
industrial growth has made it increasingly dependent on the imports we are
counting on. If China wanted to, it could easily walk into some of these
places - the Middle East, former Soviet republics in central Asia - and
extend its hegemony by force. Is America prepared to contest for this oil in
an Asian land war with the Chinese army? I doubt it. Nor can the US military
occupy regions of the Eastern Hemisphere indefinitely, or hope to secure
either the terrain or the oil infrastructure of one distant, unfriendly
country after another. A likely scenario is that the US could exhaust and
bankrupt itself trying to do this, and be forced to withdraw back into our
own hemisphere, having lost access to most of the world's remaining oil in
the process. 
We know that our national leaders are hardly uninformed about this
predicament. President George W. Bush has been briefed on the dangers of the
oil-peak situation as long ago as before the 2000 election and repeatedly
since then. In March, the Department of Energy released a report that
officially acknowledges for the first time that peak oil is for real and
states plainly that "the world has never faced a problem like this. Without
massive mitigation more than a decade before the fact, the problem will be
pervasive and will not be temporary."
Most of all, the Long Emergency will require us to make other arrangements
for the way we live in the United States. America is in a special
predicament due to a set of unfortunate choices we made as a society in the
twentieth century. Perhaps the worst was to let our towns and cities rot
away and to replace them with suburbia, which had the additional side effect
of trashing a lot of the best farmland in America. Suburbia will come to be
regarded as the greatest misallocation of resources in the history of the
world. It has a tragic destiny. The psychology of previous investment
suggests that we will defend our drive-in utopia long after it has become a
terrible liability.
Before long, the suburbs will fail us in practical terms. We made the
ongoing development of housing subdivisions, highway strips, fried-food
shacks and shopping malls the basis of our economy, and when we have to stop
making more of those things, the bottom will fall out.
The circumstances of the Long Emergency will require us to downscale and
re-scale virtually everything we do and how we do it, from the kind of
communities we physically inhabit to the way we grow our food to the way we
work and trade the products of our work. Our lives will become profoundly
and intensely local. Daily life will be far less about mobility and much
more about staying where you are. Anything organized on the large scale,
whether it is government or a corporate business enterprise such as
Wal-Mart, will wither as the cheap energy props that support bigness fall
away. The turbulence of the Long Emergency will produce a lot of economic
losers, and many of these will be members of an angry and aggrieved former
middle class. 
Food production is going to be an enormous problem in the Long Emergency. As
industrial agriculture fails due to a scarcity of oil- and gas-based inputs,
we will certainly have to grow more of our food closer to where we live, and
do it on a smaller scale. The American economy of the mid-twenty-first
century may actually center on agriculture, not information, not high tech,
not "services" like real estate sales or hawking cheeseburgers to tourists.
Farming. This is no doubt a startling, radical idea, and it raises extremely
difficult questions about the reallocation of land and the nature of work.
The relentless subdividing of land in the late twentieth century has
destroyed the contiguity and integrity of the rural landscape in most
places. The process of readjustment is apt to be disorderly and
improvisational. Food production will necessarily be much more
labor-intensive than it has been for decades. We can anticipate the
re-formation of a native-born American farm-laboring class. It will be
composed largely of the aforementioned economic losers who had to relinquish
their grip on the American dream. These masses of disentitled people may
enter into quasi-feudal social relations with those who own land in exchange
for food and physical security. But their sense of grievance will remain
fresh, and if mistreated they may simply seize that land.
The way that commerce is currently organized in America will not survive far
into the Long Emergency. Wal-Mart's "warehouse on wheels" won't be such a
bargain in a non-cheap-oil economy. The national chain stores' 12,000-mile
manufacturing supply lines could easily be interrupted by military contests
over oil and by internal conflict in the nations that have been supplying us
with ultra-cheap manufactured goods, because they, too, will be struggling
with similar issues of energy famine and all the disorders that go with it.
As these things occur, America will have to make other arrangements for the
manufacture, distribution and sale of ordinary goods. They will probably be
made on a "cottage industry" basis rather than the factory system we once
had, since the scale of available energy will be much lower - and we are not
going to replay the twentieth century. Tens of thousands of the common
products we enjoy today, from paints to pharmaceuticals, are made out of
oil. They will become increasingly scarce or unavailable. The selling of
things will have to be reorganized at the local scale. It will have to be
based on moving merchandise shorter distances. It is almost certain to
result in higher costs for the things we buy and far fewer choices.
The automobile will be a diminished presence in our lives, to say the least.
With gasoline in short supply, not to mention tax revenue, our roads will
surely suffer. The interstate highway system is more delicate than the
public realizes. If the "level of service" (as traffic engineers call it) is
not maintained to the highest degree, problems multiply and escalate
quickly. The system does not tolerate partial failure. The interstates are
either in excellent condition, or they quickly fall apart.
America today has a railroad system that the Bulgarians would be ashamed of.
Neither of the two major presidential candidates in 2004 mentioned
railroads, but if we don't refurbish our rail system, then there may be no
long-range travel or transport of goods at all a few decades from now. The
commercial aviation industry, already on its knees financially, is likely to
vanish. The sheer cost of maintaining gigantic airports may not justify the
operation of a much-reduced air-travel fleet. Railroads are far more energy
efficient than cars, trucks or airplanes, and they can be run on anything
from wood to electricity. The rail-bed infrastructure is also far more
economical to maintain than our highway network.
The successful regions in the twenty-first century will be the ones
surrounded by viable farming hinterlands that can reconstitute locally
sustainable economies on an armature of civic cohesion. Small towns and
smaller cities have better prospects than the big cities, which will
probably have to contract substantially. The process will be painful and
tumultuous. In many American cities, such as Cleveland, Detroit and St.
Louis, that process is already well advanced. Others have further to fall.
New York and Chicago face extraordinary difficulties, being oversupplied
with gigantic buildings out of scale with the reality of declining energy
supplies. Their former agricultural hinterlands have long been paved over.
They will be encysted in a surrounding fabric of necrotic suburbia that will
only amplify and reinforce the cities' problems. Still, our cities occupy
important sites. Some kind of urban entities will exist where they are in
the future, but probably not the colossi of twentieth-century industrialism.
Some regions of the country will do better than others in the Long
Emergency. The Southwest will suffer in proportion to the degree that it
prospered during the cheap-oil blowout of the late twentieth century. I
predict that Sunbelt states like Arizona and Nevada will become
significantly depopulated, since the region will be short of water as well
as gasoline and natural gas. Imagine Phoenix without cheap air conditioning.
I'm not optimistic about the Southeast, either, for different reasons. I
think it will be subject to substantial levels of violence as the grievances
of the formerly middle class boil over and collide with the delusions of
Pentecostal Christian extremism. The latent encoded behavior of Southern
culture includes an outsized notion of individualism and the belief that
firearms ought to be used in the defense of it. This is a poor recipe for
civic cohesion. 
The Mountain States and Great Plains will face an array of problems, from
poor farming potential to water shortages to population loss. The Pacific
Northwest, New England and the Upper Midwest have somewhat better prospects.
I regard them as less likely to fall into lawlessness, anarchy or despotism
and more likely to salvage the bits and pieces of our best social traditions
and keep them in operation at some level.
These are daunting and even dreadful prospects. The Long Emergency is going
to be a tremendous trauma for the human race. We will not believe that this
is happening to us, that 200 years of modernity can be brought to its knees
by a world-wide power shortage. The survivors will have to cultivate a
religion of hope - that is, a deep and comprehensive belief that humanity is
worth carrying on. If there is any positive side to stark changes coming our
way, it may be in the benefits of close communal relations, of having to
really work intimately (and physically) with our neighbors, to be part of an
enterprise that really matters and to be fully engaged in meaningful social
enactments instead of being merely entertained to avoid boredom. Years from
now, when we hear singing at all, we will hear ourselves, and we will sing
with our whole hearts.
Adapted from The Long Emergency, 2005, by James Howard Kunstler, and
reprinted with permission of the publisher, Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
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