Sunday, May 16, 2010

The Extra Special, Multiple Post Oil Extravaganza (Part 4)

This is it. This is the last installment of the extra special, multiple post oil extravaganza and I'm guessing Mrs. Schutte couldn't be happier. She has had to put up with reading my monkey garbage for awhile now and I would just like to say...here's some more.
This installment of the extra special, multiple blog post oil extravaganza deals with solutions to the problem (at least what I think the solution is).

In my opinion.....Baby Steps

My guess is as good as yours (the bitterness may be from my lack of sleep) but I believe the only way to combat the depletion of oil is to lose our dependence from oil completely. Not just from foreign oil (but that's a start, again the bitterness) but from oil all together, foreign and domestic. To do this, we need to start with baby steps. Baby steps could include raising regulations on the minimum gas mileage cars can get by a set year. Again, baby steps.

But eventually... The Big Girl Step... Or The Big Boy Step, whichever

The big Girl step (or boy) we need to take is to find alternative fuels and alternative energies that can power our cars, homes, and factories without the use of oil.

About 2/3 of all oil consumed in the United States is used for gas in automobiles (The Plan 1). So if we could impact the fuel we use in our cars, we could make a very large impact on the way we use oil everywhere.

The link below (in the citation) is a website and a cause founded by T. Boone Pickens (you may remember his commercials). He and his contributers know their stuff and can explain renewable energies better than I can in a 300 word blog. So check it out.

Well I guess that's it. The end of the extra special, multiple post oil extravaganza. I hope you are left feeling either indifferent or at least aware of oil depletion. And also aware of the effects it can and is having on the way the world works. Thank-you and hava a good one.

"The Plan." Picken Plan. Web. 26 Apr. 2010. http://www.pickensplan.com/theplan/


The Extra Special, Multiple Post Oil Extravaganza (Part 3)

If you're getting sick of the extra special, multiple post oil extravaganza, too bad, we're only half-way through. This blog will focus on the social impact of a world without oil.

It would really suck to be around for it


Before I say anything, I just want to say I'm basing this entire blog on what I know about history and people. My assumptions make up about 96.3% of this blog (bureau of labor statistics 1). This is what I and many others believe will happen in a world without oil...then again, who knows. Maybe it will all work out and everyone in the world will rally together and help out one another...I don't think so either.

If oil was gone people would freak out. And I'm not talking sixteen-year-old-girl at the twilight premiere freakout (although scary as shit). I'm talking world war freakout. The kind that kills millions. Oil drives the world economy. It also is crucial for everyday life to pretty much every western living human. Oil is commonly known to be the number one traded good in the world. So if it all runs out, we're hosed. One of the first things that will happen is everyone will run to the gas station and pump as much gas as they can get. Riots will insue from the panic and major cities will become extremely dangerous.

After failed attempts at negotiations, countries will begin fighting over what little reserves the world has left. The skirmishes will escalate in to all-out war. Some claim the drive behind present and past wars in the middle east is oil and the United States' pursuit of it.

That's just a taste of events me and my fellow group mates perceive to occur in a world without oil. It sounds really fun and at the rate we're going-I'll see you there.

The Extra Special, Multiple Post Oil Extravaganza (Part 2)

Welcome back to the extra special, multiple post oil extravaganza! I'm your blogger, Blake Forsberg, and I just realized that I may be spelling "extravaganza" wrong..oh well. My last post introduced the idea of peak oil (if you haven't checked it out, you can find it below this one). It talked of the threat of the world running out of oil in vague detail. This post, and the next two, will further explain the implications of the world oil supply running out. This particular blog will explain the economical impact of a world without oil. Enjoy.

The Economical Impact

To explain the economical impact of oil depletion, I will be utilizing the idea of supply and demand. The supply, obviously being the supply of oil and the demand being the growing thirst the world has for it(see what I did there?). Supply and demand can be visually presented in a graph. In the graph, the supply is an upward sloping curve (line) and the demand is a downward sloping curve (line). Where these two curves intersect is called the equilibrium. The equilibrium is where the price and quantity are determined based on outside influences that shift the two curves, ultimately, setting the quantity and the price per-unit of that quantity...just watch...





Ok. The blue lines indicate supply and demand before, and also the equilibrium where the price and quantity meet (at 1). Notice the positioning of the price where the blue equilibrium is at P1. The red lines indicate the shifts. The supply curve shifts left indicating a decreasing supply of oil (at 3). The demand curve shifts right, indicating an increasing demand for oil (at 2). Where these two new lines meet creates a new equilibrium point (at 4), and also a new, higher price for oil (at 5).


It's Probably Happening


The world supply of oil doesn't have to be completely gone for peak oil to have an economical effect. The world demands more and more oil as the supply diminishes...it spells trouble. Thankfully, for write now, the only thing trouble can spell is m-o-n-e-y and c-o-n-s-u-m-e-r w-a-l-l-e-t.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

The Extra Special, Multiple Post Oil Extravaganza (Part 1)

This is the first of a four-part blog series on Oil. The series will deal with the topic of oil depletion. This was the topic of a collaborative project I was apart of earlier in the year. The next four blog will each highlight one of the four main points of the project . The first installment of the series will deal with The Peak Oil Theory... Bon Appetit...probably spelled that wrong.



The Peak Oil Theory

The Peak oil theory is simple enough. The theory is a claim that oil is not in unlimited supply and will soon (or according to some, already has) reach a peak level in supply, then deplete until all is gone. The graph below illustrates the theory.





Source: www.oilcrisis.com/summary.htm



In the graph above, the estimated peak oil level is around the year 2000. If this is true, the world's oil supply is in the decline.

My Opinion (If You Really Want It)

Of course there's a limited supply of oil. Nothing is unlimited (except for the number of times I can use parenthesis). The only problem with the peak oil theory is "how do we know its all really gone."There may be reserves we haven't tapped in to yet that could save the situation entirely. But again, how would we know? There are known reserves in Alaska that could both increase the world supply and AND help the United States economy a great deal by increasing our net exports on the international trade market. But the hippies won't let us so there goes that idea...whatever.

So What Do We Do?...in my opinion


To combat this threat, the world will need to work together to free our need for oil. The best way to do this will be by finding alternative fuels and alternative sources of power. The last blog in the series will discuss ideas to do just that. So stay tuned.