Peak Oil Revisited
-
English
-
ListenPause
I’m Peter Neill, Director of the World Ocean Observatory. Remember peak oil? That was the fear of some years ago to which the fossil fuel industry and its supports responded “Drill, baby, drill!” And drill they did, and accelerated exploration in places that heretofore were inaccessible or uneconomical such as the polar seas. Suddenly, there was an urgency to drill in national parks and off shore in the Gulf and along both coasts of the United States. The industry responded worldwide, the price climbed to $100 per barrel, the stock value of ExxonMobil, Shell, Chevron, and all the rest soared. Not to be satisfied with traditional drilling, the industry invested heavily in hydraulic fracturing, shale gas, and tar sands oil, indifferent to massive damage inflicted on the landscape, the social disruption within the communities affected, the sudden increase in pipeline leaks and train derailments and tanker car explosions that did little to offset a growing opposition or reassure regulators. Today, however, the price of oil has dropped to $50 per barrel, and suddenly the equation appears very different. The reasons for the collapse are many: over-supply as a result of the splurge in drilling, external events in the middle east, sanctions against Russia and Iran, downturn in the world economy, conservation, and the emergence to scale of alternatives such as solar and wind power generation. The growing success of alternatives has been, of course, impeded by aggressive opposition by an industry that showed little interest or foresight even regarding their standing should they exhaust the renewed supply. Nonetheless, in the meantime, some progressive governments moved to diversify energy sources and, in Germany or Denmark, for example, saw wind and solar technology assume a growing share of the market and enable independence from dangerous reliance on suppliers from the Arabian peninsula and Russia. Thus, in recent weeks, we have seen the cancellation of industry plans to exploit the Arctic and Antarctic, build new pipelines, and force conventional practice and financial dependence on a single source of supply. At $50 a barrel, the justifying pro forma and prediction of continuous exorbitant profit make no sense. It is an incredible opportunity for change. The cover headline of The Economist newspaper this week exhorted “Seize the day” and, in a special report, suddenly trumpeted the virtues of improved technology, increased efficiency, and clean energy; of alternative and renewable solar, wind, ocean energy, and geothermal; of new business models; of innovation in more efficient storage devices, distribution methods, and capacity; and of new pricing analyses that show the advantage of these changes to government and investors, to produce an integrated mix of new energy policy and actions, freed from the dominance, environmental degradation, social disruption, and volatility of an industry that has controlled supply and demand, policy and the geo-politics of oil. I would argue that public awareness of the destructive impact of natural resource extraction and resultant advocacy, even in places historically captive to oil interests, has contributed to this situation. Conservation in the form of energy consumption standards, more fuel efficient, less polluting automobiles, boycotts of oil-based products like Styrofoam and plastic, and individual behaviors has surely made a difference. This progress must not be lost. Indeed it must be exploited now as the industry will not accept the status quo, already using the language of recovery as if that is the only choice for the rest of us. What else must happen now? First, we must declare that we have reached peak oil now, leaving the marginal and dirty product in the ground, and assert with confidence a continuing move away from our reliance on fossil fuels, sustaining and amplifying this opportunity for alternatives and change. Second, we must focus on the removal of subsidies, incentives, exceptions, and loopholes that underwrite the profits of these irresponsible agents and insist that the fossil fuel industry prove its true economy and real worth as a free-standing financial endeavor, demonstrating, if it can, the real cost of its impact on our lives. Third, we must incorporate sustainability as the principled focus of our individual behaviors, our work, our purchases, and our investments, supporting alternatives, petitioning and voting for change and against regression to a system that has corroded and degraded our lives for far too long. We can take advantage of this fortuitous collapse of an industry from within. We must not just seize this day, but every day of our future. We will discuss these issues, and more, in future editions of World Ocean Radio.
The price of oil has dropped to $50 per barrel and the landscape is changing: alternative energy is growing in success and popularity, industries have cancelled plans to drill in the Polar seas, there is talk of increased efficiency, improved technology, new energy policy, and “clean energy” are the buzzwords of our day. In this episode of World Ocean Radio host Peter Neill will discuss this shift away from oil dominance and will attribute it to a number of factors, including increased public awareness and education. And he will give three examples of ways in which we as individuals, communities, and corporations can seize this moment to move away from a system which has degraded our lives and environment for far too long.
About World Ocean Radio:
Peter Neill, Director of the World Ocean Observatory and host of World Ocean Radio, provides coverage of a broad spectrum of ocean issues from science and education to advocacy and exemplary projects. World Ocean Radio, a project of the World Ocean Observatory, is a weekly series of five-minute audio essays available for syndicated use at no cost by college and community radio stations worldwide. A selection of episodes is now available in Portuguese, Spanish, French, and Swahili. For more information, visit WorldOceanObservatory.org/world-ocean-radio-global.
Image credit: _J_D_R_ via flickr and Treehugger.com
- Login to post comments