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Kelpie Wilson

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Preface to a Prelude to Peak Oil

Posted: 02/11/11 04:12 PM ET

Many green groups and other science-based analysts criticized President Obama's recent State of the Union speech for failing to mention the imminent catastrophe of climate change. Instead, the President focused on a "clean energy and jobs" message. Yet perhaps he did the best he could, given our current political reality and the extreme irrationality that infects our Tea Party nation.

Following the hideous violence in Arizona, it was a stroke of genius to call on Republicans and Democrats to sit together, pairing red and blue like a pair of those old-fashioned 3D glasses -- Obama's attempt to show us that America is much more than a two-dimensional conflict between political parties. But the State of the Union address, while considerably more three-dimensional than many I have heard, still fell far short of the reality we find ourselves in. That reality includes more than just the threat of climate change. It also encompasses the phenomenon known as "peak oil."

I don't know what it is about energy and our use of it that inspires so many euphemisms, but "peak oil" is a term rarely used in the mainstream, corporate media. You may hear about "energy security" or "commodity price super-cycles" but never peak oil. And yet most of us know that the world has either passed or is now approaching the maximum volume of oil we can pump from the ground -- aka peak oil. It's the secret everyone knows but that few will mention. And it is the reason that Obama's call for investment in clean energy jobs resonates even with hardcore climate deniers. Polls consistently show high levels of support for government investment in clean energy, even from Republicans. That's because, in our guts, we all know that fossil fuels can't last forever.

The stark reality that few have truly woken to is the high probability that we have already passed the peak of oil production and that it is all downhill from here. If this is a new idea to you, or even if you already have some familiarity with it, you will enjoy the new novel, Prelude, from peak oil analyst Kurt Cobb.

Prelude may be the first thriller novel explicitly about peak oil (numberless thrillers concern the nefarious machinations of international oil conglomerates -- ultimately those are stories about peak oil too). It follows a short period in the life and career of Cassie Young, an oil industry analyst based in Washington, DC. The opening scene places Cassie in the tar sands of Alberta, Canada, on a fact-finding mission. This is a great place to start anyone's peak oil education. Touted as the next Saudi Arabia and America's future oil supply, the reality is that these hydrocarbons are dirty and exceedingly energy-intensive to extract.

Cassie's story is one of continuous stripping away of the veils that obscure our oil reality even from an oil industry professional. As Cassie uncovers more industry secrets, enigmas in her own heart become visible as well. Following her journey, the reader learns interesting things about the oil business and alarming truths about political power and oil. Cobb does a good job of the writing with snappy pacing and plotting; his descriptions giving immediacy to places and people. Despite her name, Cassie (Cassandra) is not cast as a prophet of doom. Her story is about learning the truth, not about what she does with it. Perhaps Cobb will pen a sequel. It would be interesting, but the message of the novel is that this is our story, too. What will we do with the knowledge that we are standing on an energy cliff?

Joseph Romm and other climate change bloggers are pressing hard on the Obama administration to talk more about climate change, to use the words in speeches. It is having an effect, as Romm reports that Obama did talk about climate change in a speech on clean energy last week.

We must do the same thing for the term peak oil, but it will be more challenging. Few politicians have ever uttered the words, other than Roscoe Bartlett, a truly maverick Republican congressman from Baltimore who started the congressional Peak Oil Caucus back in 2005.

Peak oil and climate change taken together are the lenses through which we can view reality with 20-20 vision. Our civilization is completely and utterly dependent on massive amounts of energy. Coping with climate change disruptions while replacing dirty fossil energy with clean, renewable energy and building a new, energy efficient infrastructure to meet our needs for housing and transportation will define every aspect of our future.

Peak oil: read about it, talk about it, Tweet about it, get out in the streets and meet about it. Rising food and fuel prices are a big reason for the revolution in Egypt. Soon it will be our turn. Today is just a prelude.

 
 
 

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AlanBannacheck
President of the Deep Thoughts Association (DTA)
09:55 PM on 02/21/2011
The fact of the matter is the current "use an d throw away" mentality is against are self interests and the future of the human race in general. I like to consider the garbage island, space junk, oily bottom on the gulf, and dead zones in the ocean a few of the wounds we've already applied to Earth. it may be out of site from our concrete artificial realities, but it inches closer every second.
03:32 PM on 02/20/2011
Despite the overwhelming scientific consensus that climate change is an extreme threat requiring immediate wartime mobilization scale response, the disinformation campaigns of fossil fuel interests and their allies have blocked action. We can work around the obstacles to climate change response by blowing the whistle on peak oil. Americans may be indifferent to flooding of cities and record heatwaves becoming commonplace, but they will pay close attention when they realize how quickly gasoline can reach $5 or $10 per gallon. Whether you're concerned about climate change, energy security, or domestic job creation, join Kurt Cobb and Kelpie Wilson in blowing the whistle on peak oil. If you're a progressive and you want to roll back the Koch Brothers and their evil empire, tell everyone about the elephant in the room that everyone wants so badly to ignore. Ask Arianna Huffington to acknowledge peak oil. Ask President Obama to acknowledge peak oil. Imagine what will happen when a critical mass of Americans acknowledge that our reliance on a quarter of the world's daily oil production simply cannot continue. The forces that deny science and resist green polices will be exposed. Because of their vast power, this will be a huge campaign, but take the next small steps: read Kurt's excellent book, and spread the word.
04:01 PM on 02/17/2011
The greatest thing Kurt's novel can do is to introduce people to a concept the major media has been avoiding for years. Stressing that the world will (in my mind already is) be faced with serious effects of declining energy availability and high costs for possibly years before civilization "collapses". Nay-sayers always will say we have lots of oil and other fossil fuels left- and they would be correct. The issue isn't how much is left- it is how easily and cheaply we can continue to get it out of the ground, processed and in a form we can use. We have already passed the point where the easy oil is used up. Putting the issue in the form of a story- especially with the glossary of terms in the back to make concepts clearer, is the quickest way to spread the word. A much needed book.
09:43 PM on 02/15/2011
Early in Kurt Cobb's novel, Victor Chernov says, "financial collapse, peak oil collapse, climate collapse, take your pick." But before collapse, he says, there will be a lot of ups and downs as "we bump up against our limits" over and over again. But we're already WAY OVER the limits, and not just on climate change. We're way over the limit on species extinction, the loss of biodiversity. And it's our fossil-fuel-driven economy that's pushing us over. Let's hope that when Victor and Cassie leave Washington and get back to "some land near Vancouver," to grow tomato plants "and some other things," the other things will include food for the soil organisms, the plants, the insects, the birds, the mammals--all the orgamisms and creatures our obsession with building and paving and traveling and consuming and mountain-topping and drilling and deforesting and sterilizing is driving to extinction at a rate that will lead to the collapse of whole ecosystems and ultimately our own civilization. Unless Victor and Cassie and the rest of us grow and restore those "other things" besides our tomatoes, Victor is right. We won't have understood our "destiny," which is not just "geological" but "ecological"; and we'll be "hopelessly lost."
09:09 AM on 02/15/2011
What will we do?
We can scrape another 40 years out of fossils is we put a bit into this and that. Now, tell me why the political class, mostly over forty, will want to do anything more?

If you want change:
1. Campaign to lower voting age to 15.
2. Campaign to get young people elected into political positions at all levels of government.
12:28 AM on 02/15/2011
Prelude is one novel that can make us smarter by imparting the peak oil story through memorable characters rather than dull data. It will appeal to the vast majority of individuals who are turned off by those more interested in arguing minutiae than forging a better future. Read Prelude and you'll be hooked on the most fascinating and under reported story of our time--Peak Oil.
11:49 PM on 02/14/2011
The definition of energy is the ability to do work. When the TOTAL amount of energy available to a civilisation decreases, the ability to do work decreases. Complex civilisations require an enormous amount of energy to get their work done and maintain their complexity. Kurt Cobb's book is a direct near future examination of this very problem. It is, in my humble opinion: REQUIRED READING. Him and Kunstler's novels are speaking truth to the power of the imagination, as the imagination requires energy...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Goethe Behr
11:44 PM on 02/14/2011
Very interesting. Just say “global warming,” and a doubter will laugh and counter that we’re having a record cold streak! “Climate change” is better, since one can hardly argue that there is some weird stuff going on out there. “Peak oil” is a great expression, since it provides a graphic image in just two words. And that’s what we need. Americans naturally suspect “experts,” and the media feel they have to find someone, anyone, to “balance” the discussion into a muddled mess, It seems to me that this Cobb guy got it right: just ask the right questions, and force the reader to (gasp) think. Whipping up an engrossing yarn to involve the reader in a concrete narrative is a stroke of genius. Kudos.
Pirate Prentice
dream surrogate
02:54 PM on 02/14/2011
The main point about peak oil, which the article does not adequately stress, is that the threat of instability from dwindling energy supplies will not wait until we are almost out of oil. When we reach peak oil, the world will be producing more oil than it ever has, and there will still be lots of oil in the ground. What will change, is that production and supply will never increase again, and will likely fall rapidly. This will create a feedback loop in which demand goes up exponentially in the face of a stagnant or decreasing supply. This increase in demand is difficult to imagine because demand continues to increase at a staggering rate today even with growing production. If you think the US and China pursues oil fields aggressively today, wait until we hit peak oil. We won't need democratizing rationalizations to invade countries at that point. As for the rest of us filling up our cars, a personal auto will become the height of luxury, available only to the fabulously wealthy. This will all happen relatively quickly. How fast is impossible to say, but I don't think we've reached peak oil yet, like the article claims. When we do, the commodities index on oil futures that determines gas prices will basically set the value of a barrel as priceless. There will still be lots of oil being produced. There will still be lots of oil in the ground. But it won't matter.
03:14 PM on 02/12/2011
It may be a peak, a plateau, or some other shape. You cannot dispense with these realities: fossil fuels are nonrenewable, they are currently indispensable, they will run out, and we should be concerned. Anyone who believes that the market will absolutely solve this JUST because it has solved problems in the past needs to ponder if it is possible for the market to be presented an unsolvable problem that we create by ignoring a situation (or at least not solvable in a way we would like) and if they plan anything in life as they would advocate now (do you just jump in the car and start driving to go on vacation?).
02:01 PM on 02/12/2011
In October we published environmentalist Chip Haynes' book "Peak of the Devil: 100 Questions (and answers) about Peak Oil." It's not fiction, but a deceptively light-hearted look at what could be a very sobering situation sooner than most people believe. If you're looking for a good introduction to the subject, and not a heavy scientific tome, it just might be a place to start. Without presuming to have all the answers, Haynes offers some background and some suggestions for preparation and lifestyle change that aren't impossible to undertake. Great book to get the conversation flowing, no matter which side of the aisle you're on.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Overtone
See bio on the Aesop Institute website
06:34 PM on 02/11/2011
Peak oil may or may not prove to be real. See the post by Raymond Learsy, author of Over the Barrel, for a strong argument that it is not.

However, climate change is a genuine threat.

A little publicized National Security threat is also real. And it may be much easier to mobilize the nation behind what needs to be done to much more rapidly replace fossil fuel as a result.

See Green Light at www.aesopinstitute.org to understand the threat and some of the ways to fight it.

A few Black Swans are emerging in the energy arena and they may help far more than might be imagined. See the same website for more about a few potential energy Black Swans.
02:43 PM on 02/12/2011
Why would oil companies drill 20,000 foot wells in the middle of the oceans if oil was so readily available and why develope Canadian tar sands and destroy the environment. If you can't access the energy source, it doesn't make any difference how much is there. You can think up all different ideas
to create energy but they are all pipedreams, not Blacks Swans, if you can't get them out of the lab.
I recommend reading Kurt Cobb's book "Prelude" to get an excellent understanding of the workings of the energy industry and enjoy a damn good mystery novel.
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04:22 AM on 02/13/2011
The armies of the US, Britain and Germany have published studies that confirm the reality of Peak Oil, study the possible effects and recommend mitigation. All independently of each other and all come to the same conclusions.
'nuff said.