If oil didn't exist, we'd have to invent it.

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Desert Eagle

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Very good read, regardless of who you are and your love or hate for oil in the modern world.

The Blowout and Our Addiction to Prosperity

The Deepwater Horizon disaster in the Gulf of Mexico is providing barrels of new ammunition to pundits on both the Right and the Left who contend we have to end our "addiction" to oil.

Repeating this meme - which we've been hearing non-stop since President George W. Bush used it in his 2006 State of the Union speech -- allows pundits to sound professorial and rational. The term "addiction" is a loaded term that appeals directly to the self-help/self-improvement genre that Americans are predisposed to accept.

Upon hearing that word, the supposed cures are easy to foretell: We must give up the addiction, go cold turkey, jump on the treadmill, eat fewer desserts, and in the process we will be transformed. And just as the recovered addict becomes a new man/woman, this mythical "new" America that frees itself from the petroleum junkies in the Middle East will be made stronger, more employable, and of course, thinner and better looking. Quitting oil will be as easy, something akin to appearing on "America's Biggest Loser" except this energy revolution will not be televised.

If only it were so easy.

The blowout in the Gulf is a heartbreaking mess. I say that as someone who swims, fishes, and birdwatches on the Gulf Coast. But as awful as the blowout is -- as dreadful as the environmental damage is and will likely be for years to come -- the simple unavoidable truth is that we humans cannot, will not, quit using oil.

If oil didn't exist, we'd have to invent it. No other substance can compare to oil in terms of energy density, flexibility, cost, and convenience.

For all of the myriad problems that oil creates, it also provides us with unprecedented mobility, comfort, and convenience. While we think of oil primarily as a transportation fuel, it's also a nearly perfect fuel for heating.

It can be used to generate electricity. When refined, it can be turned into an array of products ranging from cosmetics to shoelaces and bowling balls to milk jugs.

The addiction meme inflames the masses and makes for convenient talking points for ambitious politicians, but the reality is that oil remains an absolutely critical commodity in the global economy. And that's why BP and Transocean were out there in the Gulf of Mexico drilling in 5,000 feet of water.
A decade ago, a colorful railroad lawyer named Don Cheatham told me "without transportation there is no commerce." Cheatham's point is clearly true. But the corollary to Cheathman's point is also obvious: without oil there is no transportation.

About 95 percent of the world's transportation fuel comes from oil. Thus, without oil, there is no commerce. And in today's world, the people who are the most mobile are also the most affluent.
While American voters are being inundated with talk about addiction, the reality is that the U.S. oil market has quit growing. Since the Exxon Valdez spill in 1989, global oil demand has increased by nearly 20 million barrels per day. But the U.S. accounted for just 1.6 million barrels per day of that new demand.

The peaking of US oil demand is being driven by a number of factors including the aging of the
population and improvements in efficiency. In June 2009, Cambridge Energy Research Associates issued a report which projected that U.S. demand for automotive fuel will peak in 2014. Meanwhile, Exxon Mobil expects U.S. demand for transportation fuel to plateau by 2015 and then fall by about 10 percent by 2030.

Nearly all of the new growth in oil demand is coming from the developing world. Between 1990 and 2008, oil use soared in places like China (up by 244 percent), India (138 percent), South Korea (121 percent), and Saudi Arabia (120 percent).

So are the Chinese, Indians, Koreans and others around the world "addicted" to oil, too? No. They are addicted to prosperity. And so are we.
 
The following words are written by myself, this is my opinion and knowledge of this great resource.


The western world would not have existed as it does today if it wasn't for black gold.

The average middle class person in the West lives a lifestyle similar to that of a King or Queen a couple of centuries ago. This is because we have harnessed the world’s natural resources to increase our standard of living. i.e powering machinery, the machinery being our extremely productive slaves.

The average us citizen uses 60 barrels of oil equivalent per year. The amount of energy contained within these barrels is the equivilant to between 60-450 humans working for you throughout that year. THINK ABOUT THAT FOR A MINUTE OR TWO!!!! MOST PEOPLE GO ABOUT THEIR LIVES WITH ABSOLUTELY NO KNOWLEDGE/APPRECIATION OF THIS SOURCE OF ENERGY. WE HAVE EACH BEEN TRULY BLESSED WITH THE INCLUSION OF THIS ENERGY SOURCE IN OUR LIVES.


The most important use of oil is in the production of food .... pesticides, fertilizers, herbicides, and oil powered machinery to work the fields. This has allowed us to increase food production (through efficient land use) by 250% !!!!!!! purely because of oil and gas


……….. ONE FACT (1st of 3) ABOUT OUR ADDICTION to this wonderful source of energy is the FACT THAT IT IS A FINITE RESOURCE ………….. IT WILL RUN OUT ONE DAY !!!!!


…………… THERE ARE NO ALTERNATIVES TO OIL ……………


There are other technologies which can do what OIL does, but these alternatives are extremely costly and are in all cases; No where near as convenient.


To keep up with future demand mainly coming from the developing Nations of the East, the world needs to bring online an Oil Resource equal in reserves to that of SAUDI ARABIA EVERY THREE YEARS. THIS IS AN IMPOSSIBILTY HOWEVER;


With modern technology, I believe we will be able to slowly reduce our demand (use) and dependence on this resource. Especially with the availability of the internet which I personally believe will be used in a large scale for businesses/employees around the world. I can almost guarantee that in the near future, you will see an increase in the amount of people working from home. I personally believe this will be the best way to alleviate the risk of having shortages.


……….. ANOTHER FACT (2nd of 3) ABOUT OUR ADDICTION to this source of energy is the FACT THAT WE WASTE IT AND SEEM TO HAVE NO CARE FOR CONSERVING ANY FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS …….. HOW SELFISH …………..


…LAST BUT BY NO MEANS LEAST ….. CONTROL OVER OIL RESOURCES, SECURITIZATION OF OIL TRANSPORTATION ROUTES AND THE PROFITS THAT CAN BE MADE IN THE PRODUCTION OF OIL ARE THE CAUSE OF MANY WARS AND DEATHS, BOTH HISTORICAL, PRESENT AND POTENTIALLY FUTRE.



Many thanks if you have read all of this, it took 30 mins to write. It’s a Friday night, Im ill in bed and bored.
 
Completely irrelevant argument. Oil is a finite resource. I don't care what language you use to frame our reliance upon it, we HAVE to move away from it.
 
Oil was great, it had it's time. But now it's time to start focusing on alternative, sustainable energy.
 
Really? When you think of energy what comes to mind other then oil?

.....nothing?
 
I don't do too much. I mean, I have a hybrid that averages 40mpg, and collect and recycle the free snapple/water//etc plastic bottles that work keeps in the kitchen but I have no delusions about our inability to stop using oil. Our use and abuse of the planets natural resources have put us into a positive feedback loop to destruction. People on here like to squabble back and forth (myself included) with the red team / blue team shit but in reality by 2050 the Resource Wars are going to begin and we'll all stop giving a shit about that stuff
 
and where are you going to get your cheap "make them as you need them to be" plastic storage containers among NUMEROUS other things that are so easily made from polycarbonates?

What else can be used?
 
Well, none of these...

plastic
rubber
aluminum
electronics
carbon and graphite products
paint
carpeting
clothing
medicines
livestock feed
candles
asphalt
food preservatives
shingles
pvc piping
lubricants
cologne/perfumes
 
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