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Oil Peak, Facts and Policies Energy Policy Gary Flomenhoft, Fellow Gund Institute Lecturer, Community and Intl. Development http://www.uvm.edu/giee
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Fuel Domesticated Animals Labor Work Done in the U.S. Economy, 1850-1970
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0 25 50 75 100 180018251850187519001925195019752000 Composition of U.S. Energy Use wood animal feed coal oil gas electricity Percent of total energy use
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WORLD ENERGY 2004
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Net Energy
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Hubbert Oil Cycle Marion King (MK) Hubbert
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The Epoch of Fossil Fuel Exploitation (after Hubbert, 1969) 0 -5 -4-3 -2 +1 +2+3 +4 +5 Iron in Middle East Stonehenge Built Parthenon completed Pyramids constructed Mayan culture Inquisition Black Death Magellan's Circumnavigation Steam Engine 100 200 300 Trillion kwh per year
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US Oil Extraction
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World Oil Extraction
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Oil Reserves
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US Oil Extraction
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World Oil Extraction
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Source: Boyle, et al, Oxford Press
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Oil consumption by area
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OIL AND GAS LIQUIDS ASPO Scenario
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World Oil Extraction
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World Oil Flows
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Oil Producers: 98 countries www.lastoilshock.com
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Oil Producers: 64 from 98 in decline, 60 terminally www.lastoilshock.com
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http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3087 Oil Watch Monthly: October 2007
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Business As Usual-EIA
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1960-1980 Predictions
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1975-1983 Predictions
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Real Price of Oil 1869-2007
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$145 $56.34 May 18, 09
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World Oil Extraction
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Dumped Gas Hogs 1974 Lincoln~8mpg 1974 Corolla~30mpg
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Jet Industries: Citi-Car (Beaumont) ElectricarLectra 1980’s 2nd Wave of EVs “Better batteries 10 years away”
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WORLD ENERGY
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(61% FF=8.8%FF) 8.8+1.6+1= 11.4% Fossil Fuels
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How VT Heats 86% Fossil Fuels
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How People Move-USEIA
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Hummer H1 Sticker price $106,185 Current law Equipment deduction $25,000 Total tax deduction* $60,722 Bush economic plan Equipment deduction $75,000 Total tax deduction* $88,722 * Includes bonus tax write-off enacted by Congress in March 2002 and a deduction for normal depreciation. Sources: Detroit News research, IRS, Taxpayers for Common Sense Gas Hog Tax Credit
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Source: EPA
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Policy Recommendations: Guidelines 1.Eliminate perverse incentives-make money! 2.Provide positive incentives-account for externalities. ie: putting a price on carbon- make money or revenue neutral. 3.Regulate (higher mpg) 3.Spend money The playing field is NOT level. Fossil Fuels have 100 years of subsidies,ignoring external costs, and a huge lobby in DC. Don’t expect the “free market” to take care of it.
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WHAT TO DO? Reactive or Pro-active? WHAT DON’T WE HAVE? Oil-zero Coal-zero Nat Gas-not much (landfills) Why promote consumption of something we don’t have? * Conduct an audit of perverse incentives promoting FF use. Eliminate perverse incentives.
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WHAT TO DO? DEALING WITH PEAK OIL IS GOOD FOR Climate Change Vermont Economy Should do it anyway
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WHAT TO DO? Provide incentives Ex: Germany Policies, Market-based Instruments: 1.1999 Tax & Rebate on Fuel (tax cut): Diesel/gasoline $1.79-2.48/gallon Funds rebated to payroll taxes-89%, efficiency, and RE 2.2005 Cap/trade for CO2-powerplants and industrial heat 3.1991 Feed-in Tariffs: Wind=$.1149, PV=$.6385, hydro=$.1055, biogas=$.1551 No costs to government Results: PV Industry: 2715 MW installed, 52% of world total, 40,000 employed (US has 360 MW installed or 13% of Germany) Wind Industry: 22,247MW, 28% of world total, 82,000 employed (United States 16,818MW) Biomass sector 95,400 employed Total: 217,000 employees in RE ~107,000 FF & nuclear
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WHAT TO DO? Reactive or Pro-active? WHAT DO WE HAVE TO WORK WITH? Trees Farms Cows Land Wind Sun Big and Small Hydro Smart People Indigenous Energy Industry Entrepreneurs
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WHAT TO DO? Electricity VT Yankee = 550MW CT River Dams-567MW. Dams = $160 Million/year revenue. Buy the dams. Use eminent domain if necessary Fast-track small hydro-up to 400MW Approve more wind farms More Wood chip plants Etc.
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WHAT TO DO? Heat All-fuels efficiency/ weatherization District heating and co-generation Biodiesel heating fuel Wood and wood chip/pellet heating Building codes requiring passive solar, thermal mass, window insulation, Solar hot water Wood stoves High Performance Schools Energy Program Cap/dividend on carbon-heating fuel
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WHAT TO DO? Transportation Hybrids Plug-in hybrids Electric vehicles Alternative fuels, ethanol, methanol (flex-fuel), biodiesel Trains Public transit-Jitneys Bike/pedestrian paths Tax/rebate on fuels Cap/dividend on carbon-vehicles
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WHAT TO DO? Agriculture Don’t turn food into fuel Biodiesel: waste oil, algae, non-food crops Methane digesters: “Cow-power”
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Crisis or Opportunity We will shift from Fossil Fuels. Will we be Pro-active or reactive? It’s up to you.
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