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Oil and the Economy: Bumping Against the Growth Ceiling Gail Tverberg, Univ. of New Mexico, February 8, 2012.

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Presentation on theme: "Oil and the Economy: Bumping Against the Growth Ceiling Gail Tverberg, Univ. of New Mexico, February 8, 2012."— Presentation transcript:

1 Oil and the Economy: Bumping Against the Growth Ceiling Gail Tverberg, Univ. of New Mexico, February 8, 2012

2 We have all been taught that economic growth can continue forever  What if economic growth really can’t continue forever?  What if we really are hitting growth limits now?  Where do we go from here, if we are hitting limits now? 2

3 Brief statement of problem: 1) We have an economy that needs growth 2) We have limited oil supply that constricts growth 3

4 Our Economy Needs Growth

5 World has used fossil fuels for 450 years  Helped create economic growth  Helped create belief that economic growth will always continue 5

6 Our financial system depends on growth 6

7 7

8 Reinhart and Rogoff looked at 800 years of repayment of sovereign debt  They report --  “It is notable that the non-defaulters, by and large, are all hugely successful growth stories.”  Countries that were growing could repay debt! 8

9 Growth provides many benefits Rising home pricesRising stock prices Rising employment Rising taxes; Rising sales for businesses 9

10 Use of fossil fuels allowed population to expand greatly Note: Population from US Census Bureau website; fuel use from Energy Transitions: History, Requirements, Prospects, Appendix A by Vaclav Smil; Praeger, 2010. 10

11 A few of oil’s many uses  Fertilizer  Pesticides  Herbicides  Diesel for tractors  Fast transport to market  Diesel for irrigation  Fuel for refrigeration  Asphalt for roads  Medicines  Plastics  Gasoline  Synthetic cloth  Building materials  Easier metal extraction and working  Diesel for earth movers 11

12 Economic decline leads to many bad outcomes  Many debt defaults  Declining home prices  Fewer people employed  Declining tax revenue; rising unemployment claims  Declining stock market  Declining church and other charity contributions 12

13 Limited oil supply is constricting economic growth

14 Oil production is no longer responsive to rising price Note: “Crude and Condensate” oil amounts. Based on EIA data. World oil production has been pretty much level since 2005! 14

15 How can this happen? 15

16 But in practice there are huge obstacles  Cheap oil is mostly gone  Expensive oil seems to cause recession  James Hamilton: 10 out of 11 most recent recessions followed oil price spikes  Major investment needs to be made, well in advance of when oil is needed  Prices haven’t been high enough, long enough, to support huge investment needed 16

17 Leveling of world oil supply is not entirely unexpected  Oil production in many countries has started to decline 17

18 18

19 Part of our problem is that China, India, etc. are consuming more of the oil 19

20 An economy without enough oil stops growing

21 Food prices tend to rise with oil prices 21

22 History shows a close tie between world economic growth and oil growth Source: Robert L Hirsch. Mitigation of maximum world oil production: Shortage scenarios. Energy Policy 2008 22

23 If oil shortage  Food and oil prices rise  People’s incomes don’t rise  People cut back on discretionary goods  Debt defaults rise  Result: Recession 23

24 Shrinkage of economy is like making a smaller recipe batch 24

25 What happens after an economy hits the ceiling?

26 For one thing, oil prices keep spiking up  Recession hits and continues on the down slope  Looks like we are heading into a recession again 26

27 For another, non-government debt starts to decline, and governmental debt soars! 27

28 We don’t know for sure how this all ends  Some views are that this will end badly  Not too different from throwing a ball up and hitting the ceiling 28

29 Can renewables play a role?

30 Alternate energy sources are too little, too late  Biofuels amounted to 4.4% of US petroleum consumption in 2009  Most mitigations are electric  Don’t directly help oil problem – also small in total 30

31 Some would advocate more high tech “renewables”  Wind turbines, solar PV, electric cars  Would require a huge amount of investment  We aren’t even investing enough now to replace what is worn out! 31

32 “Old renewables” have more promise  Cheaper  Can be maintained with local materials 32

33 Or even this “renewable” 33 This “renewable” actually replaces gasoline!

34 A Longer View of the Problem

35 Over-use of resources began 100,000 years ago  Man has over-used resources since he became intelligent  Brain capacity about 1450cc  Fewer than 100,000 people on earth  Humans left Africa  Able to kill off whole species of animals elsewhere  Beginning of “6 th Mass Extinction” 35

36 About 10,000 years ago, agriculture began  Allowed big increase in population  Further attack on ecosystems  Whole ecosystems wiped out  Replaced with plants for food  All other plants “weeds”  Trees cut down; some irrigation  Sixth Mass Extinction worsened  Humans “bulls in China shop” 36

37 Fossil fuel use further increased disruption  Began 1550, greatest effects 1900 and subsequent 37 Image by DeLene Beeland, Wild Muse blog 2/09/2010

38 Capitalism, globalization extended this trend 38  Capitalism  Make money pulling resources out  Tax dollars create roads, schools  Further destroy the environment  Globalization  Makes possible high tech goods from around the world  Seeks to maximize world output  Logical limit to growth

39 Where do we go from here?

40 Globalization seems to sow the seeds of its own demise  Workers compete with workers from around the world  Playing field isn’t level  Workers in warm countries can live in flimsy houses, without heat  Use bicycles year around  Require lower salaries  China, India, Pakistan,  Bangladesh, Philippines  Workers in cold countries find it hard to compete  Need cars in winter; study homes 40

41 Combination of higher oil prices, lower salaries works out badly  US workers can’t afford to buy what they make  Salaries too low  Spending too much on gasoline, food  Demand for products drops  Layoffs  Debt defaults  Bailouts 41

42 End up with declining economy instead of growing one 42

43 High probability of widespread debt defaults 43

44 Impact of debt crisis likely widespread  Affect United States as well as Europe  Affect oil supply  Reduced demand  Reduced international trade 44

45 An economic collapse seems all too possible – but we can’t know for sure 45

46 What should our response be?

47 Take one day at a time 47  What to expect  Another recession, probably severe  More layoffs  Huge governmental problems  Possible cutback in government programs  More hungry people  Possibly even nearby riots  Job prospects for recent graduates may be poor

48 A few thoughts 48  Do what we can today  Count our blessings!  No real solution  Keep some water and food on hand  Don’t count on always having electricity  Gardening is somewhat helpful  Don’t count on paper investments  High population is an issue – smaller families?  Need to work together to find partial solutions

49 For more information  See my blog:  http://ourfiniteworld.com/ http://ourfiniteworld.com/ Get twitter notifications of new posts: gailtheactuary 49


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