Staying Current On Peak Oil

By now, most people realize that oil prices are going to
keep rising due to declining world oil supplies.

Information confirming what I’ve been saying here all
these months is starting to come in so fast and furious that I’m having trouble keeping up with it anymore.

So I’ve decided to provide links to the energy articles and blogs I find most useful in keeping track of these topics. They’ll also be posted soon on the sidebar on this blog.

• Gail Tverberg is one of the editors of The Oil Drum, and I find her to be one of the most credible writers on energy. When The Kohala Center brought her to the Big Island to be the featured speaker in an energy forum, I took her to give a talk to the Kanaka Council. She was extremely well received by them.

Robert Rapier cuts through the spin and hype relating to biofuels. His responses to comments are very informative.

• Subscribe to daily Peak Oil news to stay current on energy
topics. Soon you will be as current on energy news as anybody.

• This Chris Martenson video on Peak Oil explains
what’s going on very clearly. I strongly recommend you look at the rest of the “chapters,” too.

• I recommend this Jeff Rubin YouTube video. Rubin is a Canadian economist and author, and a former chief economist at CIBC World Markets. From the video:

“How much longer can the world pretend that it won’t soon
be facing another energy shock, one every bit as challenging as the one it faced two years ago? Whether we are talking about supply or demand, there is nothing on the horizon to prevent the imminent return of the very same oil prices that put us into the deepest postwar recession yet in the first place.”

• Subscribe to The Energy Bulletin. This is an excellent Energy Bulletin article by Chris Nelder: “Officials wake up to peak oil, part 2:”

“…Estimates on the timing of the peak have narrowed
dramatically, and now center on the 2012-2015 time frame. The range of estimates on the peak rate of production remain a bit broader and shrouded in caveats, but they are rapidly drawing closer to 90 mbpd. And the globally
averaged, post-peak annual decline rates are settling in around 2%.

In other words, industry and governments appear to be
coming around to what my call has been all along — 2012, at 90 mbpd or less, then declining at about 2.5% per year.

Now we know that the oil and gas industry, and the world’s
governments, are not only aware of the peak oil threat but they are deeply worried about it. Worried enough to huddle behind closed doors, away from the press. Worried enough to formulate plans to control price volatility. Worried enough to agitate for more transparent data. Worried enough to begin planning for a future of relentlessly declining energy.

But not worried enough to tell the American people the
truth—not just yet.”

One thought on “Staying Current On Peak Oil”

  1. Maybe the threat of peak oil will be a thing of the past, down the line. A lot of effort is going into magnetic drive motors. Google: Netherlands, magnetic motor, Turkish. Turkish inventor has given a sample motor to engineering college for inspection and development. Watch You Tube video. 250 watt motor just runs with power, then its pulled apart and left with school. I watched a video of this guy powering his house two yrs ago but thought it was a hoax. To turn this over to the world, without finical blackmail, this guy is a hero Aloha Gary

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