New York, May 15: Famine, disease, economic collapse, despotism, and resource wars. Sounds horrific, but that's what's in store unless the world cuts back fast on its energy consumption, according to a new book.
In The Party's Over: Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies, author Richard Heinberg argues global oil output will peak in three to 12 years, and if an aggressive shift to include new energy sources, like wind, solar or fuel cells in the mix doesn't happen by then, grim consequences will result.
It's no surprise the United States, which consumes a quarter of the world's oil and imports more than half of the 20 million barrels of oil it now uses every day, is at the top of Heinberg's list of offending countries. But the author stresses high growth rates in oil-thirsty countries like China or India heighten the chances of calamity by increasing competition among nations for oil and therefore requiring the shift to alternatives to be even more decisive.
"The party, which is the past 200 years of fossil fuels use, is coming to an end, and we have the choice as to how to bring that party to an end," Heinberg told the media. "Either we do it voluntarily or it will be thrust upon us."
While Heinberg has his share of detractors, even among those who agree that the world may well face some sort of crisis when oil production begins to tail off for good, his worst-case scenario is certainly attention-grabbing.
He predicts a less global world where cities shrink into towns as people move closer to food and water supplies, where currencies will be local, electrical power delivered by cooperatives and bicycles and walking widespread once again.
"We are going to have to run the movie of globalisation in reverse," said Heinberg, an ecology professor at the New College of California, in Santa Rosa north of San Francisco.

In his book, Heinberg quotes Colin Campbell – a geologist and author known for his forecasts that world oil production is likely to peak within a decade – to help make the case that time is of the essence to avoid disaster.

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But Campbell's claim that: "We now find one barrel of oil for every four we consume," is dismissed by people like Minsk as scare mongering.

Heinberg's detractors acknowledge that oil will obviously run out one day, but generally say that if oil prices rise as supplies begin to tighten, market forces will kick in to avert a global disaster.

"Since the 1950s people have been predicting that oil production will peak 10 years later, and we are now in the 2000's and people are still predicting that production will peak in a decade," Minsk said.

Minsk said higher oil prices might hurt the economy in the near term, but would also increase the economic incentive to explore and develop oil and alternative energy sources that may have previously been too expensive to develop before.

Oil prices reached US $40 a barrel this year in the weeks before US-led forces attacked oil-rich Iraq on fears that widespread destruction of oil fields there could shock the world economy. Prices have since settled back to around US$26.

Heinberg considers the latest conflict in Iraq not as an attempt to get rid of weapons of mass destruction but as a way for the United States to secure oil supplies. The invasion was, in his view, an early sign of the resource wars of the future he predicts if alternatives to oil are not quickly pursued.

He also says that in the absence of massive investments in alternative energy – that is in the billions of dollars rather than the millions proposed by U.S. President George W. Bush in his latest budget – relying on price spikes as an early indicator of supply problems is pretty much useless.

That's because the next big supply crisis is likely to signal the beginning of the end of the petroleum era and thus the beginning of chaos – first in the developing world but also, eventually, in the industrialised world as well.

"We really need to wake up. It is the greatest challenge that we have faced in the last 200 years," Heinberg said.
Bureau Report