Peak Oil - How Will You Ride the Slide?

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We've already burned through almost half the world's supply of oil. How will we ride out the slide down the other side of Hubbert's Curve? For more information, go to: http://www.energychallenge.tv/

Channel: Film & Animation
Uploaded: November 17, 2007 at 9:41 pm
Author: Oilyboyd

Length: 0:01:56
Rating: 4.79
Views: 124,614

Tags: peak oil crisis animation

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Video Comments:
FutureCollapse (Wednesday 26th of November 2008 02:22:49 PM)
War. War never changes. Global thermonuclear war will settle scores regarding access to dwindling resources. A sort of mercy suicide.
nubtards (Tuesday 25th of November 2008 06:25:13 AM)
I doubt oil will peak in such a dramatic fashion. Generally speaking, production in oil fields follows a sort of plateau. Furthermore, there are untapped reserves of oil shale that could be developed in an economic fashion once the price of oil has made a comeback.
Oilyboyd (Tuesday 25th of November 2008 08:13:57 AM)
In general I'd agree with you, but do you really want to bet your future on it? Take a look at the decline of Cantarell (14-20%) or some of the North Sea fields (25-30%). The bell curve may not be a fit here. We're on that plateau now. At this point, it isn't a given that oil from shale can make up the difference; we need to be thinking about making adjustments. According to Hirsch in the DOE report, we needed to start planning 25 years ago, and the recently released IEA report confirms it.
Brlz4 (Monday 24th of November 2008 03:25:57 PM)
Great Cartoon
Key88Gun (Friday 21st of November 2008 02:18:44 PM)
Is there any evidence the oil comes from fossils? And what is that Russian drilling in 13 km have found oil. This deep is older than any dinosaur fossils. Sorry for my bad english.
Oilyboyd (Friday 21st of November 2008 04:33:42 PM)
There is overwhelming evidence that it comes from ancient sedimentary organic matter (algae and zooplankton, not dinosaurs.) Hydrocarbons such as methane have been detected elsewhere in the solar system, but if there is an abiotic process of oil genesis taking place somewhere deep within the planet (doubtful), it isn't happening fast enough to compensate for our steady depletion of known reserves.
FutureCollapse (Sunday 23rd of November 2008 11:48:33 AM)
Be more sorry for your failed reasoning. The earth is not a creamy nougat of petroleum. There is plenty of evidence that the vast majority of oil comes from fossils.
rayafelix (Thursday 20th of November 2008 03:49:51 PM)
Fantastic animation! well done
Oilyboyd (Thursday 20th of November 2008 02:02:29 PM)
No, I'm just trying to prepare in the ways available to me for what I view to be realistic difficulties for myself, my family, and my community. Even if I'm wrong in my assessment, I will simply have moved towards a more frugal lifestyle. These days, how is that a bad thing? My cartoon doesn't say: the end is near, prepare to meet your doom! It asks a question: given that the supply of oil will decline, how will you ride the slide? You're apparently okay with being a pawn. I'm not.
DaveJP1973 (Friday 21st of November 2008 03:21:14 PM)
Don't disagree with your living frugally theme, nowadays what choice does one have? You've been forcefed too much miserable propaganda though and believe it- the oilmen of this world want to convince you it's running out to keep the price artificially high for as long as possible.Which at present they aren't doing.. $100 a barrel down in 3 months - The oil industry is paranoid about being replaced & will do anything to scare people - There will be combustion engines in 100 years time believe me.