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March 4, 2008

Of oil & stones

From today's Wall Street Journal. We are no where near peak oil production nor some Malthusian catastrophe, but as Julian Simon showed us, rising prices will prompt technical innovation and we will most likely invest superior replacement technologies before we suffer mass shortages. This is of course one of the reasons Silicon Valley is investing heavy in alternative energy these days. The conclusion:

The world is not running out of oil anytime soon. A gradual transitioning on the global scale away from a fossil-based energy system may in fact happen during the 21st century. The root causes, however, will most likely have less to do with lack of supplies and far more with superior alternatives. The overused observation that "the Stone Age did not end due to a lack of stones" may in fact find its match.

The solutions to global energy needs require an intelligent integration of environmental, geopolitical and technical perspectives each with its own subsets of complexity. On one of these -- the oil supply component -- the news is positive. Sufficient liquid crude supplies do exist to sustain production rates at or near 100 million barrels per day almost to the end of this century.

Technology matters. The benefits of scientific advancement observable in the production of better mobile phones, TVs and life-extending pharmaceuticals will not, somehow, bypass the extraction of usable oil resources. To argue otherwise distracts from a focused debate on what the correct energy-policy priorities should be, both for the United States and the world community at large.

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This page contains a single entry by Chris published on March 4, 2008 7:17 AM.

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