- Sep 16, 2010
- 6,654
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I didn't want this to get lost in the other thread about tangentially related matters, so I'm starting a new one.
To be blunt, global warming does not matter as far as energy policy goes, because whether or not CO2 emissions are a problem, we have to change anyway. It is getting so much harder to get cheap energy that we are desperate enough to drill underwater, break down shale, etc. Oil cost between 10 and 20 dollars per barrel for most of the 1980s and 1990s; now it's 50 and people think it's cheap? No it's not cheap, it's vastly more expensive, and even 50 won't last long as it's too low relative to the cost of producing the last (marginal) barrel of oil in global supply.
Therefore even if CO2 were not a problem at all, you STILL need to go to renewables because the world economy is way too dependent on fossil fuels, which do eventually get scarcer and scarcer as we're seeing before our eyes. If we wait till hydrocarbons are in such scarce supply that the price is untenable and destabilizes countries and so forth, that's just plain stupid; it's like waiting until the last second to write that final paper for a class--that you were given weeks to prepare for. The economy is crippled by that point and leaves even fewer resources to do the hard R&D work to transition away from hydrocarbons.
You get a 3-for-1 benefit from switching to renewables: lower energy prices so we don't spend so much money on freaking electricity bills and gasoline every week (hydrocarbons are heavily subsidized; see below), lower CO2 just in case it's a problem, and hurting people like Iran's leadership which sponsors terrorism worldwide. Most of the top oil producers are unfriendly regimes like Venezuela, Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia (in theory we're friends but in practice their subsidizing hardcore Islam has lead to much more conservatism in the Muslim world over the last several decades), etc.
Side note: even if we manage to switch to renewables faster than the slothlike pace we're on now (look at the % share of renewables globally or even nationally and it's still just a drop in the bucket compared to coal/oil/gas and that's been true despite all the news you hear about how we're allegedly switching to renewables that quickly... we're NOT!), the ultimate problem is overpopulation. But nobody wants to touch that politically so you have to attack it indirectly like promoting women's education in areas where women breed like rabbits. (More edu leads to lower birthrate.) A lot of those "breeder" countries are jihadi factories so the sooner we shut those down via education, the better. You get a 2-for-1 benefit from increasing female education in those countries: the actual benefit of education, plus the side benefit of breeding fewer jihadis. Do you guys realize that a global population growth rate of only 1% still means a DOUBLING of population every 72 years? We're currently at 1.14%?
"Climate change" or "global warming" shouldn't be the issue. The real issue is why we're so slow in switching to renewables and lowering population growth. If you don't give a shit about temperature rise--due to the overdue ice age or whatever--you should still support switching out of fossil fuels ANYWAY for the reasons stated above (and some others I won't get into here).
Addendum, for those who are naive enough to believe that "the market will sort it out":
1) Energy is far from a free market. For about 50 years from 1949 to ~2000, 94% of energy subsidies went to coal, oil, gas, and nuclear and to this day we still subsidize those industries to the tune of $billions of direct and implied subsidies (e.g., Price-Anderson Act).
Furthermore the negative externalities of things like acid rain, smog, and water pollution (not just fracking but also things like tailings) are not being accounted for with fossil fuels, though to be fair you should also do that with waste products from solar/wind turbine/etc. production.
The energy market is NOT a free market due to these distortions. Congress meddles with it at every turn, just like with agriculture and how heavily subsidized corn is once you factor everything such as water subsidies and the ridiculous ethanol mandate.
Furthermore, even if energy were perfectly free of distortions and market failures, the transition time can be painful and destabilizing to various countries. It would be preferable by many to have a smoother transition away from hydrocarbons than willingly plunge ourselves into boom-bust spikes/recessions.
2) The flipside of 1): Renewable energy costs are plummeting as technology keeps improving, whether in solar efficiency or battery storage tech. Also, a lot of the price of power is due to transport lines; with distributed generation you save a bundle on distro and transmission lines.
Look at Africa for instance. They aren't burdened by legacy costs of stringing wire. They don't have as much land-line phone service or electricity service because that's expensive and requires a lot of density. So what they've found is that in some parts of Africa it's more economic to simply use a solar panel and battery. Similarly, mobile phones are way popular there because it's cheaper to wire up transmission towers than each individual home.
3) Energy policy should not be short-sighted. As hydrocarbons become harder to extract, price WILL keep going up. A lot of numbers people throw around #s about how we have x number of years of coal/gas/oil at present rates of consumption, ignore how we are consuming such hydrocarbons at an increasing rate, and how the low-hanging fruit gets picked first. The cheap stuff gets used up first and as we get more desperate we reach for higher and higher fruit like arctic oil or deepwater oil. Same for gas, nobody was desperate enough to frack shale for gas on a large scale until 2004, and while you might hear talk of "cheap" gas, historically gas has been cheaper than it is today. Similarly, the high-grade, easy to reach coal got depleted first.
Long story short, hydrocarbon costs will rise more as more people (literally, more population) uses more energy per capita. Rather than wait till the last minute, we should be trying to get ahead of the curve.
To be blunt, global warming does not matter as far as energy policy goes, because whether or not CO2 emissions are a problem, we have to change anyway. It is getting so much harder to get cheap energy that we are desperate enough to drill underwater, break down shale, etc. Oil cost between 10 and 20 dollars per barrel for most of the 1980s and 1990s; now it's 50 and people think it's cheap? No it's not cheap, it's vastly more expensive, and even 50 won't last long as it's too low relative to the cost of producing the last (marginal) barrel of oil in global supply.
Therefore even if CO2 were not a problem at all, you STILL need to go to renewables because the world economy is way too dependent on fossil fuels, which do eventually get scarcer and scarcer as we're seeing before our eyes. If we wait till hydrocarbons are in such scarce supply that the price is untenable and destabilizes countries and so forth, that's just plain stupid; it's like waiting until the last second to write that final paper for a class--that you were given weeks to prepare for. The economy is crippled by that point and leaves even fewer resources to do the hard R&D work to transition away from hydrocarbons.
You get a 3-for-1 benefit from switching to renewables: lower energy prices so we don't spend so much money on freaking electricity bills and gasoline every week (hydrocarbons are heavily subsidized; see below), lower CO2 just in case it's a problem, and hurting people like Iran's leadership which sponsors terrorism worldwide. Most of the top oil producers are unfriendly regimes like Venezuela, Iran, Russia, Saudi Arabia (in theory we're friends but in practice their subsidizing hardcore Islam has lead to much more conservatism in the Muslim world over the last several decades), etc.
Side note: even if we manage to switch to renewables faster than the slothlike pace we're on now (look at the % share of renewables globally or even nationally and it's still just a drop in the bucket compared to coal/oil/gas and that's been true despite all the news you hear about how we're allegedly switching to renewables that quickly... we're NOT!), the ultimate problem is overpopulation. But nobody wants to touch that politically so you have to attack it indirectly like promoting women's education in areas where women breed like rabbits. (More edu leads to lower birthrate.) A lot of those "breeder" countries are jihadi factories so the sooner we shut those down via education, the better. You get a 2-for-1 benefit from increasing female education in those countries: the actual benefit of education, plus the side benefit of breeding fewer jihadis. Do you guys realize that a global population growth rate of only 1% still means a DOUBLING of population every 72 years? We're currently at 1.14%?
"Climate change" or "global warming" shouldn't be the issue. The real issue is why we're so slow in switching to renewables and lowering population growth. If you don't give a shit about temperature rise--due to the overdue ice age or whatever--you should still support switching out of fossil fuels ANYWAY for the reasons stated above (and some others I won't get into here).
Addendum, for those who are naive enough to believe that "the market will sort it out":
1) Energy is far from a free market. For about 50 years from 1949 to ~2000, 94% of energy subsidies went to coal, oil, gas, and nuclear and to this day we still subsidize those industries to the tune of $billions of direct and implied subsidies (e.g., Price-Anderson Act).
Furthermore the negative externalities of things like acid rain, smog, and water pollution (not just fracking but also things like tailings) are not being accounted for with fossil fuels, though to be fair you should also do that with waste products from solar/wind turbine/etc. production.
The energy market is NOT a free market due to these distortions. Congress meddles with it at every turn, just like with agriculture and how heavily subsidized corn is once you factor everything such as water subsidies and the ridiculous ethanol mandate.
Furthermore, even if energy were perfectly free of distortions and market failures, the transition time can be painful and destabilizing to various countries. It would be preferable by many to have a smoother transition away from hydrocarbons than willingly plunge ourselves into boom-bust spikes/recessions.
2) The flipside of 1): Renewable energy costs are plummeting as technology keeps improving, whether in solar efficiency or battery storage tech. Also, a lot of the price of power is due to transport lines; with distributed generation you save a bundle on distro and transmission lines.
Look at Africa for instance. They aren't burdened by legacy costs of stringing wire. They don't have as much land-line phone service or electricity service because that's expensive and requires a lot of density. So what they've found is that in some parts of Africa it's more economic to simply use a solar panel and battery. Similarly, mobile phones are way popular there because it's cheaper to wire up transmission towers than each individual home.
3) Energy policy should not be short-sighted. As hydrocarbons become harder to extract, price WILL keep going up. A lot of numbers people throw around #s about how we have x number of years of coal/gas/oil at present rates of consumption, ignore how we are consuming such hydrocarbons at an increasing rate, and how the low-hanging fruit gets picked first. The cheap stuff gets used up first and as we get more desperate we reach for higher and higher fruit like arctic oil or deepwater oil. Same for gas, nobody was desperate enough to frack shale for gas on a large scale until 2004, and while you might hear talk of "cheap" gas, historically gas has been cheaper than it is today. Similarly, the high-grade, easy to reach coal got depleted first.
Long story short, hydrocarbon costs will rise more as more people (literally, more population) uses more energy per capita. Rather than wait till the last minute, we should be trying to get ahead of the curve.
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