Rafy
Retired
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2004
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- 10,719
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- Female
- HSC
- 2005
- Uni Grad
- 2008
The latest 4 corners program explores the issue of peak oil and the consequenses of the decline in supply. The issue of Peak oil was also raised in a senate inquiry today.
Also:http://news.google.com.au/news?hl=en&ned=au&q=peak+oil&btnG=Search+News (A number of interesting recent articles on the matter)
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Have we reached peak oil production? Or can existing supplies still maintain our needs for many years to come?
Will higher prices ultimately force economies and societies to adjust to alternatives? Or is this a dangerously inadequate assumption?
Ultimately are we ready? There is no doubt oil will not last forever, but are we as a society that is so reliant on oil, preparing for the inevitable?
Your Thoughts?
Nobody knows exactly how much oil is left, or how long supplies can keep up with rising demand. Almost everyone now agrees that the era of cheap oil is over.
But most oil producers believe that they can meet world needs for decades to come. They say there is still plenty undiscovered oil, and new technologies will extent to life of existing fields, and higher prices will bring massive investment in alternative fuels.
But a growing body of analysts makes a grim prediction. Production is set to peak they say, before suddenly and dramatically falling behind demand causing prices to rocket, thrusting an unprepared world into economic turmoil and upending suburban lifestyles built around the private card.
Who is right? When will the crunch come, and can alternatives to conventional oil fill the gap?
- 4 Corners - Peak Oil? (Includes a stream of the entire program, extended interviews and other resources)
- Peak Oil? - Program Transcript
Also:http://news.google.com.au/news?hl=en&ned=au&q=peak+oil&btnG=Search+News (A number of interesting recent articles on the matter)
___
Have we reached peak oil production? Or can existing supplies still maintain our needs for many years to come?
Will higher prices ultimately force economies and societies to adjust to alternatives? Or is this a dangerously inadequate assumption?
Ultimately are we ready? There is no doubt oil will not last forever, but are we as a society that is so reliant on oil, preparing for the inevitable?
Your Thoughts?
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