Al Masetti;3077952:
These statements add up to what I said … that massive coercive governments carrying out these policies would be needed to achieve the dismal picture being painted.
Coercion is your idea, not mine; I find the idea abhorrent. What you haven’t understood is that if we are to avoid possible coercion in the future by tyrannical governments, we should start planning now, in the ways I have suggested. Noting that people who live far from public transportation will see the value of their houses drop relative to those who are served by public transit has nothing to do with suggesting building concentration camps along railway corridors (your bizarre interpretation).
To date you have not offered a single cogent reply to Doug50’s massive documentation of that fact that no one has come up with a magic bullet to find substitutes at scale for the thousand barrels of oil the world consumes every second. The argument of my research group is that if we wish to rescue the project of civilization for the long term - the next ten thousand years – we need to confront the fact that there is only about a century of uranium and a few centuries of coal. If you seriously believe the planet can support an indefinitely growing human population, it is incumbent upon you to demonstrate how that can be sustained in terms of energy consumption.
[drpmjhess, You have your posting and my posting all mushed together. Can you go back and redo your post … or something … or learn how to use the quote feature properly? ]
Sorry, I thought I had offered a single congent “plan” / reply for the future of energy / petroleum.
- Expand the use of nuclear power for electrical generation. Start by issuing each existing nuclear plant four new licenses. Expand our 20% of electricity generated by nukes to 80% (to match France).
- Remove all the political / permitting constraints on drilling in Alaska and off-shore, as well as the more subtle constraints imposed by the individual states (such as simply not issuing gas drilling permits).
- Reopen the coal deposits in the Western states that were closed at the request of the Riady family (because the coal competed with their coal mines / deposits in Indonesia).
- Remove the import tariff on imported ethanol.
All of these can be done with four strokes of the pen.
I can’t see ten thousand years into the future. And neither can anyone else. That would be twice the time horizon as looking back to the beginning of the Old Testament.
A hundred years ago, no one could have anticipated the use of jet airplanes, electronic computers, television, or miracle drugs.
Diseases that routinely took people a hundred years ago, are virtually unknown today.
Go back a hundred years and project to today … the internet.
Can’t do it.
Can’t project out into the future more than a year or two.
Technology is growing by leaps and bounds. New stuff coming out all the time.
[How to you propose to make all those changes in a short time without coercion?]