WHERE’S OUR OIL PRICE COLLAPSE?

Make no mistake about it, without plentiful, cheap, and easy to access oil, the United States of America would descend into chaos and collapse. The fantasies painted by “green” energy dreamers only serve to divert the attention of the non critical thinking masses from the fact our sprawling suburban hyper technological society would come to a grinding halt in a matter of days without the 18 to 19 million barrels per day needed to run this ridiculous reality show. Delusional Americans think the steaks, hot dogs and pomegranates in their grocery stores magically appear on the shelves, the thirty electronic gadgets that rule their lives are created out of thin air by elves and the gasoline they pump into their mammoth SUVs is their God given right. The situation was already critical in 2005 when the Hirsch Report concluded:

“The peaking of world oil production presents the U.S. and the world with an unprecedented risk management problem. As peaking is approached, liquid fuel prices and price volatility will increase dramatically, and, without timely mitigation, the economic, social, and political costs will be unprecedented. Viable mitigation options exist on both the supply and demand sides, but to have substantial impact, they must be initiated more than a decade in advance of peaking.”

In the six years since this report there has been unprecedented oil price volatility as the world has reached the undulating plateau of peak cheap oil. The viable mitigation options on the demand and supply side were not pursued. The head in the sand hope for the best option was chosen. The government mandated options, ethanol and solar, have been absolute and utter disasters as billions of taxpayer dollars have been squandered and company after company goes bankrupt. The added benefit has been sky high corn prices, dwindling supplies and revolutions around the world due to soaring food prices. The last time the country went into recession in 2008, the price of oil plunged from $140 a barrel to $30 a barrel in the space of six months. I’d classify that as volatility. We’ve clearly entered a second recession in the last six months. So we should be getting the benefit of collapsing oil prices.

But, a funny thing happened on the way to another oil price collapse. It didn’t happen. WTI Crude is trading for $87 a barrel, up 23% since January 1. Unleaded gas prices are up 54% in the last year and 43% since January 1. Worldwide oil pricing is not based on WTI crude but Brent crude, selling for $113 per barrel, only down 10% from its April high of $125. The U.S. and Europe consume 40% of all the oil in the world on a daily basis. Multiple European countries have been in recession for the last nine months. The U.S. economy has been in free fall for six months.

Some short term factors will continue to support higher oil prices.  The Chinese continue to fill their strategic petroleum reserve, Japan is still relying on diesel generators for electricity post-tsunami, and the Middle East is developing a love affair with the air conditioner. But, it’s the long term factors that will lead to much higher oil prices for myopic oblivious Americans.

U.S. GDP 2011 Q2 update 2009-2011 US GDP second Q2011 (percent) July 2011

John Hussman describes the situation on the ground today based upon six economic conditions presently in effect:

There are certainly a great number of opinions about the prospect of recession, but the evidence we observe at present has 100% sensitivity (these conditions have always been observed during or just prior to each U.S. recession) and 100% specificity (the only time we observe the full set of these conditions is during or just prior to U.S. recessions).

With 40% of the world in or near recession, how come oil prices are still so high and much higher than last year, when the economies in Europe and the U.S. were expanding? The number of vehicle miles driven in the U.S. is still below the level reached 43 months ago and at the same level as early 2005. The price of a barrel of oil in early 2005 was $42. The U.S. is using the same amount of oil, but the price is up 112%. It seems the U.S. isn’t calling the shots when it comes to the worldwide supply/demand equation.

It would probably be a surprise to most people that U.S. oil consumption today is at the same level it was in 1997 and is 10% lower than the peak reached in 2005. This is not a reflection of increased efficiency or Americans gravitating towards smaller vehicles with better mileage. Americans are still addicted to their SUVs and gas guzzling luxury automobiles. It’s a reflection of a U.S. economy that has been in a downward spiral since 2005.

1996 18,476.15 3.89 %
1997 18,774.07 1.61 %
1998 18,946.01 0.92 %
1999 19,603.83 3.47 %
2000 19,717.92 0.58 %
2001 19,772.60 0.28 %
2002 19,834.31 0.31 %
2003 20,144.82 1.57 %
2004 20,833.01 3.42 %
2005 20,924.36 0.44 %
2006 20,803.93 -0.58 %
2007 20,818.37 0.07 %
2008 19,563.33 -6.03 %
2009 18,810.01 -3.85 %

If the U.S. isn’t driving oil demand in the world, then why are prices going up? There are three main factors:

  1. Dramatic increase in demand from China and other developing countries.
  2. A plunging U.S. Dollar
  3. Peak oil has arrived

Surging Developing World Demand

The Energy Information Administration issued their latest forecast and it does not bode well for lower prices:

Despite continued concerns over the pace of the global economic recovery, particularly in developed countries, the US Energy Information Administration expects worldwide oil consumption to increase this year and next spurred by demand in developing countries. US oil consumption, however, is forecast to contract from a year ago. Worldwide oil demand, led by China, will increase by 1.4 million b/d in 2011 to average 88.19 million b/d and by 1.6 million b/d in 2012, outpacing average global demand growth of 1.3 million b/d from 1998-2007, before the onset of the global economic downturn.

China is now consuming over 9 million barrels per day. This is up from an average of 7 million barrels per day in 2006. Platts, a global energy analyst, put China’s 2010 figures at 8.5 million barrels per day, up 11.43% from the previous year. The forecast for China’s crude throughput in 2011 is an average of 9.24 million barrels per day up 8.5% from 2010. In the first seven months of this year, total crude throughput stood at average of 8.95 million barrels per day.

Standard Chartered Bank predicts that, by the year 2020, China will overtake all of Europe as the second largest consumer of oil in the world, and should catch up to the U.S. by the year 2030 as China’s demand continues to rise while U.S. demand is expected to be flat. Chinese crude imports grew 17.5% in 2010 to 4.79 million barrels per day. China is importing 55% of its oil today versus 40% in 2004.

China’s oil consumption per capita has increased over 350% since the early 1980s to an estimated 2.7 barrels per year in 2011. Consumption per capita has risen nearly 100% in just the past decade. Oil consumption per capita in the U.S. currently ranks among the top industrialized nations in the world at 25 barrels per year. However, today’s consumption levels are approximately 20% lower than they were in 1979. The chart below paints a picture of woe for the United States and the world. China overtook the United States in auto sales in 2009. They now sell approximately 15 million new vehicles per year. India sells approximately 2 million new vehicles per year. The U.S. sells just over 12 million new vehicles per year. In China and India there are approximately 6 car owners per 100 people. In the U.S. there are 85 car owners per 100 people.

They call China, India and the rest of the developing world – Developing – because they will be rapidly expanding their consumption of goods, services and food. There will certainly be bumps along the way, as China is experiencing now, but the consumption of oil by the developing world will plow relentlessly higher. China isn’t the only emerging country to show big increases in per capita consumption. The growth in consumption for several other countries far outpaces China. Consumption per capita in Malaysia has nearly quadrupled since the mid-1960s. Consumption in Thailand and Brazil has more than doubled to roughly 5.7 barrels and 4.8 barrels per year, respectively.

Developed countries, especially those in Western Europe, have experienced substantial declines in oil consumption. Today’s per capita consumption in Sweden is roughly 12 barrels per year, down from 25 barrels per year in the mid-1970s.  France, Japan, Norway and U.K. all use less oil on a per capita basis than they did in the 1970s. These countries have been able to drive down the consumption of oil by taxing gasoline at an excessive level.

Americans pay 43 cents in taxes out of the $3.70 they pay at the pump for a gallon of gasoline. A driver in the UK is paying $4 per gallon in taxes out of the $9 per gallon cost. Gasoline costs between $8 and $9 per gallon across Europe today. The extreme level of gas taxes certainly reduces car sizes, consumption and traffic. Too bad the mad socialists across Europe spent the taxes on expanding their welfare states and promising even more to their populations. Maybe a $6 per gallon tax will do the trick. Forcing Americans to drive less by doubling the gas tax is a quaint idea, but it is too late in the game. Europe is still made up of small towns and cities with the populations still fairly consolidated. Biking, walking and small rail travel is easy and feasible. The sprawling suburban enclaves that proliferate across the American countryside, dotted by thousands of malls and McMansion communities, accessible only by automobiles, make it impossible to implement a rational energy efficient model for moving forward. We cannot reverse 60 years of irrationality. Even without higher gas taxes, the price of gasoline will move relentlessly higher due to the stealth tax of currency debasement.

A Plunging US Dollar

The US dollar has fallen 15% versus a basket of worldwide currencies (DXY) since February 2009. This is amazing considering that 57% of the index weighting is the Euro. If you haven’t noticed, Europe is a basket case on the verge of economic disintegration. The US imports a net 9.4 million barrels of oil per day, or 49% of our daily consumption. Our largest suppliers are:

  1. Canada – 2.6 million barrels per day
  2. Mexico – 1.3 million barrels per day
  3. Saudi Arabia – 1.1 million barrels per day
  4. Nigeria – 1.0 million barrels per day
  5. Venezuela – 1.0 million barrels per day
  6. Russia – 600,000 barrels per day
  7. Algeria – 500,000 barrels per day
  8. Iraq – 400,000 barrels per day

These eight countries account for over 70% of our daily oil imports. You hear the “experts” on CNBC declare that our oil supply situation is secure because close to 60% of our daily usage is sourced from North America. The presumption is that Canada and Mexico are somehow under our control. There is one problem with this storyline. US oil production peaked in 1971 and relentlessly declines as M. King Hubbert predicted it would. Mexico will cease to be a supplier to the U.S. by 2015 as their Cantarell oil field is in collapse. Most of the oil supplied from Canada is from their tar sands. Expansion of these fields is difficult as it takes tremendous amounts of natural gas and water to extract the oil.

The rest of the countries on the list dislike us, hate us, or are in constant danger of implosion. When the Neo-Cons on Fox News try to convince you that Iraq has been a huge success and certainly worth the $3 trillion of national wealth expended, along with 4,500 dead and 32,000 wounded soldiers, you might want to keep in mind that Iraq was exporting 795,000 barrels of oil per day to the U.S. in 2001 when the evil dictator was in charge. Today, we are getting 415,000 barrels per day. Dick Cheney was never good at long term strategic planning.

We better plant more corn, as our supply situation is far from stable. Maybe we can install solar panels from Obama’s Solyndra factory on the roofs of the 65 Chevy Volts that were sold in the U.S. this year, to alleviate our oil supply problem. The reliability and stability of our oil supply takes second place to the price increases caused by Ben Bernanke and his printing press. The average American housewife driving her 1.5 children in her enormous two and a half ton Chevy Tahoe or gigantic Toyota Sequoia two miles to baseball practice doesn’t comprehend why it is costing her $100 to fill the 26 gallon tank. If she listens to the brain dead mainstream media pundits, she’ll conclude that Big Oil is to blame. The real reason is Big Finance in conspiracy with Big Government.

Ben Bernanke is responsible for Americans paying $4 a gallon for gasoline. Zero interest rates, printing money out of thin air to buy $2 trillion of mortgage and Treasury bonds, and propping up insolvent criminal banks across the globe have one purpose – to deflate the value of the U.S. dollar. The rulers of the American Empire realize they can never repay the debts they have accumulated. They have chosen to default through debasement. It’s an insidious and immoral method of defaulting on your obligations. Let’s look at from the perspective of our two biggest oil suppliers.

A barrel of oil cost $40 a barrel in early 2009. The U.S. dollar has declined 30% versus the Canadian dollar since early 2009. The U.S. dollar has shockingly declined 20% versus the Mexican Peso since early 2009. How could the mighty USD decline 20% against the currency of a 3rd world country on the verge of being a failed state? Ask Ben Bernanke. Our lenders can’t do much about the continuing debasement of our currency, but our oil suppliers can. They will raise the price of oil in proportion to our currency devaluation. Since Bernanke’s only solution is continuous debasement, the price of oil will relentlessly rise.

Peak Oil Has Arrived

“By 2012, surplus oil production capacity could entirely disappear, and as early as 2015, the shortfall in output could reach nearly 10 MBD. At present, investment in oil production is only beginning to pick up, with the result that production could reach a prolonged plateau. By 2030, the world will require production of 118 MBD, but energy producers may only be producing 100 MBD unless there are major changes in current investment and drilling capacity.” – 2010 Joint Operating Environment Report

We’ve arrived at the point where demand has begun to outpace supply and even the onset of another worldwide recession will not assuage this fact. World oil supply has peaked just below 89 million barrels per day. Supply has since fallen to 87.5 million barrels per day, as Libyan supply was completely removed from world markets. The International Energy Agency is already forecasting worldwide demand to reach 90 million barrels per day in the second half of 2011 and reach 92 million barrels per day in 2012. The IEA warns that “just at the time when demand is expected to recover, physical limits on production capacity could lead to another wave of price increases, in a cyclical pattern that is not new to the world oil market.”

project global oil production through 2100

The world is trapped in an inescapable conundrum. As supply dwindles, prices increase, causing global economies to contract, and temporarily causing a drop in prices, except the lows are higher each time. The drill, drill, drill ideologues do nothing but confuse and mislead the easily led masses. We have 2% of the world’s oil reserves and consume more than 20% of the daily output. We consume 7 billion barrels of oil per year.

Drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska and areas formerly off limits in the Outer Continental Shelf will not close the supply gap. The amount of recoverable oil in the Arctic coastal plain is estimated to be between 5.7 billion and 16 billion barrels. This could supply as little as a year’s worth of oil. And it will take 10 years to produce any oil from this supply. The OCS has only slightly more recoverable oil at an estimated 18 billion barrels and the BP Gulf Oil disaster showed how easy this oil is to access safely. The new over hyped energy savior is shale gas. The cheerleaders in the natural gas industry claim that we have four Saudi Arabias worth of natural gas in the U.S. This is nothing but PR talking points to convince the masses that we can easily adapt. The amount of shale gas that can be economically produced is far less than the amounts being touted by the industry. The wells deplete rapidly and the environmental damage has been well documented. And last but certainly not least, we have the abiotic oil believers that convince themselves the wells will refill despite the fact that there is not one instance of an oil well refilling once it is depleted.

I wrote an article called Peak Denial About Peak Oil exactly one year ago when gas was selling for $2.60 a gallon. I railed at the short sightedness of politicians and citizens alike for ignoring a calamitous crisis that was directly before their eyes. Just like our accumulation of $4 billion per day in debt, peak oil is simply a matter of math. We cannot take on ever increasing amounts of debt in order to live above our means without collapsing our economic system. We cannot expect to run our energy intensive world with a depleting energy source. There is no amount of spin and PR that can change the math. Un-payable levels of debt and dwindling supplies of oil will merge into a perfect storm over the next ten years to permanently change our world. The change will be traumatic, horrible, bloody and a complete surprise to the non-critical thinking public.

“In the longer run, unless we take serious steps to prepare for the day that we can no longer increase production of conventional oil, we are faced with the possibility of a major economic shock—and the political unrest that would ensue.”Dr. James Schlesinger – former US Energy Secretary, 16th November 2005

We were warned. We failed to heed the warnings. If we had begun making the dramatic changes to our society 5 to 10 years ago, we may have been able to partially alleviate the pain and suffering ahead. Instead we spent our national treasure fighting Wars on Terror and bailing out criminal bankers. Converting truck and bus fleets to natural gas; expanding the use of safe nuclear power; utilizing wind, geothermal, and solar where economically feasible; buying more fuel efficient vehicles; and creating more localized communities supported by light rail with easy access to bike and walking options, would have allowed a more gradual shift to a less energy intensive society.

We’ve done nothing to prepare for the onset of peak oil. Until this foreseeable crisis hits with its full force like a Category 5 hurricane, Americans will continue to fill up their M1 tank sized, leased SUVs, tweet about Lady Gaga’s latest stunt, and tune in to this week’s episode of Jersey Shore. Meanwhile, economic stagnation, catastrophe and wars for oil are darkening the skies on our horizon.

 

“Dependence on imported oil, particularly from the Middle East, has become the elephant in the foreign policy living room, an overriding strategic consideration composed of a multitude of issues. …. Taken in whole, the National Energy Policy does not offer a compelling solution to the growing danger of foreign oil dependence.  …  Future military efforts to secure the oil supply pose tremendous challenges due to the number of potential crisis areas.  …..  Economic stagnation or catastrophe lurk close at hand, to be triggered by another embargo, collapse of the Saudi monarchy, or civil disorder in any of a dozen nations.”–  America’s Strategic Imperative A “Manhattan Project” for Energy

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188 Comments
Steve Hogan
Steve Hogan
September 4, 2011 1:17 pm

Fear not, for our Dear Overlord, Barack Obama the Magnificent will be our savior. As soon as he creates all these wonderful jobs he’s been promising for 2.5 years, he’ll turn his attention to the energy thing like a laser beam. Have you no faith?

Old Buck
Old Buck
September 4, 2011 1:19 pm

long lines at gas stations. even or odd day to fill up. nice future

paul
paul
September 4, 2011 1:21 pm

Unfortunately we are in for it no matter what we do. Oil to heat a home has risen so fast and so high that we are seeing people who paid 2k last year starting to get quotes for fixed prices well over 3k. Not sure why so many seem to “hope” prices come back down when they can control prices themselves — well at least our members.

Hope@ZeroKelvin
Hope@ZeroKelvin
September 4, 2011 1:23 pm

There is simply no way around the reality of Peak Oil, none. Just as there is no way around the mathematical certainty of a US sovereign debt default or economic crash, none.

Numbers do not lie, they are the ultimate truth. Oh, they can be massaged, spun, corrupted, politicized, and they are, they are, my friends. But pretty soon the cold hard equations will be stomping the crap out of the unicorn farting lollipop fantasies that pass for analysis by our elites.

Yet we are a nation led by Poli Sci majors whose degree plans have the same math requirements as for football players. We are a nation where cash registers not only compute the change but use icons for the selections so you don’t even need to fucking read – yet the morons behind the counter still screw up your order and your change. We are a people that have sold our liberty, our dignity , our very souls, for empty promises of “safety” and worthless gimcrackery from China.

Oh yeah, a Smack Down of Cosmic Proportions is coming, my friends, and soon.

Peak Oil? Yeah, it’s a reality, but since we’re living in land of the willfully deluded and led by the hopelesly corrupted and inept moronic, well, mebbe PO will not be the worst of our problems.

Powerhourcoug
Powerhourcoug
September 4, 2011 1:45 pm

Outstanding read.

I’ve been lurking on this blog for about 6 months now, and sharing articles on my FB for a bit as well.

Whenever I bring up these topics people’s eyes tend to glaze over until we return to horrendously superficial discussions about Snooki and SportsCenter. Even my girlfriend is a hopeless optimist. She’ll come around eventually.

At any rate, I’ll keep doing my best to get ready for the coming shitstorm. Could be next week, could be next month, could be next decade. No one really knows. But it is coming, guaranteed, and this craven new world will not look kindly on the bloated, self absorbed breed we’ve come to embrace breeding into our society.

We will need critical thinkers, warriors, and most importantly patriots. Hopefully enough will rise to the occasion.

babystrangeloop
babystrangeloop
September 4, 2011 2:06 pm

“Standard Chartered Bank predicts that, by the year 2020, China will overtake all of Europe as the second largest consumer of oil in the world, and should catch up to the U.S. by the year 2030 as China’s demand continues to rise while U.S.” — SAY WHAT?!?

By 2030 there will be not enough producible oil to be worth mentioning.

2030 is the Optimists’ idea of when Peak Oil will hit. Only a sufferer of Panglosian Disorder would talk about which nation will be consuming the most oil in 2030.

Dave Doe
Dave Doe
September 4, 2011 2:16 pm

When the SHTF, it will come down to the law of the jungle and who can use force to guarantee access to oil. That would be us – for now.

Colma Rising
Colma Rising
September 4, 2011 2:31 pm

The Spice MUST flow.

The Watchdog
The Watchdog
September 4, 2011 2:52 pm

Enjoy the oil orgy while it lasts and prepare for your personal post-carbon world. It’s the only rational response.

ecliptix543
ecliptix543
September 4, 2011 3:11 pm

He who controls the Spice, controls the Universe! I’m with Muad’dib. Stop the flow and make the Emperor come down here personally to deal with us.

Stan
Stan
September 4, 2011 3:23 pm

Late 2011 will be a very interesting time in history.

For you fucking liberal democrats who always and forevermore play the race card, Read this:

http://econfaculty.gmu.edu/wew/articles/11/RaceAndEconomics

When black people finally wake up and see how the democrats have used them all these years for their votes, they will loot and rape and murder every democrat they know.

Democrat playbook: 1st, you make a minority dependent on you. 2nd, you do shit to make them think you love them, ie foodstamps, section 8, quotas, ect. Then you forget about them and they vote 95% for you forever.

Oh I can’t wait till this crap stops. It will too. You all know about the dreaded “N” word that no white person must ever say. Oh how evil that word is. So evil that black people call each other that all the time. Well, that dreaded “N” word is about to become the most quoted word on earth.

Why? One reason. Barack Hussein Obama. Get ready folks. When the son of a bitch gets re- elected in 2012, he will have 4 more years unabated to finish us off, which has been his goal all his sorry fucking life.

To all you guys who voted for this sorry piece of shit: FUCK YOU!! And yo mama. and yo sister and your fucking grannie.

Punk in Drublic
Punk in Drublic
September 4, 2011 3:35 pm

“The U.S. dollar has shockingly declined 20% versus the Mexican Peso since early 2009. How could the mighty USD decline 20% against the currency of a 3rd world country on the verge of being a failed state?”

Here is another question.
How many Americans know this little snippet of information?

Damn few. All the average bloke knows is higher prices at the pump. All the average bloke can do is piss and moan and write to their congressmen.

Dear Congress,

Those bastard oil companies keep raising the prices. Those bastard wall street speculators keep driving up prices. Yesterday I had to choose between filling my tank and picking up a case of Budweiser. There ought to be a goddamn law against that.

Sincerely,
John doe the dipshit

platoplubius
platoplubius
September 4, 2011 3:41 pm

@ Stan

reminds me of this clip from the movie “Bulworth”….I have shown it on here before…but I can’t help myself.
this is the only link I could find to the clip…Please don’t let the fact that you have to enter your date of birth prior to viewing the clip to discourage you from doing so. It is a classic.
http://www.movieweb.com/movie/bulworth/HUJkCNLRUZhPOM

For those who don’t want to take the time to watch the clip above, here is some of the text from the speech.

Angry black woman: Are you sayin’ the Democratic Party don’t care about the African-American community?

Bullworth: Isn’t that OBVIOUS? You got half your kids are out of work and the other half are in jail. Do you see ANY Democrat doing anything about it? Certainly not me! So what’re you gonna do, vote Republican? Come on! Come on, you’re not gonna vote Republican! Let’s call a spade a spade!
[Loud, angry booing]
Bullworth: I mean – come on! You can have a Billion Man March! If you don’t put down that malt liquor and chicken wings, and get behind someone other than a running back who stabs his wife, you’re NEVER gonna get rid of somebody like me!

Thunderbird
Thunderbird
September 4, 2011 3:56 pm

I think it is time to look at the positive side of peak oil and peak fiat money. Americans have had so much discretionary money to spend over the years our houses are stuffed with junk made in China and each family has two or more cars in the garage.

Remember the offical unemployment rate (U6) is 16% while the employment rate is 84%, so we are still well off. So there is still lots of money pouring into the government purse in taxes and unmentioned royalties from oil & mineral leases.

It is the cost of maintaining our overseas wars and military bases that is draining us; not entitlements, unempoyment insurance, food stamps, and social security. The addition of Homeland Security and TSA is another drain on the purse.

The cost of oil is up for more reasons than peak oil. How about the declining purchasing power of the dollar. The use of oil is also higher than normal because of military use. Wonder why jet fuel is so high? Look no farther than the military. Why can’t we include all the factors that drive up prices; like the cost of maintaining the military.

This country had the greatest commercial boom ever after WW2 for one reason; people sacrificed purchasing durable goods because the war effort needed everything, and while this was going on people were saving their money. At the end of the war when military support was no longer needed the people had the money to purchase durable goods. If we were doing this now to support the wars we are presently in, we would be in great shape. The people did not sacrifice so we are now reaping what we have sowed.

Today people have lost their memory of what it takes to support war. They think the country can fight all the wars it wants using up precious resources like oil, and at the same time they can have all the durable goods and crap they want. Not so and the reality is fast catching up with us.

So when the financial crash comes it will knock economic reality into the people. This includes the rich ones that will also be eating in the soup lines. We have done it to ourselves.

Peak oil? What is this really supposed to mean? The government and talking heads have been talking about getting off of foreign oil dependance since the 70s. It is pure BS and we won’t do anything about it until the oil is used up. So the sooner we use it up the better.

We are going to have an oil price collapse along with the collapse of the global market. The elite have shot their wad. We should be glad to see what is coming. No rioting will happen except for isolated black getto areas. This is America. The American people have been through many boom & bust periods throughtout our history. We will pick up and start over; this time without the elites controlling everything through their banks.

America has always been a “can do” society. It is the people that “can do,” not the educated idiots now running all the top political offices in this country. Just look how recently they screwed up focusing on hurricane Irene and the coastal areas; when they should have been focusing on the huge storm system it brought with heavy rain on an already water saturated Northeast. They forcefully evacuated 350,000 people from the safe coastal areas into the upper land mass and many of the people got trapped in the flooding. Is that intelligent critical thinking when all the information was in front of them? The FEMA trailers should heve been repositioned into the town centers. The storm system was as big as Europe with heavy rain forecast; what were they thinking? Duh.

We should all be happy this farce of a political & financial system is apparently coming to an end. Instead of focusing on the negative think about the positive things that will develop for a change.

Smokey
Smokey
September 4, 2011 3:57 pm

Excellent article.

It would behoove each of you to reread and then read again the first two paragraphs of the Hope@ZeroKelvin post earlier in this thread.

There is enormous wisdom in those words.

platoplubius
platoplubius
September 4, 2011 4:00 pm

Great points Thunderbird! and I am happy this farce of a political and financial system is coming to an end.

I have just one quivel….the “official unemployment rate”….although what you quote is accurate the unemployment rate is much higher…I’m sure you know this being a TBP regular…

Steve Hogan
Steve Hogan
September 4, 2011 4:06 pm

“It is the cost of maintaining our overseas wars and military bases that is draining us; not entitlements, unempoyment insurance, food stamps, and social security.” -Thunderbird

Tbird, to state that entitlements are not draining us financially is extreme ignorance. While we definitely need to end the wars, the empire, close the bases, and bring the troops home, even if you zeroed out the Pentagon budget, we’d still be running deficits.

SS has $15T in unfunded liabilities. Medicare Part D is now over $20T in the red…and it’s only 7 years old! Throw in Medicare Part B at a mere $80T and you have yourself $115T that cannot and will not be paid.

The Free Shit Army is not just couch potatoes collecting 99 weeks of unemployment or lazy bastards using SNAP cards to buy booze and cigarettes. The free pills, the zillion dollar medical care system, school subsidies…all of it desperately needs to be phased out. All of it.

Major Kong
Major Kong
September 4, 2011 5:09 pm

Anyone ever seen that documentary, Collapse, with Michael Ruppert in it? He had an interesting theory that as the availability of oil decreases, so will the world population. Just curious about opinions…

ron
ron
September 4, 2011 5:13 pm

Its about controlling people.When i was in Holland in 1989 i watched a program about the keyoto? climate treaty.The speaker talked about how they had to make the USA raise its prices to like 8 or 9 dollars a gallon so americans wouldnt drive as much and their would be less carbon released.All i keep hearing about is new fields discovered and places that have oil but we cant drill there.So this peak oil stuff is malarky(sorry about the rough language)I like natural gas and think the country needs to develope filling stations for it and push it.I use synthetic oil and change it twice a year.Make trucks commercial vehicles so people want to drive cars and save a lot of oil,pickup trucks are horrible as a commuter vehicle.

Stucky
Stucky
September 4, 2011 5:27 pm

Two words. Abiotic oil.

Two more words: Problem solved.

Two final words. Chill out!!!

Stucky
Stucky
September 4, 2011 5:29 pm

Two words for Smokey: Eat shit.

(That’s called a pre-emptive strike.)

Smokey
Smokey
September 4, 2011 5:30 pm

ron,

How do you keep from drowning when you take a shower?

Smokey
Smokey
September 4, 2011 5:32 pm

Stuckey,

I should have known you’d buy into abiotic oil.

Who ties your shoes in the morning?

Smokey
Smokey
September 4, 2011 5:34 pm

Stuck,

Keep believing that the supply of oil is infinite.

DavosSherman
DavosSherman
September 4, 2011 5:34 pm

To see how this will play out, all you have to do is overlay this chart on the production capacity of 87 million barrels a day.

Either we BK them or they BK us or it’ll be the 4th turning, a nuclear effing Holocaust.

If we BK them we are effed since we don’t manufacture anything.

I want an island.

[imgcomment image[/img]

Thunderbird
Thunderbird
September 4, 2011 5:36 pm

Steve Hogan says: “Tbird, to state that entitlements are not draining us financially is extreme ignorance.”

I won’t dispute you on that point; but that is not my point. My point is the government at all levels has caused this situation by their over-regulation of the economy and allowing the corporations to outsource most of our manufacturing jobs to low wage paying third world countries. They also used high tech means to eliminate many more jobs along with acquisitions of smaller manufacturers. Because of this unbalance many low educated workers lost their jobs. Bring back manufacturing jobs would put these people back to work and eliminate many of the entitlements (you list) presently being paid out because of this unbalance. Many people are taking advantage because they have no other choice.

You just can’t make people go away when you take their jobs away. One of the functions of the federal reserve banks is to make sure money is available to sustain full employment. But the people that have been running this government system did not follow this policy. If they had we would not see our jobs outsourced to other countries and the corporations allowed to grow into monopolies where their is no price and wage competition.

But who votes for the politicians? Look to where the entitlements are going and you will see where the votes are coming from. How do you reduce the entitlement payouts? Increase employment. How do you increase employment? Bust up the monopoly corporations in this country, greatly reduce the regulations on private business, get the states and local governments out of the worker licensing & certification business, and licensing of small business. Get rid of mandatory liability insurance for small business and increase income for 1099s on labor to at least 10K dollars. And get rid of the monopoly insurance many states run on workman’s comp insurance that charges up the gazoo rates on workers in small business.

I have not seen one instance where State and local governments are doing anything for the small business. The Federal government talks but they can’t do anything other than dance their tune. Government Statutes from the top down have to be eliminated. I know many people who could and would start a small business if they did not have to pay the upfront cost the government requires for business licence, insurance, compliance cost to comply with arbitrary local codes, and the paperwork to hire labor. In this environment of contracting business the cost is too high. Want to know why the economy is failing? Look no farther than government; at all levels. You want a civil war? Cut off all these entitlements you are complaining about without at the same time getting the government off the back of business minded people and you will see one. Yes, the sooner it all fails the better off we will be. I don’t want to see a civil war. I want the government out of everybodies business.

Smokey
Smokey
September 4, 2011 5:47 pm

“Two more words: Problem solved.”

To you it probably is.

llpoh
llpoh
September 4, 2011 5:58 pm

Sarcasm alert! But Smokey knows that. Stuck, quit stirring shit.

Smokey
Smokey
September 4, 2011 6:28 pm

llpoh,

I think he was serious.

ecliptix543
ecliptix543
September 4, 2011 6:39 pm

I think you’re both full of shit.

llpoh
llpoh
September 4, 2011 6:40 pm

Stuck – please confirm whether you are dumber than a fucking rock or whether you were stirring shit. Seems voters are split. That dumb as rock is getting support should concern you some. .

Smokey
Smokey
September 4, 2011 6:49 pm

ecliptix543,

Don’t press your luck.

I have gone out of my way, since my return, to not deliver you forthwith a well deserved trouncing, of Bradley Manning- worthy proportions.

llpoh
llpoh
September 4, 2011 6:50 pm

ecliptix joins in with this request:

[imgcomment image[/img]

Best be careful what you ask for, ecliptix!

Colma Rising
Colma Rising
September 4, 2011 6:58 pm

Stuck’s words:

UNFORGIVEN – PART FIVE

[imgcomment image[/img]

“I’m not totally sold on abiotic oil. Too many questions.

Then again, the folks who say oil comes from Barney the dinosaur and/or a bunch of carrots and trees have never made a convincing case either. How many Dino’s does it take to make trillions and trillions of barrels of oil? Ha! And why isn’t there oil in Greenland (which was once a lush tropical landmass)?”

llpoh
llpoh
September 4, 2011 6:59 pm

Smokey – I have seen this coming now for a few days. Ecliptix is feeling froggy – he will not be able to resist the urge to jump into the boiling water. He is standing by the edging thinking “Boy, the water sure looks inviting. Just how hot can it really be?” Here he is thinking about taking the plunge:

[imgcomment image[/img]

Colma Rising
Colma Rising
September 4, 2011 7:00 pm

That thread also introduced “abiotic” ed.

I wonder what he’d say.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 4, 2011 7:42 pm

SmokeyQuinn likes to lecture on what he knows best… beastility…to put it bluntly…having sex with an animals.

ZH regulars will notice that SmokeyQuinn is obsessed with the obscene practice of sex between humans and animals and has a preference for sheep and fixation on such practices. People who practice zoophilia are known as zoophiles.

He is well known as a “zoosexual” or simply a “zoo”.

Your blog http://www.TheBeastilityPlatform.com is the biggest joke on the web. That’s where you post comments under your various aliases to stir up your stable of weak-minded 9/11MORONs and Racists to improve your pathetic hit counts. Hell… you make Karl Douchingger look like a fucking genius concerning the scientific facts of 9/11.

You are the traitorous fool and an…

ACCESSORY AFTER THE FACT
Whoever, knowing that an offense has been committed, receives, relieves, comforts or assists the offender in order to hinder or prevent his apprehension, trial or punishment, is an accessory after the fact; one who knowing a felony to have been committed by another, receives, relieves, comforts, or assists the felon in order to hinder the felon’s apprehension, trial, or punishment.

Your Fat and Woolly Ewe, you so lovingly named Avalon, cries out for your attention out in the sheep paddock. Best you attend to her under the covers tonight.

…………………………………………………………………..

SmokeyQuinn is now posting to himself over at his sheep paddock…

Smokey

Check out this article on Zero Hedge. I’ve been fighting a foul mouthed running battle all day long.

They are appalled that the author would use such language.

My reponse to David Pierre may be one of my best ever.

SmokeyQuinn thinks it perfectly okay to be a “foul mouthed” 9/11Moron that posts under various aliases on his own blog.

ROTFLMAO !!!

llpoh
llpoh
September 4, 2011 7:53 pm

And DP sneaks back under the cover of darkness to deliver another turd. We always know it is you, DP, by the stench of sheepshit that lingers everywhere you go. You really should get a good check-up. Sheep carry VD you know.

DavosSherman
DavosSherman
September 4, 2011 7:53 pm

Good grief, I just read the comments over at 0Hedge. Saying peak oil on 0Hedge is akin to going to a gay pride parade and shouting faggots.

Smokey
Smokey
September 4, 2011 8:02 pm

Administrator,

Yes, the Pierre response was Hall of Fame caliber.

Consider letting the sheep fucker back on for a little while next Sunday. I wish we could get a few of his friends to also partake in the beatdown.

ZombieDawg
ZombieDawg
September 4, 2011 8:08 pm

Oh boy, where to start !

“Where’s our oil price collapse?” – soon enough when society collapses methinks…

But of course it’s a catch-22..
Economic recovery (joke that it is as it won’t happen, PERIOD) would result in increased demand for oil so the price hikes which then crashes demand and the economy.
The infinite growth paradigm meets reality.
As to whether the whole global economic collapse was a deliberately orchestrated event (carefully planned decades ago) by the elite to collapse demand for oil and so help stave off the otherwise imminent peak-oil crash (and keep the oil industry alive just that little bit longer) of human society is an unknown and will probably remain so. I wouldn’t put it past the elite, as distrusting of humanity as I am…
The so called emerging economies like India, Pakistan, Korea etc are starting to implode economically so their demand for oil will slow dramatically, especially when their western world customer base goes kaboom shortly.
The western-world lifestyles they crave simply won’t materialise – the time to play catch-up was many years ago and the window of opportunity has closed. Sorry guys – it’s a pushbike not a car, a fan not an aircon.
China ? Lying through their teeth I’d say. Corrupt, facing multiple severe crises with debt/GDP ratio at dangerous levels despite their claims to the contrary. Little wonder they’re buying up every resource than can globally.

As for future consumption forecasts, I don’t see the point of them.
Given that the weather service can’t reliably predict next week’s weather but can supposedly tell us what the climate will be like decades from now, how can oil figures be predicted reliably ?
They can’t ! Simply extrapolating current production & usage graphs don’t allow for any number of variables that could (will) affect outcomes.
The age of affordable oil is over and there are NO viable alternatives for the multiplicity of uses oil has. It IS crunch time. All we are seeing now is human society in its death throes. Global resource wars up next !

Recovery=collapse, collapse=collapse.
For those that haven’t read them yet, get “The oil age is over” by Matt Savinar, “Collapse” and “Crossing the Rubicon” by Mike Ruppert.

Well worth a look too is the Paul Revere collection on youtube :

http://www.youtube.com/user/PaulRevere2012

Smokey
Smokey
September 4, 2011 8:09 pm

anonymous, AKA DP,

Still into that 9/11 conspiracy theory, huh.

Have you ever wondered why the posters over at Zero Hedge always refer to you as a nutjob?

About time for you to come through with the iron clad case that the Bin Laden take down was staged.

You know, Bin Laden died years ago of kidney failure. Or liver, whatever.

At least one poster here will back you on that—-Stucky.

At least he indicated to me that he is wide open to the suggestion, so that’s enough to give you a raging hard on.

Do you still think that me and Quinn are the same person, you fucking shit eating maggot?

Colma Rising
Colma Rising
September 4, 2011 8:09 pm

Ha! Hilarious!

Some real winners out there.

Deliverance indeed, Admin.

DPES

scott
scott
September 4, 2011 8:17 pm

As AWD notes hydrocarbons are the fuel and we aren’t short of hydrocarbons, just cheap oil. There are oil shales, coal and natural gas sufficient to produce the liquid fuels we need, even to be energy independant, but at some higher price level and and at some environmental cost. It is frustrating to hear Admin parrot the leftists line that there is only X number of days/months/years from this that or the other drilling site. While there maybe no more Spindletops in the US even smaller fields are incredibly valuable and need to be exploited wherever found. At $100/barrel even a tiny field is a billion dollar find and billion barrel field is $100 billion dollars we don’t have to send abroad to those nations that dislike or even hate us. Its money that will stay in the US and circulate in our economy yet the US, alone in the world, resists exploiting its own oil reserves. Other nations pray that oil will be found off their coasts. We refuse to drill for oil we know is there. That is the most retarded energy policy on the planet and it is supported by many in the US.

I also take exception to AWD’s conspiracy assertion that oil companies would obstruct or fail to exploit any alternative energy source. They really have nothing to worry about as the US is built on an oil platform and short of aliens landing and GIVING us some new technology their reserves will not be devalued on anything like a realistic timeline necessary to adopt even the most dramatic breakthrough in energy technology should it come. The truth is oil’s energy density is so high and its uses so varied its probably never going to be undersold by any conceivable technology. So the oil companies don’t really care what the next big thing is and if they can develop it or make money from promoting it they will. Exxon doesn’t care if you fill up with gasoline, CNG, hydrogen or electricity. You are still going to have to pull into their filling stations to do it and buy it from them.

Colma Rising
Colma Rising
September 4, 2011 8:20 pm

DP is like a psychotic ex-girlfriend… consumed with rage, obsessed and stalking.

Calumnous but really looking for the magic meat stick.

Looks like the bitch slipped in the back door and is hungry for a proverbial pounding…

Stucky
Stucky
September 4, 2011 8:32 pm

If I asked any of you to write everything you know about the question, “How was oil formed””, I suspect virtually none of you could produce more than one paragraph.

You spout the age old story, “oil comes from decayed organic material which has been under enormous pressure for millions of years.” And …. that about it!

Similarily, 99% of humanity once thought the earth was flat, mankind could never achieve heavier than air flight, and on an on. So, you COULD be wrong about the source of oil.

As I have said before, even if oil is abiotic …. that does not necessarily help humanity. No one knows how fast new oil is being produced, where it is being produced, etc etc. For example, we DO know that it takes an very long time to produce a diamond. So, even if the abiotic theory is correct, but the process takes thousands of years, what fuckin’ good does that do for our Peak Oil problems? Nada!

And, yes, Peak Oil is a very very real problem. I hope I’m dead of old age before the shit hits the fan … which it WILL.

PS: Smokey …. I wear loafers.

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