Apart From Used Chip Fat, There Is No Such Thing as a Sustainable Biofuel
Even capitalists now admit the oil crisis is real. But their solutions border on lunacy as they avoid the obvious answer
Now they might start sitting up. They wouldn't listen to the environmentalists or even the geologists. Can governments ignore the capitalists? A report published last week by Citibank, and so far unremarked on by the media, proposes "genuine difficulties" in increasing the production of crude oil, "particularly after 2012". Though 175 big drilling projects will start in the next four years, "the fear remains that most of this supply will be offset by high levels of decline". The oil industry has scoffed at the notion that oil supplies might peak, but "recent evidence of failed production growth would tend to shift the burden of proof on to the producers", as they have been unable to respond to the massive rise in prices. "Total global liquid hydrocarbon production has essentially flatlined since mid 2005 at just north of 85m barrels per day."
The issue is complicated, as ever, by the refusal of the Opec cartel to raise production. What has changed, Citibank says, is that the non-Opec countries can no longer answer the price signal. Does this mean that oil production in these nations has already peaked? If so, what do our governments intend to do?
Nine months ago, I asked the British government to send me its assessments of global oil supply. The results astonished me: there weren't any. Instead it relied exclusively on one external source: a book published by the International Energy Agency. The omission became stranger still when I read this book and discovered that it was a crude polemic, dismissing those who questioned future oil supplies as "doomsayers" without providing robust evidence to support its conclusions. Though the members of Opec have a powerful interest in exaggerating their reserves in order to boost their quotas, the IEA relied on their own assessments of future supply.
Last week I tried again, and I received the same response: "The government agrees with IEA analysis that global oil (and gas) reserves are sufficient to sustain economic growth for the foreseeable future." Perhaps it hasn't noticed that the IEA is now backtracking. The Financial Times says the agency "has admitted that it has been paying insufficient attention to supply bottlenecks as evidence mounts that oil is being discovered more slowly than once expected ... natural decline rates for discovered fields are a closely guarded secret in the oil industry, and the IEA is concerned that the data it currently holds is not accurate." What if the data turns out to be wrong? What if Opec's stated reserves are a pack of lies? What contingency plans has the government made? Answer comes there none.
The European commission, by contrast, does have a plan, and it's a disaster. It recognises that "the oil dependence of the transport sector ... is one of the most serious problems of insecurity in energy supply that the EU faces". Partly in order to diversify fuel supplies, partly to cut greenhouse gas emissions, it has ordered the member states to ensure that by 2020 10% of the petroleum our cars burn must be replaced with biofuels. This won't solve peak oil, but it might at least put it into perspective by causing an even bigger problem.
To be fair to the commission, it has now acknowledged that biofuels are not a green panacea. Its draft directive rules that they shouldn't be produced by destroying primary forest, ancient grasslands or wetlands, as this could cause a net increase in greenhouse gas emissions. Nor should any biodiverse ecosystem be damaged to grow biofuels.
It sounds good, but there are three problems. If biofuels can't be produced in virgin habitats, they must be confined to existing agricultural land, which means that every time we fill up the car we snatch food from people's mouths. This, in turn, raises the price of food, which encourages farmers to destroy pristine habitats - primary forests, ancient grasslands, wetlands and the rest - in order to grow it. We can congratulate ourselves on remaining morally pure, but the impacts are the same. There is no way out of this: on a finite planet with tight food supplies, you either compete with the hungry or clear new land.
The third problem is that the commission's methodology has just been blown apart by two new papers. Published in Science magazine, they calculate the total carbon costs of biofuel production. When land clearance (caused either directly or by the displacement of food crops) is taken into account, all the major biofuels cause a massive increase in emissions.
Even the most productive source - sugar cane grown in the scrubby savannahs of central Brazil - creates a carbon debt which takes 17 years to repay. As the major carbon reductions must be made now, the net effect of this crop is to exacerbate climate change. The worst source - palm oil displacing tropical rainforest growing in peat - invokes a carbon debt of some 840 years. Even when you produce ethanol from maize grown on "rested" arable land (which in the EU is called set-aside and in the United States is called conservation reserve), it takes 48 years to repay the carbon debt. The facts have changed. Will the policy follow?
Many people believe there's a way of avoiding these problems: by making biofuels not from the crops themselves but from crop wastes - if transport fuel can be manufactured from straw or grass or wood chips, there are no implications for land use, and no danger of spreading hunger. Until recently I believed this myself.
Unfortunately most agricultural "waste" is nothing of the kind. It is the organic material that maintains the soil's structure, nutrients and store of carbon. A paper commissioned by the US government proposes that, to help meet its biofuel targets, 75% of annual crop residues should be harvested. According to a letter published in Science last year, removing crop residues can increase the rate of soil erosion a hundredfold. Our addiction to the car, in other words, could lead to peak soil as well as peak oil.
Removing crop wastes means replacing the nutrients they contain with fertiliser, which causes further greenhouse gas emissions. A recent paper by the Nobel laureate Paul Crutzen suggests that emissions of nitrous oxide (a greenhouse gas 296 times more powerful than CO2) from nitrogen fertilisers wipe out all the carbon savings biofuels produce, even before you take the changes in land use into account.
Growing special second-generation crops, such as trees or switchgrass, doesn't solve the problem either: like other energy crops, they displace both food production and carbon emissions. Growing switchgrass, one of the new papers in Science shows, creates a carbon debt of 52 years. Some people propose making second-generation fuels from grass harvested in natural meadows or from municipal waste, but it's hard enough to produce them from single feedstocks; far harder to manufacture them from a mixture. Apart from used chip fat, there is no such thing as a sustainable biofuel.
All these convoluted solutions are designed to avoid a simpler one: reducing the consumption of transport fuel. But that requires the use of a different commodity. Global supplies of political courage appear, unfortunately, to have peaked some time ago.
--monbiot.com
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
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26 Comments so far
Show AllThe one thing that we are really running out of is time. The only way to gain more of it, is to go on a global go slow. This means taking as many people off as possible from the global production consumption requirements of transport, and putting them into a rest state. The most common methodology known to mankind is called the sabbath, whereby no one does any non-essential work or travel. We now need about 3 sabbaths per week, especially in the big CO2 and OIL spending nations, to cause a significant drop in both of these. The idea is that for 3 days a week, no one is allowed to drive anywhere for private frivolous purposes. Only public transport or bicycle allowed. Only essential food items and medical care, and policing allowed. Everyone has to access only local resources. No flying. Since the patient, Gaia, is having a fever, what is required is an immediate reduction in the rate of production factors leading to it. Nothing else will buy time, both for OIL, switch to alternative ways of life, and reduction in rate of CO2 accummulation. I urge a full consideration of this proposal. It requires a reduction in consumer spending, and a reduction in production of wasteful goods. The rich world needs a stringent diet and rest.
This is one of the best threads on the CD blogs I've read today - tone and content. Thanks all of the above for your input.
Monbiot mentions two new studies published in "Science" that show biofuels do NOT reduce CO2 emissions; rather, they increase them. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/02/13/science_biofuel_reports/ and http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/02/13/EDGEV10VF.DTL provide some discussion/analysis of those studies and many more can be found through google.
And the Trolls are lost as even the right-wing American Spectator agrees, http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=12727
NO SILVER BULLET
-We are already, finally, seeing de-consumption here in the US, when you have to choose between dining out, fueling your car, buying meds, etc. No one's happy about it, but we did spend less on Christmas shopping.
-Move away from "fuel we grow"!! yes, ethanol, biofuel/alchohol, algae, will all be componets of a petroluem free world.
-but (as i will always say- solar power and batteries are where we need to invest.... solar is populist (it decentralizes energy distribution)
-reducing meat consumption will lighted the burder placed on food production when biofuels start getting a bigger cut.
-if you can reduce your consumption of meat, driving and shopping, then maybe the political will is there after all.
-Or we can all just give up and burn the house down. Whatever.
Hey karlof1....Thanks for the site and the comment about ALGAE. I'm reading your link ASAP and will get back. I think 20-30 years is off the mark. I may be wrong, won't be the 1st time. As others have mentioned...big money is now coming in....Chevron, Italian giants ENI and ENIL are in, Shell too....and the Germans and Dutch are committed. Once the Germas set their minds to solving the number of challenges with algae production we will all benefit.
I really don't understand why they let this guy write stuff here. This man and those that agree with him really have very little clue about many things. Biofuels in and of them selves will not solve any of our problems. We need to reduce overall fuel consumption before we think about anything else. However, biofuels can play a role in a sustainable society if used properly. Wood and ethanol can replace heating oil and gasoline if use properly and in moderation. However this requires drastic infrastructure changes amongst many shifts in technology.... Another point, talk to any well informed engineer and they will tell you things like hybrids and electric vehicles that charge off of the grid are just pie in the sky crap that subvert our attention from addressing the real structural issues like a massively oversize and inefficient vehicle fleet combined with a sprawling and wasteful infrastructure. Yet again Monbiot has presented a touchy-feely piece of rhetoric that does not accurately reflect the state of theory or reality....
Why increase production to increase sales from Current to Current + Increased production at the same price? If you can simply produce at the same rate and ensure price increases that generate more net income at the current production levels than increased production at the lower price, that better, plus you stay in business longer assuming reserves are running low.
How do you control nations and people besides force?
Oil and/or Food, and credit to pay for it.
Oil prices, and now food prices are being artificially controlled by the oil and agribusiness cartels. Credit is controlled by our international financial cartels who control the USD's required to buy oil. Don't worry, if a 3rd world nation can not pay back the loan, the Fed monetizes their debt.
The Biofuels play into both of these, make ethanol to save oil by consuming oil to produce it and also create food shortages which drive up price and profits.
The environmental movement in the 70's that continues today with the moronic global warming hysteria all have a common cause, which is to make food and oil more expensive to get and enhance the elites control on nations and people.
http://www.newswithviews.com/Monteith/stanley.htm
http://www.newswithviews.com/Monteith/stanley1.htm
Declared Oil reserves are being artificially controlled to drive up the price and creating the market perception there is a shortage. We have almost as much proven reserves as we had in 1948. Big Oil does not like to increase its proven reserves as this reduces it depletion allowance (eg if they have 100 million on income on oil sales oil sales, but their proven reserves decrease by 30 million, then their taxable income is reduced by 30 million).
It is all a racket. Oil is a finite commodity, but there is plenty of time before we run dry.
Then there are oil reserves in deep oceans that are untapped but expensive to recover, oil sands, oil shale, all of them can be tapped into once oil really does become scarce, but that time is not now.
As far as new technology to replace oil and how to pay for it, thats simple. We can create our own money and stop borrowing from the Fed money they create out of thin air, and we do this by nationalizing the Federal Reserve system.
But the Federal reserve system is the means to keep the living standards low with taxation, interest, and inflation and thus transferring Americas wealth to the international financiers that are building the new world economic order that are enslaving the world with debt. This is to give you the illusion of national poverty so you accept a decaying infrastructure and reduced social spending for fear of higher taxes that are not needed. So do not hold your breath.
Imagine if we announced a War on Oil and a national commitment for a Manhattan Project to make oil a secondary transportation and energy source within 20 years. Oil prices might take a big hit, and so would Big Oils profits and worst of all, people and countries would have more money to spend on other things that help people, like food, and make them harder to control, so it won't happen.
There are sustainable biofuels, but ethanol, even from cellulose will be an additive. I do not think that we will, or maybe even should, get to E85 nation wide. We need to get rid of the fuel guzzling vehicles first and use hybrids to increase fuel economy.
By the time cellulose ethanol is in full swing and we have good plentiful sources of biodiesel, we may have electric cars or even fuel cell cars. But I think that the fuel cell cars will run off of Synthetic Natural Gas (synthetic methane) made by gasifying biomass like corn stalks, rice straw, wheat straw and forest waste.
There is cellose ethanol from crop and lumber wastes, plus switchgrass. Then there is the new biofuel from algae.
If Monibot doesn't know about these alternatives in 2008, he needs to shut up. Probably on the coal, oil and nuke payroll to say such things.
Today, there is no single silver bullet. It's going to be a mix of technologies for a while. Wind, solar and geothermal are maturing quite nicely. These are, indeed, renewable.
Algae has huge potential as oil source for liquid transportation fuel, and is much closer than was stated above. I'm setting up a bioreactor in my back yard to produce oil producing algae... it ain't brain surgery. (or nuclear physics!) If done on a large scale at say, local waste water treatment plants, the possibilities are huge. You pretty much just squeeze the oil out of the algae!
I have my doubts that anything distilled like ethanol, even from cellulosic materials will ever be very efficient. I hope I'm wrong, because that seems to be where we're headed.
For now I'm content burning the "garbage" I collect from the local convenience store grease dumpsters in my car.
From "What the experts are saying" page of the Alcohol Can Be a Gas website
http://www.alcoholcanbeagas.net/node/354
"David Blume's Alcohol Can Be a Gas! is the most comprehensive and understandable book on renewable fuels ever compiled. Over a quarter century in the making, the book explains the history, technology, and even the sociology of renewable fuels in a fashion that can be appreciated by the most accomplished in the ethanol and biodiesel fields, as well as the novice and young students of the issues. You will laugh out loud at his sharp wit and the dozens of cartoons. When you finish reading Dave's book, you will have a much better understanding of how our nation's energy policy evolved, why it is what it is today, and what needs to be done for the future. I have worked in the renewable energy sector in one form or another for close to four decades, and I can recommend Alcohol Can Be a Gas! as the best book I have ever read on the subject."
—Larry Mitchell, Chief Executive Officer of the American Corn Growers Association
"Humanity has used up roughly half of the world's oil and topsoil. Just in time, David Blume has given us Alcohol Can Be A Gas! It's a practical road map for supplying all of our energy needs without drilling, strip-mining, and/or depleting the soil. In fact, following Blume's model, soil fertility would actually increase worldwide; energy production would be not only sustainable, but democratic—and highly profitable on the small scale. This is a brilliant visionary work. And, with Mr. Blume's witty personality, reading it is certainly a gas."
—Larry Korn, Soil Scientist, Translator, and Editor of The One-Straw Revolution: An Introduction to Natural Farming
"As intersections of the food-energy-climate matrix form in Iowa cornfields, Amazonian rain forests, and Canadian gene-splicing labs, and as end-game battles for their control pit theocratic flat-worlders against biologists, climatologists, and tree-huggers over the very survival of life on Earth, David Blume emerges like a wizard on a misty pinnacle, backlit by the full moon, revealing a gemstone in his extended palm."
—Albert Bates, Author of The Post-Petroleum Survival Guide and Cookbook: Recipes for Changing Times
"The overarching importance of this delightful book is that it demonstrates how beside the point is the current pseudo-debate about the net energy from corn ethanol. As Blume demonstrates, fuel alcohol must be an important component of our solar-based future. It can be made from a huge variety of feedstocks, including sugar beets and cane, nuts, mesquite, Jerusalem artichokes, algae, even coffee-bean pulp; there is no real scarcity of land to grow fuel. There is a scarcity of independent, original thinking, and Blume's book provides plenty of it, along with ample doses of amazing, startling, and sometimes scary information—ecological, technological, and political-economic. This is a vast, detailed compendium drawn from decades of experience by an alert, smart, and skeptical hands-on thinker. Blume has given us his biofuels bible, and we can learn from him and survive quite nicely—or follow what he calls MegaOilron into oblivion."
—Ernest Callenbach, Author of Ecotopia, Ecotopia Emerging, and Ecology: A Pocket Guide
"Brilliant! This book should be on the reading list of every American!!"
—Thom Hartmann, New York Times bestselling Author and nationally syndicated Host of The Thom Hartmann Program on Air America
"Dave Blume has written the definitive opus on alcohol as a fuel. From the 30,000-foot view to the most minute technical detail, Alcohol Can be a Gas! makes a strong case for the practical, ecological, political, and economic sense in converting to ethanol. It's heartening to see the world's original alcohol pioneer stay abreast of the times with a book that has the promise to knock some sense into our insidious fossil-fueled economy. This book is much needed in this era of Peak Oil and fast-accelerating climate change."
—John Schaeffer, President and Founder of Real Goods, and Executive Director of the Institute for Solar Living
"What a tour de force! This is the most comprehensive and authoritative guide through all the controversy about ethanol as transportation fuel, showing it as a clear winner in the quest for solutions to our environmental and geopolitical problems. Engagingly written, full of important and amazing information and resources, this book meets every challenge to the vision for a clean, democratic path to a prosperous future for all."
—Joe Jordan Ph.D., Atmospheric Researcher, NASA/Ames Research Center, Seti Institute, and Cabrillo College
"Finally, an alcohol book for the layman and backyard enthusiast. In our culture's collective, industrialized love affair with mega-everything, Blume cuts across the government-subsidized factories with ecologically practical models. Here is a viable energy system that can be embedded in a region, linking rural producers to urban users of energy and food. Self-reliance and resiliency follow community-based alcohol production, and we all owe a debt of gratitude to Blume for codifying his life's passion in what is a veritable compendium of information."
—Joel Salatin, Farmer, and Author of You Can Farm and Everything I Want to Do Is Illegal
"Ethanol champion David Blume has completed his opus, Alcohol Can Be a Gas! It is a great read. The history of petroleum, history of alcohol, technical coverage of production process, vehicle development (conversion), and feedstocks—it's all in the text, complete with charts and pictures. David's wit, wisdom, and hardcore experience illuminate this biofuel's potential. We have eagerly awaited this publication and will use it in our Sustainable Transportation and Biofuels courses."
—Dr. Jack Martin, Appropriate Technology Program, Appalachian State University; Vice-Chair of Renewable Fuels and Transportation Division, American Solar Energy Society
"Written with enterprising do-it-yourselfers in mind, Blume offers countless hands-on technical solutions ranging from home stills to for-profit manufacturing strategies, and builds chapters on detailed charts, graphs, and step-by-step building instructions, giving activist-minded readers the data and resources they need to implement personal and individualized energy solutions. A well-executed, socially conscious, proactive, and rigorous call to action."
—Kirkus Discoveries
So READ it already!
All technology has an R&D cycle. On large-scale high tech projects, the cycle can take decades. If you look at the production curves for oil and natural gas it is clear that we will not have decades to develop solutions.
Any solution will be built with very expensive energy and materials. Already, road and mass transit projects are running years behind schedule and seriously over budget for this reason. The same will be true for future "energy" projects.
Technology is a big problem; but economics is bigger. The US is broke. Who is going to pay for projects costing hundreds of billions of dollars? If foreign loans come our way, they will probably be considered "subprime". How ironic, what goes around, comes around.
We have about four different standards for success in ending global warming:
1. Doing something, and it sure doesn't matter what. This is Congress's old standby standard.
2. Stopping any increase in carbon dioxide production for a task such as transportation, and in fact doing a bit better.
3. Going carbon-neutral for that task. Putting zero CO2 into the atmosphere.
4. The world steadily taking the excess CO2 out of the atmosphere and down to pre-industrial levels.
Number 4 is the sustainable goal. Goals 2 and 3 are just benchmarks to pass.
Any kind of biofuel will maybe achieve goal 2. However, we could have used that land (or that water) to gobble up carbon dioxide. For this reason, growing algae and growing alkafuel is a waste of valuable land.
I agree with Adele and others that electric is the wave of the future. Huge amounts of power are easily and safely shipped in high voltage DC lines. Huge amounts of power can be permanently stored (at a 30% power loss rate) by pumping water uphill and letting it back down through turbines. Delivering the power to each car is done at night in the owner's garage. Gas stations are dinosaurs waiting to be turned into really odd-looking coffee shops.
AdeleThe Czech
"...this doesn't solve the problem of freight (trucks, diesel locomotives, container ships, etc.)"
Steam engines ......... we used them before, why not again?
This is not entirely true ... for example there are some companies that are using barren desert to grow algae indoors hydroponicly. One acre of barren desert used this way produces 4 times more ethanol than one acre of corn, soy, etc...
So there are some options, but turning our food supply into gas is certainly not a good idea.
Also:
There is an online petition asking the DNC to choose the candidate with the most votes and delegates rather than take the chance on a secret backroom deal.
Please sign the petition and pass it on to your friends.
Petition http://www.petitiononline.com/Superdel/petition.html
AdeleThe Czech - Consider the pollution & the energy requirements of all mining & manufacturing processes involved in the production, distribution and disposal of batteries. The elegance and intelligence of Blume's vision is that sustainable and ecological energy production is integrated with ecological and sustainable agriculture. No waste, no pollution. Decentralized production; no corporate control. Funny your apparent snobbery about "fuels we have to grow". I'd say having to mine and manufacture energy is thoroughly 20th century and completely lacking in the kind of ecological intelligence upon which our future must be built.
VooDooPatriot--At the 2005 ASPO-USA Conference in Denver, I talked with one of the presenters from NREL--National Renewable Energy Labratory--about the potentials of alga-based biodiesel. He said like fusion, the concept has great potential, but has enormous problems to overcome before those promises are realized. IF those problems can be surmounted, we might see alga-based biodiesel in 20-30 years. The same is true for cellulosic-ethanol. Please see this, http://www.theoildrum.com/node/2541
Panaceas and Snake Oil Salesmen are both present as the current paradigm's supporters face the (for them) unpleasent fact that BAU will fail.
Big bucks are finally entering the game. Chevron is backing a process where microbes developed by university reseachers "eat" gasified waste tires, plastic, and well most trash and secrete an extremely pure ethanol. Also, GM is backing an algae process formed by some co. out of California. When large amounts of money are thrown at a problem, possible solutions suddenly appear.
Mr. Monbiot is wrong...there is a biofuel source that may possibly serve the motherlode of our transport fuel needs....the same "original" source of most of our current transport fuels. The crop of the future is Algae and Cyanobacteria (bacteria that uses photosynthesis). The race is on. Japan, the US, Germany, Holland, Spain and Israel seem to have the current lead. Micro algae are among the worlds fastest growing organisms doubling in mass every 12-24 hours. Certain algae species are as much as 50% lipids/oils....the rest protein and starches. I suggest you all check it out and maybe invest in some of the US leaders.....SolixBiofuels....GreenfuelTech....PetroAlgae. Imagine producing 20,000 -40,000 gallons of biodiesel alone per acre compared to a few hundred gallons from Soy. Best yet....these companies are utilizing GHG's ...CO2 from coal fired power plants to FEED the Algae photosynthesis needs.....a double win. 80% of CO2 can be observed during sunlight hours. Please check into it all and spread the word. Commercialization is 1 - 3 years away IMHO.
I wish the national dialogue would move away from burning "fuels we have to grow," which is really a 20th century idea, to the evolution of 21st century batteries such as lithium/ion to power our vehicles. Electric cars and buses have zero emissions, and the power to keep the batteries charged can be made by wind, solar, tidal, photovoltaic, you name it -- none of which (once manufactured) add a scintilla of global warming gases to the atmosphere.
While it's true that this doesn't solve the problem of freight (trucks, diesel locomotives, container ships, etc.), considering that we have about 200 million autos in this country, electric cars would be a powerful new beginning.
One cannot legitimately compare ethanol production to petroleum production when it comes to GHG because oil is dwindling fast and the true comparison
is to oil shale, tar sands, coal to liquids and methane clathrates.
That's where Big Oil is going if we don't develop biofuels and
most specifically alcohol. Those other sources are as much as
hundreds of times the impact of petroleum on air quality and climate
change.
Plus these Science magazine studies as well as others are at odds with the Dec
6, 2006 Science study which is the only study to look at polycultures
of energy crops and the full carbon absorption including that which
is exuded from the ROOTS which accounts for up to 80% of the carbon
absorbed by plants.
These other studies ignore these contributions so their numbers are nothing more than an academic exercise. They have no relevance to the real world. The 12/6/06 study shows that 13+ times the CO2 is absorbed than is produced in the farming and burning of alcohol.
For more information see www.permaculture.com, as the third poster notes.
I've met Bloom and heard him talk about his book and life's ambitions. He does NOT advocate using alcohol to fuel BAU. At best, biofuels will provide farmers with a means to power their machinery, and municipalities with a means for powering their emergency and infrastructure support (ulitity) vehicles. The future of transportation for the public and business is electrification and a vast downsizing of personal vehicles, aside from bicycles.
"All these convoluted solutions are designed to avoid a simpler one: reducing the consumption of transport fuel."
Amen! But do you know what this means? It means de-consumption. 'Mercans aren't gonna like that.
The lack of leadership is appalling. But every crisis holds within it an opportunity. Individuals can take action. Those individuals who take the boldest action will be those most likely to survive.
How bold? If you're driving to work, you ain't gonna make it -- sorry. Absolute best would be producing organic food for your local community. If you don't have skills nor inclination for that, perhaps some form of self-employment that requires limited motor transport. Last choice would be living within walking or biking distance of a job that will survive, such as one based on feeding people. If you have any dirt around where you live, start growing food on it! If you don't have dirt, seek out or start a community garden.
Your future depends on the degree to which you can de-couple your life from non-renewable resources, especially fossil fuels. Ignore that at your peril.
There is in fact such a thing as sustainable biofuel. But the status quo, including Mr. Monbiot apparently (it's hard to imagine the man is truly ignorant), don't want you to know this. Just read David Blume's book, Alcohol Can Be a Gas. The history of fuel alcohol is there in Chapter 1. All the myths about fuel alcohol are conclusively dispelled in chapter 2. The solution is introduced in chapter 3: The Permaculture Solution to Fossil Fuel Dependency. The rest of the book is an incredible compendium of technical information about feedstocks, fermentation, types of distillation, designing a fuel plant, the use of alcohol as a fuel in different kinds of engines (including chapters on carburetion, fuel injection, ignition timing, compression & dual fuel use). David Blume has been working on this for 25 years and his proposals are both sound and visionary. Go to http://www.permaculture.com/book_menu/360.
karlof1, good point, great info. Thanks.
A few graphs here, http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3620#comment-303012 showing that crude plus condensate extraction has peaked and total supply is being propped up by just a few countries. As I noted on the Chavez thread, the real key is the quantity of net exports, which are in decline. The overall decline rate is put at 8% by the CEO of Schlumberger. Even Yergin at CERA puts it at 4.5%. Co-author of the Export Land Model Jeff Brown notes: "around 2015, our middle case is that it would take 100% of the net oil exports from the current top five net oil exporters, just to meed current US net import demand."
So as Monbiot notes in his conclusion, transport fuels use must be cut because they WILL be cut by nature. And as is becoming very clear, biofuels will NOT sustain BAU except where they exacerbate carbon emissions fueling climate chaos.