EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Corporate Win: Supreme Court Says Monsanto Has 'Control Over Product of Life'
- How the US Turned Three Pacifists into Violent Terrorists
- Cornel West: Obama 'Is a War Criminal'
- In 'March Toward Disaster,' World Hits 400 PPM Milestone
- Revealed: How US State Department 'Twists Arms' on Monsanto's Behalf
Popular content
Today's Top News
America and Oil: Declining Together?
America and Oil. It’s like bacon and eggs, Batman and Robin. As the old song lyric went, you can’t have one without the other. Once upon a time, it was also a surefire formula for national greatness and global preeminence. Now, it’s a guarantee of a trip to hell in a hand basket. The Chinese know it. Does Washington?
America’s rise to economic and military supremacy was fueled in no small measure by its control over the world’s supply of oil. Oil powered the country’s first giant corporations, ensured success in World War II, and underlay the great economic boom of the postwar period. Even in an era of nuclear weapons, it was the global deployment of oil-powered ships, helicopters, planes, tanks, and missiles that sustained America’s superpower status during and after the Cold War. It should come as no surprise, then, that the country’s current economic and military decline coincides with the relative decline of oil as a major source of energy.
If you want proof of that economic decline, just check out the way America's share of the world's gross domestic product has been steadily dropping, while its once-powerhouse economy now appears incapable of generating forward momentum. In its place, robust upstarts like China and India are posting annual growth rates of 8% to 10%. When combined with the growing technological prowess of those countries, the present figures are surely just precursors to a continuing erosion of America’s global economic clout.
Militarily, the picture appears remarkably similar. Yes, a crack team of SEAL commandos did kill Osama bin Laden, but that single operation -- greeted in the United States with a jubilation more appropriate to the ending of a major war -- hardly made up for the military’s lackluster performance in two recent wars against ragtag insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan. If anything, almost a decade after the Taliban was overthrown, it has experienced a remarkable resurgence even facing the full might of the U.S., while the assorted insurgent forces in Iraq appear to be holding their own. Meanwhile, Iran -- that bête noire of American power in the Middle East -- seem as powerful as ever. Al Qaeda may be on the run, but as recent developments in Egypt, Libya, Syria, Yemen, and unstable Pakistan suggest, the United States wields far less clout and influence in the region now than it did before it invaded Iraq in 2003.
If American power is in decline, so is the relative status of oil in the global energy equation. In the 2000 edition of its International Energy Outlook, the Energy Information Administration (EIA) of the U.S. Department of Energy confidently foresaw ever-expanding oil production in Africa, Alaska, the Persian Gulf area, and the Gulf of Mexico, among other areas. It predicted, in fact, that world oil output would reach 97 million barrels per day in 2010 and a staggering 115 million barrels in 2020. EIA number-crunchers concluded as well that oil would long retain its position as the world’s leading source of energy. Its 38% share of the global energy supply, they said, would remain unchanged.
What a difference a decade makes. By 2010, a new understanding about the natural limits of oil production had sunk in at the EIA and its experts were predicting a disappointingly modest petroleum future. In that year, world oil output had reached just 82 million barrels per day, a stunning 15 million less than expected. Moreover, in the 2010 edition of its International Energy Outlook, the EIA was now projecting 2020 output at 85 million barrels per day, hardly more than the 2010 level and 30 million barrels below its projections of just a decade earlier, which were relegated to the dustbin of history. (Such projections, by the way, are for conventional, liquid petroleum and exclude “tough” and “dirty” sources that imply energy desperation -- like Canadian tar sands, shale oil, and other “unconventional” fuels.)
The most recent EIA projections also show oil’s share of the world total energy supply -- far from remaining constant at 38% -- had already dropped to 35% in 2010 and was projected to continue declining to 32% in 2020 and 30% in 2035. In its place, natural gas and renewable sources of energy are expected to assume ever more prominent roles.
So here’s the question all of us should consider, in part because until now no one has: Are the decline of the United States and the decline of oil connected? Careful analysis suggests that there are good reasons to believe they are.
From Standard Oil to the Carter Doctrine
More than 100 years ago, America’s first great economic expansion abroad was spearheaded by its giant oil companies, notably John D. Rockefeller’s Standard Oil Company -- a saga told with great panache in Daniel Yergin’s classic book The Prize. These companies established powerful beachheads in Mexico and Venezuela, and later in parts of Asia, North Africa, and of course the Middle East. As they became ever more dependent on the extraction of oil in distant lands, American foreign policy began to be reorganized around acquiring and protecting U.S. oil concessions in major producing areas.
With World War II and the Cold War, oil and U.S. national security became thoroughly intertwined. After all, the United States had prevailed over the Axis powers in significant part because it possessed vast reserves of domestic petroleum while Germany and Japan lacked them, depriving their forces of vital fuel supplies in the final years of the war. As it happened, though, the United States was using up its domestic reserves so rapidly that, even before World War II was over, Washington turned its attention to finding new overseas sources of crude that could be brought under American control. As a result, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and a host of other Middle Eastern producers would become key U.S. oil suppliers under American military protection.
There can be little question that, for a time, American domination of world oil production would prove a potent source of economic and military power. After World War II, an abundance of cheap U.S. oil spurred the development of vast new industries, including civilian air travel, highway construction, a flood of suburban housing and commerce, mechanized agriculture, and plastics.
Abundant oil also underlay the global expansion of the country’s military power, as the Pentagon garrisoned the world while becoming one of the planet’s great oil guzzlers. Its global dominion came to rest on an ever-expanding array of oil-powered ships, planes, tanks, and missiles. As long as the Middle East -- and especially Saudi Arabia -- served essentially as an American gas station and oil remained a cheap commodity, all this was relatively painless.
In addition, thanks to its control of Middle Eastern oil, Washington had its hand on the economic jugular of Europe and Japan, both of which remain highly dependent on imports from the region. Not surprisingly, then, one president after another insisted Washington would not permit any rival to challenge American control of that oil jugular -- a principle enshrined in the Carter Doctrine of January 1980, which stated that the United States would go to war if any hostile power threatened the flow of Persian Gulf oil.
The use of military force, in accordance with that doctrine, has been a staple of American foreign policy since 1987, when President Ronald Reagan first applied the “principle” by authorizing U.S. warships to escort Kuwaiti tankers during the Iran-Iraq War. George H. W. Bush invoked the same principle when he authorized American military intervention during the first Gulf War of 1990-1991, as did Bill Clinton when he ordered missile attacks on Iraq in the late 1990s and George W. Bush when he launched the invasion of Iraq in 2003.
At that moment, the United States and oil seemed at the pinnacle of their power. As the victor in the Cold War and then the first Gulf War, the American military was ranked supreme, with no conceivable challenger on the horizon. And nowhere were there more fervent believers in “unilateralist” America’s ability to “shock and awe” the planet than in Washington. The nation’s economy still appeared relatively robust as a major housing bubble was just beginning to form. China’s economy was then a paltry 15% as big as ours. Only seven years later, it would be approximately 40% as large. By invading Iraq, Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld planned to demonstrate the crushing superiority of America’s new high-tech weaponry, while setting the stage for further military exploits in the region, including a possible attack on Iran. (A neocon quip caught the mood of the moment: “Everyone wants to go to Baghdad. Real men want to go to Tehran.”)
The future of oil seemed no less robust in 2003: demand was brisk, crude prices ranged from about $25 to $30 per barrel, and the concept of “peak oil” -- the notion that planetary supplies were more limited than imagined, that in the near future production would reach its peak and subsequently contract -- was still considered laughable by most industry experts. By invading Iraq and setting up permanent military bases at the very heart of the global oil heartlands, the White House expected to ensure continued control over the flow of Persian Gulf oil and gain access to Iraq’s voluminous reserves, the largest in the world after those of Saudi Arabia and Iran.
From an imperial point of view, it was a beautiful dream from which Americans were destined to awaken abruptly. As a start, it quickly became apparent that American technological prowess was no panacea for urban guerrilla warfare, and so a vast occupation army was soon needed to “pacify” Iraq -- and then pacify it again, and again, and again. A similar dilemma arose in Afghanistan, where a tribal-based religious insurgency proved remarkably immune to superior American firepower. To sustain hundreds of thousands of American soldiers in those distant, often inaccessible areas, the Department of Defense became the world’s single biggest consumer of oil, burning more on a daily basis than the entire nation of Sweden -- this, at a time when the price of crude rose to $50, then $80, and finally soared over the $100 mark. Procuring and delivering ever-increasing amounts of gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel to American forces in Iraq and Afghanistan may not be the principal reason for the wars’ spiraling costs, but it certainly ranks among the major causes. (Just the price of providing air conditioning to American troops in those two countries is now estimated at approximately $20 billion a year.)
With oil likely to prove increasingly scarce and costly, the Department of Defense is being forced to reexamine its fundamental operating principles when it comes to energy. Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld’s notion that troops could be replaced by growing numbers of oil-powered super-weapons no longer appears viable, even for a power already garrisoning much of the planet for which “unending” war has become the new norm.
Yes, the Pentagon is looking into the use of biofuels, solar arrays, and other green alternatives to petroleum to power its planes and tanks, but any such future still seems an almost inconceivably long way off. And yet the thought of more wars involving the commitment of vast numbers of ground troops to protracted counterinsurgency operations in distant parts of the Greater Middle East at $400 or more for every gallon of gas used appears increasingly unpalatable for the globe’s former “sole superpower.” (Hence, the sudden burst of enthusiasm over drone wars.) Seen from this perspective, the decline of America and the decline of oil appear closely connected indeed.
Don’t Bet on Washington
And this is hardly the only apparent connection. Because the American economy is so closely tied to oil, it is especially vulnerable to oil’s growing scarcity, price volatility, and the relative paucity of its suppliers. Consider this: at present, the United States obtains about 40% of its total energy supply from oil, far more than any other major economic power. This means that when prices rise or oil supplies are disrupted for any reason -- hurricanes in the Gulf of Mexico, war in the Middle East, environmental disasters of any sort -- the economy is at particular risk. While a burst housing bubble and financial shenanigans lay behind the Great Recession that began in 2008, it’s worth remembering that it also coincided with the beginning of a stratospheric rise in oil prices. As anyone who has pulled into a gas station knows, at an average price of nearly $3.70 a gallon for regular gas, the staying power of high-priced oil has crippled what, until recently, was being called a “weak recovery.”
Despite the great debt debate in Washington, oil is a factor seldom mentioned when American indebtedness comes up. And yet the United States imports 50% to 60% of its oil supply, and with prices averaging at least $80 to $90 per barrel, we’re sending approximately $1 billion every day to foreign oil providers. These payments constitute the single biggest contribution to the country’s balance-of-payments deficit and so is a major source of the nation’s economic weakness.
Consider for comparison our leading economic rival: China. That country relies on oil for only about 20% of its total energy supply, about half as much as we do. Instead, the Chinese have turned to coal, which they possess in great abundance and can produce at a relatively low cost. (China, of course, pays a heavy environmental price for its coal dependency.) The Chinese do import some petroleum, but considerably less than the U.S., so their import expenses are considerably smaller. Nor do its oil-import costs have the same enfeebling effect, since China enjoys a positive balance of trade (in part, at America’s expense). As a result, when oil prices soared to record heights in 2008 and again in 2011, Beijing experienced none of the trauma felt in Washington.
No doubt many factors explain the startling rise of the Chinese economy, including lower costs of production and weaker environmental regulations. It is hard, however, to avoid the conclusion that our greater reliance on oil as it begins its decline has played a significant role in the changing balance of economic power between the two countries.
All this leads to a critical question: How should America respond to these developments in the years ahead?
As a start, there can be no question that the United States needs to move quickly to reduce its reliance on oil and increase the availability of other energy sources, especially renewable ones that pose no threat to the environment. This is not merely a matter of reducing our reliance on imported oil, as some have suggested. As long as oil remains our preeminent source of energy, we will be painfully vulnerable to the vicissitudes of the global oil market, wherever problems may arise. Only by embracing forms of energy immune to international disruption and capable of promoting investment at home can the foundations be laid for future economic progress. Of course, this is easy enough to write, but with Washington in the grip of near-total political paralysis, it appears that continuing American decline, possibly of a precipitous sort, could be in the cards.
And don’t think that China will get away scot-free either. If it doesn’t quickly embrace the new energy technologies, the environmental costs of its excessive reliance on coal will, sooner or later, cripple its development as well. Unlike Washington, however, the Chinese leadership not only recognizes this, but is acting on it by making colossal investments in green energy technologies. If China succeeds in dominating this field -- as has already begun to happen -- it could leave the United States in the dust when it comes to economic growth. Ditching oil for the new energy technologies should be America’s top economic priority, but if you’re in a betting mood, you probably shouldn’t put your money on Washington.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


37 Comments so far
Show All"America and Oil: Declining Together?"
YES!
No further comments needed.
Excellent article. Like almost everything Amereichan policy-wise, though, the U.S. will not do what is in its best long-term interests, because the Plutocracy that runs it is invested too heavily in short-term profits and gains. As with all other things Amereichan, if it isn't something that is immediately on the horizon, then fuggetaboutit. That is the ultimate irony of the U.S.'s decline and fall: we know well in advance what is needed to avoid a calamity, but we plunge headlong into the abyss anyway.
Instant gratification and worship of the market appear to be the key ideological underpinnings of the Amerikan plutocracy.
Throw in a tanker load of theocratic lunacy and, boy, are you ready to rock and roll into the future.
Of course, market worship only extends so far. If the plutocrats on Wall Street are about to get their asses ripped off by the 'market' then you jump in with taxpayer's trillions to mollify the angry market god with immense dollar sacrifices.
Later on you will have to toss a bunch of 'little people' into the maw of the angry market god but, hey, 'everyone' must sacrifice.
Check out Energybulletin.net for alternatives and more.
It's peak oil, no doubt, but not exclusively: see Morris Berman's book "Dark Ages America" and his most recent one "Why America Failed."
America is not merely declining owing to a geological phenomenon (the depletion of oil fields), i.e., by no doing of its own: rather, it has been actively involved in its own failure.
Indeed, Berman's last book reveals how the very tools that enabled the country's expansion have become the instruments of its demise.
Generally, Klare generates insightful analysis but this is a very strange statement:
"So here’s the question all of us should consider, in part because until now no one has: Are the decline of the United States and the decline of oil connected? Careful analysis suggests that there are good reasons to believe they are."
It seems like any number of analysts have been making this connection and related arguments for many, many years. Just to cite one important analyst -- how about Richard Heinberg?
http://richardheinberg.com/bookshelf/partys-over
http://www.oildepletionprotocol.org/thebook
Plus there are many excellent information sites on the web making precisely this claim. Just google "peak oil USA decline" and see what you come up with. Klare himself has been making this connection, I presumed, for quite some time. It does not undermine anything else he is arguing in the essay but still seems a rather perplexing assertion.
http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3833
http://www.postpeakliving.com/peak-oil-primer#
http://www.oildecline.com/
And yet the failed solar company given stimulus money will become the poster child for the folley of the alternative energy sector, while "reliable and abundant coal" leaves upside down graveyards of counties all over this country, and the climate goes berserk.
But for the "theory" of climate change/agw the far-right religious conservatives would be all over this season's extreme weather as punishment for gays, liberals, atheists/agnostics/secularists, promiscuity, etc. The silence is eery. If the talk begins with the wrath of god for our immorality, it is likely to change to the sensitivity of nature to our systems and insensitivity to our beliefs. Can't have that, leave sleeping dogma lie. People I meet seem more willing to draw the conclusion of climate gone awry.
"Peak Oil" is a mind fuck phrase.
It serves the same war economy elite forces as "terrorism" and "weapons of mass destruction".
It is fair game psy-war on our minds and the collective spirit of the Planet.
As long as we obsess with getting more oil it will be our demise to the extent of our obsession.
This is what I get from the compelling and obvious truth of this vital summation of the state of our energy question.
And "clean coal" is no better.
My friend who started building swamps near Coal Power plants to filter out the toxins in the waste has come down with cancer through out his body that attacked his spine even suddenly, and he is now paraplegic.
Mr. Klare makes many valid points- but he misses a big one. China's "alternative energies" are mainly coal- and they are not the only ones that pay a heavy price for this- we all will, and our children and our grandchildren, and probably their children as well. The elephant in this living room is the FACT that alternatives that don't pollute are never going to replace nearly the amount of energy we get from oil. Just the amount of oil-energy required to scale up the infrastructure of any alternative would be impossible. Look at EROEI, and you soon see that the only solution- indeed the only response that makes any sense at all is to focus on energy efficiency and restructure our individual lives and our communities to use much (80%?) less energy.
This task is the one we should be quickly- no frantically- implementing. Instead, I see just one solitary movement focused on this obvious strategy- the Transition network. Sometimes I wonder if the reluctance to take this path is because otherwise smart people like Michael Klare talk about alternatives taking up the slack- thereby removing any motivation to reduce energy use. Why bother if scientists are going to come up with a miracle energy source to replace oil?
Probably their children? DEFINITELY their children. China is going to have to pay for the health and medical costs of coal. Klare waves away the costs of coal use too casually.
I meant our grandchildrens' children. He is implying only China will suffer the consequences of burning coal- and could not be further from the truth.
I agree with you that we need to rebuild our infrastructure, restructure our communities and in general use less energy. Your assertion that renewables cannot replace oil, however, is false.
Since it requires enormous amounts of oil to research, develop, manufacture, ship, install, maintain, and dispose of waste...on top of building a new infrastructure for many (electrical charging stations for electric cars, for example), the logistics pretty clearly indicate no alternatives are feasible. The analyses that I have read say best case- if we were somehow to manage to build up an infrastructure and manufacture the optimum number of solar panels, etc, in spite of resource constraints, shaky economy and other realities.- all alternatives combined would optimally replace only 20% of the energy we use NOW. And this does not take into consideration the growing energy needs of an expanding population.
If I were risk manager for Corporation U.S.A., I would say this is unacceptable risk and I would phase in extreme reduced energy usage immediately. Way lean. Amazingly, Co. U.S.A. management seems oblivious, and is hoping magical thinking will save the day.
India also uses coal as an "alternative energy" source. I have no problem going back to walk-able/bike-able communities, Stateside. In fact, that might just be the best answer to the growing obesity epidemic, too.
Meanwhile, as Greener technology comes into play, with novelties yet to be invented and/or implemented, three things should be taking place:
1. Bring down that massive MIC use of oil footprint (What a Catch-22, the oil it orbits the globe to confiscate, is the oil burned to support this tunnel vision quest)
2. Increase fuel efficiency and invest in mass transit
3. Teach people to eat less meat. Raising cattle is a big contributor to CO2 build up.
Yes to all 3.
Professor Klare, I bow in humble gratitude for the scope and clarity of your thinking. You da man!
Excellent article!
However energy SUPPLIES are not where the answer lies...
Instead we need to follow the Ecological Principles:
"REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE"
Michael Klare does an excellent job laying out the huge expense of the Wars
for our energy/oil usage (waste?)
But the other major reason the US uses 3-5x the oil per capita of Europe or Japan is AUTO ADDICTION!
The US uses 70% of its oil for transportation (primarily auto addiction) which in turn generates 38% of greenhouse emissions.
We need to transition ASAP away from auto dependency into Green Transit which could be powered by renewable energy as Germany has already pledged to do for their public transit/Rail system by 2050.
We already have Green transit which passes only 3/4 th mile away from
70% of working age Americans in 100 US Metro areas (i.e. most of the US population!) according to a Brookings Study in May, 2011.
But we do not run it!
We do NOT have to build ever more highway lanes, Hi-speed Rail or even any more Transit to begin within months to RUN public transit as the normal means
of transportation available 24x7 not just peak hours. This could easily save 10% of our oil usage and greenhouse emissions in 1 year while creating thousands of jobs for conductors, engineers, bus drivers, and shuttle drivers.
After that the next step is to restore Rail lines strategically all over the US like the Lackawanna Cutoff in New Jersey. Pennsylvania which goes to Scranton and from there to Buffalo, the Rail which already runs from Baton Rouge to New Orleans, the Rail which connects Cincinnati to Dayton to Columbus to Cleveland, the Vermont Rail which connects from White River Junction to Canada and goes through every major Main Street along the Rail line.
Look around fellow CDers and I would not be surprised if you will find an
abandoned or almost unused Rail line within a mile or so of your house or office
which could be brought back into service.
Instead Teabaggers are killing the ARC tunnel to NYC, Ohio rail connection,
Tampa to Orlando Hispeed Rail, etc.
Since 2008 over 150 Green public transit systems have had service cuts and
fare increases precisely when we need them the most.
private 2000 lb Electric cars which take as much energy as a house, use 12 times the land as Rail, will still cause 30,000 deaths per year while requiring ever more road construction and maintenance are NOT the answer!
Green public transit, bikes (possibly electric) and cities for people with walking
access are the number one priority to solve this problem.
why do we have to lie in every single article?
SEALs killed Bin Laden...ah...
I feel so used when I read this tripe...
is it better, or worse, if the guy actually believes this?
even best-selling fiction, these days, is predicated on the lie that is 911, and all of the resulting lies, and invasions, begat by that one...
when virtually all material published in a country propagates this lie, where does one turn?
Why are the 9-11 Truth people so assertive and definitive? You don't know anything more than anybody else. You all act like you KNOW the TRUTH and that everybody else is just stupid. Saying that a Pakistani newspaper reported in 2001 that Bin Laden died does not constitute evidence. Perhaps there were some folks in Pakistan who wanted to give the impression that Bin Laden was dead...is that totally beyond the realm of possibility? Would 9-11 Truth people cite an article in the NY Times as absolutely definitive evidence of anything? There are legitimate 9-11 questions but to denigrate everybody on the Left who doesn't accept your exact theory creates divisions among people that could/should be united.
I'm ignorant of the details of alternative energy, but hopeful that inventions such as salt towers for storing solar-generated power, now just getting started, prove effective in tipping the balance. My mind approaches this differently: I see the endless quest for more oil as connected not just with the US as a state, but with a kind of generalized death-cult which has taken hold. Oil is derived from very old, dead plant and animal life. Solar energy is derived from the moment, from the very sun that sustains life itself. Wind and geothermal have a similar connection with active forces, rather than dead materials. A lifestyle based on oil, I believe, inevitably leads to a comfort with death and decay, and a related acceptance of causing death in its pursuit. The "reliability" of oil and coal, are similar to that of death. The "unreliability" of solar, etc. are similar to that of life and everything good about life. Having spent a great deal of time around conservative Christians, and with no desire to presume states of mind, I sense that it is not the life-affirming, liberationist Gospel that attracts them, but the idea of the end times, the idea of a God who kills. I suggest this is not a product of the religion itself, but of the culture's relationship to the earth and to stuff and to life itself. We and our descendants are in a great deal of trouble if we can't turn this around. I suggest a constant focus on life and joy and creativity. It can't all be about "NO" and "smaller" and "less." Life is abundant, it is our greed and fear that generate scarcity and poverty. Pace the population-warning-givers, yes there are too many of us, but even a whole lot less of us will just as surely die off if we can't change our basic posture, and embrace life and change and creativity. People need to know there is something to aim for, something worth keeping, somewhere good we can get to.
Amongst the wails and gnashing of teeth that will get us nowhere there is this gem of truth written by kdhymes: oil and coal are dead but life is abundant.
Our society or structure of meaning cannot see this and will die. The number of people who live through this process will depend on how quickly we change our structure of meaning.
My penny's worth is that we live on a solar cell. It is called earth. We have to live within its rate of power production and we can.
this planet cannot tolerate energy use...even if one were to successfully argue the method of generation and harness, we cannot continue to manufacture the infrastructures necessary, nor the products...
that we can is but a lie meant to placate, and postpone...
I believe this underscores the point that the writer is making. The world can no longer tolerate traditional energy use and therefore the peoples on the earth are beginning to make a transition but that transition is not happening here. Why? Because we built our empire on oil energy. As the world moves away from this kind of energy out of necessity, Americans are mired in their systems, beliefs, and structures that are all based around oil. The change you talk about is coming but it's going to happen on the other side of the world, not here.
"America and Oil: Declining Together?"
Wonderful news!
The longer the USA remains in thrall to the economic drug dealers of our time, the fossil fuels industries, the more painful and difficult the recovery from their damaged legacy becomes.
Given the near certainty that the GOP will regain dominance in national politics and policy, Klare's hesitance to back the U.S. is wise. Look for the U.S. energy policy to become even worse than it is, with increased subsidies to Big Coal, tar sands, and other energy desperation measures, as Klare put it. Americans seem hellbent on extracting all the fossil fuel it possibly can, even past the break point of EROI. It seems we are determined to cause as much pollution and environmental damage as we possibly can. A madder or more malicious society can scarcely be imagined (and that includes Germany and Russia last century).
For some reason humans have the tendency to think what's true for today will be true for tomorrow. A few years ago, no one could imagine a housing market where prices went down. The same people can't imagine a world where oil supplies go down. All that's left is for some energy policy counterpart to Alan Greenspan to plead, "but who could have seen this coming"?
Also, why the comment, "...incapable of generating forward momentum. In its place, robust upstarts like China and India are posting annual growth rates of 8% to 10%", -- this just perpetuates the assumption that growth is a measure of momentum (progress). We can either choose sustainability or choose to grow until we crash.
If we think an economic crash is a problem, wait until it's an ecological crash...
I have read many times that the emergence and passing of empires correspond to the development and transition to new energy sources. Thus Britain ruled at a time when coal was ascendent and was replaced by the U.S. when oil became ascendent.
If this is the case then it would only make sense that we are declining as the world moves on to new sources of energy. It also would help explain why the 'green' economy can't get traction in the U.S. while China is embracing it with government initiatives and subsidies.
Perhaps we can't change our stripes and if that is the case then as oil fades into the sunset as the world's key energy source so will the sun set on the American empire.
There's, at most, 40 years of oil left in the ground.
My estimate is that the price will explode, within ten years, to a level so high it'll grind the world economy to a halt.
Wars will break out all over the globe as countries divide into blocs to access the remaining supply.
This is clearly the reason our troops will never come home from the Middle East and Africa...they're staying in anticipation of the day when this reality sets in.
The terrifying chart (in the link below) backs up my thinking.
It may be one of the most important pages you'll ever look at.
http://tinyurl.com/34vemyl
Al Bartlett, Hubbert before him - laid this out for everyone decades ago... the dangers of exponential growth in finite systems. Energy being their prime example since energy is the master resource in every economy that has ever existed.
Bartlett considers human being's greatest weakness to be their general inability to grasp the implications of exponential growth. Humanity is about to get an arithmetic lesson the severity of which it cannot even imagine.
Knowing that peak oil has arrived helps make sense of a lot of the crap going down in the world today, trying to figure out a way to duck the problem? Not so simple with 7 billion people on the planet but the glimer of hope is - with fewer people, human civilization has a chance. Too bad the Chamber of Commerce that owns the government at every level and all the Big Religions are dead set against reducing the human population. It's going to be interesting.
Nobody ever addresses the real issue -- the real problem that the US will face with declining oil supplies.
Food production.
With declining supplies of fuel, or rapidly rising prices the 'abundance' of food produced in the US becomes unattainable, or so expensive that nobody will be able to afford to buy it.
No oil and the US starves. for those who do not understand this, study your farming methods. massively dependent upon fuel, fertiliser, fungicides and pesticides --- all produced from oil.
A well composed, thoroughly written informative article...Thanks Mr. Klare...
Well said, Dr. Klare! I'll have to read this a second time, just to soak it all in.
Oil as a resource will become to valuable to be put into inefficient automobiles.
It will continue to be turned into plastics for new products and such, community is were you make it and with virtual work, the need for personal vehicles will decline in the future as well. So grab your solar powered IPAD and jump aboard the 1920's Art Deco speed train to the coast for a stay in your off the grid solar cabin and reinvent Americas future. Peace