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Museletter Book Review

Richard Heinberg
The Party's Over: Oil, War, and the Fate of Industrial Societies
Industrial nations' fossil-fueled joyride
is about to end . . . is anyone prepared?
Endorsements:
Richard Heinberg has distilled complex facts, histories, and events into a
readable overview of the energy systems that keep today's mass society
running. The result is jarring. The Party's Over is the book we need to
reorient ourselves for a realistic future.
- Chellis Glendinning, Ph.D., author of Off the Map: An Expedition Deep
into Empire and the Global Economy
A few generations hence, our descendants will look back on the industrial
world of today with a combination of awe, wonderment, and horror. Their
past is our future—a transitional era of dwindling energy supplies,
resource wars, and industrial collapse. If societies a century from now
have managed to learn how to live peacefully, modestly, and sustainably,
it may be at least partly because the advice in this timely book was
heeded.
- Thom Hartmann, author of The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight and
Unequal Protection: The rise of corporate dominance and theft of human
rights.
As Richard Heinberg makes shockingly clear in this extraordinarily
well-researched and written book, our way of life will soon change
dramatically, as oil production and reserves both begin to decline. He
also makes clear that our actions now will strongly affect what is left of
the world when this shift away from oil takes place. But before we can act
we must understand, and before we can understand we must be informed. In
this compelling book, Richard Heinberg gives us the tools — the
information and understanding — to act. This is a wise and important book.
- Derrick Jensen, author of A Language Older than Words and The Culture
of Make Believe.
The Party's Over begins with a commanding review of world history, where
past and current developments including war, empire, and population growth
are interpreted as functions of cheap or increasingly scarce and expensive
energy. The discussion of substitutes for fast-depleting fossil fuels, and
the formidable impediments to making the transition that would allow
industrial civilization to continue, are important to every investor and
citizen.
- Virginia Deane Abernethy, Ph.D., author of Population Politics.
Richard Heinberg has written an outstanding book , The Party's Over. I
hope that the U.S. President and Congress read his book. The world and the
U.S. populations are projected to double in 50 and 70 years, respectively,
and global oil supplies are projected to be mostly depleted in 50 years! I
agree with Heinberg that society is headed for serious trouble in the near
future.
- David Pimentel, Ph.D., Professor, Department of Entomology, Systematics and Ecology, Cornell University.
Synopsis
When Mike Bowlin, Chairman of ARCO, said in 1999
that “We’ve embarked on the beginning of the last days of the age of oil,”
he was voicing a truth that many others in the petroleum industry knew but
dared not utter. Over the past few years, evidence has mounted that global
oil production is nearing its historic peak.
Oil has been the cheapest and most convenient energy
resource ever discovered by humans. During the past two centuries, people in
industrial nations accustomed themselves to a regime in which more
fossil-fuel energy was available each year, and the global population grew
quickly to take advantage of this energy windfall. Industrial nations also
came to rely on an economic system built on the assumption that growth is
normal and necessary, and that it can go on forever.
When oil production peaks, those assumptions will
come crashing down.
As we move from a historic interval of energy growth
to one of energy decline, we are entering uncharted territory. It takes some
effort to adjust one’s mental frame of reference to this new reality.
Try the following thought experiment. Go to the
center of a city and find a comfortable place to sit. Look around and ask
yourself: Where and how is energy being used? What forms of energy are being
consumed, and what work is that energy doing? Notice the details of
buildings, cars, buses, streetlights, and so on; notice also the activities
of the people around you. What kinds of occupations do these people have,
and how do they use energy in their work? Try to follow some of the strands
of the web of relationships between energy, jobs, water, food, heating,
construction, goods distribution, transportation, and maintenance that
together keep the city thriving.
After you have spent at least 20 minutes
appreciating energy’s role in the life of this city, imagine what the scene
you are viewing would look like if there were 10 percent less energy
available. What substitutions would be necessary? What choices would people
make? What work would not get done? Now imagine the scene with 25 percent
less energy available; with 50 percent less; with 75 percent less.
Assuming that the peak in global oil production
occurs in the period from 2006 to 2015 and that there is an average two
percent decline in energy available to industrial societies each year
afterward, in your imagination you will have taken a trip into the future,
to perhaps the year 2050.
But how can we be sure that oil will become less
abundant? Petroleum geologists like Colin Campbell (formerly with Texaco and
Amoco) point to simple facts like these: Oil discovery in the US peaked in
the 1930s; oil production peaked roughly forty years later. Since 1970, the
US has had to import more oil nearly every year in order to make up for its
shortfall from domestic production. The oil business started in America in
the late nineteenth century, and the US is the most-explored region on the
planet: more oil wells have been drilled in the lower-48 US than in all
other countries combined. Thus, America’s experience with oil will
eventually be repeated elsewhere.
Global
discovery of oil peaked in the 1960s. Since production curves must
eventually mirror discovery curves, global oil production will doubtless
peak at some point in the foreseeable future. When, exactly? According to
many informed estimates, the peak should occur around 2010, give or take a
few years.
When the global peak in oil production is reached,
there will still be plenty of petroleum in the ground — as much as has been
extracted up to the present, or roughly one trillion barrels. But every year
from then on it will be difficult or impossible to pump as much as the year
before.
Clearly, we will need to find substitutes for oil.
But an analysis of the current energy alternatives is not reassuring. Solar
and wind are renewable, but we now get less than one percent of our national
energy budget from them; rapid growth will be necessary if they are to
replace even a significant fraction of the energy shortfall from post-peak
oil. Nuclear power is dogged by the unsolved problem of radioactive waste
disposal. Hydrogen is not an energy source at all, but an energy carrier: it
takes more energy to produce a given quantity of hydrogen than the hydrogen
itself will yield. Moreover, nearly all commercially produced hydrogen now
comes from natural gas —whose production will peak only a few years after oil
begins its historic decline. Unconventional petroleum resources —so-called
“heavy oil,” “oil sands,” and “shale oil”—are plentiful but extremely costly
to extract, a fact that no technical innovation is likely to change.
The hard math of energy resource analysis yields an
uncomfortable but unavoidable prospect: even if efforts are intensified now
to switch to alternative energy sources, after the oil peak industrial
nations will have less energy available to do useful work —including the
manufacturing and transporting of goods, the growing of food, and the
heating of homes.
To be sure, we should be investing in alternatives
and converting our industrial infrastructure to use them. If there is any
solution to industrial societies’ approaching energy crises, renewables plus
conservation will provide it. Yet in order to achieve a smooth transition
from non-renewables to renewables, decades will be needed —and we do not
have decades before the peaks in the extraction rates of oil and natural gas
occur. Moreover, even in the best case, the transition will require the
massive shifting of investment from other sectors of the economy (such as
the military) toward energy research and conservation. And the available
alternatives will likely be unable to support the kinds of transportation,
food, and dwelling infrastructure we now have; thus the transition will
entail an almost complete redesign of industrial societies.
The
likely economic consequences of the energy downturn are enormous. All human
activities require energy —which physicists define as “the capacity to do
work.” With less energy available, less work can be done —unless the
efficiency of the process of converting energy to work is raised at the same
rate as energy availability declines. It will therefore be essential, over
the next few decades, for all economic processes to be made more
energy-efficient. However, efforts to improve efficiency are subject to
diminishing returns, and so eventually a point will be reached where reduced
energy availability will translate to reduced economic activity. Given the
fact that our national economy is based on the assumption that economic
activity must grow perpetually, the result is likely to be a recession with
no bottom and no end.
The consequences for global food production will be
no less dire. Throughout the twentieth century, food production expanded
dramatically in country after country, with virtually all of this growth
attributable to energy inputs. Without fuel-fed tractors and petroleum-based
fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides, it is doubtful that crop yields can
be maintained at current levels.
The oil peak will also impact international
relations. Resource conflicts are nothing new: pre-state societies often
fought over agricultural land, fishing or hunting grounds, horses, cattle,
waterways, and other resources. Most of the wars of the twentieth century
were also fought over resources —in many cases, oil. But those wars took
place during a period of expanding resource extraction; the coming decades
of heightened competition for fading energy resources will likely see even
more frequent and deadly conflicts. The US —as the world’s largest energy
consumer, the center of global industrial empire, and the holder of the most
powerful store of weaponry in world history— will play a pivotal role in
shaping the geopolitics of the new century. To many observers, it appears
that oil interests are already at the heart of the present administration’s
geopolitical strategy.
There is much that individuals and communities can
do to prepare for the energy crunch. Anything that promotes individual
self-reliance (gardening, energy conservation, and voluntary simplicity)
will help. But the strategy of individualist survivalism will offer only
temporary and uncertain refuge during the energy down-slope. True individual
and family security will come only with community solidarity and
interdependence. Living in a community that is weathering the downslope well
will enhance personal chances of surviving and prospering far more than will
individual efforts at stockpiling tools or growing food.
Meanwhile, nations must adopt radical energy
conservation measures, invest in renewable energy research, support
sustainable local food systems instead of giant biotech agribusiness, adopt
no-growth economic and population policies, and strive for international
resource cooperation agreements.
These suggestions describe a fundamental change of
direction for industrial societies —from the larger, faster, and more
centralized, to the smaller, slower, and more locally-based; from
competition to cooperation; and from boundless growth to self-limitation.
If such recommendations were taken seriously, they
could lead to a world a century from now with fewer people using less energy
per capita, all of it from renewable sources, while enjoying a quality of
life perhaps enviable by the typical industrial urbanite of today. Human
inventiveness could be put to the task, not of making ways to use more
resources, but of expanding artistic satisfaction, finding just and
convivial social arrangements, and deepening the spiritual experience of
being human. Living in smaller communities, people would enjoy having more
control over their lives. Traveling less, they would have more of a sense of
rootedness, and more of a feeling of being at home in the natural world.
Renewable energy sources would provide some conveniences, but not nearly on
the scale of fossil-fueled industrialism.
This will not, however, be an automatic outcome of
the energy decline. Such a happy result can only come about through
considerable effort.
There are many hopeful indications that a shift
toward sustainability is beginning. But there are also discouraging signs
that large political and economic institutions will resist change in that
direction. Therefore much depends upon the public coming to understand the
situation, taking personal steps, and demanding action from local and
national governments.
Richard Heinberg, a journalist and
educator, is a member of the core faculty of New College of California,
where he teaches a program on Culture, Ecology, and Sustainable Community.
This article is adapted from his book, The Party's Over: Oil, War, and
the Fate of Industrial Societies (New
Society Publishers, March 2003).
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* Courtesy of Museletter.
See original at < http://www.museletter.com/partys-over.html
>.
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