The future looks black but not because we are in danger of running out of oil. Dieoff.org is promoting the same kind of hysteria that went around in the early 1970s and again in the early 1980s and again...These predictions have panned out about as well as the Bible's predictions that Jesus would return in the lifetime of the apostles. When serious scientists look at the world's petroleum reserves, they are justified in considering "uh oh, we're running out of oil" hysterics to be chicken littles. We are not even in danger of running out of oil in the Gulf of Mexico, which is an extremely mature oil field. There is plenty of deep oil remaining, and we have the technology to get this oil. But, while oil is relatively cheap, it just makes good sense strategically to drain the reserves of other nations and regions and to leave our reserves in the ground. Meanwhile, people in Louisiana, Texas, and Oklahoma are frustrated that the oil companies will not drill on their property and pay them their royalties because the oil coming from elsewhere is still too cheap.
I am not worried about the human race dying out. It won't. What will die out is the magic and beauty of the world. Thousands upon thousands of species will be extinct in a few decades -- many thousands are extinct already but we don't have enough people to document their extinction, just think about how long it is taking to confirm the extinction of Ivory-Billed Woodpecker (extinct in the early 1990s in Cuba, earlier in the U.S.) or Bachmann's Warbler (probably extinction date the 1960s). A great many wild flowers and shrubs are probably extinct or a few years from extinction. And I am talking about
in North America. We don't even have a pimple on the butt of a clue about what we are losing in less studied parts of the world. Be that as it may, the minority who care about the beautiful and the wild have always been that, the minority. The majority is afraid of anything uncontrolled, be it as tiny as a spider or as large as a tiger. (Truthfully, you would not want a tiger charging through your backyard either.)
People will keep breeding, and we will keep finding new technologies to feed them, like the catfish and tilapia farms, until every corner of the earth is crowded in, and there is nothing beautiful or mysterious left. Unfortunately, I don't see a damn thing we can do about this. Most people would rather have a new car in their driveway than a new butterfly in their garden.
We can and should be working on ways to reduce our use of fossil fuel, if only because of the greenhouse effect, but worrying about "the end of oil" is a distraction, as it isn't going to happen. People would be amazed if they did a little research on this topic. Petroleum is almost everywhere (only a slight exaggeration) -- yes, even in North Korea. :-)
If the consumer economy comes to an end, and it may, it will be through lack of confidence rather than lack of oil. "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself." If I were in a position to do so, I would be authorizing a new New Deal and a new WPA, with huge numbers of jobs being created to research the transition away from fossil fuels (but not because of lack of oil, but because of global climate change), restoration of eroded coastlines and other environments, studies of populations of plants and animals, searches for extinct and near-extinct species, etc. and so on. Protecting and <b>restoring</b> the environment would be a huge task that would create millions of jobs. The oil industry will <b>never</b> hire so many people again as they did in the late 1970s/early 1980s, there is no need -- computers make that sort of work so much more efficient. We have to create jobs that can't be done by computer, whether the job be as simple as butterfly landscaping on public grounds or as complex painstakingly restoring an entire prairie ecosystem on former cattle-graising grounds.
where's my oil well?