conflict 8 peak oil

40
CONFLICT Eight: Peak Oil

Upload: neil-jackson

Post on 22-Nov-2014

1.695 views

Category:

Business


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Photojournalism by Neil Jackson

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

CONFLICTEight:

Peak Oil

Page 2: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘Most people thought it would come but no man

prepar’d for it; no man consider’d that

it would come like a thief in the night.’

Political satirist Jonathon Swift (1667 – 1745), on

the South Sea Bubble financial collapse of 1720

Page 3: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘Oil production is in decline in 33 of the 48 largest oil producing countries.’

Chevron

Page 4: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘There isn’t a company quoted on the stock exchange that doesn’t tacitly assume a business as usual supply of cheap oil.

When that isn’t there any more that means that virtually every company is over-valued on the stock exchange and as the financial

community recognises this, well, that might trigger some kind of over-reaction and stock market

collapse. I think it’s very likely. I wouldn’t be surprised personally if it triggers another great depression comparable to the one of the 1930s, if

not worse, because this one is imposed by nature rather than being a speculative bubble.’

Dr Colin Campbell, retired petroleum geologist and consultant to Exxon, Fina, Mobil, Shell, Total and others.

Dr Campbell is the world’s leadingexponent of the Peak Oil theory

Page 5: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

PeakOil...

Page 6: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 7: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘At any given moment, there is a sort of all-pervading orthodoxy, a general tacit agreement not to discuss large and uncomfortable facts.’

George Orwell

Page 8: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘The oil crisis is very, very near. World War III has started. It has already affected every single citizen of the Middle East. Soon, it will spill over to affect every citizen of the world.’

Ali Samsam Bakhtiari (1946-2007), senior expert in the Corporate Planning Directorate of the National Iranian Oil Company

Page 9: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 10: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘The doubling of oil prices from 2003-2005 is not an anomaly, but a picture of the future. Oil production is approaching its peak; low growth in availability can be expected in the next five to ten years. As worldwide petroleum production peaks, geopolitics and market economics will cause even more significant price increases and security risks. One can only speculate at the outcome fromthis scenario as world petroleum productiondeclines.’

Energy Trends and Their Implications for US Army Installations, US Army Corps of EngineersSeptember 2005

Page 11: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 12: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘It took us 125 years to use the first trillion barrels of oil. We’ll use the next trillion in 30.’

Chevron advertisement

Page 13: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 14: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

In 1956, Professor Marion King Hubbert, a Shell geologist,

developed what became known as the ‘Hubbert peak theory’.

With it, he worked out when America’s oil production would reach its maximum – its peak – and afterwards go into terminal

decline. His maths proved chillingly correct.

And so by extension there will be a time when global oil

production will peak and then drop away to nothing. Forever.

That time is the subject of argument, but ever-growing

demand does nothing to allay oil industry fears - until the

2008 recession, China’s economy has been growing at

9.9% a year since 1978. Indian consumers are also demanding

their share of the Western dream, and everyone,

everywhere will demand more oil

Page 15: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

All other fossil fuels will have their own production peaks, so there’ll eventually be no

coal or gas. Before that, ecological stresses will be heightened as we switch

back to coal. Uranium will run out, or be

left unmined; the gain not worth the effort to find. But

before all that, there’s the oil wars. Barack Obama’s

choice of National Security Advisor, retired US Marine

Corps General James Jones, was elected to the board of

directors of the Chevron Corporation on May 28,

2008. The official line for these close links with the oil

industry is that people holding top government posts should have some business experience at

senior level

Page 16: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 17: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘The whole flimsy financial edifice has now crashed, and

some of the sillier governments are now pumping yet more

fictional money into the system to encourage new

consumption. Such policies may briefly succeed, but will only make the subsequent crash

worse. We enter a new world, as the principal energy that drove

the anomalous past two centuries heads into decline from

natural depletion.’

Dr Colin Campbell, interview with myself on February 8, 2009

Page 18: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘It’s just a handful of people that run everything and that’s provable… I have this feeling that whoever’s elected president, like Clinton was, no matter what promises you make on the campaign trail - blah, blah, blah - when you win, you go into this smoky room with the twelve industrialist scum***ks that got you in there, and this little screen comes down… and it’s a shot of the Kennedy assassination from an angle you’ve never seen before, which looks suspiciously off the grassy knoll… And then the screen comes up, the light comes on, and they say to the new president, ‘Any questions?’ ‘Just what my agenda is.’‘First we bomb Baghdad.’‘You got it.’’

Comedian Bill Hicks (1961 – 1994)

Page 19: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

An obedient British government wagged its tail as the neo-cons scrabbled to secure the world’s remaining fuel. Thirteen bases

are now established in nine Central Asian countries, allowing

over 60,000 troops to guard pipeline routes. Camp Bastion,

the British base near Route One through Helmand (bordering the

Pakistani border and a perfect pipeline route, is the largest and

most expensive overseas base the British have ever built at a

cost of over £1billion. The pay-off? Who knows

beyond Bill’s smoke-filled office? Scraps from the table when the

fuel becomes scarce? Or is it just temporary election-winning

political support from a media magnate consolidating his

monopoly?

Page 20: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

Meanwhile, Britain’s North Sea oil peaked in 1999, at

over 2.5 million barrels per day, as opposed to the

2007 figure of less than 1.5 million per day. The

largest decrease of any oil exporting nation in the

world, leading Britain to become a net importer of crude for the first time in

decades. Oil exporting. As in – we sold it abroad,

instead of saving it for the coming

generations. Leaving them… what?

Something like this?

Page 21: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 22: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 23: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘I don't think new technologies will have any

impact on the date of peak, which I estimate to have

been passed in 2008.’

Dr Colin Campbell,interview with myself

on February 8, 2009

Page 24: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘2009 will be the most difficult for the Russian and world economies. I cannot remember a worse year since the end of the Second World War. This will be the worst year for the economy in modern times.’

Russian Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin, December 27, 2008

Page 25: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

With oil, we have found a way to artificially – and temporarily – extend the world’s carrying capacity. Extended transport systems, refrigeration and global trade all depend on oil

This frame: cooling towersat a disusedpower station

Page 26: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 27: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

As, of course, does industrialised agriculture. Nature abhors a vacuum.

When there’s a sudden availability of resources,

there’s a subsequent explosion in population. Common sense tells us that, once the

bonanza has gone, this population will drop back to a normal, sustainable level. In 1806,

when the internal combustion engine was invented, the world’s population stood at

around one billion. Today there’s over six times that number. All

consuming, all demanding more. Farmers use fantastic amounts

of fossil fuel to keep the food flowing.

They’ve also become de-skilled in relation

to the older methods of farming, methods that were perfected

over millennia

Page 28: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

Is it possible, without oil, that our farmers could grow as much food as was grown a

century ago, the peak, as it were, of pre-engine

production? Enough to sustain that one billion? What’s left of

the old infrastructure are museum curiosities. Our self-reliant forebears were feeding

a billion people using honed skills and techniques – Shire Horses, intricate mechanical devices to dig and seed and

reap, craft skills, life methods in harmony with the

environment such as preserving what food was

available and setting their waking and sleeping

to the rising and waning of

the sun

Page 29: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 30: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

And it took half of them, working long, back-breaking

hours, to feed that billion. Today, even

the bees are critically threatened, such is the state of the

environment. But despite bread and rice

doubling in price, we all keep turning away, secure in some

seeming knowledge that growth will go on forever. That, after all,

is the plan. It’s why we vote for them;

They and their four-year shelf life promise on-going prosperity.

Why would we vote otherwise? Why would they promise

otherwise? To my mind, a well-feathered nest – and personal power - is

about the extent of any politician’s plan.

The promise of perpetual growth is the biggest lie of all. It’s the

docility drug that stuns all those on the treadmill into silence

Page 31: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘We are on the verge of a global transformation. All we need is the right major crisis and the nations will accept the New World

Order.’

David Rockefeller,speaking at the UN,

September 23, 1994

Page 32: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘Let us never tolerate outrageous conspiracy theories.’

President George W Bush

‘Now we can see a new world coming into view. A world in which there is the very real prospect of a new world order.’

President George Bush Senior

Page 33: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘Thanks to words, we have been able to rise above the brutes; and thanks to words, we have often sunk to the level of the demons.’

Aldous Huxley, Adonis and the Alphabet

Page 34: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘Two riders were approaching, the wind began to howl.’

All Along the Watchtower, Bob Dylan

‘Break On Through (to the other side)’

1967 song title, The Doors

‘If the doors of perception were cleansed, everything would appear to man as it is,

infinite.’

William Blake (1757 - 1827)The Marriage of Heaven and Hell

Page 35: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

Perhaps we can for once learn from our political masters by looking at the response they gave the last

time we faced such a deadly threat. When Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain said ‘I believe it is Peace

for our time’ on his return from Munich in 1938, he finished off with the following words to the cheering

crowd gathered in Downing Street…

Page 36: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

‘Go home and get a nice, quiet sleep.’

Page 37: Conflict 8  Peak Oil
Page 38: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

Trained from infancy to respect and obey authority, conditioned to expect ruthless big business and grubby politicians to solve our every need, we make our way in a mad world. Evil flourishes around us as we nightly sit and stare at the electronic boxin the corner of the room. A vacuous media ensures we are lulledwith frivolity just as honest reporting is needed most - as the resource wars spread and a permanent recession begins. For those who can think outside the mass indoctrination, Ralph Glasser’s‘stage sets of make-believe’, it is time to prepare for a new way of lifeas we make our way down the slopes…

++of Hubbert’s Peak++

Page 39: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

++ ends++

This work is the copyright of Neil Jackson. Reproduction is permitted as long as the original meaning remains unaffected. Feel free to copy, use and send. In fact: please do.

Page 40: Conflict 8  Peak Oil

Comments, questions and suggestions welcome. Email: [email protected].

Please note: Conflict is a constantly evolving polemic, and so - unless I am silenced – there will be fresher versions as time progresses. This is the November 2009 version. Currently working on a blog

Thanks.Neil Jackson

Acknowledgments:John Pilger, Barbara Gluck,Professor Brendan Simms, Norman Baker MP,Colonel Bob Stewart,Dr Colin Campbell and Mikael Höök, ASPOScotty for the idea,Sheffield Sue for the tech support,Iain Dale for the Rohini Simbodyal deception,all those who’ve encouraged me tokeep going This has been an

extract from Conflict. Click here to visit

Conflict