Turquoise wrote:
B.Schuss wrote:
FEOS wrote:
DING DING DING DING!
We have a winner.
so you're against protecting the beautiful alaska nature ? Oil drilling isn't exactly environmentally friendly...
Good point but.... even though I usually support more regulation against pollution and such, I'm 100% behind drilling in the ANWR area. It's better we do it now than to wait until the Middle East is completely drained.
So keep relying on fossil fuels?
We're really headed down a scary path. There will be a point when oil runs out, no matter where you drill. Many believe that "peak oil" as it is called has passed, in fact, many feel that 2005 was the year of peak oil production and now it will continue to decline, even as demand grows.
Source. When oil does run out (or become too expensive to really use with any degree of effectiveness) what happens? All of our alternatives are derivatives of oil. They need the energy from oil to make the solar panels, or to collect the corn for ethanol, or to split the water into hydrogen. When it drys up, life is going to change in a significant way; but no one seems terribly concerned -- well, they're concerned about their wallets... but what's new.
So should we really keep drilling? Trying to find that fix that'll last us another 5, maybe 10 years? Hell even if we find enough oil to burn for 200 years, there's so many other downsides. The production of everything these days requires so much oil, so much fresh water, so much of the resources that we've taken for granted for so long, and as our population swells, we'll be in a real pinch for them. The amount of fresh water that goes into the production of many every day products is disturbing.
Sourcesource wrote:
Petroleum refining is one of the most water-intensive of all industrial activities. Tar Sands oil represents 66% of the world's supply of petroleum,13 and it requires huge amounts of fresh water for refining. High-pressure steam (heated by natural gas) is required to wash heavy oil from sand.14
Manufacturing one automobile requires approximately 118,877 gallons of fresh water. This water comes in clean and goes out polluted. With peak oil putting our entire energy paradigm in question, if we consider what it means to create a new generation of alternative-fuel cars - to build 700 million new vehicles would require 83,213,900,000,000 gallons of fresh water.15
We do have enough fresh water, oil, and other resources to last us indefinitely if we us them in a sustainable manner, the problem is, we have so many people. As China and India industrialize, we're talking about several billion people competing for increasingly limited resources. While capitalism is an establishment that works best with an ever-growing base of consumers, we need to wake the fuck up and tackle the true source of the issue (population), otherwise, we're in for quite the bumpy ride.