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Author Topic: Earth 'will expire by 2050'
Eauz
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posted 08 July 2005 09:27 PM      Profile for Eauz   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Earth 'will expire by 2050'

Well, I don't post here too often, I'm sure most of you have forgot who I am, but I've been on another forum, and saw this interesting article. It's too bad we don't hear much about this type of research in the media...

quote:
Our planet is running out of room and resources. Modern man has plundered so much, a damning report claims this week, that outer space will have to be colonised

Earth's population will be forced to colonise two planets within 50 years if natural resources continue to be exploited at the current rate, according to a report out this week.
A study by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), to be released on Tuesday, warns that the human race is plundering the planet at a pace that outstrips its capacity to support life.

In a damning condemnation of Western society's high consumption levels, it adds that the extra planets (the equivalent size of Earth) will be required by the year 2050 as existing resources are exhausted.



From: New Brunswick, Canada | Registered: Sep 2002  |  IP: Logged
Anchoress
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posted 08 July 2005 09:33 PM      Profile for Anchoress     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
There's some good stuff in the article, but I think the 'colonise space' angle is a red herring. As a graphic example of how dire our situation is I think it will fail, because IMO not very many people appreciate the impossibility of space colonisation well enough to grasp it.
From: Vancouver babblers' meetup July 9 @ Cafe Deux Soleil! | Registered: Nov 2003  |  IP: Logged
nonsuch
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posted 08 July 2005 09:38 PM      Profile for nonsuch     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
The alternative: whoever is left will have to live differently.
It's difficult to imagine a lifestyle unlike the one we're used to, but people have adapted before and can adapt again.

Given that there are not two earth-like planets within reach, within the time-frame - and certainly no chance of building spacecraft that can make the trip and carry enough people to matter.


From: coming and going | Registered: Sep 2001  |  IP: Logged
CMOT Dibbler
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posted 08 July 2005 09:39 PM      Profile for CMOT Dibbler     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Dude, first of all the planet won't expire. We will.
Second, How the hell are we supposed to build space ships and colonize new worlds if the planet is rapidly running of resources? a project like that would probably bankrupt the world econemy

From: Just outside Fernie, British Columbia | Registered: May 2003  |  IP: Logged
Aristotleded24
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posted 08 July 2005 09:43 PM      Profile for Aristotleded24   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Not only that, but if we want to colonise other planets by then, we're looking at a 45 year time frame. That simply isn't enough time to send people to other planets and see how they react, explore the planets to see what resources they have available, etc.
From: Winnipeg | Registered: May 2005  |  IP: Logged
Hawkins
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posted 08 July 2005 10:05 PM      Profile for Hawkins     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
We will merely have to learn how to extract resources from our garbage dumps.

[ 08 July 2005: Message edited by: Hawkins ]


From: Burlington Ont | Registered: Nov 2002  |  IP: Logged
CMOT Dibbler
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posted 08 July 2005 10:50 PM      Profile for CMOT Dibbler     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
You mean we should start learning how to make rocketships out of used condoms, old TV sets etc?
From: Just outside Fernie, British Columbia | Registered: May 2003  |  IP: Logged
Aristotleded24
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posted 08 July 2005 10:51 PM      Profile for Aristotleded24   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Hawkins:
[QB]We will merely have to learn how to extract resources from our garbage dumps.[QB]

Oh horrors!!!!! Will this mean that we will finally have to learn that nature never intended things be "thrown away" but recycled?


From: Winnipeg | Registered: May 2005  |  IP: Logged
DrConway
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posted 09 July 2005 02:19 AM      Profile for DrConway     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Oh, in the long run (millions of years) everything we've dumped will be "recycled". The metals we've forged and fabricated will slowly disintegrate under the effects of oxidation (only the "noble metals" are really resistant to oxidation. Even chrome-steel will oxidize), the plastics we've made and the polymers we've created will ultimately fall prey to photooxidation and/or photodissociation, and so on and so forth.

And eventually the world will have new mineral deposits and new organic life-forms which feed on the nonmetallic stuff we've made.

But all that is cold comfort to anyone who wants to see survival of the human race.


From: You shall not side with the great against the powerless. | Registered: May 2001  |  IP: Logged
rsfarrell
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posted 09 July 2005 02:36 AM      Profile for rsfarrell        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by CMOT Dibbler:
You mean we should start learning how to make rocketships out of used condoms, old TV sets etc?

We might as well, for all the good it would do.

The nearest place we could possibly find habitable planets (and it's a long shot) is 4.5 light years (about 26,400,000,000,000 miles) away.

For comparison, the furthest humans have ever been (at the cost of tens of billions of dollars to move a couple dozen of them) is the Moon, 250,000 miles away.

I'm afraid we're going to have to deal with our population problems with earth-bound solutions for the foreseeable future (pending the invention of warp drive.)


From: Portland, Oregon | Registered: Dec 2004  |  IP: Logged
Vansterdam Kid
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posted 09 July 2005 03:34 AM      Profile for Vansterdam Kid   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Heck even "terraforming" or just colonizing a planet like as Mars (the most likely target for such a thing in the "near" future), would require quite a lot of effort and resources further compounding the point that we have to adapt our lifestyles to protect the Earth.
From: bleh.... | Registered: Apr 2004  |  IP: Logged
Gir Draxon
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posted 09 July 2005 03:38 AM      Profile for Gir Draxon     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I think the real crisis is energy. With a limitless supply of energy, we can reclaim materials, desalinate water, grow food in artificial environments, you name it.

So basically, we have 45 years to figure out how to take the same phonomena we see at the infantisimally small level of matter, and scale it up to massive energy proportions. Any advancements in any other power source are simply buying us time. We need the free energy.

Which is why I think we should be investing in Physics research, not more Arts funding so that we can have more Piss Christs before civilization implodes.


From: Arkham Asylum | Registered: Feb 2003  |  IP: Logged
maestro
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posted 09 July 2005 05:20 AM      Profile for maestro     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I believe the reference in the article to extra planets was a device to illustrate the rate at which we are using the world's resources.

I doubt anyone really thought we would go find some new planets, although if they do, I can think of a few people we should send...


From: Vancouver | Registered: Jan 2005  |  IP: Logged
Vansterdam Kid
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posted 09 July 2005 05:58 AM      Profile for Vansterdam Kid   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Gir Draxon:

Which is why I think we should be investing in Physics research, not more Arts funding so that we can have more Piss Christs before civilization implodes.


There you go again. The thing is that people choose whatever field they want to go into because they may have an aptitude for said field, not to mention the glibness of your interpretation. For instance many of those arts students will be going into fields that help reduce the use of energy, and generally reform society for the better (helping to I don't know avoid the collapse of civilization). Besides which just pretending that we can pour a lot of funds into one sector of learning, and that that will somehow suddenly attract a horde of people to solve the planet's energy problems is dumb, especially with regards to something so complex as Physics. Yeah more funding obviously helps but it won't automatically "save civilization".

Besides the sciences require more resources as it is (ie: a microscope is usually more expensive than a book), and generally scientific faculties recieve more funding. And any incresed funding go on per capita (student) basis more towards the sciences anyways. I think there's a saying that Arts students subsidize Science ones, that would be especially true if they're both paying comprable tuition.

[ 09 July 2005: Message edited by: Vansterdam Kid ]


From: bleh.... | Registered: Apr 2004  |  IP: Logged
Hawkins
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posted 09 July 2005 10:28 AM      Profile for Hawkins     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Fertilizers are the big problem. A good portion of fertilizers are synthetics... when the oil runs out so does fertilizers and a good chunk of the world's food production. There are good old fashion ways of producing food, but I don't think they could possibly support the same yields (more fields left fallow, fewer growing seasons, farms in california gone, etc.).
From: Burlington Ont | Registered: Nov 2002  |  IP: Logged
gunnar gunnarson
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posted 09 July 2005 12:18 PM      Profile for gunnar gunnarson     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
In Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy, the business of terraforming and adaptation is the background for a multi-generational political struggle. Nation-states have been supplanted by transnational corporations.
From: audra's corner | Registered: Mar 2005  |  IP: Logged
Che
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posted 09 July 2005 01:32 PM      Profile for Che     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Hawkins:
Fertilizers are the big problem. A good portion of fertilizers are synthetics... when the oil runs out so does fertilizers and a good chunk of the world's food production. There are good old fashion ways of producing food, but I don't think they could possibly support the same yields (more fields left fallow, fewer growing seasons, farms in california gone, etc.).

The answer my friend...is...permaculture. One of the answers anyway.


From: Avans | Registered: Jul 2005  |  IP: Logged
CMOT Dibbler
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posted 09 July 2005 01:49 PM      Profile for CMOT Dibbler     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
The answer my friend...is...permaculture. One of the answers anyway.


What is permaculture?


From: Just outside Fernie, British Columbia | Registered: May 2003  |  IP: Logged
Hephaestion
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posted 09 July 2005 02:45 PM      Profile for Hephaestion   Author's Homepage        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by CMOT Dibbler:
What is permaculture?

The micro-society and its mores that is frequently found in hairdressing shops.


From: goodbye... :-( | Registered: Dec 2003  |  IP: Logged
Panama Jack
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posted 09 July 2005 03:33 PM      Profile for Panama Jack     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Hephaestion:

The micro-society and its mores that is frequently found in hairdressing shops.


Good one ...

One sentence definition :

"Creating sustainable human habitats by following nature's patterns".

See the Permaculture wiki article


I was thinking of taking a Permaculture course this summer ... not a full fledged design course but one of those 3 days primer courses. Any recommendations ?


From: Vancouver | Registered: Jul 2004  |  IP: Logged
Raos
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posted 09 July 2005 04:55 PM      Profile for Raos     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by gunnar gunnarson:
In Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars trilogy, the business of terraforming and adaptation is the background for a multi-generational political struggle. Nation-states have been supplanted by transnational corporations.

I loved that trilogy! It's been so long, though. It was about 7 years ago I read those books.


From: Sweet home Alaberta | Registered: May 2004  |  IP: Logged
Albion1
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posted 14 July 2005 01:34 PM      Profile for Albion1     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Read this article I pulled from the website www.fromthewilderness.com
I think we will be in serious trouble before the year 2050

THREATS OF PEAK OIL TO THE GLOBAL FOOD SUPPLY

A paper presented at the FEASTA Conference, "What Will We Eat as the Oil Runs Out?", June 23-25, 2005, Dublin Ireland


Food is energy. And it takes energy to get food. These two facts, taken together, have always established the biological limits to the human population and always will.

The same is true for every other species: food must yield more energy to the eater than is needed in order to acquire the food. Woe to the fox who expends more energy chasing rabbits than he can get from eating the rabbits he catches. If this energy balance remains negative for too long, death results; for an entire species, the outcome is a die-off event, perhaps leading even to extinction.

Humans have become champions at developing new strategies for increasing the amount of energy - and food - they capture from the environment. The harnessing of fire, the domestication of plants and animals, the adoption of ards and plows, the deployment of irrigation networks, and the harnessing of traction animals - developments that occurred over tens of thousands of years - all served this end.

The process was gradual and time-consuming. Not only were new tools developed, but, over centuries, small inventions and tiny modifications of existing tools - from scythes to horse-collars - enabled human and animal muscle power to be leveraged more effectively.

This entire exercise took place within a framework of natural limits. The yearly input of solar radiation to the planet was always immense relative to human needs (and still is), but it was finite nevertheless, and while humans directly appropriated only a tiny proportion of this abundance the vast majority of that radiation served functions that indirectly supported human existence - giving rise to air currents by warming the surface of the planet, and maintaining the lives of countless other kinds of creatures in the oceans and on land.

The amount of available human muscle power was limited by the number of humans, who, of course, had to be fed. Draft animals (bred for their muscle-power) also entailed energy costs, as they likewise needed to eat but also had to be cared for in various ways. Therefore, even with clever refinements in tools and techniques, in crops development and animal breeding, it was inevitable that humans would reach a point of diminishing returns in their ability to continue increasing their energy harvest, and therefore the size of their population.

By the nineteenth century these limits were beginning to become apparent. Famine and hunger had long been common throughout even the wealthiest regions of the planet. But, for Europeans, the migration of surplus populations to other nations, crop rotation, and the application of manures and composts were gradually making those events less frequent and severe. European farmers, realizing the need for a new nitrogen source in order to continue feeding burgeoning and increasingly urbanized populations, began employing guano imported from islands off the coasts of Chile and Peru. The results were gratifying. However, after only a few decades, these guano deposits were being depleted. By this time, in the late 1890s, the world's population was nearly twice what it had been at the beginning of the century. A crisis was again in view.

But again crisis was narrowly averted, this time due to fossil fuels. In 1909, two German chemists named Fritz Haber and Carl Bosch invented a process to synthesize ammonia from atmospheric nitrogen and the hydrogen in fossil fuels. The process initially used coal as a feedstock, though later it was adapted to use natural gas. After the end of the Great War, nation after nation began building Haber-Bosch plants; today the process produces 150 million tons of ammonia-based fertilizer per year, equaling the total amount of available nitrogen introduced annually by all natural sources combined.

Fossil fuels went on to offer still other ways of extending natural limits to the human carrying capacity of the planet.

Early steam-driven tractors came into limited use in 19th century; but, after World War I, the size and effectiveness of powered farm machinery expanded dramatically, and the scale of use exploded, especially in North America, Europe, and Australia from the 1920s through the '50s. In the 1890s, roughly one quarter of US cropland had to be set aside for the growing of grain to feed horses - most of which worked on farms. The internal combustion engine provided a new kind of horsepower not dependent on horses at all, and thereby increased the amount of arable land available to feed humans.

Chemists developed synthetic pesticides and herbicides in increasing varieties after WWII, using knowledge pioneered in laboratories that had worked to perfect explosives and other chemical warfare agents. Pesticides not only increased crop yields in North America, Europe, and Australia, but also reduced the prevalence of insect-borne diseases like malaria. The world began to enjoy the benefits of "better living through chemistry," though the environmental costs, in terms of water and soil pollution and damage to vulnerable species, would only later become widely apparent.

In the 1960s, industrial-chemical agricultural practices began to be exported to what by that time was being called the Third World: this was glowingly dubbed the Green Revolution, and it enabled a tripling of food production during the ensuing half-century.

At the same time, the scale and speed of distribution of food increased. This also constituted a means of increasing carrying capacity, though in a more subtle way.

The trading of food goes back to Paleolithic times; but, with advances in transport, the quantities and distances involved gradually increased. Here again, fossil fuels were responsible for a dramatic discontinuity in the previously slow pace of growth. First by rail and steamship, then by truck and airplane, immense amounts of grain and ever-larger quantities of meat, vegetables, and specialty foods began to flow from countryside to city, from region to region, and from continent to continent.

William Catton, in his classic book Overshoot, terms the trade of essential life-support commodities "scope expansion."1 Carrying capacity is always limited by whatever necessity is in least supply, as Justus von Liebig realized nearly a century-and-a-half ago. If one region can grow food but has no exploitable metal deposits, its carrying capacity is limited by the lack of metals for the production of farm tools. Another region may have metals but insufficient topsoil or rain; there, carrying capacity is limited by the lack of food. If a way can be found to make up for local scarcity by taking advantage of distant abundance (as by exporting metal ores or finished tools from region A to help with food production in region B, and then exporting food from B to A), the total carrying capacity of the two regions combined can be increased substantially. We can put this into a crude formula:

CC of A+B > (CC of A) + (CC of B)

From an ecological as well as an economic point of view, this is why people trade. But trade has historically been limited by the amount of energy that could be applied to the transport of materials. Fossil fuels temporarily but enormously expanded that limit.

The end result of chemical fertilizers, plus powered farm machinery, plus increased scope of transportation and trade, was not just a three-fold leap in crop yields, but a similar explosion of human population, which has grown five-fold since dawn of industrial revolution.


Agriculture at the crossroads

All of this would be well and good if it were sustainable, but, if it proves not to be, then a temporary exuberance of the human species will have been purchased by an eventual, unprecedented human die-off. So how long can the present regime be sustained? Let us briefly survey some of the current trends in global food production and how they are related to the increased use of inexpensive fossil fuels.


Arable cropland:For millennia, the total amount of arable cropland gradually increased due to the clearing of forests and brush, and the irrigation of land that would otherwise be too arid for cultivation. That amount reached a maximum within the past two decades and is now decreasing because of the salinization of irrigated soils and the relentless growth of cities, with their buildings, roads, and parking lots. Irrigation has become more widespread because of the availability of cheap energy to operate pumps, while urbanization is largely a result of cheap fuel-fed transportation and the flushing of the peasantry from the countryside as a consequence of their inability to buy or to compete with fuel-fed agricultural machinery. Roads that cover former cropland are built from oil, and the erection of buildings has been facilitated by the mechanization of construction processes and the easy transport of materials.


Topsoil:The world's existing soils were generated over thousands and millions of years at a rate averaging an inch per 500 years. The amount of soil available to farmers is now decreasing at an alarming rate, due mostly to wind and water erosion. In the US Great Plains, roughly half the quantity in place at the beginning of the last century is now gone. In Australia, after two centuries of European land-use, more than 70 percent of land has become seriously degraded.2 Erosion is largely a function of tillage, which fractures and loosens soil; thus, as the introduction of fuel-fed tractors has increased the ease of tillage, the rate of soil loss has increased dramatically.


The number of farmers as a percentage of the population:In the US at the turn of the last century, 70 percent of the population lived in rural areas and farmed. Today less than two percent of Americans farm for a living. This change came primarily because fuel-fed farm machinery replaced labor, which meant that fewer farmers were needed. Hundreds of thousands - perhaps millions - of families that desperately wanted to farm could not continue to do so because they could not afford the new machines, or could not compete with their neighbors who had them. Another way of saying this is that economies of scale (driven by mechanization) gave an advantage to ever-larger farms. But the loss of farmers also meant a gradual loss of knowledge of how to farm and a loss of rural farming culture. Many farmers today merely follow the directions on bags of fertilizer or pesticide, and live so far from their neighbors that their children have no desire to continue the agricultural way of life.


The genetic diversity of domesticated crop varieties:This is decreasing dramatically due to the consolidation of the seed industry. Farmers on the island of Bali in Indonesia once planted 200 varieties of rice, each adapted to a different microclimate; now only four varieties are grown. In 2000, Semenis, the world's largest vegetable seed corporation, eliminated 25 percent of its product line as a cost-cutting measure. This ongoing, massive genetic consolidation is also being driven by the centralization of the seed industry (the largest three field seed companies - DuPont, Monsanto, and Novartis - now account for 20 percent of the global seed trade), which is in turn consequent upon fuel-fed globalization.


Grain production per capita:A total of 2,029 million tons of grain were produced globally in 2004; this was a record in absolute numbers. But for the past two decades population has grown faster than grain production, so there is actually less available on a per-head basis. In addition, grain stocks are being drawn down: According to Lester Brown of the Earth Policy Institute, "in each of the last four . . . years production fell short of consumption. The shortfalls of nearly 100 million tons in 2002 and again in 2003 were the largest on record."3 This trend suggests that the strategy of boosting food production by the use of fossil fuels is already yielding diminishing returns.


Global climate:This is being increasingly destabilized as a result of the famous greenhouse effect, resulting in problems for farmers that are relatively minor now but that are likely to grow to catastrophic proportions within the next decade or two. Global warming is now almost universally acknowledged as resulting from CO2 emissions from the burning of fossil fuels.


Available fresh water:In the US, 85 percent of fresh water use goes toward agricultural production, requiring the drawing down of ancient aquifers at far above their recharge rates. Globally, as water tables fall, ever more powerful pumps must be used to lift irrigation water, requiring ever more energy usage. By 2020, according to the Worldwatch Institute and the UN, virtually every country will face shortages of fresh water.


The effectiveness of pesticides and herbicides:In the US, over the past two decades pesticide use has increased 33-fold, yet, each year a greater amount of crops is lost to pests, which are evolving immunities faster than chemists can invent new poisons. Like falling grain production per capita, this trend suggests a declining return from injecting the process of agricultural production with still more fossil fuels.


Now, let us add to this picture the imminent peak in world oil production. This will make machinery more expensive to operate, fertilizers more expensive to produce, and transportation more expensive. While the adoption of fossil fuels created a range of problems for global food production, as we have just seen, the decline in the availability of cheap oil will not immediately solve those problems; in fact, over the short term they will exacerbate them, bringing simmering crises to a boil.

That is because the scale of our dependency on fossil fuels has grown to enormous proportions.

In the US, agriculture is directly responsible for well over 10 percent of all national energy consumption. Over 400 gallons of oil equivalent are expended to feed each American each year. About a third of that amount goes toward fertilizer production, 20 percent to operate machinery, 16 percent for transportation, 13 percent for irrigation, 8 percent for livestock raising, (not including the feed), and 5 percent for pesticide production. This does not include energy costs for packaging, refrigeration, transportation to retailers, or cooking.

Trucks move most of the world's food, even though trucking is ten times more energy-intensive than moving food by train or barge. Refrigerated jets move a small but growing proportion of food, almost entirely to wealthy industrial nations, at 60 times the energy cost of sea transport.

Processed foods make up three-quarters of global food sales by price (though not by quantity). This adds dramatically to energy costs: for example, a one-pound box of breakfast cereal may require over 7,000 kilocalories of energy for processing, while the cereal itself provides only 1,100 kilocalories of food energy.

Over all - including energy costs for farm machinery, transportation, and processing, and oil and natural gas used as feedstocks for agricultural chemicals - the modern food system consumes roughly ten calories of fossil fuel energy for every calorie of food energy produced.

But the single most telling gauge of our dependency is the size of the global population. Without fossil fuels, the stupendous growth in human numbers that has occurred over the past century would have been impossible. Can we continue to support so many people as the availability of cheap oil declines?


Feeding a Growing Multitude

The problems associated with the modern global food system are widely apparent, there is widespread concern over the sustainability of the enterprise, and there is growing debate over the question of how to avoid an agricultural Armageddon. Within this debate two viewpoints have clearly emerged.

The first advises further intensification of industrial food production, primarily via the genetic engineering of new crop and animal varieties. The second advocates ecological agriculture in its various forms - including organic, biodynamic, Permaculture, and Biointensive methods.

Critics of the latter contend that traditional, chemical-free forms of agriculture are incapable of feeding the burgeoning human population. Here is a passage by John John Emsley of University of Cambridge, from his review of Vaclav Smil's Enriching the Earth : Fritz Haber, Carl Bosch, and the Transformation of World Food:

If crops are rotated and the soil is fertilized with compost, animal manure and sewage, thereby returning as much fixed nitrogen as possible to the soil, it is just possible for a hectare of land to feed 10 people - provided they accept a mainly vegetarian diet. Although such farming is almost sustainable, it falls short of the productivity of land that is fertilized with "artificial" nitrogen; this can easily support 40 people, and on a varied diet.5

This seems unarguable on its face. However, given the fact that fossil fuels are non-renewable, it will be increasingly difficult to continue to supply chemical fertilizers in present quantities. Nitrogen can be synthesized using hydrogen produced from the electrolysis of water, with solar or wind power as a source of electricity. But currently no ammonia is being commercially produced this way because of the uncompetitive cost of doing so. To introduce and scale up the process will require many years and considerable investment capital.

The bioengineering of crop and animal varieties does little or nothing to solve this problem. One can fantasize about modifying maize or rice to fix nitrogen in the way that legumes do, but so far efforts in that direction have failed. Meanwhile, the genetic engineering of complex life forms on a commercial scale appears to pose unprecedented environmental hazards, as has been amply documented by Dr. Mae Wan-Ho among many others.6 And the bio-engineering industry itself consumes fossil fuels, and assumes the continued availability of oil for tractors, transportation, chemicals production, and so on.

Those arguing in favor of small-scale, ecological agriculture tend to be optimistic about its ability to support large populations. For example, the 2002 Greenpeace report, "The Real Green Revolution: Organic and Agroecological Farming in the South," while acknowledging the lack of comparative research on the subject, nevertheless notes:

In general . . . it is thought that [organic and agroecological farming] can bring significant increases in yields in comparison to conventional farming practices. Compared to "Green Revolution'"farming systems, OAA is thought to be neutral in terms of yields, although it brings other benefits, such as reducing the need for external inputs.7

Eco-agricultural advocates often contend that there is plenty of food in the world; existing instances of hunger are due to bad policy and poor distribution. With better policy and distribution, all could easily be fed. Thus, given the universally admitted harmful environmental consequences of conventional chemical farming, the choice should be simple.

Some eco-ag proponents are even more sanguine, and suggest that their methods can produce far higher yields than can mechanized, chemical-based agriculture. Experiments have indeed shown that small-scale, biodiverse gardening or farming can be considerably more productive on a per-hectare basis than monocropped megafarms.8 However, some of these studies have ignored the energy and land-productivity costs of manures and composts imported onto the study plots. In any case, and there is no controversy on this point, Permaculture and Biointensive forms of horticulture are dramatically more labor- and knowledge-intensive than industrial agriculture. Thus the adoption of these methods will require an economic transformation of societies.

Therefore even if the nitrogen problem can be solved in principle by agro-ecological methods and/or hydrogen production from renewable energy sources, there may be a carrying-capacity bottleneck ahead in any case, simply because of the inability of societies to adapt to these very different energy and economic needs quickly enough, and also because of the burgeoning problems mentioned above (loss of fresh water resources, unstable climate, etc.). According to widely-accepted calculations, humans are presently appropriating at least 40 percent of Earth's primary biological productivity.9 It seems unlikely that we, a single species after all, can do much more than that. Even though it may not be politically correct in many circles to discuss the population problem, we must recognize that we are nearing or past fundamental natural limits, no matter which course we pursue.

Given the fact that fossil fuels are limited in quantity and we are already in view of the global oil production peak, the debate over the potential productivity of chemical-gene engineered agriculture versus that of organic and agroecological farming may be relatively pointless. We must turn to a food system that is less fuel-reliant, even if it does prove to be less productive.


The Example of Cuba

How we might do that is suggested by perhaps the best recent historical example of a society experiencing a fossil-fuel famine. In the late 1980s, farmers in Cuba were highly reliant on cheap fuels and petrochemicals imported from the Soviet Union, using more agrochemicals per acre than their American counterparts. In 1990, as the Soviet empire collapsed, Cuba lost those imports and faced an agricultural crisis. The population lost 20 pounds on average and malnutrition was nearly universal, especially among young children. The Cuban GDP fell by 85 percent and inhabitants of the island nation experienced a substantial decline in their material standard of living.

Cuban authorities responded by breaking up large state-owned farms, offering land to farming families, and encouraging the formation of small agricultural co-ops. Cuban farmers began employing oxen as a replacement for the tractors they could no longer afford to fuel. Cuban scientists began investigating biological methods of pest control and soil fertility enhancement. The government sponsored widespread education in organic food production, and the Cuban people adopted a mostly vegetarian diet out of necessity. Salaries for agricultural workers were raised, in many cases to above the levels of urban office workers. Urban gardens were encouraged in parking lots and on public lands, and thousands of rooftop gardens appeared. Small food animals such as chickens and rabbits began to be raised on rooftops as well.

As a result of these efforts, Cuba was able to avoid what might otherwise have been a severe famine. Today the nation is changing from an industrial to an agrarian society. While energy use in Cuba is now one-twentieth of that in the US, the economy is growing at a slow but steady rate. Food production has returned to 90 percent of its pre-crisis levels.10


The Way Ahead

The transition to a non-fossil-fuel food system will take time. And it must be emphasized that we are discussing a systemic transformation - we cannot just remove oil in the forms of agrochemicals from the current food system and assume that it will go on more or less as it is. Every aspect of the process by which we feed ourselves must be redesigned. And, given the likelihood that global oil peak will occur soon, this transition must occur at a rapid pace, backed by the full resources of national governments.

Without cheap transportation fuels we will have to reduce the amount of food transportation that occurs, and make necessary transportation more efficient. This implies increased local food self-sufficiency. It also implies problems for large cities that have been built in arid regions capable of supporting only small populations on their regional resource base. One has only to contemplate the local productivity of a place like Nevada, to appreciate the enormous challenge of continuing to feed people in such a city such as Las Vegas without easy transportation.

We will need to grow more food in and around cities. Currently, Oakland California is debating a food policy initiative that would mandate by 2015 the growing within a fifty-mile radius of city center of 40 percent of the vegetables consumed in the city.11 If the example of Cuba were followed, rooftop gardens would result, as well as rooftop raising of food animals like chickens, rabbits and guinea pigs.

Localization of the food process means moving producers and consumers of food closer together, but it also means relying on the local manufacture and regeneration of all of the elements of the production process - from seeds to tools and machinery. This would appear to rule out agricultural bioengineering, which favors the centralized production of patented seed varieties, and discourages the free saving of seeds from year to year by farmers.

Clearly, we must minimize chemical inputs to agriculture (direct and indirect - such as those introduced in packaging and processing).

We will need to re-introduce draft animals in agricultural production. Oxen may be preferable to horses in many instances, because the former can eat straw and stubble, while the latter would compete with humans for grains.

Governments must also provide incentives for people to return to an agricultural life. It would be a mistake simply to think of this simply in terms of the need for a larger agricultural work force. Successful traditional agriculture requires social networks, and intergenerational sharing of skills and knowledge. We need not just more agricultural workers, but a rural culture that makes agricultural work rewarding.

Farming requires knowledge and experience, and so we will need education for a new generation of farmers; but only some of this education can be generic - much of it must of necessity be locally appropriate.

It will be necessary as well to break up the corporate mega-farms that produce so much of today's cheap grain. Industrial agriculture implies an economy of scale that will be utterly inappropriate and unworkable for post-industrial food systems. Thus land reform will be required in order to enable smallholders and farming co-ops to work their own plots.

In order for all of this to happen, governments must end subsidies to industrial agriculture and begin subsidizing post-industrial agricultural efforts. There are many ways in which this could be done. The present regime of subsidies is so harmful that merely stopping it in its tracks might in itself be advantageous; but, given the fact that a rapid transition is essential, offering subsidies for education, no-interest loans for land purchase, and technical support during the transition from chemical to organic production would be essential.

Finally, given carrying-capacity limits, food policy must include population policy. We must encourage smaller families by means of economic incentives and improve the economic and educational status of women in poorer countries.

All of this constitutes a gargantuan task, but the alternatives - doing nothing or attempting to solve our food-production problems simply by applying more technological intensification - will almost certainly result in dire consequences. In that case, existing farmers would fail because of fuel and chemical prices. All of the worrisome existing trends mentioned earlier would intensify to the point that the human carrying capacity of Earth would be degraded significantly, and perhaps to a large degree permanently.

In sum, the transition to a fossil-fuel-free food system does not constitute a utopian proposal. It is an immense challenge and will call for unprecedented levels of creativity at all levels of society. But in the end it is the only rational option for averting human calamity on a scale never before seen.


From: Toronto, ON. Canada | Registered: Jun 2005  |  IP: Logged
FourteenRivers
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posted 14 July 2005 03:11 PM      Profile for FourteenRivers        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Ilike the story of Cuba's recovery. We should do this here also.
From: Quebec | Registered: Jul 2005  |  IP: Logged
Hawkins
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posted 14 July 2005 03:58 PM      Profile for Hawkins     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Lord knows the average Canadian has property large enough to grow a little vegetable garden of their own (some large enough to feed the family by itself for the growing season!) .
From: Burlington Ont | Registered: Nov 2002  |  IP: Logged
Tommy Shanks
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posted 14 July 2005 04:03 PM      Profile for Tommy Shanks     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
If the example of Cuba were followed, rooftop gardens would result, as well as rooftop raising of food animals like chickens, rabbits and guinea pigs.

They must have some big-ass roofs.


From: Toronto | Registered: Sep 2002  |  IP: Logged
Mr. Magoo
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posted 14 July 2005 04:17 PM      Profile for Mr. Magoo   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
But think of all the delicious guinea pig we could be eating.

Maybe with a side order of kittens!


From: ø¤°`°¤ø,¸_¸,ø¤°`°¤ø,¸_¸,ø¤°°¤ø,¸_¸,ø¤°°¤ø, | Registered: Dec 2002  |  IP: Logged
Hawkins
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posted 14 July 2005 04:36 PM      Profile for Hawkins     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
guinea pigs were food long before they were pets.

http://cavyhistory.tripod.com/


From: Burlington Ont | Registered: Nov 2002  |  IP: Logged
Mr. Magoo
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posted 14 July 2005 04:39 PM      Profile for Mr. Magoo   Author's Homepage     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
I'm sure every animal that moves was food before it was a pet.

Doesn't mean I want a hamsterburger.


From: ø¤°`°¤ø,¸_¸,ø¤°`°¤ø,¸_¸,ø¤°°¤ø,¸_¸,ø¤°°¤ø, | Registered: Dec 2002  |  IP: Logged
EFA
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posted 14 July 2005 06:05 PM      Profile for EFA        Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
quote:
Originally posted by Mr. Magoo:
I'm sure every animal that moves was food before it was a pet.

Nothing worse than a pet that's immobile.


From: Victoria, BC | Registered: Jun 2005  |  IP: Logged
Albion1
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posted 22 July 2005 04:39 PM      Profile for Albion1     Send New Private Message      Edit/Delete Post  Reply With Quote 
Another article from the website
www.fromthewilderness.com

-----------------------------------

[Notice that most experts have no completely given up on the rosy future of endless growth scenarios. They have caved in and quietly admitted that contraction is coming. - MCR]


HOW MUCH OIL DO WE REALLY HAVE?

By Adam Porter
In Perpignan, France
15 July, 2005
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/business/4681935.stm


As oil prices remain volatile the markets do their best to forecast future prices. Unfortunately this is not an easy task. While it may appear extraordinary to outsiders one of the main problems in the oil market is the reliability of basic statistics.

The oil industry calls the problem 'data transparency'.

As an example this week is a 'revision' to oil demand growth in the United States in 2004.

Previously the growth in oil demand was thought to be 2.4%, about 484,000 barrels per day. In fact it was 697,000 barrels per day or 3.5%.

That is in fact 46% more than was previously stated - a huge revision.

"Oil market data is generally a black art like using a set of chicken bones," says Paul Horsnell of Barclays Capital. "If Columbus had thought he'd hit India when in fact he was in the Caribbean, that's about the level of oil market data."

"The revisions to US demand growth are small in percentage terms, they are generally 99% accurate. But the change is huge in barrel terms, and this is from the USA who have the best oil data in the world."

"Suggestions that oil consumption will grow to up to 120m bpd by 2020 and that automobile and airline traffic will increase at extraordinary rates are futile and damaging."
Dr Michael Smith, Energy Files

The barrel difference was in fact 213,000 per day. Added up that is 77.75 million extra barrels per year, about one day of global production.

"Oil data is like paint thrown across a canvas, you get the broad outline of the situation. But even then it's not just a Jackson Pollack painting, the paint actually moves of its own accord after it has been applied," says Mr Horsnell.

- PHANTOM RESERVES -

One of the major problems surrounding oil data is in reserves.


CLAIMED OPEC OIL RESERVES

Kuwait: 92bn (64bn)

UAE : 92bn (34bn)

Iran : 93bn (64bn)

Iraq: 100bn (48bn)

Saudi Arabia: 258bn (170bn)

Claimed oil reserves, bn barrels 1990s/1970s


These are the basins of crude oil that lie underground.

They are either held by governments or the 'oil majors' like BP, ExxonMobil or Shell, or a combination of both.

Many countries simply do not allow outsiders to audit the size of these fields.

This is especially true of the major Middle East oil producers of OPEC and the countries of the former Soviet Union.

Some believe that reserves stated by OPEC countries such as Kuwait and Saudi Arabia are not accurate.

"There are a lot of questions to answer over OPEC reserves," says Bruce Evers of Investec Bank. "The quality of overall oil market data is poor, but with OPEC there remains considerable debate over the reliability of their reserve estimates."


- SUDDEN REVISIONS -

One of the main reasons is that in the 1980s OPEC decided to switch to a quota production system based on the size of reserves.

The larger the reserves a country said it had the more it could pump.

The more it could pump the more money it could make.

As a result in 1985 Kuwait revised its reserve estimates by 50% overnight.

It was soon followed by United Arab Emirates, Iran, and Iraq. In 1988 Saudi Arabia became the last to join the revised reserve estimates party, adding a whopping 88bn barrels.


- UNEXPLAINED CHANGES -

"Something needs to be done," says Mr Evers. "OPEC have never fully explained the reasons behind these changes, they have never issued any guidelines. The market needs to know."

Although previous estimates may have been conservative, what troubles some analysts is that twenty years later, these reserve estimates are unchanged, in fact some have increased.

Whilst it is obviously possible to add reserves by new field discoveries it can seem a perplexing situation to market makers.

Kuwait for example still claim exactly the same reserve level as they had in 1985 despite pumping millions of barrels every day since then.

Nor are company estimates any better, with Shell forced to make four revisions downwards of its official reserves since 2002, losing around 4.8bn barrels and damaging its share price.


- UNCLEAR FIGURES -

Even current figures for OPEC production are unclear.

OPEC say they are producing exactly 28 million barrels a day (mbpd).

This includes their latest 500,000 barrels per day increase announced at their last quarterly meeting by Kuwaiti oil minister Al-Sabbah.

But OPEC have also admitted that their members break their own quotas to take advantage of high prices.


- SO IS IT REALLY 28MBPD?

The International Energy Agency says OPEC pumped 29.3 mbpd in May 2005.

The IEA say this is actually a fall from April 2005 of 55,000bpd.

Who is correct? "There is no official OPEC output data," says Mr Horsnell. "they just kind of pass on the data they are given by their member countries. It is really not that easy for OPEC, you can't blame them, it is down to their members."


- FORECASTING DEMAND -

"I don't rate IEA data either," says Mr Evers. "they have horrendously underestimated demand in the past, it is one of the reasons we are where we are now. They are little more than a data collection agency, and the data they are given is already tarnished."

It is no easier to forecast the future demand for oil, and analysts are growing increasingly sceptical of oil company attempts to do so.

Energy Files director Dr Michael Smith said "it is no longer appropriate to accept glib demand forecasts from oil companies, financial institutions and governments¿suggestions that oil consumption will grow to up to 120 million barrels per day by 2020 and that automobile and airline traffic will increase at extraordinary rates are futile and damaging."

But Paul Horsnell says that gaps between data-sets can in fact show up areas of the oil market that need careful study.

"Take Russian production as an example," he says. "There are all kinds of rosy forecasts and then there are people like me who think it's all rather bad news. But there are many reasons about why it is impossible to measure oil, it's a liquid for a start.

"There are huge margins of error with oil data and it has to be treated as such. It's the nature of the product. Thinking you can measure it to the eighth decimal point, well, it's just a waste of time."

As oil prices continue to soar, the lack of accurate data could make it harder for the oil market to predict its future direction.

-------------------------------------------


From: Toronto, ON. Canada | Registered: Jun 2005  |  IP: Logged

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