Ten Reasons to Take Peak Oil Seriously

Forty years ago, the results of modeling, as presented in The Limits to Growth, reinvigorated a discussion about exponentially growing consumption of natural resources, ranging from metals to fossil fuels to atmospheric capacity, and how such consumption could not continue far into the future. Fifte...

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Main Author: Robert J. Brecha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-02-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/2/664
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spelling doaj-37069a17f51f4d2bae30a42b642675b02020-11-24T22:33:25ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502013-02-015266469410.3390/su5020664Ten Reasons to Take Peak Oil SeriouslyRobert J. BrechaForty years ago, the results of modeling, as presented in The Limits to Growth, reinvigorated a discussion about exponentially growing consumption of natural resources, ranging from metals to fossil fuels to atmospheric capacity, and how such consumption could not continue far into the future. Fifteen years earlier, M. King Hubbert had made the projection that petroleum production in the continental United States would likely reach a maximum around 1970, followed by a world production maximum a few decades later. The debate about “peak oil”, as it has come to be called, is accompanied by some of the same vociferous denials, myths and ideological polemicizing that have surrounded later representations of The Limits to Growth. In this review, we present several lines of evidence as to why arguments for a near-term peak in world conventional oil production should be taken seriously—both in the sense that there is strong evidence for peak oil and in the sense that being societally unprepared for declining oil production will have serious consequences.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/2/664peak oilnatural resource limitsnon-conventional oil
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Robert J. Brecha
spellingShingle Robert J. Brecha
Ten Reasons to Take Peak Oil Seriously
Sustainability
peak oil
natural resource limits
non-conventional oil
author_facet Robert J. Brecha
author_sort Robert J. Brecha
title Ten Reasons to Take Peak Oil Seriously
title_short Ten Reasons to Take Peak Oil Seriously
title_full Ten Reasons to Take Peak Oil Seriously
title_fullStr Ten Reasons to Take Peak Oil Seriously
title_full_unstemmed Ten Reasons to Take Peak Oil Seriously
title_sort ten reasons to take peak oil seriously
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2013-02-01
description Forty years ago, the results of modeling, as presented in The Limits to Growth, reinvigorated a discussion about exponentially growing consumption of natural resources, ranging from metals to fossil fuels to atmospheric capacity, and how such consumption could not continue far into the future. Fifteen years earlier, M. King Hubbert had made the projection that petroleum production in the continental United States would likely reach a maximum around 1970, followed by a world production maximum a few decades later. The debate about “peak oil”, as it has come to be called, is accompanied by some of the same vociferous denials, myths and ideological polemicizing that have surrounded later representations of The Limits to Growth. In this review, we present several lines of evidence as to why arguments for a near-term peak in world conventional oil production should be taken seriously—both in the sense that there is strong evidence for peak oil and in the sense that being societally unprepared for declining oil production will have serious consequences.
topic peak oil
natural resource limits
non-conventional oil
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/5/2/664
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