| August 11, 2008
Thirty Reasons Why Organizations Must Get Off Petroleum
Now
by Charles Cresson Wood
Don't get me wrong -- I am very concerned about global warming and climate
change. In the long run, that's one of the most serious challenges that
humans face as a species. But in the short run, the world is no longer able
to produce petroleum in sufficient volume to satisfy its demand. Soon it
will not be able to produce petroleum in sufficient volume to satisfy its
needs.
Reflecting this, a majority of the world's major oil producing countries now
see that their production is in decline. These post-peak producers include
the United Kingdom, Norway, Denmark, Venezuela, Mexico, Nigeria, Canada and
the United States. Likewise, the world's discovery of new fields peaked in
1965, and it generally lags production by about 40 years. That means that
total world production will decline sometime soon, if it has not already.
What's more, the price of crude oil has risen 95% over the last year, and
this reveals that worldwide supply can no longer keep up with worldwide
demand. Peak oil and its impacts will seriously affect us much sooner than
climate change will, although the sooner we stop burning fossil fuels, the
soon we take care of both of these very serious problems.
Although global warming gets a lot of press these days, the major media are
strangely silent about peak oil. In a culture that makes it a habit to be
short-term in its focus, it is astounding that more Americans are not
seriously concerned about peak oil. In this brief piece, I list 30 reasons
why we all must immediately start to transition away from petroleum.
Although a great deal of transition-related work remains to be done, we now
have eleven commercially available alternative fuels that can stand-in for
petroleum. Although it looks as though all-electric cars are going to be the
long-term winner, depending on the circumstances, a wide variety of other
alternatives may be appropriate, at least as transition fuels. The other
options include ethanol, butanol, di-methyl ether, bio-diesel, straight
vegetable oil, bio-methane, natural gas, propane, hydrogen and synthetic
liquid fuel.
Don't take my word for any of this. Look it up on the web or ask the retired
expert geologists who used to work for the oil companies, such as Dr. Colin
J. Campbell. Read some books such as Richard Heinberg's The Party's Over, or
Dale Allen Pfeiffer's The End Of The Oil Age. When you really see the big
picture, you will no doubt agree with me that a reorientation away from
petroleum, towards renewables, is absolutely required, and it is required
now.
By making the transition away from petroleum-based fuels, organizations can
or will:
1. Respond to the increasing publicity about, and moral pressure favoring,
the adoption of alternatives to petroleum. In the process, they will note
that staff morale and public support can be augmented when an organization
shows that it is in fact acting in an ecologically-responsible way.
2. Reduce and mitigate the adverse environmental impacts related to the use
of oil. These impacts including air pollution from refineries, poisoning of
flora and fauna when oil is produced in wilderness areas, and damages done
by oil spills on land as well as in the sea. Note that burning fossil fuels
contributes about 80% of the worldwide emissions of carbon dioxide.
3. Benefit from government incentives, such as loans, subsidies, and special
tax credits. Organizations should expect that these incentives will become
not only more common, but also considerably more compelling in the years
ahead. The current U.S. alternative fuel vehicle tax credit of up to
$4,000/vehicle is an example.
4. Exploit new business opportunities in alternative energy. Many
progressive companies, such as General Electric and Siemens, see the
transition away from oil as a significant business opportunity. These
companies have invested a great deal of money in the development of new
products and services to support this transition.
5. Take advantage of the marketing opportunities afforded to those
organizations that paint themselves as green. Polls show that consumers are
willing to pay considerably more for products and services that are indeed
better for the environment.
6. Go beyond the massive spin campaign now underway to obfuscate the peak
oil message. Countries such as Saudi Arabia conceal the real numbers about
their available petroleum reserves and there is ample evidence that many
producing countries are over-estimating these reserves. It is time for
organizations to go beyond the "we need to study this" or "the jury is still
out" phase, and time for organizations to enter the "begin transitioning
right now" phase.
7. Show real thought leadership and catapult the organization into a
position of public prominence. The U.S. government is clearly resisting
change when it comes to transitioning away from oil, in fact there is ample
evidence of gridlock in Washington on these issues. As a result,
individuals, communities, and organizations need to all initiate their own
plans for the transition away from petroleum.
8. Prepare for government-dictated mandatory changeovers to alternative
energy sources, and away from petroleum. Recent research indicates that the
world has, at most, thirty years to get the gasoline completely out of cars,
and to otherwise stop burning fossil fuels. So while there are no current
laws or regulations that require a complete conversion to new transportation
technologies, for certain types of organizations, there are already partial
mandatory conversion laws and regulations in place (in the U.S., one such
law is the National Energy Policy Act of 1992).
9. Limit the likely future damage caused by government fuel rationing. They
should expect that there will soon be rationing because even conservative
organizations like the International Energy Agency (IEA) have developed
plans to impose rationing via the authority of the United Nations.
10. Avoid restrictions in the petroleum-based fuel supply created by
government-imposed price controls. In an effort to look as though they are
doing something about the rapidly increasing price of petroleum-based fuels,
many governments will impose price controls, as Richard Nixon did on oil in
the 1970s. But the record is clear that these price controls do not work —
they in fact create shortages.
11. Avoid a black market in petroleum-based fuels and the related government
corruption. Government interventions (price controls, rationing, etc.) in
the oil market will become increasingly common in the years ahead. The
real-world experience in countries, such as Nigeria, shows that fuel
adulteration, political bribes for favors, and related corruption problems
will soon follow.
12. Prepare for a new business environment where energy is scarce.
Reflecting the difficulties that we as a species are having when it comes to
transitioning to renewable energy systems, over the next decade, the total
amount of available energy, on a per capita basis, is likely to be
considerably lower than it is today. In large measure this is because the
available quantities of fossil fuels will be considerably reduced.
Politician claims about the "American way of life being non-negotiable"
don't in any way change this fact of life.
13. Recognize that conversion will take years of sustained and dedicated
effort. Warnings about peaking world oil supply were issued more than 30
years ago, so we have had plenty of time to prepare. Unfortunately, very
little has been done, and we are now in an oil crisis. Nonetheless, it still
takes years to establish the new technologies, the new infrastructures, the
new habits, and the new economic systems needed to fully support and exploit
alternatives.
14. Begin to recreate themselves so that they are truly independent from
oil, so that they open up new and previously unappreciated options. Oil is
now used, in one way or another, in just about every industrial product
produced (such as paints, carpets, detergents, food additives, fertilizers,
and pesticides). Organizations are more likely to see and create new
possibilities, such as organic and natural products, when they move away
from their dependency on oil.
15. Formally acknowledge just how many of their internal costs have been oil
dependent. An examination of the income statements for many organizations
over the last several years will indicate that fuel has been a relatively
minor and immaterial cost. But this will dramatically change in the years
ahead, as the airlines and trucking firms are already coming to appreciate.
16. Lower the future cost of goods sold and/or future overhead costs. By
moving to alternatives, organizations can at least partially unhook
themselves from the direct correlation between the increase in the price of
oil and the increase in the price of other goods. For example, studies show
that a 33% increase in the price of oil translates to a 0.6% to 0.9%
increase in the consumer price of food.
17. Insulate themselves from volatile oil prices caused by increasing
political involvement in the oil market. Uncertain future supplies of
petroleum are making prices for oil volatile, and we can expect that this
volatility will get worse in the near future. This volatility will be made
worse by the maneuvers of certain governments, such as that of Russia, as
they attempt to gain greater power and influence using their energy
resources as weapons.
18. Insulate themselves from volatile oil prices caused by speculators
participating in the oil market. While speculators have recently been blamed
for the run-up in the price of oil, the presence of speculators is really
only a reflection of the widespread belief that there is major money to be
made in the futures market and similar commodities exchanges. While
speculators may be able to change the price of oil in the short run, in the
long run they are not able to affect the market price, because they do not
change the underlying supply and demand. Organizations transitioning away
from oil can thus eliminate the need to be in competition with speculators
for a dwindling supply of oil.
19. Expect that real oil prices will significantly increase because
governments will add new taxes, and eliminate the existing subsidies that
have encouraged the consumption of oil. While many countries, such as Iran
and the United States, have subsidized both the oil industry and consumers
using oil, as global supplies become tighter in the years ahead, governments
will change their policies to discourage the consumption of oil. These same
organizations will thus avoid having to pay the much higher cost of future
petroleum-based fuels. Note that a full-costing analysis recently done by
Milton Copulos at the National Defense Council Foundation indicated that the
true cost of American gasoline is now US $8/gallon (this includes government
subsidies, the cost of the war in Iraq, etc.).
20. Anticipate that government attempts to buffer the volatility in the oil
market will diminish and soon cease. Many governments such as China and the
U.S. have invested in "strategic petroleum reserves" to help buffer their
domestic markets against oil shocks in the world market, but these and
related approaches will soon become too costly and as a result they will be
abandoned. The world is facing a shortage of certain raw materials, such as
oil, and no measure of government meddling can protect consumers of oil from
that fact.
21. Prepare for carbon taxes intended to reduce greenhouse gases and deal
with climate change. Western Europe is currently setting an example for the
rest of the world in terms of adopting laws and regulations to discourage
carbon dioxide emissions. The approaches found there (including
cap-and-trade systems) are likely to be found in many other countries in the
years ahead. So organizations that have adopted certain alternatives, such
as electric vehicles, will be well prepared for these new laws and
regulations.
22. Set their organizations free from the traditional link between economic
growth and inexpensive oil. The recent economic growth of both China and
India has been inextricably tied-up with, and enabled by, the availability
of relatively inexpensive fossil fuels. But in the future, when these fuels
are much more expensive, economic growth will still be possible when
renewable alternatives are employed.
23. Achieve freedom from the oil supply problems occasioned by the
super-sensitivity of the oil market to small disruptions. The oil embargo
against the United States in 1973 provided an example of how a relatively
small reduction in the supply of oil can cause a profound impact, and
although the world has changed since then, the panic and impact associated
with such disruptions will still be quite serious. For example, Dr. Henry
Kissinger called this oil embargo "the most threatening event for the
world's developed economies since World War II."
24. Obtain freedom from oil supply problems caused by trouble in the complex
oil transportation network. The routes taken to deliver oil from producing
country to consuming country are often long and complex, and because the
buffers in the system are now so small, relatively small disruptions in that
highly tuned system, perhaps caused by terrorist incidents, can cause
serious supply disruptions for the consumers of oil.
25. Avoid damage from fuel supply interruptions caused by resource wars.
Research by Professor Michael T. Klare indicates that the cause of recent
wars and violent conflicts has in many cases been competition for resources,
often petroleum. Without question, the struggle for control over these
scarce and valuable materials will worsen in the years ahead.
26. Obtain freedom from supply shortages caused by the long time it takes to
build new oil production facilities. Many oil producers have been
under-investing in infrastructure in the recent years. It can take five
years or more before new wells are able to produce oil. This means that even
if there are vast and economically accessible reserves of oil locked under
the ground or ocean, it will still be many years before this oil can be
brought to market.
27. Limit fossil fuel supply interruptions occasioned by refinery upgrade
problems. The further we go beyond the world peak in supply, the more
undesirable the quality of the oil will be (tar sands are a good example).
This is because the most desirable oil was produced first because it was
more easily obtained, less expensive to process, etc. The less desirable oil
produced in the years ahead requires that refineries be retooled so that
they can process heavier oil, oil containing more sulfur, and the like.
Delays associated with this retooling may lead to local shortages.
28. Avoid having to scramble at the same time that nearly everyone else is
scrambling to transition to alternatives. By transitioning now,
organizations can take advantage of commercially-available alternative
energy products and services, rather than coping with delays when everyone
else is attempting to transition at the same time (when an even more severe
petroleum crisis occurs).
29. Off-load gas guzzlers and other petroleum-dependent equipment while
there is still a market for these machines. At a certain point, the decline
in the availability of petroleum will be quite rapid, especially for those
consumers in oil-importing countries. Those consumers who get rid of their
gas guzzlers and related equipment now will at least receive some money for
these machines, while they may receive nothing after the rapid decline takes
place.
30. Help to assure that their workforces are able to get to work. As
gasoline and petro-diesel prices soar in the years ahead, the poorest
segment of an organization's work force may be forced to quit their jobs
because they can no longer afford to commute long distances from remote
suburbs. So an organization that helps its workers transition to
alternatives (including public transportation) will then be more likely to
retain these same workers in the years ahead. Reflecting this, a recent
Business Week survey indicated 26% of workers were considering quitting
their jobs to get a better commute, and 65% thought that their employers
should step-up and take the lead in dealing with this problem.
So if your organization isn't already seriously planning for its transition
away from petroleum-based fuels, talk to your department manager about it,
talk to your firm's Chief Operations Manager about it, talk to the
organization's Contingency Planning Manager about it and/or start an
employee brown-bag discussion about it. Within your community, write your
legislators, meet with your city council representatives, mention it to your
neighbors and otherwise help to shift people's consciousness so that they
will soon move away from petroleum. The first step is widespread awareness
that this transition must in fact take place now; the resulting actions will
follow naturally from that awareness.
Charles Cresson Wood is an alternative fuels management consultant with
Post-Petroleum Transportation, in Sausalito, California. His latest book is
Kicking The Gasoline & Petro-Diesel Habit: A Business Manager's Blueprint
For Action. For more information about the book, as well as a mechanism to
contact him, go to
www.kickingthegasoline.com .
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