Four years ago I read a similar article in National Geographic.  The  
potential consequences of this scared the crap out of me.  I am not  generally 
a doom 
and gloom guy.  I just know how John Q. Public generally  keeps his head 
burried in the sand and other orafices until a problem is no  longer on the 
clearly visible horizon but breaking down the front door.   The longer we wait 
to 
agressively deal with this problem, the more painful it  will be once it gets 
to 
our doorstep.
Four years ago, I had some mechanical skills, but I did not know how to  
weld,  I knew nothing about electricity.  I worked full time and I  still do.  
Now 
I have 2.7 KW of PV panels as well as solar hot  water on my roof, an 
electric car in my garage, a grease burning diesel as  well as a few other 
toys.  I 
bring this point up not to brag but to show  the potential.  To paraphrase 
Abraham Lincoln, the fact that a few men have  achieved greatness demonstrates 
to 
us the we all can achieve  greatness.  Not that I consider myself "great" but 
IF I CAN, SO  CAN YOU!  I have heard to many times "I could never do that, I'm 
just a  (substitute your occupation here)"  BULL$%&+!!!!!  I am a  doctor.  
That does not make me incapable of learning new things, nor anyone  else.  All 
I did was take the time that most of us spend staring at a TV  screen and put 
it to better use in the garage or reading about the current  project.  We can 
all fix this problem!!!  It is said (often by myself  in the garage late at 
night) that the journey of a thousand miles begins with a  single step.  Those 
first steps require a surprising amount of courage, a  direction and a fair 
idea of the destination.
The only important difference between me and many club members and a lot of  
the public is that I had a head start.  I am now where anyone can be in a  few 
years.  A few years is not a long time.
There is a lot that needs to be done.  Clubs like ours can give this  journey 
some direction.  My motivation is my kids.  Whenever the next  major energy 
"crisis" comes,  I want my kids to be able to remember  that at least I tried 
to do something about it.  A pleasant and unexpected  side effect from all of 
this is that my kids think I'm some kind of genius, even  my 15 year old.  We 
need to start taking those first few  courageous steps, find our motivation 
whatever it may be.  The journey  of a thousand miles (or for me four years) 
will 
never be finished if we don't  step off the front porch and start walking.
 
 
 
In a message dated 12/3/2008 9:24:31 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,  
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

Wow. You  DO amaze me, Mr. Charles. These ideas and computations need to be 
shared  with other minds. Would you be ok to send this to the FLEAA mailing 
list?  Plug In America? EVs for sale? etc.?
I do *get* the concept re: EVs being  the possible key to breaking this 
viscious cycle:
(from your words) The  only way we can get out of the vicious cycle of this 
paradigm  (explained
reasonably well by mathematical queueing models), which has  stalled and
flatlined long-term economic growth, is to develop a widely  available
competitive substitute for oil, which of course would  be
electrically-powered transportation, i.e. EVs.  That would remove  the
constraint and ceiling on economic growth and allow the global economy  to
once again expand.

----- Original Message ----- 
From:  "Charles Whalen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Florida EAA"  <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:52  PM
Subject: [FLEAA] My mathematical explanation of the extreme oil  
pricevolatility we are seeing in a post Peak Oil world


>  ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: Charles Whalen
> To: Fran  Sullivan-Fahs
> Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2008 7:05 PM
>  Subject: Re: what do you think, charles? from fran
>
> Very  complex subject.  Peak Oil is not about running out of oil; it's 
>  about
> having reached maximum supply and production.  There's a  big difference.
> Basically what Peak Oil does is that it puts a cap on  GDP, where the only
> way GDP can grow any further is through efficiency  gains.  The practical
> effect of this is that we will see repeated  cycles of rolling recessions 
> (or
> worse, depressions) and  recoveries, but without a longer term trendline of
> growth.  The  longer term trendline will be flat.  This is exactly what we
> are  seeing.  Global oil extraction and production peaked in 2005 and  has
> fallen slightly since then.  We are now on a very slightly  decreasing
> plateau and will likely not see larger declines in oil  output for a few
> years, possibly until 2012-15, when the declines will  get steeper.  There
> can be, and will be, lots of oil price  volatility within this paradigm, 
> with
> price basically  determined by demand.  What we now have is a
> demand-destruction  dynamic, where price will moderate demand and 
> vice-versa,
> but  where total supply is limited and capped by the global peak that is 
>  now
> clearly visible behind us in the rear-view mirror back in  2005.  Peak Oil 
> is
> only visible in hindsight, and we've  now got that hindsight to clearly see
> it.
>
> There are  mathematical models which explain the extreme price volatility 
>  we
> are seeing and will continue to see in the oil market.  In the  absence of
> any widely developed and available, competing substitute  for oil and with
> the supply of oil constrained and limited to the peak  we have already seen
> behind us and unable to expand any further, I see  mathematical queueing
> models as a good proxy and theoretical construct  for explaining this price
> volatility.  In a queueing model, you  have a demand rate and a supply 
> rate,
> just as in the case of  the oil market.  Mathematical queueing models do 
> not
>  directly incorporate price into them, but this can be done by proxy, as  
> the
> length of the queue -- or equivalently, the waiting time  in the queue 
> (which
> is proportional to the length of the  queue) -- can be thought of as a 
> proxy
> for price, since price  will likely be directly proportional to the length 
> of
> the  queue (or equivalently, waiting time in the queue).  This may be
>  somewhat counter-intuitive to those without mathematical training, at 
>  least
> on first thought, but the length of the queue (and waiting time  in it), 
> and
> hence, by proxy, the price of oil, takes off  exponentially and skyrockets 
> as
> the demand rate approaches  the limited, constrained, fixed supply rate. 
> In
> fact, the  length of the queue, and hence price of oil, actually goes to
> infinity  (in the mathematical model) as slack capacity completely 
>  disappears
> and the demand rate reaches 100% of supply, bumping up  against the fixed
> supply constraint.  This can be seen  mathematically, for the simplest 
> M/M/1
> queue, with the  formula:
>
> L(t) = 1/[mu(t)-lambda(t)]
>
>  where
>
> L(t) = length of the queue (as a proxy for price) at  time t
>
> lambda(t) = demand rate at time t
>
> mu(t)  = supply rate at time t
>
> This mathematical model is a good  proxy in explaining the 
> demand-destruction
> dynamic in a  supply-constrained environment, as we now have with the oil
> market  having reached maximum global ouput, and the resulting repeated
> cycles  of rolling recessions and recoveries that we are seeing and will
>  continue to see, with a flat longer-term GDP trendline, where demand
>  continues to bump up against this fixed ceiling at the height of each
>  recovery, causing the price of oil to skyrocket, which then results in
>  demand destruction, leading to another recession and then subsequent
>  recovery, and so on and so on.
>
> As demand backs off of the  fixed, constrained supply going into each
> recession, the mathematical  model explains and demonstrates how the price 
> of
> oil will  drop precipitously with the more slack capacity that is freed up
>  through demand destruction.  Basically what will happen is that  with
> sufficient slack capacity (of supply over demand) in the global  oil 
> market,
> the price of oil will start to drop back down  towards its cost of 
> extraction
> and production, which is  exactly what we are now seeing.
>
> The only way we can get out of  the vicious cycle of this paradigm 
> (explained
> reasonably well  by mathematical queueing models), which has stalled and
> flatlined  long-term economic growth, is to develop a widely available
>  competitive substitute for oil, which of course would be
>  electrically-powered transportation, i.e. EVs.  That would remove  the
> constraint and ceiling on economic growth and allow the global  economy to
> once again expand.
>
>  Charles
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From:  Fran Sullivan-Fahs
> To: Charles Whalen
> Sent: Tuesday, December  02, 2008 10:50 AM
> Subject: what do you think, charles? from  fran
>
> Peak oil hoax: Keeping the idea of EVs alive in the era  of cheap gas
>
> Posted by: "doug korthof"  [EMAIL PROTECTED]   live_oil_free
> Sun Nov 30, 2008  7:45 am (PST)
>
> What makes you think Peak Oil is a hoax? You  think there's an
> infinite amount of oil? You don't believe the decline  in discovery &
> production rates and increase in demand  rates?
>
> I wrote an article about this; while oil is not  unlimited, per se,
> there's much more of it than the peak oilers think  or will admit.
>
> Do you know that the original peak oiler was a  Shell exec? Hubble
> was writing about peak oil to promote Shell nukular  power, and to
> jack up the price and increase control of oil  supplies.
>
> It's not entirely a bad idea, because the peak oil  myth gets people
> to accept high oil prices; but it's pernicious if  people think we're
> going to run out of oil.
>
>  ----------------------------------------
>
> The Myths of Peak Oil  and the "Energy Crisis"
>
> "the problem is NOT that we are  running out of oil; the problem is
> that we are NOT going to run out of  oil before we smother in the
> debris of the oil  economy...".
>
> The American Petroleum Institute confidently  expects to deliver oil
> at the present rate of growth until the very  last decades of the
> 21st Century. Newer technologies such as shale-oil  extraction, and
> revived older technologies, such as converting coal  and natural gas
> to oil are in ADDITION to this  assurance.
>
> The amount of oil in the Earth is finite, of  course. Books such
> as "The Party's Over" claim much more, that the  upcoming end of
> cheap energy from oil will necessarily cause global  political
> disruption, and that there's neither enough time nor enough  other
> resources to find a substitute.
>
> This version of  "Peak Oil" is the one that sells books, is a real
> position held by  widely read authors, and can be shown to be false.
> Explication of the  two meanings for "peak oil" remove the salability
> of scare books. In  one sense it's trivially true, and in the other
> sense, it's just  false.
>
> 1. Peak Oil in one unarguable sense means that it's the  end of
> easily-recoverable oil. When oil stops bubbling out of Arabia,  it
> must be pumped or pressure-extracted and separated. The price  of
> oil will rise correspondingly.
>
> Oil prices of $50  per barrel may explode to $100 or even $500 or
> more if oil must be  extracted from "shale oil" or converted from
> coal deposits. These  numbers correspond to pump prices of $1.60,
> $3.20, and $14.00 per  gallon. Price inflation will eventually
> increase the price of gasoline  to these levels, as the dollar
> degrades over the decades. Even a pump  price of $14/gallon is still
> a DISCOUNT from one estimate of the real,  unsubsidized costs that
> are not paid by the oil  industry.
>
> So in this sense, "Peak Oil" is trivially true; gas  prices are going
> to rise, maybe severely! No one doubted, back when  bread was 30
> cents a loaf, that some day it would be $3; it's just a  matter of
> time and market pressures.
>
> The price of oil  has little to do either with the cost of production
> or scarcity. As  the Saudi Oil Minister stated, there is no
> shortage; they are able to  supply ALL their customers. When the
> reporter asked about lower  prices, the Minister laughed. Big Oil
> charges what they feel the  market will bear; it's a managed market,
> like  diamonds.
>
> Big Oil has been consolidating, from reducing the  number of gas
> stations and refineries to a smaller number of  multi-nationals,
> effectively allowing Standard Oil to reform itself  and join with
> OPEC to control the market. It's a monopoly in the sense  that folks
> who relied on cheap gas and purchased a gas-guzzler are  helpless,
> for now. They must purchase the fuel or do without driving.  In a
> sense, we are hooked on the drug of mobility, and have no
>  alternative. Mass transit was dismantled years ago, and we got
> hooked  on the freedom of the auto.
>
> In a controlled market, there's a  mathematical model for the price-
> point where cash returns are  maximized. Naturally, drivers react to
> higher prices by either driving  less or finding other means of
> transportation. To the degree that they  do so, Big Oil lowers the
> price, but only in accordance with the  model; there's no shortage,
> as there is in a free market, all the  customers get the "drug".
>
> Are oil-fired cars "sustainable?"  That is, could we run oil-fired
> cars indefinitely? Amazingly, it's  possible. Given enough power,
> we can sequester carbon dioxide from the  atmosphere, as plants do,
> and accelerate its conversion into burnable  Carbon compounds such as
> oil. The cost of this oil might be perhaps  $2000 per barrel, and we
> would all be smothered by the debris of  burning the rest of the oil,
> but it is theoretically possible. So in  this sense, unfortunately,
> our oil addiction won't be solved by "peak  oil." We have to decide
> to get off the "drug" ourselves, nobody else  is going to do it for
> us.
>
> In another sense, "Peak oil"  is the idea that, in the immediate
> future, we will run out of physical  oil, and not have any. Why does
> this matter? Well, it will mean our  cars will sit idle, and our
> economy collapse. Shopping centers, urban  sprawl, and whole
> populations will disappear; societies will fight and  die over the
> last few gallons of gasoline, the last few puffs of CNG,  and the
> last few pounds of coal.
>
> In this sense, it's  just false, as shown by the supplies of physical
> oil examined above;  moreover, as oil runs out, people adapt. When
> trains disappeared, we  were "trained" to use cars and busses; those
> who depended on trains  adapted.
>
> The chief thing about this sense of "peak oil" that  bothers me: it
> ignores the infinite adaptability of humans. We are  clever and
> ingenious monkeys; we adapt, within limits. As things  change,
> commodities become scare, prices rise, and people learn to  live with
> the new situation. To run out of oil in this way assumes we  would
> have to fall off the cliff suddenly, from subsidized cheap oil  to
> scarcity with scarcely a break. The scary image is of  suddenly
> empty pumps, going from lots of cheap oil to none at  all.
>
> Things don't happen this way. It's ironic, to see videos  like "the
> end of suburbia", when so many people are working so hard to  stop
> big developments like Rancho Mission Viejo; sprawl is happening  now,
> and it's an insult to think that it's going away because soon  there
> won't be any gasoline. Peak oil won't stop sprawl, only  difficult
> battling and opposition even has a ghost of a  chance.
>
> Can there be an "Energy Crisis" without a  crisis?
>
> What happens with Peak Oil is illustrated by the  claims of an Energy
> Crisis. A mild, but sudden, jump in oil prices led  to the sudden
> popularity of Electric cars. Every automaker seems on  the verge of
> some day producing an Electric car. From Nissan to VW,  Honda, and
> even General Motors, which scarcely three years ago  arrested would-
> be buyers of their Electric car and crushed them  all.
>
> Dick Cheney said that we need "a new power plant a week  for the next
> twenty years," 1,000 new electric plants.
>
>  A study of the California grid on www.CAISO.org shows that the only
>  time we are anywhere near a shortage of electric power is summer
>  daytime peak periods. The rest of the time, we are shutting down
> big  generators as electric power goes begging. During off-peak
> hours,  extra electric is used to pump water up to Lake Castaic and
> other  reservoirs; the next day, the pumps turn into generators, and
> the  power helps meet peak demand. Electric generated by this "peak
>  shaving" technique is still cheaper than firing up dirty "peaker"
>  units, despite the loss via pumping and generating.
>
> Our  current generating capacity of about 52,000 megaWatts is far in
> excess  of even our peak demand.
>
> A simple calculation shows that we  could generate all of this peak
> power by rooftop solar panels,  assuming every Californian lives
> under an average of 1000 square feet  of roof; this is realistic,
> since the area available includes parking  structures, apartment
> houses, courtyards, etc. A thousand square feet  per person assumes
> 2.5 residents of an average 2,500 square foot home.  1000 square
> feet is 100 square meters of roof, times 200 Watts per  square meter
> yields an average system of 20,000 Watts or 20 kiloWatts  (kW) per
> person. If only half of the roof is useable due to shading  or
> skylights, that's an average system per person, just using  rooftops,
> of 10 kW. Multiply by 30,000,000 Californians and you  get
> 300,000,000 kW of capacity, or 300,000 megaWatts, about 6 times  our
> existing generating potential.
>
> So there's no  "energy crisis" with respect to electric production.
> We have more than  enough electric capacity, and, if we used our
> solar peak power  generating capacity, we would be flooded with
> excess electric power.  There are equipment outages and storm
> damage, of course, but if we  installed battery backup solar systems,
> we'd be immune to that,  too.
>
> What, then, do they mean by an Energy Crisis? Let's look  at oil.
> Could that be what talk about an Energy Crisis is all about?  First,
> people don't want to get off oil.
>
> If you claim  there's an oil shortage, I'd have to ask where's the
> shortage. What  this boils down to is that we don't like the high
> price of  oil.
>
> If we really wanted to get off of oil, and still retain  our
> mobility, and assuming oil prices remained high and  manufacturers
> resumed production of all-electric EVs and started  making plug-in
> hybrids, we can reduce oil far below current US demand  of 20 million
> barrels per day.
>
> Even better, some of  our driving could be done with excess electric
> production, especially  off-peak charging of plug-in cars.
>
> The average car travels  1000 miles per month. A kilo-Watt-hour
> (kWh) is a measure of electric  energy or work. There's about 35 kWh
> per gallon of gasoline. An  Electric car such as the Toyota RAV4-EV,
> a small SUV, gets about 4  miles per kWh of energy. So to travel
> that 1000 miles only takes 250  kWh of electric energy per month.
>
> The average home uses  between 500 kWh and 1000 kWh per month. So
> 1000 miles of driving could  be done on a small fraction of the
> energy use of the  home.
>
> An average gas car gets 20 miles per gallon, so avoiding  buying gas
> for 1000 miles saves 50 gallons of gas. At $2/gallon, that  saves
> $100, not counting oil changes, tune ups, and so on. That's  more
> than enough to purchase a rooftop solar system large enough  to
> produce 300 kWh of energy per month. So in effect, if you could  buy
> a plug-in car, you could use the money you don't spend on  gasoline
> to help electrify America. And after it's paid for, you get  to
> drive for free.
>
> Even better: your daytime peak  electric production could charge your
> car -- or you could "bank" the  valuable peak power with the grid
> when it needs it most, using the  extra credit for that valuable
> power to "pay for" off-peak charging of  your plug-in car. Both the
> daytime peak production and the nightly  charging help level electric
> usage and actually lower the cost of  electric power.
>
> Each plug-in car that doesn't use gasoline  tends to lower the price
> of gas for the remaining oil-fired cars.  Those people who want to
> buy a plug-in car, and power it with their  own solar system, should
> be allowed to do so; the only thing stopping  them is a lack of plug-
> in cars.
>
> The RAV4-EV ceased  production after Chevron bought control of its
> Nickel Metal Hydride  (NiMH) batteries from GM and sued Toyota,
> extracting $30 million in  "damages" and allowing Toyota only to make
> small NiMH batteries, too  small to power an Electric car or a plug-
> in. That's why all car  companies are forced to experiment with
> Lithium batteries, which show  promise, but may not last as long as
> NiMH. Should an oil company  dictate our Energy Policy? Why did GM
> and Chevron collude to suppress  plug-in cars, and why should they be
> allowed to get away with  it?
>
> There's in the end no "peak oil" problem, and no "energy  crisis".
> There's a lack of leadership, a lack of will, a sickening  failure to
> address our Energy Policy, but that's a lack of mental  energy in our
> failure to force politicians to rein in Big Oil. Our  corrupt
> politicians are paralyzed by Big Oil's donations. Big Oil  must
> smirk when the pols scramble for pennies while they make off  with
> billions, distracting the gullible with talk of an "energy  crisis."
>
> All the talk of "solving the energy crisis" and of  Electric cars
> would vanish instantly if gasoline fell to $2/gallon.  We'd go back
> to sleep, and remain vulnerable to Big Oil any time they  want to
> yank our chain. So the real angst behind the Energy Crisis is  the
> desire for lower pump prices.
>
> In practice, most of  the remaining Electric cars are Toyota RAV4-EV,
> and most are powered  by energy credits from daytime rooftop solar
> electric peak power  production. The only thing stopping more people
> from making this  sensible choice is the failure to resume production
> of the Electric  car. If the auto companies were serious about it,
> they would not defer  production of Electric cars for years; Electric
> cars, and plug-in  hybrids, are not, as GM claims, "cutting edge"
> ideas; they are twenty  years old, are well proven, and you can see
> examples in your own  community of people living the "EV-PV"
> lifestyle. It's not difficult  to "go green" if they let you, it's
> EASY, and it's even  fun.
>
>
>  _______________________________________________
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> [email protected]
> http://www.floridaeaa.org  


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