The world WILL wheep – “Peak Oil-Hysteria” the new Peak-Oil

Eugene Van Den Berg - Ahead by a Century
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Manhattan Contrarian Announces The Arrival Of “Peak Oil-Hysteria” — Manhattan Contrarian

https://www.manhattancontrarian.com/blog/2021-11-3-manhattan-contrarian-announces-the-arrival-of-peak-oil-hysteria

Eugene van den Berg, Nov 2021

WSJ writes:

I think it’s been a big mistake, quite frankly,” Mr. Biden said Tuesday on the sidelines of the summit. “The rest of the world is going to look to China and say, what value add are they providing? They’ve lost an ability to influence people around the world and all the people here.”He said he felt the same way about Russia. “Literally, the tundra is burning,” Mr. Biden said of Russian President Vladimir Putin. “He has serious climate problems and he is mum on his willingness to do anything.

The truth and reality is, China gets it. Without fossil fuels, it’s much harder, costly, and more challenging to transition to net-zero.

China seems to have adopted a two-pronged strategy around duality. Keep on relying on fossil fuels whilst developing Renewable Energy. It’s a phased approach.

China is rated high on the “food chain” concerning electric vehicle (EV) developments. Yet, it still has to set a legislative date when the country will ban the sale of Internal Combustion Engines (ICE) in the future.

Excluding the impact that China may have on global oil demand, the graphic below depicts what the reduction in the demand for oil may look like considering EV legislated cut over future dates. The analysis includes the bold ambitions of Ford and General Motors announced earlier in 2021.

Eugene Van Den Berg - Ahead by a Century

The demand for oil will not disappear instantly. Mankind is the “Siamese Twin” of energy. Without energy, poverty eradication efforts will fail. Without oil, the quality of life will be substantially lower.

A very big part of what is being missed, in all climate change adaption and transition policy and discussion, is the undeniable fact that what we are looking to transition to, being RE, has many obstacles still to be solved around storage, reliability, and replacing baseload. Solving those are more important compared to the effort being invested in sizing up Green House Gas emissions reduction targets.

On top of that, electric grids require massive expansion and capital to expand capacity to feed and support the increase in demand stemming from charging needs. That’s not the issue but rather a consequence.

What’s different with this energy transition compared to when society transitioned from horse and carriage to the ICE, was that what we transitioned to was cheap and in unlimited supply.

In comparison, RE energy is free from the sun and wind. However when the sun shines and when the wind blows. The current global energy crisis, yes it’s driven mainly by low investment in fossil fuels since 2015, and compounded by lower wind occurrence to drive reliance on RE wind.

Eugene Van Den Berg - Ahead by a Century

CNN’s Fareed Zakaria sums it nicely. We need an energy transition strategy. Even if the world can reduce GHG emissions the reality is the world still depends on ~84% of its energy needs forthcoming from fossil fuels.

cnnfareedzakari

The question is how much RE is required to fully replace fossil fuels? RE investment and expansion still have a long way to go.

cnnfareedzakari

We are undeniably in a compounding energy crisis. It’s merely the beginning gauging the recent rise in electricity production costs in the US and Europe.

cnnfareedzakari

cnnfareedzakari

Put the climate hysteria to the side and develop policies and strategy that embraces duality as the world transitions to RE.

The first big energy shock of the green era

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The first big energy shock of the green era from TheEconomist https://www.economist.com/leaders/2021/10/16/the-first-big-energy-shock-of-the-green-era

Eugene Van Den Berg Oct, 2021

From the above article, The Economist writes:

“Next month world leaders will gather at the cop26 summit, saying they mean to set a course for net global carbon emissions to reach zero by 2050. As they prepare to pledge their part in this 30-year endeavour, the first big energy scare of the green era is unfolding before their eyes. Since May the price of a basket of oil, coal and gas has soared by 95%. Britain, the host of the summit, has turned its coal-fired power stations back on, American petrol prices have hit $3 a gallon, blackouts have engulfed China and India, and Vladimir Putin has just reminded Europe that its supply of fuel relies on Russian goodwill.The panic is a reminder that modern life needs abundant energy: without it, bills become unaffordable, homes freeze and businesses stall. The panic has also exposed deeper problems as the world shifts to a cleaner energy system, including inadequate investment in renewables and some transition fossil fuels, rising geopolitical risks and flimsy safety buffers in power markets. Without rapid reforms there will be more energy crises and, perhaps, a popular revolt against climate policies.”

Over the past 30-years or so, Renewable Energy (RE) wind and solar failed to capture sufficiently enough energy marketshare to have stored off the current global energy crisis notwithstanding vast subsidies.

Contributing to the challenges are the demand for RE component parts stemming from critical commodities like Lithium, Copper, Cobalt and many more, that are used in manufacturing such parts. These commodities too experiencing demand that exceeds supply, and the last few years are only the start of a massive drive to accomplish energy transition goals. What will demand and pricing likely look like over the next few years.

Electric Vehicles (EVs) too showing strong growth and demands more copper and microchips than Internal Combustion Engines (ICEs). Microchip supply chains are under strain and so are the supply chains of other RE core commodities.

 

Rex Murphy: This energy crisis has been 30 years in the making. Why is anyone surprised? | National Post

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https://nationalpost.com/opinion/rex-murphy-this-energy-crisis-has-been-30-years-in-the-making-why-is-anyone-surprised

Eugene Van Den Berg Oct, 2021

The current energy crisis playing out in large parts of the world is driven chiefly by the onset of a commodity supercycle that commenced in April 2020, combined with massive under investment in oil and gas since 2015. Such under investment causes demand for oil and energy commodities to exceed supply.

From the above article, The National Post writes:

The inevitable collision between 30 years of global warming hyper activism — the howling demonization of available, proven energy resources — and reality, is upon us. There is an atmosphere of semi-panic as many of the countries most committed to “getting off” oil and gas and turning their economies over to wind and sun find winter approaching and they, environmentally virtuous as they are, are wondering if they have enough oil and gas and even coal to get through it.”

Commodities in turn drive the demand for oil. Vast amounts of oil is needed to drive the machinery and industrial equipment used to process such commodities. This cycle compounds increases in inflation.

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