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By Robert Bériault PEAK OIL AND THE FATE PEAK OIL AND THE FATE OF HUMANITY OF HUMANITY Chapter 7 – How We Got Ourselves Into this Chapter 7 – How We Got Ourselves Into this Situation Situation

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By Robert Bériault. PEAK OIL AND THE FATE OF HUMANITY Chapter 7 – How We Got Ourselves Into this Situation. How did a seemingly intelligent species like yours get into this mess?. The problem, in a nutshell is that:. Humans as a general rule, aren’t familiar with the concept of I=TAP. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: By Robert Bériault

By Robert Bériault

PEAK OIL AND THE PEAK OIL AND THE FATE OF HUMANITYFATE OF HUMANITY

Chapter 7 – How We Got Ourselves Into Chapter 7 – How We Got Ourselves Into this Situationthis Situation

Page 2: By Robert Bériault

How did a seemingly intelligent

species like yours get into

this mess?

Page 3: By Robert Bériault

The problem, in a nutshell is that:

Humans as a general rule, aren’t familiar with the concept of

I=TAP

Page 4: By Robert Bériault

Impact on the

environment

=Populatio

n(how many

people)

Affluence(howMuch

money we

spend)

Technology

(how many

processes, tools and goods we

use)

I = TAP

x xI PATIt is a beautifully elegant formula:

Page 5: By Robert Bériault

Technologymultiplied by the effect of

Affluencemultiplied by the effect of

Population

The I = TAP formula(pronounced: “eye-tap”) is the multiplier effect

on the environment (Impact) of:

Page 6: By Robert Bériault

I = TAPYou can reduce the Impact if you either:

Resort to more manual labour (less Technology)or Spend less money (less Affluence) or Reduce the number of people (in other words, less Population) orAny combination of those three

Page 7: By Robert Bériault

Paul and Anne Ehrlich tried to explain this wonderfully simple

and logical formula in 1968.

People refused to listen.

The Erlichs referred to the phenomenon as I=PAT

Page 8: By Robert Bériault

You’ve lost me Robert. I’m no

good at formulas. Can

you explain this in simple language?

Page 9: By Robert Bériault

What this formula says is that the factors Technology, Affluence and Population aren’t added to each

other but they’re multiplied by each

other.

I = TAP

Impact = Technology X Affluence X Population

Page 10: By Robert Bériault

The extraction of resources for the manufacture of TV sets, their packaging, transport, their operation and eventual disposal have an impact on the environment, right?

Here’s a concrete example of technology…

I = APT

Page 11: By Robert Bériault

I see what you’re driving at. The more TV sets are made, the more the

impact, right?

Page 12: By Robert Bériault

Exactly! Now lets look at the three elements on the right hand side

of the equation.

I = TAP

Page 13: By Robert Bériault

0

5

10

15

20

25

TV s

ets

(mill

ions

)

1960 2003YEAR

Today the Impact on the environment is about 6.5 times what it was in 1960

Think of this:when TV sets didn’texist they had noenvironmental impact!

3.6 million 24 million

Number of TV sets in Canada

First, we’ll start with the T, Technology factor

I = APT

Page 14: By Robert Bériault

Affluence means more TV sets

024681012

Perc

enta

ge

of s

alar

y

1960 2003YEAR

When people have more money, it means more TV sets, which means more environmental impact.

Buying a TV set in 2003 took 11 times less of a Canadian’s income than in 1960.

A TV set cost11% of a 1960 salary

A TV set cost 1%of a 2003 salary

I = T PSecond, we multiply by the A, Affluence factor

A Cost Relative to Wages

Page 15: By Robert Bériault

Population increased by 1.7 times

05101520253035

Pers

ons

(mill

ions

)

1960 2003YEAR

A 74% increase in population meant a 74% increase in the number of TVs…

…and a 74% increase in environmental impact.

There was a 74% increase in the Canadian population between 1960 and 2003

I = TA18 million 32 million

P Increase in Population

Third, we multiply by the P, Population factor

Page 16: By Robert Bériault

I think that an understanding of how we got into this

situation can be useful in seeking solutions, so bear

with me.

Page 17: By Robert Bériault

Soil erosionWater contaminationLoss of biodiversityDeath of pollinatorsDeforestationHabitat destructionAtmospheric pollution

I = TAP

Page 18: By Robert Bériault

Every invention, every improvement to our homes or work places adds to the “T” part of the equation.

I = APT

Page 19: By Robert Bériault

Technology started with the invention of fire and stone axes and has culminated with space exploration.

All inventions increase humankind’s effect on the environment.

Waorani Indian of Ecuadorcuts tree with stone axe

I = APT

Page 20: By Robert Bériault

Perhaps we haven’t recognised that we are animals like others:

Diagram from: www.nrcs.usda.gov/.../ land/pubs/ib5text.html

Humans are organisms– subject to the laws of nature.

The artificial environments we have built for ourselves and the machines that we created have distanced us from the natural life-support systems that are essential to our survival.

Our technology ignores the laws of nature.

Those laws of nature will inexorably catch up with

us.

I = APT

Page 22: By Robert Bériault

The destruction of one of the links of the chain can have serious effects on the entire chain and on other parts of the web.

Humans have been breaking chain links without understanding the impact this might have on the whole web of life.

I = APT

Page 23: By Robert Bériault

Changes occur too slowly for us to recognise them

Humans are like the frog in a pan of cold water.

The pan is placed on the stove burner. As the water warms up the cold blooded animal doesn’t feel the incremental heat.

The hapless thing will stay in the pan until it boils to death.

I = APT

Page 24: By Robert Bériault

Growing cities, minerals, pollution

Growth of a city, with its crowding and pollution, is

imperceptible from one day to the next.

We don’t notice that the easy resources to extract are gone and only the harder-to-reach ones are

left.

Some important changes, such as mercury pollution cannot be detected by the senses and we

must trust the scientists’ instruments and knowledge.

Growing cities

Poor yieldcopper ore

Mercury pollution

I = APT

Page 25: By Robert Bériault

Like the frog…However, like the frog,

we fail to notice incremental changes. Therefore the “T” part of the equation keeps

on increasing.

I = APT

Page 26: By Robert Bériault

It’s a complicated world and it’s difficult to obtain definitive information

We can’t prove beyond the shadow of a doubt that global warming is caused by human activities. So those who have a vested interest in the status quo have campaigned very effectively against any greenhouse gas reduction.

With regards to the oil peak, information has only recently started to reach the mainstream.

I = APT

Page 27: By Robert Bériault

Perhaps we have not assessed the risks adequately:

If there is a 10% chance of global warming causing sea rises that would flood coastal cities and cause hundreds of millions of people to lose their homes and workplaces, that is a huge risk.

Most scientists would bet that the odds are much greater than 10 to one.

I = APT

Page 28: By Robert Bériault

The more money you spend (the more affluent your are), the more resources you consume.

I = T PA

Page 29: By Robert Bériault

It’s remarkable that almost everybody lives up to their income.Those earning $30K live in a small apartment and spend

all their salary.

Those earning $200K live in a McMansion and spend all their

salary.

I = T PA

Page 30: By Robert Bériault

Most people spend all they earn (and even go on

credit). Nobody ever seems to have

too much money.

Translated: People don’t seem to to be able to stop

accumulating possessions or improving their lifestyle.

I = T PA

Page 31: By Robert Bériault

Affluence is not just buying an SUV.

Affluence is not just buying an SUV.

It’s convenient to single out SUV owners as being the bad guys.

I = T PA

Page 32: By Robert Bériault

Aren’t SUVsthe worst

vehicles onthe road?

Page 33: By Robert Bériault

It’s being able to afford a Canadian

house or apartment.

It is being able to buy

consumer items.

It is being able to pay

for a holiday.

SUVs consume a lot, but affluence is not just buying a big vehicle.

I = T PA

Page 34: By Robert Bériault

The tragedy of our world is that…

…it is perfectly logical and rational for an individual to go on an expensive holiday or to buy a luxurious house if he or she can afford it.

I = T PA

Page 35: By Robert Bériault

We are opportunistic beings, so it doesn’t seem logical for an

individual to deprive him/herself if others

aren’t.

For more insight on this problem, read:”The Tragedy of the Commons”, Garrett Hardin

I = T PA

Page 36: By Robert Bériault

Nobody has come up with a solution to reducing the “A” part of the equation.

Nobody has come up with a solution

to reducing the “A” part of the equation.

Preachingpoverty

hasn’t worked

I = T PA

Page 37: By Robert Bériault

Whenever more people are born than die, we add to the “P” part of the equation

I = TAP

Page 38: By Robert Bériault

Our powerful reproductive instinct:

The reproductive instinct explains why:

Pubescent boys have wet dreams and romantic thoughts induce vaginal lubrication in girls.Barren women of 40 pine for a baby. Men ogle women’s buttocks. Men and women purposefully burden themselves with raising demanding children.

I = TAP

Page 39: By Robert Bériault

Humans are naturally divided into groups, whether based on religion, language, or race.

When there exists no natural difference, they create artificial divisions or clans.

Every one of these groups needs to increase its numbers, thereby contributing to the “P” part of the I=TAP equation.

I = TAP

Page 40: By Robert Bériault

Controlling population

Controlling population goes

against the reproductive instinct and against religion.

I = TAP

Page 41: By Robert Bériault

Very intelligent, well meaning, well-known environmentalists have been concentrating on the “A” and “T” parts of the equation to the total exclusion of the ever-growing “P” part.

“The Human Element” here does not refer to the humans that are overpopulating the

Earth. It only refers to what humans can do to reduce “A” and “T”.

I = TAP

Page 42: By Robert Bériault

The I = TAP formula requires that we cut back on all three factors.

But it goes against the grain for humans to voluntarily reduce ANY one of these three factors.

Harsh measures would be required to reduce our technology, to earn less money and to exercise population control.

Intellectually we know this to be true. On an emotional level we can’t bring ourselves to make any but very superficial changes.

I = TAP

Page 43: By Robert Bériault

Chapter 8 will look at what might be the consequences of peak oil and overpopulation.

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