Johann Hari: The world must end its addiction to oil
Thursday, 29 May 2008
This week, a battalion of angry addicts brought London to a standstill. They snarled up the traffic, then marched on 10 Downing Street to demand their fix at prices they can afford. Across the world, in countries as different as the US and Iran, fellow junkies are rising up in rage. Their addiction is to a gloopy black drug called petrol – and we are all about to go cold turkey.
In the past seven years, the price of oil has soared from $30 (£15) a barrel to $140. By the end of next year it could be at $200. No matter how much we plead or howl at our governments, it will never go back: the final act of the Age of Oil has begun.
The era that is ending began at 10.30am on 10 January 1901, on a high hill called Spindletop in south-eastern Texas. A pair of pioneer brothers managed to drill down into the biggest oilfield ever found. Until then, the dribbles of oil that had been discovered were used only for kerosene lamps – but within a decade, this vast gushing supply was driving the entire global economy. It made the 20th century – its glories, and its gutters – possible. Humans were suddenly able to use in one frenetic burst an energy supply that had taken 150 million years to build up. A species that died before the age of 40 after a life of boring, back-breaking labour spurted forward so far and so fast that today billions live into their eighties after a life of leisure and plenty.
Oil now drives everything we do. It shuttles us across the globe, we fight wars for it, and we even eat it: to farm a single cow and deliver it to slaughter burns up six barrels of oil – enough to drive from New York to LA. That's why food becomes expensive when oil becomes expensive.
It is totally understandable that most of us want to live forever in that sweet niche in history when we had seemingly infinite reservoirs of oil, and no awareness that burning it would, in time, burn us too. But, alas, we need to wake up and smell the fumes. There are three reasons why the placebos demanded by the petrol protesters and the politicians cowering from them across the world – lower taxes! find more oil! dig! burn! – are a delusion.
Reality Check One: Petrol is finite. There is a limited amount of oil in the world, and we have already burned more than 900 billion barrels of it. There is a complex scientific debate about when we will reach the point of "peak oil", when we will have used up more than half of all the supplies on earth. Some geologists think this moment has already passed. Others – mostly oil industry flunkies – think we have as long as 30 years to go. But all agree the remaining oil is harder to reach, and much of it can never be accessed.
The facts are stark. All the biggest oilfields on earth were discovered before my parents were born. The discovery of new oilfields peaked in 1965, and has been falling ever since. The last year in which humans found more oil than we burned was the year I was born: 1979.
So we have a diminishing supply – at the very moment when billions more people want access to it. Car ownership in India has trebled in the past decade, and it will treble again by 2020. In China, three-quarters of urban Chinese say they plan to buy a car in the next five years. These factors mean we are unquestionably moving from having a world with growing pools of cheap oil to dwindling supplies of expensive oil.
Reality Check Two: Even if we had infinite supplies of free petrol, we couldn't afford to use it without dramatically destabilising the climate. To use just a few examples: Spain and Australia are currently suffering their worst droughts since records began, and several cities are on the brink of running out of drinking water. The oceans are rapidly turning more acidic, to levels scientists didn't expect to see until 2050. The Arctic is now almost free of sea ice in the summer.
This is all with just one degree of global warming. The world's climatologists agree that if we burn up most of the remaining dribbles of oil on earth, we could be on course for six degrees this century. The last time the world warmed so quickly was 251 million years ago – and 95 per cent of everything on earth died.
Reality Check Three: Our addiction to oil means we can never undermine the Islamic fundamentalists who want to kill us – and often actually help them.
Most of the world's remaining oil is in the Middle East. In order to access it, we have a twin-track policy. To start with, we support the most repressive dictatorship in the region – the torturing, sharia-law enforcing House of Saud – because they keep the supply running nicely. The Saudi state then uses the money we pay at the pump to fund a vast network of extreme madrasahs and mosques across the world – including within the US and Europe – preaching that democracy is "evil", women should be subordinated, Jews are "pigs and apes", and gays should be killed. We do not query this because, as the writer Thomas Friedman put it, "junkies don't tell the truth to their dealers".
Where we cannot find a friendly local tyrant, we invade the country in order to control the oil ourselves. Even John McCain admitted this month that Iraq was about oil, arguing that energy independence would "prevent us from having ever to send our young men and women into conflict again in the Middle East." (He later claimed with a red face he was talking exclusively about the first Iraq war.)
On their own, each of these inconvenient truths would be enough to require us to begin an urgent transition away from petrol. Together, they are unanswerable.
Of course it's tempting to draw the oily covers over our head and cry for tiny little steps like cutting a few pence off petrol taxes, or squeezing out a few more barrels as Gordon Brown begged yesterday. But these measures would be at best a local anaesthetic, putting off the moment when the rapid transition to a global economy run on carbon-free energy sources must start.
The longer we delay, the harder it will be. As Paul Roberts puts in his book The End of Oil: "The real question is not whether change is going to come, but whether the shift will be peaceful and orderly or chaotic and violent because we waited too long to begin planning for it."
Every penny now should be spent not on perpetuating petrol, but on developing and disseminating alternative fuels. The addiction that began a century ago on a hill in Texas is ending – and we have no choice but to check en masse into petro-rehab.
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Comments
35 Comments
It's occurred to me that this scenario is exactly applicable to food. The argument for GM foods is that the world's population is such that it cannot survive without GM foods productivity. Er.. isn't this painting ourselves into a corner?
When GM crops fail or exhibit some long term weakness the resulting catastrophe will be greater than if we had calculated without the benefits of GM crops.
Why is no organisation addressing the population time bomb?
Posted by Des Troy | 01.06.08, 17:33 GMT
Spot on Johanne!
But one technical error. Peak Oil is not when half the world's oil has run out. No way, no way!
It is when the easy to win stuff has been extracted and the more difficult is having to be brought on line (and plans are being made about the really difficult stuff) when the rate, that is the rate, at which the world's oil is being extracted reaches it's peak. Therein after, because of the aforesaid extraction difficulties the rate of extraction begins it's LONG fall-off - and it will be long because there is an ENORMOUS amount of difficult to win stuff still in the ground.
As the world's growing economies hit the reality of an effectively capped flow of oil then expect the severe 'growing pains' you describe.
Many experts believe and none will gain-say with any confidence the assertion that Peak Oil has been hit now!
Posted by Brian Orr | 31.05.08, 12:58 GMT
"In the past seven years, the price of oil has soared from $30 (£15) a barrel to $140. "
excellent research
Posted by simeon | 30.05.08, 17:23 GMT
Why is it, that nothing has been developed to replace the need for oil? It's not a new revelation that fossil fuels will run out, I was told this when I was at school 20 years ago, so why does nothing appear to have been done about it? We can bleat on about the environment, and impending climate change, but it's not something we can stop, it is going to happen anyway, why aren't we doing more to protect ourselves so that when it happens, we will survive as best we can? The government sending out the message that the higher price of fuel is good for their green targets doesn't help the economy, the businesses, the people. The government don't seem to want to drop the fuel duty, yet they are more than happy to shell out 22k a year to themselves to furnish their second homes. So many of us in the UK can't even afford our first homes! We the people need an alternative to fuel, and taxing us to the hilt and getting no results is not doing anything but lining the governments pockets.
Posted by Miss C | 30.05.08, 16:29 GMT
A beautifully-crafted essay, Johann, but do you really think that 'battalion of angry addicts' has The Independent neatly folded on their dashboards? If you are truly passionate about this topic, you'd 'get your hands dirty' and write for tabloid readers. Aren't you more or less preaching to the converted here? White Van Man can read, if you'd ever care to address him...
Posted by Amanda Hill | 30.05.08, 00:45 GMT
A brave and truthful article, Johann You might also add that we need to downsize, or retrench, too, because there is no convenient substitute for all that oil. Even if we built a nuclear power station on every street corner, there just isn't the uranium to fuel them.
Posted by Mark Downing | 29.05.08, 22:58 GMT
When I was still a very young man, something in me whispered insistently the feeling that my life was being shaped and controlled by a bunch of mysterious men in some remote place. I saw the sheeplike attitude of those around me, living exactly as those distant puppeteers dictated very cunningly.
Throughout my existence, I have been in silent revolt, not being willing to be manipulated. Even so, the use of a car and other amenities became neccessary for living in the world.
Now that deep insistent voice is saying, "You were right". We have been imprisoned by a system now in it's death-throes.
Oil is not the only expendable commodity. We, the sheep, are now headed en masse to the slaughterhouse, herded by those blind fools who still make their greedy rules for us, not knowing what they do!
I won't be there to see the end of life on earth as we know it., but the voice of God will.
Posted by IBB | 29.05.08, 21:09 GMT
Pretty nice... just to detail a bit further what you said about the drought in Spain. In a general sense, our dams are on a 58,34% of its capacity (May 27th, 2008). One of the most affected regions is Catalunya (where Barcelona is located) with only a 36,08%. If you want to read more about it or see the graphs, check www.embalses.net. Fortunately, the last couple of weeks we've been having generous showers all around the country.
And all of this weather changing, who could believe it's almost June and I'm wearing a sweater in sunny Spain? and a good friend of mine in Sweden just told me he was wearing short trousers... is that possible??
Posted by Julieta | 29.05.08, 17:46 GMT
Of course some people have to drive for a living, but does anyone today still enjoy driving? Despite all the sexy car ads how can anyone still find pleasure sitting in a motor vehicle given the endless jams, road works, tolls, multi storey car parks, underground car parks, single lines, double lines, bus lanes, radar, speeding and parking fines, not to mention the running cost and depreciation etc. How can it be sane for trucks, vans, FWDs, minis, campers, caravans and bikes with drivers of varying ability and codes of practice, all at different speeds, to use the same, crowded, stip of tarmac.
After years in the country I returned to the big city. I walk or use public transport or taxis. My stress and high blood pressure has all but disappeared. If I want to get away by road I can always hire a car and hand back the keys when I return.
Thus the answer to save the planet and solve the petrol crisis is for everyone to head back to town, but then this leads to overcrowding and urban sprawl.
Posted by peter fieldman | 29.05.08, 15:37 GMT
Of course some people have to drive for a living, but does anyone today still enjoy driving? Despite all the sexy car ads how can anyone still find pleasure sitting in a motor vehicle given the endless jams, road works, tolls, multi storey car parks, underground car parks, single lines, double lines, bus lanes, radar, speeding and parking fines, not to mention the running cost and depreciation etc. How can it be sane for trucks, vans, FWDs, minis, campers, caravans and bikes with drivers of varying ability and codes of practice, all at different speeds, to use the same, crowded, stip of tarmac.
After years in the country I returned to the big city. I walk or use public transport or taxis. My stress and high blood pressure has all but disappeared. If I want to get away by road I can always hire a car and hand back the keys when I return.
Thus the answer to save the planet and solve the petrol crisis is for everyone to head back to town, but then this leads to overcrowding and urban sprawl.
Posted by peter fieldman | 29.05.08, 15:31 GMT
35 Comments