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End of the oil age and the rise of renewables/nuclear/new sources.

Is this the end of the age of oil?


  • Total voters
    29

Yes the global sale of fossil fuel cars peaked in 2017 / 2018.


There it can also benefit with reducing car dependency there this also can save families a lot of money.





While for developing countries it will be very costly to build the infrastructure needed for car centric cities and it could also lead to the destruction of many local neighborhoods

 

While often you need government support to get the ball rolling. Because initial cost of new technologies can be very high and private companies also profit alot on the existing technologies. While investments into renewable energy, electric cars and other green technologies have really payed of. Three the transition could have come a lot sooner if it wasn't for the destructive influence of fossil fuel companies and other powerful interests.


 
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We still use rocks, bronze, iron, steel and coal but a lot, lot, lot less than we used to when we heavily relied on those products. The question is not if usage will disappear entirely but in % terms how important is it.

very.


The question is not if usage will disappear entirely but in % terms how important is it.

very. and we will not run out of oil; peak oil is false

so i give you The Truth...

learn how God creates oil in the earth with no Dinosaurs....



Abiogenic (Abiotic) Theory


The abiogenic petroleum origin hypothesis proposes that oil and gas are formed from deep-Earth processes, not from decaying biological material. According to this theory:


  • Oil can be produced from primordial hydrocarbons present since the Earth's formation or generated by chemical reactions deep within the mantle.
  • Methane, a simple hydrocarbon, is abundant in the Earth and could be converted into more complex hydrocarbons (oil) through heat and pressure, potentially in various types of rocks, not just sedimentary ones
  • Some proponents suggest oil is continually produced in the Earth's crust and could be a renewable resource on a geological timescale


Key Points of the Abiogenic Theory


  • Oil may originate from deep-Earth processes involving methane and other hydrocarbons, not just decayed organic matter
  • Methane could polymerize under heat and pressure to form oil, and this could happen in various rock types, not only in traditional "source rocks" like shale or limestone
  • Some evidence cited includes the presence of hydrocarbons on other planets and moons (where no life is known to exist), and occasional findings of oil in igneous or metamorphic rocks

Is the Earth Still Producing Oil?


  • The biogenic process that forms oil is still happening, but at a rate much slower than current consumption
  • The abiogenic theory suggests that oil could be produced continuously deep within the Earth, but there is limited direct evidence that this contributes significantly to current oil reserves



 

I know this might be a useless question but why do you care one way or the other? If renewables and EVs are more profitable and efficient why is it such a big issue for you?
 
Beats Biden's "drill baby drill" policy that led to record oil production.

Glad we're finally talking about the end.
 
I know this might be a useless question but why do you care one way or the other? If renewables and EVs are more profitable and efficient why is it such a big issue for you?

John, that is a Great question and we should look at it: ALL of us

maybe i can throw a few crumbs....

End of the road for EVs? Electric cars encounter nearly 80% more problems than gas alternatives, report shows - but experts suggest they're just teething issues TEETHING PROBLEMS MEANS THEY'LL CHEW YOUR BUTT OF FINANCIALLY!

  • Electric vehicles are almost 80 percent more problem-prone than gas cars
  • Plug-in hybrids are more problematic than fully electric vehicles, report said
  • Most reliable are traditional hybrids - with 26% fewer problems than gas cars
John, i need a car not another Problem in my drive way, i can find enuf of those myself and do. my neighbor has a hybrid, Toyota couldn't fix it right and suggested a new 6000 dollar battery. um Wrong...

it really was a 200 dollar part which another neighbor found when towing it down South to an Independent repair facility. forget Tesla, nobody can fix those either. so what to do?..............well i don't know. it is hard enuf getting my Chevy fixed without some air head mechanic destroying the car.


may continue.

.
 
We will always need oil to:

Some but not all of what you say is true.

• make plastics
• make diesel fuel for trucking


and trains
• make jet fuel for military and commercial aviation
• make fuel oil (HFO) for global shipping
• provide Heating and electricity in remote locations

Solar is already doing some of this

• lubricate machinery
• manufacture paints and solvents
et al . . .

The oil age is here to stay. Renewables can facilitate cutting down on oil, but they will not ever totally eliminate the need for oil.
Oil is here to stay, but the idea of the oil age meaning oil dominance is slipping away.
 

Electric cars have often lower maintenance cost than fossil fuel cars.

 
Or China. They are so far ahead of the "branded" man on the EV playing field.. but we don't like them. So we continue our generations long trend of American complacency and regression while inexplicably bitching about how we are being outcompeted.
 
using more electricity = burning more fossil fuels
Not even close to true

I use more electricity than I did 2 years ago and STILL get refund checks for the excess energy I provide. My annual KWh of usage has been negative for the last 2.5 years.

Apply your simplistic equation to that scenario please!
 
what % of our electricity is generated by oil products ??

serious question - does anyone know the answer?
0.4%. Most of our electricity production comes from natural gas.
 
What your charts show is that we need to get rid of Trump if we want to have better prices on EVs. Look at the alternative, drill for oil someplace and place it into ships that will carry it over the ocean to a place where it can be refined into 4 different products. Then, pump it back into ships or diesel powered trucks and deliver it to about every street corner in the world. Meanwhile, solar power is made where you need it and ...guess what.... the fuel is free. Go figure.
 

all your vehicles are electric? your lawmower/weedeater etc? chainsaw? when you fly do you include that? the grocery stores, wal-marts, where you work all use electricity ..... no, you're not a negative

the more electricity we use, the more fossil fuels burn
 
0.4%. Most of our electricity production comes from natural gas.

While natural gas currently provides a larger share of electricity generation in the US, coal still plays a significant role. In 2023, natural gas accounted for 42.7% of utility-scale electricity-generation capacity, while coal accounted for 15.2%. Coal was the largest source of electricity generation in 15 states in 2021, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Yes, natural gas is considered a fossil fuel
 
using more electricity = burning more fossil fuels



You are moving the goalposts and comparing apples to oranges. Your statement that I responded to was "using more electricity = burning more fossil fuels" I demonstrated that is not always true. I provide 125% of my electric usage via solar panels, which = burning less fossil fuel.
 

Fossil fuels are more energy-dense than other renewables except for nuclear. If we want to wean ourselves off of oil, nuclear will have to make a comeback and play a more integral role in the energy grid.

We'd still need fossil fuels for transportation and movement of goods, though. EVs can certainly play a bigger role, but I don't see us ever getting rid of oil/fossil fuels, which are still the dominant source of energy worldwide.
 
We need more nuclear.
 
"Drill baby,drill."

-D.J. Trump
 
On the contrary, nuclear energy is a safe, reliable, less expensive to operate energy generation option. US plants are built to exacting safety standards for construction, operation and waste disposal. While the largely Chinese made solar and wind energy facilities only work when the sun is shining or the wind blowing, nuclear power plants run consistently 24/7. The major factors in inflated construction costs are unique designs and regulatory cost burden. Unsubsidized nuclear energy plant operating costs

"Nuclear, on the other hand, although the most expensive to build, has an industry-wide capacity factor above 90 percent, the highest for any form of generation. Reactors also have life expectancies of at least 40 to 60 years, as opposed to only 20 years for wind, solar and natural gas. This keeps nuclear's levelized costs low, despite the initial high costs of construction."

 
I doubt the world will get over the use of petroleum products any time in the near future...not even sure what would replace how those products are made without Petroleum. Also petroleum is the prime ingredients in asphalt used in our roads.
When the USA get over their fear of Nuclear energy power plants the road to complete renewable energy will be long road to no where. There should be a real concerned effort to research Fusion energy.
 

that's impossible

maybe for your house .... but for all your electric cars (you don't own gas do you? ) all your electric things ( i listed a few) ... and then of course all the electric used to make everything you consume ....

yeah ... no. The more electricity used/demanded is literally more fossil fuels that will need to be burned. Unless liberals allow nuclear power plants, that's going to continue
 
Germany who has depended on nuclear power and Russian oil is shutting down their nuclear plants and have been partially cut off from Russian oil when the under sea pipe line was blown to hell.
 

End of the oil age and the rise of renewables/nuclear/new sources.​

I voted NO.

I wish we were at the end of the oil age, but we are not even close.
 
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