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Created on: June 04, 2008
Record high energy prices and a recent trip to Europe prompt these thoughts on our energy future. The current energy situation, i.e., high prices, high demand, and tight supplies, is a glimpse of what life in a carbon constrained world looks like. We're entering the early stages of a transition from fossil fuels that will likely continue until mid-century.Vaclav Smil of the University of Manitoba describes the significance: "We are now at a point in time comparable to 1850, which marked the outset of the last great energy transition. Then, about 85 percent of the world's total primary energy supply came from biomass fuels. In 2005 about 85 percent of the total supply originated from fossil fuels.... A non-fossil world may be highly desirable, but getting there will demand great determination, cost and patience."We've seen this movie before. Thirty years ago, high inflation and then record oil prices caused both businesses and consumers to drastically alter their energy consumption. The results were impressive. The Energy Information Agency calculates that U.S. energy intensity (a measure of energy used per unit of GDP) fell by 42 percent between 1980 and 2007. That explains why to date high energy prices have not derailed our economy.Oil drives the global transportation system. Demand has been growing steadily, primarily because consumers in the developing world are discovering the tremendous convenience afforded by cars powered by the internal combustion engine. China's vehicle fleet numbers just 37 million cars (the U.S. has some 250 million). Any guess as to the direction the Chinese fleet number is headed?If Europe represents the future for American automobiles, here's what we can expect. A wide selection of high quality four door sedans, small SUVs and trucks, all powered by highly efficient, clean diesel engines. The days of the internal combustion engine may indeed be numbered. Their demise will come when the price of gasoline rises high enough to make alternative technologies cheaper than gas-powered cars. Judging from what I saw in ber-green Europe, where gas sells at the equivalent of $9 a gallon, we're not yet close. Hybrids and plug-in electrics may be the future, but in Europe at least, they seem a long way off.High prices induce consumers to use an increasingly valuable resource more wisely. They respond in all sorts of ways, for example by leaving the water ski boat on the trailer for the summer or taking the Honda, rather than the Suburban,
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