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Lawrence Solomon: Forget the old Peak Oil theory, now the oil industry’s doom will be its everlasting supply

Lawrence Solomon: Environmentalists are embracing the Peak Oil Theory, but in their version supply won't peak, demand will, since no one really wants oil.

Peak-oil theorists – they’re those who predicted $300-a-barrel oil, because new discoveries wouldn’t materialize – were fundamentally immediately after all. So they say.

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No, not about the $300 price tag. Oil has become around US$30 a barrel and may stay there indefinitely, but that detail, they explain, only helps prove their point. And no, not about the failure to find new oil: The good thing about their theory, modestly revised, is it doesn’t depend on ever-diminishing supplies. On the contrary, peak-oil theorists first got it right, kind of. Oil will still peak and individuals will still abandon oil, simply not because we run out. On the contrary, the oil industry’s doom is going to be its everlasting supply.

For those who have trouble understanding this horror scenario, here is a short course from instructors for example Bloomberg Business and Thinkprogress’s Joe Romm, crowned Hero of the Environment by Time magazine. If you don’t have US$41 billion worth of savvy, as Bloomberg Business’s owner does, or a PhD from MIT as Romm does, you might need to read this explanation twice.

The peak-oil theory applies, they explain, if peak oil is thought in terms of demand, not supply. As the supply of oil won’t peak, demand for oil will, and shortly, since no one really wants oil. The proof is abundant and obvious – everything’s trending that way – once you consider it. Go ahead and take automobile.

The oil industry’s doom will be its everlasting supply

Electric vehicles now account for a mere one-tenth of one percent from the world’s one-billion cars and, according to OPEC, is only going to account for one per cent in 2040. But that estimate might be way off, Bloomberg Business announced this week in “Sooner Than You Think,” its series that “examines a few of the biggest transformations in human history that haven’t happened quite yet.”

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