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The Coming Resource Wars

By Michael T. Klare, TomPaine.com. Posted March 10, 2006.


America's closest ally has announced that climate change has ushered in an era of violent conflict over energy, water and arable land.
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It's official: the era of resource wars is upon us. In a major London address, British Defense Secretary John Reid warned that global climate change and dwindling natural resources are combining to increase the likelihood of violent conflict over land, water and energy. Climate change, he indicated, "will make scarce resources, clean water, viable agricultural land even scarcer" -- and this will "make the emergence of violent conflict more rather than less likely."

Although not unprecedented, Reid's prediction of an upsurge in resource conflict is significant both because of his senior rank and the vehemence of his remarks. "The blunt truth is that the lack of water and agricultural land is a significant contributory factor to the tragic conflict we see unfolding in Darfur," he declared. "We should see this as a warning sign."

Resource conflicts of this type are most likely to arise in the developing world, Reid indicated, but the more advanced and affluent countries are not likely to be spared the damaging and destabilizing effects of global climate change. With sea levels rising, water and energy becoming increasingly scarce and prime agricultural lands turning into deserts, internecine warfare over access to vital resources will become a global phenomenon.

Reid's speech, delivered at the prestigious Chatham House in London (Britain's equivalent of the Council on Foreign Relations), is but the most recent expression of a growing trend in strategic circles to view environmental and resource effects -- rather than political orientation and ideology -- as the most potent source of armed conflict in the decades to come. With the world population rising, global consumption rates soaring, energy supplies rapidly disappearing and climate change eradicating valuable farmland, the stage is being set for persistent and worldwide struggles over vital resources. Religious and political strife will not disappear in this scenario, but rather will be channeled into contests over valuable sources of water, food and energy.

Prior to Reid's address, the most significant expression of this outlook was a report prepared for the U.S. Department of Defense by a California-based consulting firm in October 2003. Entitled "An Abrupt Climate Change Scenario and Its Implications for United States National Security," the report warned that global climate change is more likely to result in sudden, cataclysmic environmental events than a gradual (and therefore manageable) rise in average temperatures. Such events could include a substantial increase in global sea levels, intense storms and hurricanes and continent-wide "dust bowl" effects. This would trigger pitched battles between the survivors of these effects for access to food, water, habitable land and energy supplies.

"Violence and disruption stemming from the stresses created by abrupt changes in the climate pose a different type of threat to national security than we are accustomed to today," the 2003 report noted. "Military confrontation may be triggered by a desperate need for natural resources such as energy, food and water rather than by conflicts over ideology, religion or national honor."

Until now, this mode of analysis has failed to command the attention of top American and British policymakers. For the most part, they insist that ideological and religious differences -- notably, the clash between values of tolerance and democracy on one hand and extremist forms of Islam on the other -- remain the main drivers of international conflict. But Reid's speech at Chatham House suggests that a major shift in strategic thinking may be under way. Environmental perils may soon dominate the world security agenda.

This shift is due in part to the growing weight of evidence pointing to a significant human role in altering the planet's basic climate systems. Recent studies showing the rapid shrinkage of the polar ice caps, the accelerated melting of North American glaciers, the increased frequency of severe hurricanes and a number of other such effects all suggest that dramatic and potentially harmful changes to the global climate have begun to occur. More importantly, they conclude that human behavior -- most importantly, the burning of fossil fuels in factories, power plants, and motor vehicles -- is the most likely cause of these changes. This assessment may not have yet penetrated the White House and other bastions of head-in-the-sand thinking, but it is clearly gaining ground among scientists and thoughtful analysts around the world.

For the most part, public discussion of global climate change has tended to describe its effects as an environmental problem -- as a threat to safe water, arable soil, temperate forests, certain species and so on. And, of course, climate change is a potent threat to the environment; in fact, the greatest threat imaginable. But viewing climate change as an environmental problem fails to do justice to the magnitude of the peril it poses. As Reid's speech and the 2003 Pentagon study make clear, the greatest danger posed by global climate change is not the degradation of ecosystems per se, but rather the disintegration of entire human societies, producing wholesale starvation, mass migrations and recurring conflict over resources.


Digg!

Michael Klare is a professor of peace and world security studies at Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass., and the author of Blood and Oil: The Dangers and Consequences of America's Growing Petroleum Dependency.

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How come nobody ever mentions population?
Posted by: strahlungsamt on Mar 11, 2006 2:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every time I read an article about diminishing resources, I read about ensuring that third worlders have adequate food and drinking water, medicine, fuel, internet etc. Yet nobody has the balls to mention birth control. In every non-european society today, people are reproducing like rabbits. 10 children per family is the norm in many countries. That's 5 times as many people with each new generation battling for the same resources.
Face it. It doesn't matter how well meaning you are, giving money and help to people, if you don't attack the problem at its core, unbridled population growth, you might as well pack your bags and go home and read about all the successful democracy in Iraq, because you are sticking your head in the sand.

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» Totally right Posted by: daro
» RE: Totally right Posted by: haruki
» RE: Totally right Posted by: Armafied
» RE: Totally right Posted by: particle
» RE: Totally right Posted by: Armafied
» RE: Totally right Posted by: haruki
» RE: Totally right Posted by: haruki
» RE: Totally right Posted by: mazur
» RE: Totally right Posted by: rcfa
» The word is "irony" Posted by: Sojourner
» RE: The word is "irony" Posted by: haruki
» I'm here, now slam the door..... Posted by: Michiganman
» RE: Robots, robots, & robots Posted by: Smiggsy
» RE: Robots, robots, & robots Posted by: particle
» Hehe. Posted by: ABetterFuture
» RE: I'm here, now slam the door..... Posted by: ConnecttheDots
» Yup individuals are useless Posted by: Michiganman
» RE: Yup individuals are useless Posted by: ConnecttheDots
» Donate my a-- Posted by: Michiganman
» RE: Disagree Posted by: edgar_michel
» RE: Disagree Posted by: gbruno
brits and others
Posted by: rsaxto on Mar 11, 2006 2:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The brits and others are finally coming to their senses about the coming environmental perils and catastrophes that will happen at the confluence of global warming, environmental degradion and selfish military adventures. We need to act fast to halt global warming and other disasters created by human hypocracy and greed. Impeach Bushies now so we will be able to do the required planning and action.

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» RE: brits and others Posted by: haruki
» AGREE 10,000% Prophit Posted by: Michiganman
» RE: AGREE 10,000% Prophit Posted by: particle
» RE: AGREE 10,000% Prophit Posted by: MyLeftFoot
ZERO SUM
Posted by: lelandjamieson on Mar 11, 2006 5:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oil and coal deposits and living forests worldwide are carbon heat sinks. It is astonishing to me that we think we can address global warming without addressing the way we are burning up these repositories. A truly sustainable energy policy must adhere to a Zero Sum game harnessing solar energy of all kinds, harnessing tides, solar cells, and wind.

How do you put the genie back in the bottle? Or, to change the metaphor, we are like frogs in a slowly warming kettle that will cook us because we haven't the wits to jump out --- if we had anywhere to jump! It is a little late for this anyway, considering the accelerating momentum of global warming, which is probably a geometic, rather than arithmetical, function. As T.S. Eliot wrote, "This is the way the world will end, not with a bang but a whimper."

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It's happening NOW
Posted by: Michiganman on Mar 11, 2006 5:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Of course the battle for resources is happening right now in Iraq and with Iran on the horizon. You have to surmise this British official knows this but dares not say it. I applaud his speaking out and would guess he will lose his job over it.
This discussion is mute since we are past the point of no return. My deepest apologies to the next generation.

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» Apologies Posted by: Riverside
Mother Nature’s self preservation move.
Posted by: williameon on Mar 11, 2006 5:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
She will shake, rattle and roll.
Till the fleas on her back realize!
That they must live in Harmony, Cooperation, Respect and Peace with her:
The Planet Earth.
The Mid-West will flood.
There goes the Corn Belt.
The North Atlantic Seaboard will flood.
Low lying areas will become seabed.
What’s going to happen to the Nuclear Reactor at Indian Point?
It must be decommissioned.
The North Pole is migrating towards Siberia.
Where it will stop: no one knows.
The Political Hacks in Washington are clueless.
These Corporate Stooges all must be fired.
The system has failed.
We must reboot.
Eliminate the political virus.
It is divisive.
A tool used to divide us.
One against another.
We all have common goals.
Health Care.
Pure Air and Water.
Adequate food and shelter for all.
To live in peace and harmony with our neighbor.
To provide safe, clean, healthy place to live.
These goals are Universal.
Only after we change the system, will it be possible to effect meaningful change.
Narrow Minded Bureaucrats are useless now:
The Blind leading the Blind.
We must look beyond ourselves towards the greater good.
The Change is upon us.
Together we must make a stand.
Together we have a chance.

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» RE: We all have common goals Posted by: NoPCZone
» A Prayer For We The Poeple Posted by: Riverside
» RE: A Prayer For We The Poeple Posted by: Riverside
"1984" sure seems to be coming to life alright
Posted by: maxpayne on Mar 11, 2006 5:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Remember that saying "War is peace" ? In addition to Iraq, the conflict over nature's resources will most certainly bring this quote to life.

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No Joke
Posted by: particle on Mar 11, 2006 5:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You have to wonder if the martial and totalitarian tendencies currently evident in US policies aren't in some way preparation for mass population management as systems start to break down. If so, is this how we should be "handled?"

Tin foil hat maybe. But at some point we'll have to ask similar questions anyway. The implications of what is outlined in this article are highly disturbing.

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» RE: No Joke Posted by: Brother Artemis
» We have It Posted by: O.B.Server
» RE: We have It Posted by: mrjbentley
Nothing new here move along
Posted by: AlienSlave on Mar 11, 2006 6:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The British have been colonizing and raping the world’s resources and leaving wars and famine in their wake for quite some time. Now they have the USA in league with them. Join in or jump out. Move along.
AlienSlave

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Policymaker's premise ignores reality too
Posted by: don_alejandro on Mar 11, 2006 6:17 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My head nearly exploded when I read that top American and British policymakers “…insist that ideological and religious differences -- notably, the clash between values of tolerance and democracy on one hand and extremist forms of Islam on the other -- remain the main drivers of international conflict. If our top policymaker's initial premise is that we are operating from a position of tolerance, then it's no wonder their policies turn out to be so destructively clueless.

If one looks at historical and current US meddling in the affairs of countries around the globe or at the current projection of US military force around the world it's hard to see how we could consider ourselves "tolerant" with regard to foreign policy.

And then there's our own extremist forms of Christianity. The humorless homophobic women-as-chattel values of the US religious right seem eerily similar to those of the Taliban and other Islamist extremists.

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Priorities needed to lead the way
Posted by: IanA on Mar 11, 2006 6:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is one of the most important articles yet published on Alternet, and the response in comments shows clearly that it touches the nerve at the core of most of our problems today; in Iraq, Iran Darfur as well as MacDonald’s, Dubai Ports World, GM or Wal-Mart.

The missing element in the scenario is that it is not the poor “have nots” who are attacking and stripping the bark of the trees of the “haves” it is those that comprise less than 20% of the worlds population who are consuming more than 80% of the resources. The rich are further encouraged in this our capitalist, materialist, consumer based society to consume ever more, consumers are encouraged to extend their credit to do more damage. The US forfeits medical care and education to arm and take or control “material and energy interests” anywhere in the world they see fit. With 1/3 of the world's people on less than $1.- and the billionaires wealth increasing by more than 15% per annum, the cause of the problem is not population but distribution of resources, priorities and planning. The farts of the goats on the hills in Rumania are not causing the excess greenhouse gasses.

Therein lyes the present terrorism.

The other mistake is that it is the poor and least gifted in the third world that will survive. It is their seed that will “inherit the earth” because their means of existence are most direct. They eat their potatoes and milk their goats and have known some very lean years already. Whereas the sophisticate in a complex society depends on the continuity of social structures based of confidence and is quicker to revert to violence. That’s why in war the farmers are kings.

If I was presenting Iran’s case at the Security Council today, I would point out that Iran has every right to develop nuclear energy including the complete fuel cycle. America’s use of military dominance to spread its hegemony has already shown its hand in using draconian force to confront energy and resource domination. Not only do they want to steal the oil they want to dominate and control the nuclear fuel cycle for peaceful energy.

The bomb, the US is the only country to have used it and say today they would use it again “pre-emptively”, and yet, we should trust them! Who are the terrorists today? Why is it that Sweden can make a 10 year plan to illuminate dependence on fossil fuels while the US spends 1 to 2 Trillion on their killing machine in just Iraq.

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Drowing in Stupidity
Posted by: Dominic on Mar 11, 2006 6:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with Williameon's earlier comment.

Collaboration is the ONLY option.

Military fortification doesn't even exist as a viable alternative. You can't import stuff when your terminals are under water!

And, by the way, has anybody noticed that we're already bankrupt and don't have more trillions to dump down the toilet?

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Small is still beautiful
Posted by: JPHickey on Mar 11, 2006 7:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
After reading the article and comments, I still find myself remaining loyal to insights I've enjoyed for years. That the only enduring approach is to shift away from imperialistic corporatism where bigger is better and back to small is beaftiful.

Regardless of the illusion that happiness results from dominance and possessiveness, beyond a reasonable point, there's little support for this assumption. If there were, Dick Cheney and Dubya Bush would be happy and generous people, despite their personal delusions to the contrary.

Quality of life experience does not require massive ownership and/or power over so-called wealth. Of course this enlightening shift isn't that common, as the status quo establishmentarianists are only comfortable in their old ruts.

However, the time is coming when all of us will be facing the challenge of downsizing our lives gracefully (if lucky), if we haven't already begun. I personally avoid supporting the old paradigm when I can, and I believe that getting off the grid is one giiant step in the direction of personal responsibility.

Back to competition for resources, the powers-that-be are either so ill-informed or intentionally deceptive that they're willing to promote or jump at anything that looks good on paper but probably won't stand up to the test of long-term reality. They don't even seem acknowledge the measure of energy returned on energy invested. The Canadian tar-sands are an example of this self-promoting hype. But I guess they don't have to as long as they're only throwing tax-payer's money down the rat-hole.

Now we ought to take a closer look at China which is extremely short of capacity to generate electricity and is making a big move toward nuclear power. They're already tying up most of the uranium and they can rush these plants in without all the fuss and muss of regulations faced in the U.S. If we expect to switch to neuclear power to save us from the impacts of peak oil, I'd say rots of ruck. McCaine is just engaging in political rhetoric. Even if uranium was available, the energy eventually produced would be a very expensive example of corporate socialism.

Solar is the best choice to bring power to the people of the world, which should be one of our goals. Experts already know that population growth slows when basic needs are met with maximized personal involvement. Back to the Small is Beautiful perspective, again. And we all might do well to take a moment to remember all of us are in it together! The article above is okay as far as it goes but is rather myopic to say the least.

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Rethink our economic/industrial system
Posted by: Drclaw on Mar 11, 2006 7:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Underlying all of these problems is that a small fraction of the world (industralized nations in general, us in particular) consume an overriding fraction of the worlds resources. One of the root causes of this phenomenon is an economic system that ignores human and natural capital in favor of material capital. We harness neither by sticking people in cubicles to perform grinding and unfulfilling jobs, and by ignoring the fact that the "services" that nature provides (air, water filtration, energy production, etc) far exceedes tha value of the materials we extract and transform (with huge waste) into product. Its been estimated that the value of these services is 40 TRILLION dollars PER YEAR. Unfortunately, our industrial and economic policies reduce nearly every decision to one emphasizing the short tem material gain (lets say, the quarterly profit report) which results in a race to consume and extract and produce quickly, not efficiently and sustainably. It's not the people are "bad" per se (although some clearly are) but rather we have selected for a system that operates in this way. Untill we change the incentives upon which our system is based, no amount of coercion or control will remove this fundamental barrier. I believe that many people at a variety of levels realize this systemic contradiction and are working to change our economic system to place value on long-term implications. The problem is that the old way of doing things has a firm foothold in this transitional period, so these other options stand out as more expensive. Nonetheless, the system will not change unless we support it. Recalling a similar thread recently, it is not elitist to buy organic, or resisit doing buisness with entities that are non-sustainable, it is a matter of long term survivial.

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The resource war is here
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Mar 11, 2006 8:27 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In America 46% of the drinking water can't be treated well enough to drink,bathe,or cook with.The air is of such poor quality that by 5am around any big city,you need to get above the 9th floor to see farther than 1/2 a mile. Forget breathing th shit,even if you're a healthy person,you're getting the air equivilant of a 3 pack a day smoker.
Most of the cancers,neurological,and muscular ailments,along with mental and cognitive defects are directly related to the tons of mecury that rains down on us daily
from the coal burning that's been going on for more than a hundred years. Forget sulfur dioxide. I'd rather have half rotted webbing in my lawn furniture than watch my children and grandchildren pay the cost of progress.
This over preoccupation with the beef industry is causing great harm also. The amounts of water needed for these animals equals a small city...everyday. The land used just for these critters just to walk around could feed more people woth Ag products than the food you get off the 'wannabe' burgers.
The solution is obviuosly to reevaluate our ways and means of taking care of eachother. Naturally the greedy over consuming nations are going to have to get by on less. Instead of harping about the next great plasma TV or satallite
radio,start making the return to 'Balance' in our production.
As a wasteful society we've visited the most harm of all Nations unto the Planet,our Fellow Humans and the host of other Living Things we share this Creation with.
When the hungry and thirsty see the gallons of water and the buckets of oats crammed down lo' Flossy's throat,they're not thinking about how good that steak is going to taste after it's been hanging for two weeks. No. Ther're thinking about how some studip cow deserves to eat so well when all the food and water used, for the soon to be grilled, could have fed a great many more than the few that eats the beef.
Just as serious as we were about 'stopping the Commies' or
landing on the Moon,we need to be ten times that to save this planet and the race Human. Greed is no excuse to force the many to starve while the few eat. That happened in France.
A lot of folks lost their heads over the greedy upper class and Tyranical leadership.
Climate inspired wars will be Global and Local all at the same time. It's been so throught time. As times got tough,folks variuos religions seemed to fail them,they warred against their neighbors in the mistaken idea that they were too blame,people dispursed into other areas away form the wars and the Gods that had forsaken them. They had a place to go.
In case we've been sleeping...we're over every inch of this Planet,there's nowhere left to go. So it's up to us to use the talents within each of us to get out of this mess. If that means giving up the insane quest for Wealth and Power,so be it.
Your fancy house and grounds,verdant fields and sumptous feast are all meaningless when the starving masses take you down. Hungry,thirsty, ans sick people are fearless when backed into a corner. Being overconsuming,overproductive,
wasteful greedy self absorbed little microbes is making the corner a little tight. The change is only going to improve the so-called middle and low income folks,not forgetting the extremely improvrished, way of living. It's the fat cats and the Forbes list folks that will be devastated. That would probably be for the better.

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» Agree, but... Posted by: O.B.Server
"Oh, the Shame of It."
Posted by: monkeywrench on Mar 11, 2006 9:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
With all of the advanced technology that was never put to good use; with all of the pleas for resource conservation that were ignored; with all of the birth control methods, available to help manage a runaway human population, that were fought by organized religion; with all of the intelligence that homo sapiens supposedly possess being squandered in pursuit of cheap baubles and childish, mind-numbing "entertainment"; and with the incredible lack of foresight to realize that we live on a finite, tiny little lifeboat in a infinitely vast and cold universe, this is what we're left with, our human experiment degenerating back to the era of killer apes and the law of the jungle? The shame of it is almost too much to bear.

After three million years of human development, and 20 thousand years of "civilization," the destruction of our own home is the best that we can do?

If an epitaph is ever written for the human race, it will read: "They were too clever for their own good."

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» RE: "Oh, the Shame of It." Posted by: maestro
» RE: "Oh, the Shame of It." Posted by: kungfoofighterx
As usual, the military option instead of creative solutions.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Mar 11, 2006 9:44 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
From the article:
"As famine, disease, and weather-related disasters strike due to abrupt climate change," the Pentagon report notes, "many countries' needs will exceed their carrying capacity" -- that is, their ability to provide the minimum requirements for human survival. This "will create a sense of desperation, which is likely to lead to offensive aggression"

Apparently, thanks to bumbling and inaction by Bush & Co. in handling the Katrina/Rita disasters, this now applies to us right here in the good ol' USA as well.

Offensive aggression? Not yet. But the Pentagon is funding research into a whole array of non-lethal crowd-control weapons, such as high-decibel audio "cannons" and narrow-beam microwave generators to literally "cook" people to control their movement. We gleefully kill any and all enemy combatants in foreign wars, so care to take a guess for whom these weapons are intended? Oh, and don't forget the hundreds of millions of dollars handed to Halliburton and other contractors to build new detention centers around the country, whose purpose is to support "new programs." Uh, huh. . .

It seems our military is planning for the future after all. . .

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Human Excrement + Nuclear Waste = Hydrogen
Posted by: dbaker on Mar 11, 2006 12:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
By exposing the trillions of tonnes of sewage presently being dumped into our Oceans, Lakes and Streams to Intense Radiation (spent fuel bundles)and converting it into Hydrogen is the only viable answer.

Dennis Baker
dennisbaker2003@hotmail.com

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» Hot shit Posted by: janvdb
Looks like were in for a rough ride either way.
Posted by: Artaraxl on Mar 11, 2006 12:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This is a thought provoking, albeit speculative piece, but I'm not ready to call Religion out for the count just yet. Get a load of the reader comments on yesterday's thread by a "Christian Atheist".

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TIme for a new discipline: physical economics
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Mar 11, 2006 2:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the main ideological drivers behind the current destabilization of global climate and destruction of the world's life sustaining ecological systems (forests, rivers, atmosphere, plankton, arable land, planktonic ocean systems, etc. etc.) is the economic ideology promoted in the variious universities and think tanks across the industrialized world.

It is time to address this by taking economics out of business schools and placing it under the guidance of the physical sciences. If one searches for 'physical economics' on google, only a handful of pages show up (contrast this to 'physical chemistry'). This needs to change, and soon.

Consider the physical term, "EROEI" which referes to Energy Returned On Energy Invested. Many scientists will claim that if EROEI (energy) is negative for a process, there is no point in carrying out such a process. I'm thinking of Ken Deffeyes, the Princeton oil geologist, in his two books on Hubbert's Oil Peak.

Compare this to how modern economics views the situation of EROEI - Economic Return on Economic Investment - a very different notion. For example, say that you spend three barrels of oil drilling and recovering one barrel of oil. Now, if that one barrel of oil can be sold at profit, in an economist's eyes the EROEI (economic) is positive, even though the EROEI (energy) is 200% negative. Otherwise, no oil at all will be sold.

IN truth, there are FOUR different EROEI's:

Economic Return on Economic Investment
Economic Return on Energy Investment
Energy Return on Economic Investment
Energy Return on Energy Investment

The only sane measure in the above list is the final one - the Energy EROEI. However, economics, in its current form, is quite insane.

P.S. My name is I. Peter Solem. I may be reached at photosymbiont@yahoo.com. Since a number of government agencies are well aware of who I am, I suppose it doesn't matter if everyone else does too.

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» RE: it already exists Posted by: ethanay
Yada Yada
Posted by: Ming on Mar 11, 2006 7:57 PM   
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This message has been available to anyone interested in listening for at least 10 years. I guess as a race we will just keep talking as the train wreck continues. The reality is some people will die, some peole will barely survive, and some people will survive quite well. Guess what. Those with the most money today have already made plans to be the survivors in the future. You and I can do the best to go on with whatever life deals us since we are in no position to change an iota of the coming wars.

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More Bad News
Posted by: cephalis on Mar 11, 2006 8:46 PM   
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No one has mentioned the effect that the continuing migration of people from the climatically degraded southern hemisphere to the more fertile and affluent nations of the northern hemisphere. I think social unrest, such as France and the other industrial nations are now experiencing, will do more to disrupt our societies than will armies. The continuing influx of latinos into the U.S. from south of the border threatens to radically change the demographics of this country. As climatic conditions worsen in the southern hemisphere, the current movements will greatly increase. At some point there could well be a toppling effect. Oh, woe!

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» RE: More Bad News Posted by: FedUp
We Cannot Afford What We Are Already Doing
Posted by: NoPCZone on Mar 11, 2006 10:17 PM   
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Any proposal that we rely on military power to enforce a Pax Americana is not going to work. The cost of our tiny (by post WWII-Cold War standards) Armed forces with 2 relatively small deployments is eating our budget alive and our government is living on credit. Add to that the unprecedented personal and corporate debt our country has accumulated, and there is little left.

Espouse whatever political viewpoint you choose, adhere to the economic school of your choosing, stick your head in the sand-- there are some very tough and undeniable facts that are going to drive public social, foreign and military policy sooner or later. As is usually the case, sooner is better than later. My money is on later given the craven cowardice, careerism and political posturing that is the norm in Washington.

Some of the tough facts are:
1- Our federal government is in debt up to it's eyeballs and most of it is held by foreign governments and banks. The two largest are China and Saudi Arabia. Think about that. They could, in a moment of pique, dump dollars by the truckload into the market. The economic catastrophe would be huge, unavoidable,long-lasting, painful and damaging to our economy.

2- America's corporations are loaded with debt-- tons of it, some on the books and some not. Huge corporations like General Motors have unfunded pension liabilities as large and in some cases larger, than their market capitalization. Otherwise, they owe their workers more in retirement benefits than the liquidation value of their stock. Ford and General Motors, for example, are now in the credit dog house of Junk rated securities and they are not alone.

3- America's state and local governments have run up quite a significant tab as well. Although some states are reporting growth in tax receipts, they are not paying down their debt and many are running deficits just like washington.

4-After decades of neglect, trillions of dollars of critical infrastructure is in dire need of repair or replacement. It has been patched and put off about as long as it can be and more incidents like the I-40 collapse in Oklahoma a couple of years back may become very common.

5-America's citizens are now more indebted than at any time in our nation's history. Many not showing on the books are really in precarious shape-- their net worth buoyed by hyper-inflated real estate prices. When the speculative fever breaks people are going to find out the true definition of value. Value is not an asking price-- it is what a buyer will actually pay.

Millions of families and individuals have borrowed against vaporous speculative 'values' that will become crushing debt when the bubble goes bust.

Our nation has been eating it's seed corn for a very long time now and the bill will be coming due and not at the time or place of our choosing. Our primary creditors are countries that do not share democratic values, western culture or any particular political affinity for us. The thought of using our economic might to enforce a peace upon anyone for any length of time would be a good laugh if it were not so tragic.

The point of all this: it's time to get to work mending fences around the world as a partner, not an overseer, to address the issues of climate change and all of the issues that surround and are interrelated to it. It's later than most people think- even the people who acknowledge the problem.

http://news.independent.co.uk/environment/article350785.ece

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ZPE=Peace
Posted by: dtsheridan on Mar 12, 2006 5:51 AM   
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http://www.zpenergy.com/

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How Come Nobody Ever Mentions Religion
Posted by: patvic1405 on Mar 12, 2006 9:51 AM   
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One reason there is no birth control in "third-world countries" is because of policies such as Bush's which won't allow U.S. foreign aid to be used to teach about birth control, abortion, etc. And religion is at the bottom of it (as it is in 99% of what's wrong with the world today). Add to that all the christian missionaries around the world preaching against birth control for the past 100 years, and you get the picture. Since religion is a hands-off subject to most people, there is not going to be any change. Overpopulation, unfortunately, will have to be taken care of the old fashioned way - war, famine, disease.

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This story is a classic.
Posted by: kungfoofighterx on Mar 12, 2006 11:34 AM   
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Resource wars are part of the history of many conflicts. The story above is no different than many other conflicts in human history. Humans must have surpassed their “carrying capacity” many times in history. I think Jarid Diamond may have a book out on this whole idea now. The climate has always been changing and people have always lost their lively hoods and food supplies because of it. No one knows how many humans have died because of resource exhaustion. I’m betting it’s a tremendous number. Every part/region/zone of the planet certainly has a different carrying capacity. Technology has increased the limits of capacity leading to the possibility of really big migrations, but than again we have been able to cope in the past. Maybe it’s just the beginning of another rough time for man kind. Hopefully people will keep the nuclear blasts to a minimum so the lucky people who planned well or are living in ideal environments can go on with being human. Its going to be real rough for many people of the world when the glaciers stop forming on mountain tops and the rivers run to a trickle in the summer.

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» RE: This story is a classic. Posted by: irreverentprimate
It's the Population Stupid
Posted by: leemiller38 on Mar 12, 2006 1:02 PM   
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My title was featured on a bumper sticker a few years back and the information regarding the consequences of overpopulation have been around for a long time, yet even in 2006 the Bush Adm. has cut family planning 18% of what is already a paltry sum. It is just a matter of time until one or more of the following trigger calamity: the economy flops, climate changes, fossil energy is exhausted. The following poem sums it up from a historic perspective. Note the date!

Conservationist’s Lament
By Kenneth Boulding
In: Man’s Role in Changing the Face of the Earth, 1956
University of Chicago Press, p. 1087

The world is finite, resources are scarce,
Things are bad and will be worse.
Coal is burned and gas exploded,
Forests cut and soils eroded.
Wells are dry and air’s polluted,
Dust in blowing, trees uprooted,
Oil is going, ores depleted,
Drains receive what is excreted.
Land is sinking, seas are rising,
Man is far too enterprising,
Fire will rage with Man to fan it,
Soon we’ll have a plundered planet.
People breed like fertile rabbits,
People have disgusting habits.

Moral: The evolutionary plan went astray by evolving Man.

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» RE: It's the Population Stupid Posted by: leemiller38
» RE: It's the Population Stupid Posted by: leemiller38
Malthus was right!
Posted by: greenman on Mar 12, 2006 2:50 PM   
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The upshot of Klare's article is that there are too many human beings fighting for too few resources. This is not just a distribution problem, and the same point was made by E. O. Wilson a few years back. We have exceeded the carrying capacity of the planet. Furthermore, the destruction of forests, which sequester carbon dioxide, to create grazing land for cattle is the worst possible thing we could do.

Most recenly, James Lockwood, he of Gaia Theory fame, has issued a dire warning in a new book, The Revenge of Gaia, which is presently available only in England [order through Blackwell's]. In it, he warns that we have set into motion a number of positive feedback loops which will soon guarantee our destruction, unless we begin immediately to quit using carbon-based fuels. He asserts that nuclear fission is the only practical, readily deployable energy source presently available. Not good news, but consider the alternatives.

This is a serious book by a very smart and knowledgable person, and it merits our attention, and, I would say, action. Will it get this attention from the greedheads currently in power? No way. If ever there needs to be a grass roots movement, now is the time.

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Poor Richard VIII
Posted by: The critic on Mar 12, 2006 4:25 PM   
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The speach that EX President Gore gave on the change in our environment should be required reading by all policy makers.

You don't like Gore? Then listen to the voices of all the scientists. They concour.

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too deterministic (war and more war)
Posted by: Nate in Cambridge on Mar 13, 2006 8:17 AM   
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The author is right about global warming and scarcity of resources, but his picture of a future filled with war and more war is far too deterministic . While this vision is accurate under the current political conditions where issues of justice and the needs of the many are sacrificed to corporate capitalism, militarism and the privilege of the few. The extent to which the world descends into violent struggle is inversely proportional to the extent that the people take power from their "leaders" and force a shift away from unfettered capitalism. I have always been and will alway remain a strong enviromentalist. But even the greenest policies will be meaningless without economic and social justice.

-Nate Roberts

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Irony
Posted by: constantreader on Mar 13, 2006 12:11 PM   
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We're all sitting at our computers debating our diminishing resources. Does anybody know how much electrictity a computer and all