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20080526 Monday May 26, 2008
Radical Changes Required

Jim and Darren blogged about the possibility and probable impacts of very high oil prices. They both focused on consumer behavior.

At industrial level, oil prices will have an even greater impact. Unbeknownst to many, US industries feed on oil too. From California central valley to Iowa corn field to Kansas cattle ranches, regions have specialized into single products. The famed Interstate highway system is the cardiovascular systems of this highly independent organism. Oil is the blood that runs through it, bringing in nutrients for life and haul away wastes for survival.

Americans also depend on oil to generate fertilizers that feed the corn production system: affecting almost half of the foods in typical supermarkets.

Lastly, some one in the "field" told me that the earth actually has plenty of oil for everyone and for a long time. It is just a matter of costs to extract them. The easy oil fields are near depleted. The technologies and operational costs for harder ones require higher oil prices to sustain.

So, drink up, Americans. Chinese and Indians, learn from this.


posted by syw May 26 2008, 04:00:00 PM CST Permalink Comments [2]

Comments:

I think there should be some sort of prohibition against using foodstuff for fuel. Using corn for fuel is not only driving-up the price of food in American supermarkets, but having an awful affect on the price of tortillas in Mexico:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/6319093.stm

The same goes for the use of soy, which is causing a rise in the price of tofu in many Southeast Asian countries.

Both of these are dietary staples, and hurt those who can least afford the change.

Posted by Robs on May 27, 2008 at 07:27 PM CST #

Yes, oil is the blood that keeps America alive... now that it is getting expensive, I'm expecting a lot of things to increase in price in the coming year.

Posted by Darren on May 28, 2008 at 05:57 PM CST #

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