Walter Youngquist (1921-2018) was a petroleum geologist, a University
of Oregon professor, and my friend. His life’s
masterpiece is a 600 page book that’s now available to everyone as a free PDF
download [HERE].
Geologists study Earth resources, many of which are being degraded
and depleted — aquifers, topsoil, hydrocarbons, minerals, etc. These resources have limits. Every drinker learns that the glass starts
full, ends empty, and the faster you drink it, the quicker it’s gone. Consumers pay little attention to resource
limits, but they’re beginning to comprehend the impact of carbon emissions on
the climate. Mainstream experts repeatedly
tell us not to worry. They preach a fervent
blind faith in miracles — a smooth and easy transition to a clean, green, renewable
utopia. Geologists wince.
Youngquist didn’t believe in miracles or techno utopias. Today, we’re living dangerously fast by destroying
astonishing amounts of nonrenewable resources — a onetime binge that can never
again be repeated. Nonrenewable energy is
finite. We have been soaring in a
beautiful dream world, where the air is perfumed with the intoxicating aroma of
a nonrenewable prosperity. The era of
cheap energy is fading away in the rear view mirror.
In 1973, the Eugene newspaper wrote a story about one of his
lectures, “Dark Picture Painted by Youngquist.”
He gave many talks to Chamber of Commerce groups, trying to introduce
them to the concept of limits. He was
almost never invited back. America
worships perpetual growth at any cost. Growth
is our god word.
In the mid-1990s, a number of the world’s petroleum
geologists became alarmed that the volume of new oil discovered was declining, while
the volume of consumption continued soaring.
This inspired the dawn of the Peak Oil movement, a wakeup call. In 1997, Youngquist published GeoDestinies, which
quickly sold out. Folks begged him to
print more, but Walt was reluctant. He
wanted to update the info first, but the story was moving faster than he could
type.
Finally, in 2012, he finished the update. Unfortunately, the process hit some curves. The book did not get to a printer, Walt died,
the publisher went extinct, and the manuscript gathered dust. In 2022, a small group of fans was able to
get a digital copy, and make it available to the world. Most of the content is still timely and very
important. For most readers, this book
is largely going to be a banquet of new information, important stuff that’s
rarely taught in school, if ever.
Today, many snicker at the Peak Oil dimwits. Dudes, we didn’t run out! We’ll always find more! In the ’90s, the industry was primarily producing
cheap and easy conventional
oil (insert a straw and suck). It
appears that the global production of this oil peaked around 2005. Unfortunately, mad scientists developed new
technology for extracting oil, like hydro-fracking and horizontal
drilling. This enabled a sharp increase
in the production of unconventional
oil from sources including tar sands, heavy oil, shale oil (tight oil), and
deep water wells. This oil was far more
challenging and expensive to extract (and the mother of many bankruptcies).
In addition to declining discoveries, a new boogeyman is EROEI
(energy returned on energy invested). It
takes energy to extract fossil energy.
For example, a hundred years ago, the EROEI for conventional oil was
very high. Ram a drill into a huge pool
of Texas oil, and a geyser of black gold often shot high in the sky. Today, with the shift toward unconventional
oil, the EROEI is far lower and declining.
As the energy needed for extraction approaches the energy content of the
output, the industry moves closer to its expiration date. A lot of fossil energy will be left in the
ground forever.
It took more than 500 million years for geologic forces to
transform plant and animal residue into fossil fuels — coal, oil, and natural
gas. It will take less than 500 years
for humans to extract it and burn it. We
live during a brief blip in Earth history, an ecological hurricane. Walt’s core message was a blunt warning. “The momentum of population growth and
resource consumption is so great that a collision course with disaster is
inevitable. Large problems lie not very
far ahead. …In some respects, the
twenty-first century will be like the twentieth century in reverse.”
The public believes that adequate “renewable” substitutes
will be available when needed. Alternative
energy is not clean, green, and free. The
hardware components have limited working lifespans. Scaling up to replace nonrenewable energy
would require vast land area, roads, power lines, and backup for when adequate
wind or sunbeams are unavailable. Manufacturing
solar panels requires critical minerals like cobalt, gallium, germanium,
indium, manganese, tellurium, titanium, and zinc. Each wind turbine requires tons of concrete,
steel, and other resources.
Walt described the alternative energy options, and their many
limitations. He concluded that renewable
energy will not come close to replacing fossil energy. In 2021, Alice
Friedemann presented a far more thorough discussion in her book Life After Fossil Fuels. A renewable utopia seems impossible.
Oil is just one of many Earth resource topics in Walt’s
book. Plants and animals don’t need it. Less than 200 years ago, oil was of no great
importance to anyone anywhere. For many
thousands of years, nomads wandered across the Arabian Peninsula, under which
laid oceans of ancient oil. It never
occurred to them to extract it, burn it, blindside the climate, and race down crowded
highways in powerful motorized wheelchairs.
Naturally, in those days, the planet was in far healthier condition. Then, in the twentieth century, Arabia became
very rich, very fast.
Other resources are genuinely essential for the survival of
the family of life — soil, water, air, and sunlight. Of all minerals, soil is the most precious by
far. Fertile soil is created so slowly
that, from a human perspective, it’s essentially nonrenewable. In his book Dirt, geologist David
Montgomery wrote, “Continued for generations, till-based agriculture will
strip soil right off the land as it did in ancient Europe and the Middle
East. With current agricultural
technology though, we can do it a lot faster.”
Peter Salonius studied soil for 44 years. He concluded that all extractive agriculture,
from ancient times to the present, was unsustainable.
The problems associated with soil destruction are widely
understood, and widely disregarded. Nobody
became a billionaire by promoting soil conservation. Globally, billions of tons are lost every
year. Overall, one-third of the soil on
U.S. cropland has been lost over the past 200 years. Half of the excellent topsoil of Iowa is
already gone. The highest quality soil
is close to the surface, and the first to erode. Walt wrote, “Worldwide, the continuing loss
of soil and depletion of groundwater is leading humanity directly over the
cliff.”
All life needs water. Water
allows mineral nutrients in the soil to be absorbed by plants. Your body is about 60 percent water. In some regions, farms receive adequate water
from precipitation. Other regions
require irrigation. About 17 percent of
cropland is irrigated, but it produces 40 percent of the world’s crops.
Some underground aquifers are unable to recharge as fast as
pumps are extracting the water — like the vast Ogallala aquifer in the U.S.
midlands. They are unsustainable water
mines. Several communities in Colorado are
(temporarily) drinking from reservoirs of 10,000 year old water. Forty percent of humankind now lives in
regions with chronic water shortages, especially Africans, with their rapidly
growing populations.
When ancient aquifers are depleted, subsidence can occur
— the ground sinks, filling the empty space where the water once was. This makes it impossible for the aquifer to
ever refill again. In some portions of Mexico
City, subsidence has lowered the ground surface up to 28 feet (8.5 m), causing
much damage. Irrigation can also lead to
the accumulation of salt in the soil, which eventually creates a permanent
wasteland. In the cradle of
civilization, the once thriving Tigris Euphrates floodplain is now “a
glistening desert of salt.”
Earth resources have played a starring role in world history. They enable the rise of civilizations, and
their limited eras of prosperity. It’s
no coincidence that the Industrial Revolution began in Britain, because they
had abundant deposits of coal, iron, and limestone in convenient locations. The U.S. skyrocketed into a global superpower
by exploiting huge deposits of a wide variety of Earth resources. In World War II, Japan was short on iron,
coal, and oil. Hitler invaded southern
Russia in an effort to seize the huge Baku oilfields.
In coming years, as fossil fuel fades out, agriculture will once
again be muscle powered and low tech (if the climate crisis allows crop production
to continue). Industrial scale food processing
and distribution will fizzle. Potent synthetic
fertilizers and other agrichemicals will no longer be available. As harvests decline, population growth will
shift into reverse.
Finally, a few footnotes.
GeoDestinies
was written on a tiny digital typewriter that allowed files to be saved on a
floppy disk. As Walt typed, the display
presented a single line of text. He
never owned a computer, and never had direct access to the internet or email. He had no spare time. Finishing this manuscript was job one.
I gave him prints of interesting online stuff, and copies of
my book reviews, including Brian Fagan’s The
Great Warming, and The
Little Ice Age. The Fagan reviews
reinforced his belief that climate always changed. Back in 2012, the notion that human-caused
emissions were disrupting the climate was still controversial in the mainstream
mindset.
In his 96 years, Walt witnessed remarkable changes in the
American standard of living. These were
only possible because of our maniacal binge of energy guzzling. Modernity’s high standard of living, and
fabulous healthcare was awesome. But the
long term environmental impact of these short term benefits was huge.
He lacked some sympathy for environmentalists who opposed
energy development projects in America, whilst they were enjoying a comfortable
consumer lifestyle. High impact projects
were often diverted to poor nations that had few regulations, if any. In 2012, Walt was not fully aware of the
serious long term hazards of nuclear energy, and the lack of permanent storage
for high level radioactive wastes.
Walt was especially horrified by exponential population
growth. In his lifetime, the human mob
skyrocketed from 1.9 billion to 7.6 billion.
He was deeply disappointed that overpopulation was a taboo subject for
secular and spiritual leaders. Large
numbers of immigrants to the U.S. came from cultures where large families are
the norm. Their dream was to live a
maximum impact consumer lifestyle.
Youngquist’s book pulls away cultural blindfolds, and
provides a mind-expanding full immersion baptism in the actual facts of life. “The confluence of factors soon at hand may
make this century the most turbulent in human history. There will be adjustment of population
size. There will be a new energy
paradigm. There will be lifestyle
change. There will be great economic
change. There will be environmental
change. Although change has always been
the order of life, the particular confluence of major factors in each of these
areas will make the twenty-first century a fundamental turning point for
mankind.”
Walt completed the manuscript of the second edition in
2012. Since then, he wrote four papers
for the Negative Population Growth Forum.
Our
Plundered Planet (2014), A
Geomoment of Affluence (2015), The
Scale of Things (2016), Framework
of the Future (2016).
6 comments:
Actually it's amazing how many items are made from oil, that's what's the real concern.
Nikola Tesla was a Serbian-American inventor, electrical engineer, mechanical engineer, and futurist best known for his contributions to the design of the modern alternating current electricity supply system,
I'm told or read that engineering is trying to reproduce his electronic energy field fron the magnetic earth. That he was trying to reproduce
Well protest songs and writing, from the 1960's to ??
bob dylan movie i'm not there
https://youtu.be/MFUEofAr9GA
bob dylan movie i'm not there
Glen Beck radio announcer talking about everything green , the Dems want higher gas prices.
Well I've seen the house and rental in your area, if you want to try living off the grid in Arizona , let me know,
Thanks for the offer. Right now, I'm not thinking about moving south. Need to finish my book.
Great offer;)
...with a money back guarantee!
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