Noooooooo, I understand what is meant by peak oil. The pumps will run dry, not right at that point in time (didn't realise it was reading that way), well, not all of the pumps anyway. That small spike when the wombles go banoonoos will only hasten the pumps running dry. I'm not saying it will happen overnight, but knowing that it has peaked will drive the cost up in its own right. As soon as you hit peak, demand will outstrip supply and it will continue to do so as we keep requiring our economy to grow. Which it won't be able to. If you're using 5 million barrels per day and that drops to 4.5 million barrels per day the following year, then where is that half a million barrels worth going to be cut and how will it be replaced? As you say it'll probably be put upon the "frivolous" users first (we have an alternative to cars in public transport). That's not the problem though. In year 2 you may be producing only 4 million barrels per day, year 3 3.5 million etc... Once it's past peak, it's alllllllll down hill. The demand will very much still be there as we won't want our expensive cars sitting collecting dust on the roadside, we'd like them filled etc... (cars will also start to lose value rapidly and to the point where it won't be cost effective to make any more). The market knows this and if they're told

that peak has been reached (how long will have elapsed before they confirm that we've passed peak?) it will react quite violently and we will be plunged into recession on the perception alone. The housing market caused a pretty decent recession, supposedly, and we still have the resources etc... to build houses. When oil is running out it affects many more industry's will be affected. We'll be fubar as the change won't be gradual in any way shape or form as govts/military's stockpile etc...

aye, I'll join you in the get fucked yelling, although I'll be doubting that we'll get what we're after for some unknown reason. It may well be that we'll be knobbled by safety, but in the context of efficiency, per passenger, a car outstrips a bike without breaking a sweat. Not sure how close that calculation will be with a scoot, but I can see many many bikes failing the calculation of per person km fuel consumption rationale.
Example.
Scoot can travel 100mpg. It can carry 2 people so effectively has traveled 200mpg.
Car travels 30mpg: I can carry 7 people so effectively has traveled 210mpg.
Dunno what the averages are across "motorcycles" v's cars, but there are many less efficient "motorcycles" than the scoot above and many more efficient cars than the car above. I can't see us winning that one.
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