Oil-Free Future ...
We live in a therapeutic culture, and the function of our government, our media, and all the things we buy is to make us feel good about ourselves. We want to be, and be seen as being, positive, upbeat, and ”good”. The fossil fuel lobby denies global warming. The politicians deny the influence of oil on foreign policy. The media deny American responsibility for the situation in Iraq. Military acronyms deny the reality of the brutality and killing.Environmental crises, military occupations (Although, in the words of Donald Rumsfeld, the invasion of Iraq had "nothing to do with oil, literally nothing to do with oil."), and the corporate control of democracy are not good things - and if we ever thought about them too much we'd probably have a collective breakdown. So we don't. But our lack of awareness, and of conscience, will come at a price.Americans are sitting on about 3 percent of the oil reserves in the world - and consume about 25 percent of all the oil that is produced. The average American (& Canadian) consumes more than twice the energy as does the average Japanese, more than 12 times the Chinese citizen, and more than 25 times the average man in India.Whatever the world’s oil reserves may be (estimated @ 1.1 Trillion Barrels*) - Oil is a finite resource - this is an indisputable fact. An energy transition away from oil is not just an option, at some point it is an inevitability. Renewable energy is also the route to our independence and self-determination. It breaks the power of those who control the oil reserves and gives new hope to those who do not, for even the poorest country is rich in sources of natural power. Energy can be a daunting topic, especially considering the cultural, ecological and economic scope of our dependence on finite resources. Energy is like water. It is a collective resource that everyone needs and uses. It should be produced and distributed in everyone's interest. We need a public energy plan that serves everyone, and doesn't mortgage our future to pollution and corporate greed.It is time to embrace an oil-free future and to break away from this cycle of dependency.*How much oil is left (reserves)?Precise figures for existing oil reserves do not exist. This is partly due to limitations in the technology used to estimate the size of underground oilfields, but also because companies and countries have an interest in exaggerating their so-called 'proven' (defined as 90% certain) reserves. For example, OPEC countries are allocated a production quota based on their proven reserves - it is therefore in their interest to exaggerate reserves in order to maximize production and income.At the end of 2003 there were estimated to be over 1.1 trillion barrels of proven oil reserves around the globe. But these reserves are very unevenly distributed. Saudi Arabia holds about a quarter of these oil reserves, while Iran, Iraq, Kuwait and Abu Dhabi account for another nearly 40% between them. Outside of the Middle East, the largest reserves are in U.S.A. (9.2%), Venezuela (6.8%), and Russia (6%).