Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am
In what way do you think fossil fuels are a dying industry? They don't think so.
It is a dying industry in that they know it will have to stop. It’s just a question of how long they will be allowed to continue. As you know, it’s changing the makeup of our atmosphere which is causing it to heat up. It’s a dying industry in that it is already killing people. I read an estimate today that 2 million have already died due to floods, hurricanes and other weather-related events brought about by global heating due to GHG emissions, mostly from fossil fuel production and use.
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am
"Oil and gas upstream capital expenditures (oil and gas exploration) increased by 39% in 2022 to $499 billion, the highest level since 2014 and the largest year-on-year gain in history." (IEF Upstream oil and gas investment outlook report 2023)
According to the IEA; similar but different to the IEF - global energy demand will increase 50% in the next 30 years with much of that increased demand being supplied by fossil fuels. We are not nearly on a trajectory to meet Net Zero targets - the primary purpose of which seems to be to kick the can a long way down the road.
Agreed.
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 amPresident Biden is drilling more oil and gas than did former President Trump; in part because the war in Ukraine severed Europe's pipelines to Russia, but still. The UK government recently issued a hundred new oil and gas licences for the North Sea. Fossil fuel industries are a long way from dying out. Coal use has been reduced significantly in recent years - maybe that's what you mean.
Yes, coal is the dirtiest fuel of all. The energy companies in Australia are still digging up millions of tons of it and selling it offshore: 172 million mt in 2023-24, up 9.6% from about 157 million mt in 2022-23, (data released by the Department of Industry, Science and Resources).
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am
Limits to Growth isn't susceptible to the kind of distinctions you seek to make. It's difficult to explain, but at the heart of LTG is an assumption that human needs and environmental needs are directly contradictory - a zero sum game, where human needs can only be supplied at environmental cost.
Fossil fuels certainly do entail an environmental cost as mentioned above.
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am I discussed just a few ways that magma energy allows humans to, almost negate a dependence on natural resources in food production. Farming fish instead of hunting the oceans to death, is a good illustrative example. But this requires a lot of energy - more even than can be supplied by fossil fuels. A cubic meter of water weighs a tonne - that takes a lot of energy to move, particularly pumping water uphill, inland from a desalination plant near the ocean. The price, and carbon emissions of desalination and irrigation using fossil fuels are prohibitive. Similarly, we cannot recycle all our waste with fossil fuels - it's just not economically viable. If we have an effectively limitless source of clean energy from magma however, much that was previously impossible becomes, not just economically viable, but hugely profitable and environmentally beneficial.
Yes, but there is still a big IF involved here. It is yet to be demonstrated as feasible on the scale you imagine.
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am
Limits to Growth is false.
The limits are only false if we are prepared to wear the environmental and economic cost of continued population growth, land degradation, and GHG emissions from fossil fuels and subsequent global heating. These problems place constraints on growth
of the type we have had heretofore. We need abundant, clean sources of energy. That may include energy from magma.
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am
I'd love to hear how you propose we "bring our population growth down to sustainable levels." Are you volunteering for castration? Or do you think we should just murder people? Are you willing to be murdered? Or is it other people you'd have castrated/murdered while you remain alive and fully functional?
I suggested no such thing. What I did suggest is limiting population
GROWTH. That is a completely different thing to suggesting the culling of existing populations or forced sterilization and I cannot believe you seriously thought I was advocating such things. What we are currently seeing is that, as economic development occurs, people in developing countries are already limiting the number of children they have. Instead of having ten children they are having two. They are undergoing the same demographic transition that occurred historically with economic development in the West. That is a good thing.
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am
You don't think it would be a terrible thing to invest governments with that kind of power? And do so merely to reduce demand, in the name of climate change, while still drilling oil and gas, pumping at top speed?
As above, no one has advocated or even mentioned a cull. A reduction in population growth will happen without coercion. So it’s not about culling. It’s about flattening the ever-upwards curve. That is achieved by limiting the number of children people CHOOSE to have.
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am
The potential of Magma Energy is described by Nasa and Sandia Labs, but it makes sense. Earth is a big ball of molten rock. I think the reasons it hasn't been developed are fairly mundane - at least initially, on the right, fossil fuel revenues and employment, on the left Malthus, Marx and Meadows. Magma energy falls between two stools, the excluded middle.
The left had nothing to do with it. And if there is money in it it would be getting done now or will get done. The study you mention was done at sites where magma is at the surface. It is yet to be demonstrated as feasible elsewhere on the scale you imagine
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am
The right engaged in climate change denial, while more radical elements of the left pursued Meadows Limits to Growth. Part of problem I believe, is that capitalism has surreptitiously weaponized environmental concern since the 1980's. Suddenly they're marketing plastic rcap with green labels, and building windmills. Sourcing energy for EV's from the national grid will hugely increase energy demand, while wind and solar reduce supply, thereby increasing energy prices. Then you can look to concerns around market stability, to the geopolitics of nations dependent on fossil fuel revenues. There are a good many reasons the right haven't developed magma energy; while the left have been concerned with proving Malthus, Marx and Meadows right, and capitalism wrong.
I don’t know what you mean by “more radical the left” here. You seem to use "left" as some sort of scary boogie term. I am not a communist, but I am slightly left of centre. Most of my family and friends a left-centrists like me. They all know that Malthus got it wrong, in the short term at least. Most people on the left support continued economic growth, they’re not stupid, but they would like to see growth happen without trashing the joint so much that it becomes unliveable.
Mercury wrote: ↑February 1st, 2024, 11:30 am
There are some companies - or often university research project/companies, that are having an underfunded go at it. I wonder at their aims sometimes, it seems like they're trying to problemtize rather than solve, less yet produce energy commercially. Quaise Energy, for example - I don't understand how they imagine its necessary to drill to 20km deep, the deepest hole ever drilled, to hit magma, or how they propose to do so with a laser cutting machine as big as a house. Are they proposing to lower this machine down the hole? Or invent phasers like from Star Trek? Disinformation funded by fossil fuels? I don't know. What's Hanlon's Razor say: Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.
Apart from at plate boundaries, if you wanted to access magma at the interior of continents you would need to drill through 25 to 70 km (16 to 43 mi) of continental crust first. Temperature increases slowly by about 30 deg C per 100km. You would need to drill down a long way to get to really high temperatures. And
Sy Borg pointed to some potential problems with this. In volcanic areas along plate boundaries magma can be tapped at much shallower depths. But as I mentioned earlier, these are the most seismically active places on earth and so there would be great risk to magma tapping infrastructure that would need to be factored into the cost of magma energy extraction. But, again, if there is profit in magma energy then market forces will dictate that it is used. However, I’m seeing no sign of that happening yet.
Finally, I’m not trying to be killjoy here – I accept that magma it is an untapped resource and I hope energy from magma proves to be the almost limitless energy resource you believe it can be and that, if is so proves, we start using in a big way ASAP.