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James Stafford

James Stafford

James Stafford is the Editor of Oilprice.com

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Conservation Not Technology will be our Saviour - Chris Martenson (Part 2)

Continued from Part 1…

In part 2 of our exclusive interview with Chris Martenson economist and editor of the popular financial website Peak Prosperity Chris talks about:

•    How tight oil is being oversold
•    An idea for solving the storage and Battery problem
•    How price, not technology, has unlocked boom reserves
•    Why it’s about conservation now, not new technology
•    Why we should be concerned about another financial meltdown
•    Future opportunities for investors
•    Why exporting natural gas is a terrible idea
•    Why Governments should help renewable Energy innovation
•    Why net energy returns are the MOST important thing

In part 1 Chris spoke about: Why we shouldn’t be speaking about Energy Independence, why we could see $200 a barrel oil in the near future, why peak oil is not a defunct theory, what we aren’t being told about the shale boom, and much more… Click here to read part 1

Oilprice.com:  With cheap oil looking like a thing of the past, what other energy sources should we be looking at developing? What are your thoughts on nuclear?

Chris Martenson: I believe nuclear can be done much more elegantly and safely than we're currently doing it. And I am intrigued, also, by the possibility of thorium reactors. There are a variety of developments that we could look into. It will take quite a bit of investment, and there are a number of issues to be worked through, clearly. But nuclear does provide us with the possibility of having very low emission, very cheap electricity, which is important.

And if we're going to talk about how we need to move towards electricity, which I believe we do, the thing we need to solve first is storage. We need to figure out how to store electricity.

The batteries that we can manufacture at scale have not advanced much since Volta first invented them in the 18th century. So we need batteries, we need storage, we need to start building zero-footprint buildings.  All of these things can be done, but we really are not yet doing them on a serious basis.

Saving energy is something that really gets overlooked, but it's where the biggest savings always happen to be. If I could wave a magic policy wand, I would take just one month from the Federal Reserve and I would dedicate it to a national prize to whoever can solve making batteries at scale from common materials and at a much higher energy density. The tasty prize would be $40,000,000,000, which may sound like a lot but is roughly two weeks of money printing by the Fed.

Oilprice.com: What role do you see renewable energy playing in the future? And do you think governments should help innovation in this area?

Chris Martenson: Governments right now are providing more than half a trillion dollars in subsidies for oil and gas, so they're already in the business of shaping the alternative market, mainly by making their competitor's products much cheaper. So is there a role for government to play in helping to boost alternatives at this point? The answer has to be yes, because there really isn't a lot of time left on the clock. Left to its own devices, the market would deliver us an alternative energy future, but history suggests that energy transitions take a minimum of 40 years, sometimes 60 years, and we don't have that kind of time.

When we're truly threatened, such as when a nation has to go to war, we'd never think of leaving that up to the markets. When you're in a predicament and coordination is necessary--to be effective  requires a collective response, not 300,000,000 individual responses.

I see the challenges to us at this date, such as declining net energy and debt markets, tuned for an energy reality that does not currently exist, being so profound that we're going to need a response along the lines of World War II times an Apollo project plus the Manhattan project. In other words, a response more complete, complex, and challenging than anything we've ever faced. So on that basis, absolutely I think we need a collective response because we are quite rapidly running out of time.  In other words, a government response.

Oilprice.com: And what can cause this to happen? As you say, there's no political will to make these changes at present.

Chris Martenson: We need a different narrative. Right now, the narrative we're running is simply this: "We need our economy to grow." That's the first, second, third, and last piece of discussion that we ever seem to have.

It turns out we need another narrative in here which says, "Hold on. We can't grow infinitely, we know this." The question becomes, "When the remaining resources do run out, where would we like to be?  What do we want the world, the landscape, and our energy infrastructure to look like?'' And that's the thing that's completely missing. We're just saying, 'Our strategy is we're just going to continue to grow.' It's not a strategy, it's a tactic.

Related Article: Don't Fall for the Shale Boom Hype - Chris Martenson Interview

I am among many people who are working fervently if not feverishly to help change our narrative in time.  Away from a story of growth for its own sake and towards a future shaped by design, not disaster, where we value prosperity first and growth second, if at all.

How do we do this?  I really don't know the answer to that because it has never been done before at this scale.  But people and cultures do change, all the time in fact, and so this is not an impossible task, just a very tricky one, which makes it both challenging and fascinating.

Oilprice.com: You mentioned earlier that you thought the shale boom was being oversold. What are your thoughts on America's oil and gas boom?

Chris Martenson: Well, this is really important. The current story is something along these lines: "Hey, look at how clever we've been. Because of the magic of technology, we have discovered how to unlock these incredible oil and gas resources that we just didn't even know about before."

When I talk to people who are in the oil business, they say, "Oh, no, no, we've known about those shale deposits, we've been drilling into and through them for decades. We've had horizontal drilling for decades; we've had fracking for decades. What we haven't had is $80-a-barrel oil reliably enough to support us going into those with those technologies."

So what really unlocked those reserves was price. Not technology, not cleverness, not ingenuity. Don't get me wrong, there's a lot of very clever, ingenious stuff going on in those drilling actions, but price was the primary driver here.

Here's the thing, though: When more expensive energy comes out of the ground, it means that everything that you use to go get that energy, after a lag, becomes more expensive too. This is doubly compounded by this idea that there's less net energy coming from these finds.

They use more energy to get that energy, but that more energy is more expensive. So that feedback loop is already in play here.  It simply means that there's less to be used as we like elsewhere in the economy.

When I look at America's apparent energy abundance
I'm a little worried that it's been oversold. In particular, the dynamics of depletion that exist in both the tight shale oil and shale gas plays are very different from conventional reservoir depletion dynamics.  I'm concerned that people are accustomed to the old and relatively slow reservoir depletion dynamics and are lulled by the sharp increases in output that these new reservoirs offer without really understanding just how rapidly they fall off as well.

Here's an example, in the Barnett shale gas play, in one region where they drilled 9,000 wells, there was just this exponential increase in gas output. But then there was no more room for any more wells in that section, and within one single year the gas output from that region with all of those beautiful, technologically marvelous 9,000wells had fallen by 44%. One year!

So as long as America can continue to forever increase the number of wells that it's completing and bringing online every year, it will be able to maintain rising production from the shale plays. Obviously that's an impossibility. You run out of space eventually, you don't have enough rigs or talent to drill incrementally more wells each year, or the capital just isn't there for some reason. Sooner or later, there are only so many wells you can complete. At that point, we discover that the rapid increases in oil production  almost immediately begin to drop. And this is a whole new dynamic.  I think we need to build in a little caution for ourselves around this story that seems to be almost completely missing from most mainstream news reports.

So really, we're on a very elaborate treadmill right now, where as long as we can continue to drill, drill, drill, drill, drill, drill, drill, then we'll get an increasing output. I'm not convinced that that's going to happen.

There are a number of factors that will cause that to slow. One is environmental concern. Another is, I don't think they're going to have the capital to do that forever. A third is that we've already drilled through all of the known sweet spots in these plays, and so we're down to the more marginal portions of the main plays. The wells going into the less-than-sweet spots are going to require higher energy prices to break even than did the initial wells. And fundamentally, sooner or later, you just run out of places to put new wells.

The biggest problem I have with how the shale story is being sold is it is being used to justify a blind resumption of business-as-usual and I think we really need to be asking some deeper questions of ourselves because eventually even these plays will run out too.  I say we should have a distinct and well thought out plan for how we want to use the potential work those resources represent to build ourselves the finest country energy can supply.

Related Article: Falling Oil Prices and the Shale Boom: An Interview with Michael Levi

Oilprice.com: What is the most serious problem facing humanity? Resource depletion, population growth, climate change?

Chris Martenson: I'd rate these threats in the horizons. My most immediate concern, personally, is that our world financial system could crumble with the slightest provocation right now, with pretty disruptive effects.  It's not yet out of the woods by any stretch.

On a longer horizon, humans are living well beyond our ecological and energy budgets, and we're eating into our principal on both accounts. Either we adjust on our own terms, or it will happen eventually on some other terms.

These are actually linked threats.  At the root of it all we have a monetary system that enforces perpetual growth without which it wobbles and constantly threatens to utterly collapse.  So even as our financial system is wobbling right now, sooner or later we have to come up with a system that can operate perfectly well within limits.

Oilprice.com: You talk about the world financial system crumbling. How would this look and how do you see this playing out?

Chris Martenson: So at heart what we have is a debt-based money system that requires exponential growth, just to not fall completely apart on a yearly basis. And that's something that I can't see working in a post-peak world. 

We grow our use of mineral resources about 2% per year. Which means that every 30 years, roughly speaking, we're going to be doubling the amount of those resources that we're pulling out of the ground and putting into the world economy. Obviously you cannot constantly double your extraction of finite resources.  This means we're going to need a new money system at some point, and fortunately, they exist.

People really need to be concerned about this right now. And our current crop of leadership on both the monetary side and on the Fed and the fiscal side in Washington, D.C., have made it abundantly clear that they're going to preserve the status quo as long as possible, and at any cost.

And so the risk contained in that observation is that we're going to chug along until something forces us to change. And at this point I think that it will be a complete meltdown in the financial markets. And the possibility, then, of a dollar crisis that ends in either the complete destruction of the dollar as a useful form of money or something pretty close to that. I'm not saying that it will happen, but I am saying that the risks of that outcome are now increasing.

Fortunately, there are things that we can do to increase our personal and community resilience that are easy, fun, fulfilling, and great investments to boot. So, we still have a lot of control on this story.

Oilprice.com: The crash course paint’s a pretty bleak picture for our future. Are you optimistic about any technologies that can help us out of our various predicaments?

Chris Martenson: We don't need any new technologies, we have everything we need right here on the shelf now to begin living a very different life. It begins with, I believe, the most fundamentally important thing we can do, conservation, at this stage.

If you look at a nighttime satellite photo, you can see that there are probably a few lights we could turn off and save a bit of electricity. There's technology on the shelf right now enabling homes, either residential or commercial buildings, to be built that use a fraction of the energy they currently use, just by tilting them south and putting windows on the right side and ventilating them. Very simple things like that that can be done. All we have to do is decide that we're going to use them, and that's missing still.

So, yes, I am very optimistic about technologies and processes and understandings that already exist.  The mystery to me is why they are not being deployed.  They make complete sense from economic, political, national security, ecological and social justice standpoints yet we don't use them at scale.  That's not a technology problem, that's a narrative problem.  Another way of saying that is I am very optimistic about technology but decidedly less optimistic that we will use it intelligently and rationally. 

Oilprice.com: Should the US export natural gas?

Chris Martenson: Fossil fuels. They're a one-time gift. You get to extract them and burn them exactly once. That is, whatever you choose to do with them is what gets done. They perform work for us. So we really should be focused on what sort of work we want those fossil fuels to do for us.

There are, right now, about a dozen proposals to liquefy and export US natural gas, and a study just came out this past week, commissioned by the EIA, saying that that's a good idea. Wrong, it's a terrible idea. Fully 25% or more of the energy contained within the natural gas is expended just in the process of liquefying it. That's what you get to do with 25% of the units of work. You get to turn the gas into a liquid, and nothing else.

We should be using every possible unit of work that we extract from the ground contained within that natural gas to do something actually useful. If it were mine to say, we'd be using that energy to rebuild our nation's crumbling infrastructure; we'd have a 30-year plan for exactly what we want our country to look like and how we were going to use our natural gas to get there. So when the natural gas runs out, and it will someday, we'll at least have a resilient, well-built country that can run on alternative energy sources.

Oilprice.com: What are the big future opportunities for investors?

Chris Martenson: The big trends are very clear. Food, fuel, water, those are the big, obvious trends that a burgeoning population are going to place increasing demands on. But the things that excite me the most are those technologies, those things that we can do that are going to save us the most energy.

Anything that has a visible, obvious improvement in energy use, or new and improved ways of really growing food of higher quality with less embodied energy, those are the sorts of places where I think the most extraordinary opportunities exist.

And they'll make economic sense right now, because they make energy sense right now, and in the future.

Oilprice.com: Chris – thank you for taking the time to speak with us. For those readers who would like to learn more about Chris and his work please take a moment to visit his website at: www.peakprosperity.com

Interview by. James Stafford of Oilprice.com


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  • Ed on December 21 2012 said:
    Typical Chris Martenson; clear thinking and well articulated.

    The best Nation at the moment at working towards a prosperous future, and as a Brit I find this hard to admit, is Germany. The statistics I like to tell people at every oppotunity are 1: During one day this year, Germany produced over 50% of its electricity from renewables 2: Germany is aiming to product all electricity from renewables by 2050. How awesome is that?

    This should be highlighted on your web-sites. Perhaps with a permanent banner saying "Germany: electricity producted by renewable energy x%, US: y%, UK: z%" etc The message being: if they can do it why can't we.
  • Tony on December 22 2012 said:
    What about a permanent banner highlighting how much certain countries that should know better are growing their populations? The US builds an incredible amount of new fossel-fuel burning electrial facilities due to the never ending millions they are taking in. And the immigrants have pushed birth rates, which had been moving towards replacement level, back up.
  • Steve Goldthorpe on December 22 2012 said:
    Where does the figure of 25% energy consumption for the LNG process come from? An authoritative reference to that figure would be most welcome to sent my personal email address.

    There is indeed a big energy penalty associated with including the LNG step in the gas supply train, but my investigations indicate that the penalty is about half of the 25% number.

    Apart from the adverse impact on fossil fuel resources of using a significant part of the energy as own use for the LNG step in the delivery process, it also has a significant impact on the greenhouse consequences of using natural gas. When shale gas is transported as LNG the resulting fuel gas carries a large greenhouse backpack such that the greenhouse benefit of transitioning power generation from coal to gas would be greatly reduced.
  • Mitchell Covell on December 23 2012 said:
    Hello Mr. Goldthorpe. Perhaps your figure for the energy consumption associated with the liquefaction of natural gas differs from that given by Mr. Martenson because of differences in accounting. It is possible that his statement in the interview implied a less inclusive energy accounting than that which gave rise to his figure of 25%.
    Respectfully, Mitch
  • Amvet on December 23 2012 said:
    Long range planning is not done by the US and most other governments and one easy expense to postpone is maintence. When I visited the Soviet Union in 1990 the greatest shock was "no one is doing maintence". My idea of why the SU failed is because of corruption and indiference not because of the theoretical system. No political system, no matter how cleaver, can survive massive corruption and political indifference.

    Since I am an American, lets look at the USA. Clearly a fantastic place based on resources ranging from good soil coupled with rain to oil, NG, gold, silver, coal, wood, low population density, to crawfish. Much has been used, much has been trashed, and we are in a mode of out-of-country military adventures and an in-country mode of no maintence. When I hear or read what our leading politicians are saying, I am afraid that we are following the Soviet Union to extermination.
  • Cathy on December 24 2012 said:
    To conserve is a word that would be used when people actually have that running out threat starring them in there immediate time frame, so that will be lagging until there is constant shortages of what ever fuel is used. The EPA has it's fine points but it also inhibits the overall picture by stimulating the scare of the environment it slows the fresh new idea's and inventions that opens ones eyes to try to get more with less, that is a direct cost just like a doctor having to pay malpractice insurance, that makes every open minded doctor be scared to improve a solution because if it does not work it will bankrupt him so that keeps him running every test for a answer instead of wondering how a patient got sick or shot or what ever the problem just fix it and then record what worked the best, right now the patents and second guessing are an attorney's Christmas. There will be mistakes all the time but if you stay the same there will never be any mistakes to learn from so there will never be any progress. Almost all cures or solutions are the bi product of a whole different objective for what they where trying to accomplish and that is back to attorney's and insurance which leads to being scared to take a chance to fail and learn what is the best experience not punish someone for trying which is the norm. Nobody likes a change till it has already been changed as a last resort. The wheel was not always round till somebody experienced it then they had to make the brakes to slow it down or it would not stop till it went of the cliff financially or physical pain both ave a price and that is experience and new experiences.
  • Mambarino on December 24 2012 said:
    It's been clear to me for some time that Martenson has a blind spot regarding Global Warming. He never mentions it, and has never had an article or interview about it at his website. In the interview above he rates it as a problem "on the horizon". I suppose this year's record-breaking drought in the US is just a coincidence? Or the fact that 2012 was the hottest year in US history? Plus record Arctic melt, record low on the Mississippi. And, because of the increase in water vapor due to the warming, we have catastrophic rainfall in the Pacific Northwest. "Horizon"? Major FAIL, Chris.

    But Martenson is not a stupid man, so why is he deliberately not discussing this extinction-level threat to mankind? In the past I have speculated that it's because his site's readership is largely conservative leaning, and this demographic has been thoroughly brainwashed by the denial and misinformation campaign to which the US has been subjected. Martenson does not want to alienate a paying membership cohort, so he carefully modulates his message to the audience. Disappointing, and irritating. :(
  • Oelsen on December 29 2012 said:
    Mambarino: You are right, but somebody has to do something. And Chris helps to propagate Peak Oil. Others help more locally. Everyone is needed.
  • Stephen Bach on December 29 2012 said:
    Regarding nuclear, my concern is the waste issue, which we still haven't solved. Martenson does not address this.
  • Richard Hasting on January 10 2013 said:
    Two comments: Mambarino, Since we are running out of oil, the CO2 emissions problem takes care of itself, in a way. Secondly, the solution to it is contained within Chris' solution set, which is to recarbonize the soils around the world which could fix all excess carbon in 20 years. There is a TED talk on youtube by Tony Lovell, who does his best to explain that in 22 minutes.

    Stephen: Thorium reactors are nothing like what you think you know about them. The waste issue doesn't exist with Thorium, which is one reason of many to move toward them.
  • Renzo Tavoni on January 17 2013 said:
    I have found very interesting the part of the interview in which are shown the risks that are connected in a world with a financial structure,political power,religious institutions that are following the model of a continous grouth.
    I think that an organisation like the " United Nations" would be in the best position to try to throw this kind of messages.
    But I have not a great hope in that,if I recall the problem of the growing world population and the very important article by Garrett Hardin(1968)"the tragedy of the commons".

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