"This is what Government is for: to prepare for the worst, however unlikely it may be."is utterly correct.
Rather he highlights the Government's inconsistent view on one topic they rate as having no current threat but which could have a devastating effect and so requires attention and investment, and other topic they rate as having no current threat but which could have a devastating effect and so requires a head in the sand approach.
In one of his previous articles, (which upon reading again actually has very little different content) he interviewed the chief economist of the IEA, usually a rather conservative group, and he said:
"In terms of non-Opec, we are expecting that in three, four years' time the production of conventional oil will come to a plateau, and start to decline. In terms of the global picture, assuming that Opec will invest in a timely manner, global conventional oil can still continue, but we still expect that it will come around 2020 to a plateau"Which is obviously interesting considering the Governments view:
"The government does not feel the need to hold contingency plans specifically for the eventuality of crude oil supplies peaking between now and 2020."So the conservative viewpoint is they 'expect' oil not to peak by 2020 which the Government interprets as 100% not going to. This viewpoint seems even worse when the mentioned Hirsh report states 20 years is required to implement a mitigation crash programme.
Why does the Government not believe peak oil to be a problem? Is it because it's outside of political timescales? Is it a belief that the market will provide the solution either by more investment in discovering conventional resources or new technology to improve non-conventional extraction? Are they lying to ease any fears because of the potential impacts it would have on society? (Think of the effect of the fuel protests in 2000 had for what was less than a week long and only a moderate campaign focused on a few key sites. People couldn't get to work, hospitals reduced their activities, schools closed, shops ran out of food. It's not hard to see that if supplies fell sharply for a prolonged period of time the chaos it might have on society. Incidentally if high fuel prices ever became a problem, the fact that UK fuel is something like 70/80% tax makes it a lot more flexible than countries with very little tax, but I guess that's not much consolation for the 99% of the rest of the time)
The truth is I don't know, only the Government does and they seem to want to keep very quiet about it. In my view this seems rather foolish, the Government should consider the real possibility of it in accordance with good practice, and if it does already, to do so openly. While the predictions of peak oil are still some time away, the disruption caused by fear and panic should be minimal and instead open discussion could help promote alternatives and convince the public of the need for change. Why delay what seems inevitable?
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