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by colechristensen
1475 days ago
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The worry is overblown. Oil is still used all over the place because it's cheaper than the alternative. When it's not, it'll be replaced. You can straight up synthesize an oil analog from biological sources, and even if you couldn't the oil necessary for non-energy purposes is far far less than that used just to burn. Solar is what is going to replace fossil fuels mostly, it's already cheaper than coal. Like it or not, most of the motivation for change will be economic. With the price of energy in the current times of war and inflation, solar is looking quite good. Industrial chemistry always has alternatives. Ammonia based fertilizers can always be produced with air and water instead of air and natural gas, it's just somewhat more expensive. |
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Your economic analysis of
> Oil is still used all over the place because it's cheaper than the alternative.
has no contradiction with prices skyrocketing. Fossil gasoline might get to $20/ or $50/gallon before it's more expensive than the alternative, and so on for everything else.
"Somewhat more expensive" fertilizer means more expensive food, which means starving people, which is horrible on its own, but which could also create a very dangerous political situation.
Also the risk isn't that we'll run out of fossil fuels, it's that continuing to use fossil fuels would cause so much environmental damage that restricting the supply, as horrible as that would be, would be better than the alternative.