| 1. Seems like you're not going to contest the idea that we're running out of oil. 2. Just a few hours ago you referenced a link [0] showing that China has electricity prices sitting at half the US's. India too. The US has lost access to a cheap form of energy and is likely going to be forced to rely on electricity going forward. I put it to you that it is by no means certain that the US market is going to be in a position where it can sustain even relative out-performance, let alone objectively good performance in line with historic figures. Depending on how optimistic we are about the communists continuing to adopt sane policies, it may even be unlikely based on the current trends. Fortunately those trends will likely change as the squeeze the US is going through right now gets more pronounced. But the conditions we see now are simply not the conditions of the past 60 years, putting strategies based on the last ~150 years of data into a suspect light. > America hasn’t run out of cheap oil ... all while the economy uses less oil, year after year So cheap you can't afford to use it? I don't want to be exposed to your version of cheap. [0] https://www.globalpetrolprices.com/China/electricity_prices/ |
Why would I? Everyone knows this. It’s just not a catastrophe for America.
> few hours ago you referenced a link [0] showing that China has electricity prices sitting at half the US's. India too
How did you misread “China pays more for power than American industry” as China pays less?! Look at the national price for business in China. Now look at our states’ industrial prices. Lots of variation, because e.g. New York has different policy preferences than Texas.
> US has lost access to a cheap form of energy and is likely going to be forced to rely on electricity going forward. I put it to you that it is by no means certain that the US market is going to be in a position where it can sustain even relative out-performance
This is a real argument. Thank you.
I agree it’s uncertain. The point, however, is that this won’t happen to America in a vacuum. And as it happens, it hurts others worse and first. I’d also challenge the assumption that we’re out of cheap energy [1], but that’s a separate discussion. My point is that in a world running out of oil, nobody is better positioned than America, with its domestic reserves, co-located industry and cheap electricity.
> cheap you can't afford to use it
You really can’t think of another reason we won’t use our fossil fuels?
Hint: it’s the same reason Chinese and Indian power prices are anomalously close to America’s.
[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cost_of_electricity_by_sourc...