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COMPLEX SYSTEMS AND MULTIPLE CRISES OF ENERGY JOHN URRY Director, Centre for Mobilities Research, Lancaster University @johnurry Schumacher: ‘There is no substitute for energy. The whole edifice of modern society is built upon it….it is not ‘just another commodity’ but the precondition of all commodities, a basic factor equal with air, water, and earth’ J Paul Getty ‘The meek shall inherit the Earth, but not its mineral rights’. John McNeill: ‘We have deployed more energy since 1900 than all of human history before 1900’ Žižek: ‘Nature is crazy. Nature is one big catastrophe. Oil, our main source of energy—can you even imagine what kind of ultra-unthinkable ecological catastrophe must have happened on earth in order that we have these reserves of oil? ... Nature is not Mother Earth....is imbalanced’ David Owen: ‘Oil is liquid civilization’ Martin Rees, Our Final Century (London: Arrow Books, 2003). Richard Heinberg, The Party’s Over: Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Society (New York: Clearview Books, 2005). Roy Woodbridge, The Next World War. Tribes, Cities, Nations, and Ecological Decline (Toronto: Toronto University Press, 2005). James Lovelock, The Revenge of Gaia (London: Allen Lane, 2006). Fred Pearce, When the Rivers Run Dry (London: Transworld, 2006). Thomas Homer-Dixon, The Upside of Down. (London: Souvenir, 2006). James Kunstler, The Long Emergency: Surviving the Converging Catastrophes of the 21st Century (London: Atlantic Books, 2006). Bill McGuire, Global Catastrophes: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006). Charles Perrow, The Next Catastrophe (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2007). Elizabeth Kolbert, Field Notes from a Catastrophe. A Frontline Report on Climate Change (London: Bloomsbury, 2007). Fred Pearce, With Speed and Violence. Why Scientists fear Tipping Points in Climate Change (Boston: Beacon Press, 2007). Eugene Linden, Winds of Change. Climate, Weather and the Destruction of Civilizations (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2007). Meyer Hillman, Tina Fawcett, Sudhir Raja, The Suicidal Planet. How to prevent global climate catastrophe (New York: Thomas Dunne Books, 2007). David Montgomery, Dirt. The Erosion of Civilizations (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007). Kurt Campbell (ed), Climatic Cataclysm: The Foreign Policy and National Security Implications of Climate Change (Washington: Brookings, 2008). Stephen Haseler, Meltdown (London: Forumpress, 2008). Vaclav Smil, Global Catastrophes and Trends: The Next Fifty Years (Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 2008). David Orr, Down to the Wire. Confronting Climate Collapse (New York: Oxford University Press, 2009). Thomas Friedman, Hot, Flat and Crowded (London: Penguin, 2009). Ulrich Beck, World at Risk (Cambridge: Polity, 2009). Keith Farnish, Time's Up!: An Uncivilized Solution to a Global Crisis (Totnes: Green Books, 2009). James Lovelock, The Vanishing Face of Gaia. A final warning (London: Penguin, 2010). James Hansen, Storms of my Grandchildren (London: Bloomsbury, 2011). Slavoj Žižek, Living in the End Times (London: Verso, 2011). Jared Diamond, Collapse: how societies choose to fail or survive (London: Penguin, 2011). Systems and process that all systems are necessarily processual and flow within time with no tendency for systems to move towards equilibrium be no distinction to be made between states of equilibrium and periods of growth the unpredictability of systems the significance of positive feedback mechanisms and lack of proportionality or ‘non-linearity’ between apparent ‘causes’ and ‘effects’ the way that systems once established can get ‘locked in’ the significance of the ordering of events in time that are then not ‘forgotten’ and hence ‘time matters’ systems adapt and co-evolve in relationship to each other each system has to find its place, to climb the peaks, within a fitness landscape almost all systems significant in the contemporary world are simultaneously economic, physical, technological, political and social there is increased interconnectedness or the linking of system components through software, cybernetic architecture and a networked character of life CLIMATE CHANGE • 20% risk of more than a 5°C increase in temperatures – increase beyond 2°C by 2050 now ver market failure’ • 4 major potential non-linear transformatialmost inevitable: Stern: climate change is ‘the world’s greatest eons: Greenland ice sheet, Antarctica ice sheets and melting permafrost • transformation of the world’s physical and human geography • reductions in overall population worldwide instead of 2-3 billion increase • impacts especially in poorer countries – ‘climatic genocide’ • huge conflicts over the likely rate, scale and impact of change; and of the likely costs of mitigation • the power of carbon capital in powerfully contesting climate change externalities – ‘merchants of doubt’ • big increases in energy demands and reduced energy supplies from changing climates CLIMATE CHANGE increases in ‘failed states’ (and failed ‘city states’) unable to cope with oil shortages, droughts, heatwaves, extreme weather events, flooding, desertification and millions of climate change refugees. rising sea levels and storm surges resulting in the flooding of roads, railways, transit systems, and airport runways growing insecurities in the supply of clean water increasingly significant problems of food security - food production depends upon hydrocarbon fuels significant reductions in the standard of living around the world. Thomas Homer-Dixon ‘I think the kind of crisis we might see would be a result of systems that are kind of stressed to the max already … societies face crisis when they’re hit by multiple shocks simultaneously or they’re affected by multiple stresses simultaneously’ NORTH EAST USA 2012 HAS THE FUTURE ARRIVED? THE ‘PERFECT STORM’ A major item on a 2009 BBC news programme showed how by 2030 the world may be confronted by a catastrophic ‘perfect storm’, of runaway climate change, huge water, food and energy shortages and enormous population growth. This was a mainstream news item, illustrated by reports on developments worldwide that showed how such a storm was being formed. The UK Government Chief Scientist, John Beddington, was the source of this material. This BBC report suggested that without the reversal of various systems, the world is racing headlong into multiple interlocking catastrophes. These interlocking catastrophes would leave much of the world's population poorer, less mobile, hungrier and more likely to be fighting for increasingly scarce resources. All societies would be impacted by these post-peak developments SPINDELTOP, TEXAS 1901 FIRST OIL GUSHER OIL DEPENDENCE •provides almost all transportation energy in the modern world (at least 95%) - is the single resource which uniquely makes possible family life, friendship, business life and professions; •fuels the world’s ships that transport components, commodities and food globally; •is an element of most manufactured goods produced worldwide (95%); •is crucial to at least 95% of food production and distribution for a rising world population through irrigation, the movement of food and the provision of pesticides and fertilisers; •is important for much domestic heating especially in oil-rich societies; •is crucial in providing back-up power and lighting when other energy sources fail (as in hospitals or nuclear power stations); •generates around a third of all greenhouse gas emissions and is a major category of such emissions still increasing around the world . LOCKED INTO OIL Fast travel • the growth of automobility throughout the world increasingly in the world’s two most populous societies of China and India. • the rapid growth of cheap air travel based on new budget business models. • a significant resurgence of rail transport especially of high speed trains across Europe and Japan • new kinds of globally significant themed leisure environments that have to be visited from afar • increased ‘miles’ both flown and travelling on the world’s 90,000 ships by manufactured goods, components and foodstuffs. • much greater distances travelled by work colleagues, members of leisure organisations, families and friends in order to sustain patterns of everyday life that are ‘at-a-distance’ • in 1800 people in the US travelled 50 metres a day – they now travel 50 kilometres a day • world citizens move 23 billion kilometres; by 2050 with business as usual that will have increased to 106 billion • carbon use within transport accounts for around one third of carbon dioxide emissions - second fastest growing source of such emissions and expected to double by 2050 OIL AND ENERGY DESCENT The US peaking of oil in 1970 - now imports 75%; UK peaked 1999; China just peaked Rifkin argues: the oil age is ‘winding down as fast as it revved up’. Strahan refers to the ‘imminent extinction of petroleum man’. Fatih Birol: the IEA considers that crude oil production peaked in 2006. Chief Economist, HSBC Bank (2011) ‘Energy resources are scarce. Even if demand doesn’t increase, there could be as little as 49 years of oil left’. Two trillion barrels of conventional oil; about half now used 4 barrels consumed for every new one discovered; may soon go up to 10:1 Worldwide the largest oilfields were discovered over half a century ago, with the peak being in the mid 1960s. Moreover, there appear to be no systemic alternatives for many uses of oil. US National Intelligence Council: ‘an energy transition, for example, is inevitable...An energy transition from one type of fuel (fossil fuels) to another (alternative) is an event that historically has only happened once a century at most with momentous consequences’. OIL DISCOVERY AND CONSUMPTION 1900-2030 – IEA PRONOUNCED PEAKING IN 2006 RISE AND FALL OF EUROPEAN OIL (N SEA) US OIL PRODUCTION AND CONSUMPTION The extent of treasure islands • almost all major companies have offshore accounts/subsidiaries (83%), • more than half of world trade passes through such tax havens, • almost all High Net Worth Individuals possess offshore accounts enabling tax ‘planning’, • ninety-nine of Europe's hundred largest companies use offshore subsidiaries • fewer than 10 million people currently own a US$21 trillion offshore fortune, equivalent to combined GDPs of the US and Japan CRASH 2007-8 • 2007-8 crisis was partly brought about by oil shortages and price increases. • The speculative building and risky funding of extensive tracts of ‘marginal’ suburbs depended upon cheap land, mortgages and petrol • These made it seem that the continued upward movement of house prices was inevitable. • Brenner in 2006 observed how financial speculation was generating a real estate mania. The total value of residential property in the major economies rose thirty trillion US dollars between 2000-2005. • But these began to unravel when oil prices dramatically soared in the mid-2000s (15 fold increase in a decade), because of long-term shortages and more immediate shortages in US because of Katrina. • House price fall were greatest in most far flung suburbs which were the first to demonstrate very high foreclosure rates • Murray and King (former UK Government Chief Scientist) maintain that the crash of 2007-8 was not just a credit crunch but an ‘oil-price crunch’, triggering the long recession that is still ongoing PEAKING OF TRAVEL IN US? NATURE RECLAIMING DETROIT PEAKING Peaking of oil, gas, water, ‘western incomes’, European welfare states, travel?? ‘At peak and just beyond, there is massive potential for system failures of all kinds, social, economic, and political. Peak is quite literally a tipping point. Beyond peak, things unravel and the center does not hold’ Kunstler RESOURCE WARS •extreme weather events and extensive flooding •oil (and gas and water) wars •substantial breakdown of many of the mobility, energy and communication connections •a plummeting standard of living •a relocalisation of mobility patterns •‘warlords’ controlling recycled forms of mobility and weaponry •no monopoly of physical coercion in the hands of a national state •only the super-rich would travel for pleasure – Virgin Galactica •a Hobbesian war of each warlord dominated region against their neighbours James Lovelock: ‘So is our civilization doomed, and will this century mark its end with a massive decline in population, leaving a few survivors in a torrid society ruled by warlords on a hostile and disabled planet?’ MAD MAX 2