----- Original Message -----
From: perry arnett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Perry Arnett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Saturday, November 25, 2000 4:22 PM
Subject: [CrashList] Fw: this is very long, and takes a few minutes to load, but you
may find it of some importance - Perry



you'll need to click on this URL so you can see the graphs

http://dieoff.com/page224.htm

it's worth it!!



Perry

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THE PEAK OF WORLD OIL PRODUCTION

AND THE ROAD TO THE OLDUVAI GORGE



Richard C. Duncan, Ph.D.1





Pardee Keynote Symposia

Geological Society of America

Summit 2000

Reno, Nevada

November 13, 2000





ABSTRACT


The Olduvai theory has been called unthinkable, preposterous, absurd, dangerous,
self-fulfilling, and self-defeating. I offer it, however, as an inductive theory based
on world energy and population data and on what I've seen during the past 30 years in
some 50 nations on all continents except Antarctica. It is also based on my experience
in electrical engineering and energy management systems, my hobbies of anthropology
and archaeology, and a lifetime of reading in various fields.

The theory is defined by the ratio of world energy production (use) and world
population. The details are worked out. The theory is easy. It states that the life
expectancy of Industrial Civilization is less than or equal to 100 years: 1930-2030.

World energy production per capita from 1945 to 1973 grew at a breakneck speed of 3.45
%/year. Next from 1973 to the all-time peak in 1979, it slowed to a sluggish 0.64
%/year. Then suddenly -and for the first time in history - energy production per
capita took a long-term decline of 0.33 %/year from 1979 to 1999. The Olduvai theory
explains the 1979 peak and the subsequent decline. More to the point, it says that
energy production per capita will fall to its 1930 value by 2030, thus giving
Industrial Civilization a lifetime of less than or equal to 100 years.

Should this occur, any number of factors could be cited as the 'causes' of collapse. I
believe, however, that the collapse will be strongly correlated with an 'epidemic' of
permanent blackouts of high-voltage electric power networks - worldwide. Briefly
explained: "When the electricity goes out, you are back in the Dark Age. And the Stone
Age is just around the corner."

The Olduvai theory, of course, may be proved wrong. But, as of now, it cannot be
rejected by the historic world energy production and population data.



1Institute on Energy and Man

5307 Ravenna Place NE, #1

Seattle, WA 98105

[EMAIL PROTECTED]





THE PEAK OF WORLD OIL PRODUCTION

AND THE ROAD TO THE OLDUVAI GORGE



Richard C. Duncan, Ph.D.



Pardee Keynote Symposia

Geological Society of America

Summit 2000

Reno, Nevada

November 13, 2000



Collapse, if and when it comes again, will this time be global. No longer can any
individual nation collapse. World civilization will disintegrate as a whole.
Competitors who evolve as peers collapse in like manner.

Joseph A. Tainter, 1988




  1.. INTRODUCTION


The Olduvai theory is a data-based schema that states that the life expectancy of
Industrial Civilization is less than or equal 100 years. We shall develop the theory
from its early roots in Greek philosophy down to respected scientists in the 20th
century. This approach is useful because, although the theory is easy to understand,
it is difficult (i.e. distressing) for most people to accept - just as it was for me.



The Olduvai theory deals neither with the geology or the paleontology of the Olduvai
Gorge. Nor is it prescriptive. Rather, the theory simply attempts to explain the
historic world energy production (and use) and population data in terms of overshoot
and collapse. I chose the name "Olduvai" because (1) it is justly famous, (2) I've
been there, (3) its long hollow sound is eerie and ominous, and (4) it is a good
metaphor for the 'Stone Age way of life'. In fact, the Olduvai way of life was (and
still is) a sustainable way of life - local, tribal, and solar - and, for better or
worse, our ancestors practiced it for millions of years.



No doubt that the peak and decline of Industrial Civilization, should it occur, will
be due to a complex matrix of causes, such as overpopulation, the depletion of
nonrenewable resources, environmental damage, pollution, soil erosion, global warming,
newly emerging viruses, and resource wars. That said, the Olduvai theory uses a single
metric only, as defined by "White's Law." But now it comes with a new twist - (((a
will-o'-the-wisp))) - electricity.



Most of my industrial experience is in electric power networks and the energy
management systems (EMS) that control them. Electricity is not a primary energy
source, but rather an "energy carrier": zero mass, travels near the speed of light,
and, for all practical purposes, it can't be stored. Moreover, electric power systems
are costly, complex, voracious of fuel, polluting, and require 24h-7d-52w maintenance
and operations. Another problem is that electricity is taken for granted. Just flip
the switch and things happen. In short: Electricity is the quintessence of the 'modern
way of life', but the electric power systems themselves are demanding, dangerous, and
delicate. All this suggests that permanent blackouts will be strongly correlated with
the collapse of Industrial Civilization - the so-named "Olduvai cliff," discussed
later.



This paper is the backup for the accompanying slide show titled "The Olduvai Theory:
An Illustrated Guide" (see Duncan, 2000c).



Definitions: 'Oil' (O) means crude oil and natural gas liquids. 'Energy' (E) means the
primary sources of energy - specifically oil, gas, coal, and nuclear & hydropower.
'Pop' means world population. 'ô' means oil production per capita. 'ê' means energy
production per capita. 'G' means billion (10^9). 'b' means barrels of oil. 'boe' means
barrels of oil equivalent (energy content, not quality). 'J' means joule. 'Industrial
Civilization' and 'Electrical Civilization', as we shall see, mean the same thing.



Industrial Civilization is shown as a pulse-shaped curve of world average energy-use
per capita (ê). The 'life expectancy' (i.e. 'duration') of Industrial Civilization is
defined as the time (in years) between the upside point when ê reaches 30% of its peak
value and the corresponding downside point when ê falls to the same value (Figure 4).
The new twist is that the Olduvai theory now focuses on the mounting problems with the
high-voltage electric power networks - worldwide.



Civilization and Ready Kilowatt: Although the fossil fuels are still very important,
electricity is the indispensable end-use energy for Industrial Civilization. To
determine its importance, it is essential to distinguish between the primary energy
consumed to generate electricity versus the primary energy consumed for all other
(i.e. non-electric) end-uses, such as work and heat. Consider the following. We
estimate that 42% of the world's primary energy in 1999 was consumed to generate
electricity. This compares to oil's contribution to all non-electric end-uses of 39%;
gas' contribution of 18%; and coal's contribution of a mere 1%. Moreover: When energy
quality is accounted for, then the importance of electricity becomes very, VERY clear.
For example, if you want to heat your room, then 1 joule (J) of coal is 'equal' to 1 J
of electricity. However, if you want to power up your TV, then 1 J of electricity is
'equal' to 3 J of coal! So if you're going to worry about energy, then don't loose
sleep over oil, gas, and coal. Worry about the electric switch on the wall!



2. ENERGY AND CIVILIZATION



Other factors remaining constant, culture evolves as the amount of energy harnessed
per capita per year is increased, or as the efficiency of the instrumental means of
putting the energy to work is increased. . We may now sketch the history of cultural
development from this standpoint.

Leslie White, 1949
 "White's Law"



Oil is liquid, power packed, and portable. It is the major primary source of energy
for Industrial Civilization. (But not the major end-use source!) We have developed a
new method of modeling and simulation and then used it to make a series of five
forecasts of world oil production - one new forecast every year. Figure 1 shows the
main results of our most recent forecast, i.e. Forecast #5. (Duncan, 2000b)



Figure 1. World, OPEC, and Non-OPEC Oil Production






Notes: (1) World oil production is forecast to peak in 2006. (2) The OPEC/non-OPEC
crossover event occurs in 2008. (3) The OPEC nations' rate of oil production from 1985
to 1999 increased by 9.33 times that of the non-OPEC nations.



Figure 1 shows the historic world oil production data from 1960 to 1999 and our
forecasts from 2000 to 2040. Note that the overall growth rate of oil production
slowed from 1960 to 1999 (curve 1). In detail: The average rate of growth from 1960 to
1973 was a whopping 6.65 %/year. Next, from 1973 to 1979 growth slowed to 1.49 %/year.
Then, from 1979 to 1999, it slowed yet further to a glacial 0.75 %/year. Moving beyond
the historic period, Forecast #5 predicts that world oil production will reach its
all-time peak in 2006. Then from its peak in 2006 to year 2040 world oil production
will fall by 58.8 % - an average decline of 2.45 %/year during these 34 years.



The OPEC/non-OPEC crossover event is predicted to occur in 2008 (Figure 1, curves 2
&3). This event will divide the world into two camps: one with surplus oil, the other
with none. Forecast #5 presents the following scenario. (1) Beginning in 2008 the 11
OPEC nations will produce more than 50% of the world's oil. (2) Thereafter OPEC will
control nearly 100% of the world's oil exports. (3) BP Amoco (2000) puts OPEC's
"proved reserves" at 77.6% of the world total. (4) OPEC production from 1985 to 1999
grew at a strong average rate of 3.46 %/year. In contrast, non-OPEC production grew at
sluggish 0.37 %/year during this same 14-year period.



The oil forecasting models, the application program to run them, and a User's Guide
are all available free at www.halcyon.com/duncanrc/. (Duncan, 2000a)



The peak of world oil production (2006) and the OPEC/non-OPEC crossover event (2008)
are important to the 'Olduvai schema', discussed later. But first let's have a look at
the ratio of world oil production and world population. Figure 2 shows the historic
data.



Figure 2. World Average Oil Production per Capita: 1920-1999







Notes: (1) World average oil production per capita (ô) grew exponentially from 1920 to
1973. (2) Next, the average growth rate was near zero from 1973 to the all-time peak
in 1979. (3) Then from its peak in 1979 to 1999, ô decreased strongly by an average of
1.20 %/year. (4) Typical response: "I didn't know that!" (5) The little cartoons
emphasize that oil is by far the major primary source of energy for transportation
(i.e. about 95% of the oil produced in 1999 was used for transportation).



Figure 2 shows the world average oil production per capita from 1920 to 1999. The
curve represents the ratio of world oil production (O) and world population (Pop):
i.e. ô = O/(Pop) in barrels per capita per year (i.e. b/c/year). Note well that ô grew
exponentially from 1920 to 1973. Next, growth was negligible from 1973 to the all-time
peak in 1979. Finally, from its peak in 1979 to 1999, ô decreased at an average rate
of 1.20 %/year (i.e. from 5.50 b/c in 1979 to 4.32 b/c in 1999). "You've gotta be
kidding!"



The 1979 peak and decline of world oil production per capita are shown on page 11 of
BP Amoco (2000), www.bpamoco.com/worldenergy/. Not to be missed.



Bottom Line: Although world oil production (O) from 1979 to 1999 increased at an
average rate of 0.75 %/year (Figure 1), world population (Pop) grew even faster. Thus
world oil production per capita (ô) declined at an average rate of 1.20 %/year during
the 20 years from 1979 to 1999 (Figure 2).



The main goals in this study, as was mentioned, are to describe, discuss, and test the
Olduvai theory of Industrial Civilization against historic data. Applying White's Law,
our metric (i.e. indicator) is the ratio of world total energy production (E) and
world population (Pop): i.e. ê = E/(Pop). Figure 3 shows ê during the historic period.



Figure 3. World Energy Production per Capita: 1920-1999







Notes: (1) World average energy production per capita (ê) grew significantly from 1920
to its all-time peak in 1979. (2) Then from its peak in 1979 to 1999, ê declined at an
average rate of 0.33 %/year. This downward trend is the "Olduvai slope", discussed
later. (3) The tiny cartoons emphasize that the delivery of electricity to end-users
is the sin quo non of the 'modern way of life'. Not hydrocarbons.



Observe the variability of ê in Figure 3. In detail: From 1920 to 1945 ê grew
moderately at an average of 0.69 %/year. Then from 1945 to 1973 it grew at the torrid
pace of 3.45 %/year. Next, from 1973 to the all-time peak in 1979, growth slowed to
0.64 %/year. But then suddenly - and for the first time in history - ê began a
long-term decline extending from 1979 to 1999. This 20-year period is named the
"Olduvai slope," the first of the three downside intervals in the "Olduvai schema."



Bottom Line: Although world energy production (E) from 1979 to 1999 increased at an
average rate of 1.34 %/year, world population (Pop) grew even faster. Thus world
energy production per capita (ê) declined at an average rate of 0.33 %/year during
these same 20 years (Figure 3). See White's Law, top of this section.



Acknowledgments: As far as I know, credit goes to Robert Romer (1985) for being first
to publish the peak-period data for world energy production per capita (ê) from 1900
to 1983. He put the peak (correctly!) in 1979, followed by a sharp decline through
1983, the last year of his data. Credit is also due to John Gibbons, et al. (1989) for
publishing a graph of ê from 1950 to 1985. Gibbons, et al. put the peak in 1973. But
curiously, neither of the above studies made any mention whatever about the importance
of the peak and decline of world energy production per capita.



The 1979 peak and decline of world energy production per capita (ê) is shown on page
40 of BP Amoco (2000), www.bpamoco.com/worldenergy/. Have a look.



3. EVOLUTION OF AN IDEA



And what a glorious society we would have if men and women would regulate their
affairs, as do the millions of cells in the developing embryo.

Hans Spemann, 1938


The seeds of the Olduvai Theory were planted long ago. For example, the Greek lyric
poet Pindar (c. 522-438 BCE) wrote, "What course after nightfall? Has destiny written
that we must run to the end?" (Eiseley, 1970)



Arabic scholar Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) regarded "group solidarity" as the primary
requisite for civilization. "Civilization needs the tribal values to survive, but
these very same values are destroyed by civilization. Specifically, urban civilization
destroys tribal values with the luxuries that weaken kinship and community ties and
with the artificial wants for new types of cuisine, new fashions in clothing, larger
homes, and other novelties of urban life." (Weatherford, 1994)



Joseph Granvill in 1665 observed that, although energy-using machines made life
easier, they also made it more dependent. "For example, if artificial demands are
stimulated, than resources must be consumed at an ever-increasing pace." (Eiseley,
1970)



But, as far as I know, it was the American adventurer and writer Washington Irving
(1783-1859) who was first to realize that civilization could quickly collapse.



Nations are fast losing their nationality. The great and increasing intercourse, the
exchange of fashions and uniformity of opinions by the diffusion of literature are
fast destroying those peculiarities that formerly prevailed. We shall in time grow to
be very much one people, unless a return to barbarism throws us again into chaos.
(Irving, 1822)



The first statement that I've found that Industrial Civilization is likely to collapse
into a primitive mode came from the mathematical biologist Alfred Lotka.



The human species, considered in broad perspective, as a unit including its economic
and industrial accessories, has swiftly and radically changed its character during the
epoch in which our life has been laid. In this sense we are far removed from
equilibrium - a fact that is of the highest practical significance, since it implies
that a period of adjustment to equilibrium conditions lies before us, and he would be
an extreme optimist who should expect that such adjustment can be reached without
labor and travail. . While such sudden decline might, from a detached standpoint,
appear as in accord with the eternal equities, since previous gains would in cold
terms balance the losses, yet it would be felt as a superlative catastrophe. Our
descendants, if such as this should be their fate, will see poor compensation for
their ills and in fact that we did live in abundance and luxury. (Lotka, 1925)



Polymath Norbert Wiener (1894-1964) wrote in 1950 that the best we can hope for the
role of progress is that "our attempts to progress in the face of overwhelming
necessity may have the purging terror of Greek tragedy."



[America's] resources seemed inexhaustible [in 1500] . However, the existence of the
new lands encouraged an attitude not unlike that of Alice's Mad Tea party. When the
tea and cakes were exhausted at one seat, the natural thing . was to move on and
occupy the next seat. . As time passed, the tea table of the Americas had proved not
to be inexhaustible . What many of us fail to realize is that the last four hundred
years are a highly special period in the history of the world. . This is partly the
result of increased communication, but also of an increased mastery of nature which,
on a limited planet like the earth, may prove in the long run to be an increased
slavery to nature. (Wiener, 1950)



Sir Charles Galton Darwin wrote in 1953:



The fifth revolution will come when we have spent the stores of coal and oil that have
been accumulating in the earth during hundreds of millions of years. . It is to be
hoped that before then other sources of energy will have been developed, . but without
considering the detail [here] it is obvious that there will be a very great difference
in ways of life. . Whether a convenient substitute for the present fuels is found or
not, there can be no doubt that there will have to be a great change in ways of life.
This change may justly be called a revolution, but it differs from all the preceding
ones in that there is no likelihood of its leading to increases of population, but
even perhaps to the reverse. (Darwin, 1953)



Sir Fred Hoyle in 1964 put it bluntly.



It has often been said that, if the human species fails to make a go of it here on the
Earth, some other species will take over the running. In the sense of developing
intelligence this is not correct. We have or soon will have, exhausted the necessary
physical prerequisites so far as this planet is concerned. With coal gone, oil gone,
high-grade metallic ores gone, no species however competent can make the long climb
from primitive conditions to high-level technology. This is a one-shot affair. If we
fail, this planetary system fails so far as intelligence is concerned. The same will
be true of other planetary systems. On each of them there will be one chance, and one
chance only. (Hoyle, 1964)



4. WORLD MODELS, ETC.



Perhaps the most widespread evil is the Western view of man and nature. Among us, it
is widely believed that man is apart from nature, superior to it; indeed, evolution is
a process to create man and seat him on the apex of the cosmic pinnacle. He views the
earth as a treasury that he can plunder at will. And, indeed, the behavior of Western
people, notably since the advent of the Industrial Revolution, gives incontrovertible
evidence to support this assertion.

Ian McHarg, 1971


Jay Forrester of MIT in 1970 built a world model "to understand the options available
to mankind as societies enter the transition from growth to equilibrium."



What happens when growth approaches fixed limits and is forced to give way to some
form of equilibrium? Are there choices before us that lead to alternative world
futures? . Exponential growth does not continue forever. Growth of population and
industrialization will stop. If man does not take conscious action to limit population
and capital investment, the forces inherent in the natural and social system will rise
high enough to limit growth. The question is only a matter of when and how growth will
cease, not whether it will cease. (Forrester, 1971)



The basic behavior of Forrester's world model was overshoot and collapse. It projected
that the material standard of living (MSL) would peak in 1990 and then decline through
the year 2100. Moreover, measured by the MSL (i.e. the leading and lagging 30%
points), the life expectancy of Industrial Civilization was about 210 years.
(Forrester, 1971, Figure 4-2). He used the world model to search for social (i.e.
cultural, "conscious action") policies for making the transition to sustainability.



In our social systems, there are no utopias. No sustainable modes of behavior are free
of pressures and stresses. . But to develop the more promising modes will require
restraint and dedication to a long-range future that man may not be capable of
sustaining. Our greatest challenge now is how to handle the transition from growth
into equilibrium. The industrial societies have behind them long traditions that have
encouraged and rewarded growth. The folklore and the success stories praise growth and
expansion. But that is not the path of the future. (ibid., 1971)



He found that sustainability could be achieved in the modeled world system when the
following five social policies were applied together in 1970:



·         Natural-resource-usage-rate reduced 75%

·         Pollution generation reduced 50%

·         Capital-investment generation reduced 40%

·         Food production reduced 20%

·         Birth rate reduced 30% (ibid., 1971)



Critics (mostly economists) argued that such policies were e.g. "blue sky" and
"unrealistic". Fortunately, the project team was just then completing a two-year study
using the more comprehensive 'World3' model. They too searched for social policies
that might achieve sustainability in the world system. However, the World3 'reference
run' (like Forrester's in 1971) also projected overshoot and collapse of the world
system.



This is the World3 reference run, .. Both population POP and industrial output per
capita IOPC grow beyond sustainable levels and subsequently decline. The cause of
their decline is traceable to the depletion of nonrenewable resources. (Meadows, et
al, 1972, Figure 35)



The World3 'reference run' (1972, above) projected that the industrial output per
capita (IOPC) would reach its all-time peak in 2013 and then would steeply decline
through 2100. Moreover, the duration of Industrial Civilization (as measured by the
leading and lagging IOPC 30% points) came out to be about 105 years.



I first presented the Olduvai theory to the public in 1989.



·         The broad sweep of human history can be divided into three phases.

·         The first, or pre-industrial phase was a very long period of equilibrium
when simple tools and weak machines limited economic growth.

·         The second, or industrial phase was a very short period of non-equilibrium
that ignited with explosive force when powerful new machines temporarily lifted all
limits to growth.

·         The third, or de-industrial phase lies immediately ahead during which time
the industrial economies will decline toward a new period of equilibrium, limited by
the exhaustion of nonrenewable resources and continuing deterioration of the natural
environment. (Duncan, 1989)

In 1992, twenty years after the first World3 study, the team members re-calibrated the
model with the latest data and used it to help "envision a sustainable future." But -



All that World3 has told us so far is that the model system, and by implication the
"real world" system, has a strong tendency to overshoot and collapse. In fact, in the
thousands of model runs we have tried over the years, overshoot and collapse has been
by far the most frequent outcome. (Meadows, et al., 1992)



The updated World3 'reference run', in fact, gave almost exactly the same results as
it did in the first study in 1972! For example: Industrial output per capita (IOPC)
reached its all-time peak in 2014 (v. 2013 previously) and the duration of Industrial
Civilization came out to be 102 years (v. 104 years previously).



Australian writer Reg Morrison likewise foresees that overshoot and collapse is where
humanity is headed. In his scenario (i.e. no formal model), the world population rises
to about 7.0 billion in the 2036. Thence it plunges to 3.2 billion in 2090 - an
average loss of 71.4 million people per year (i.e. deaths minus births) during 54
years.



Given the current shape of the human population graph, those indicators also spell out
a much larger and, from our point of view, more ominous message: the human plague
cycle is right on track for a demographically normal climax and collapse. Not only
have our genes managed to conceal from us that we are entirely typical mammals and
therefore vulnerable to all of evolution's customary checks and balances, but also
they have contrived to lock us so securely into the plague cycle that they seem almost
to have been crafted for that purpose. Gaia is running like a Swiss watch. (Morrison,
1999)



The foregoing discussions show that many respected professionals have reached
conclusions that are consistent with the Olduvai theory, to which we now turn.



5. THE OLDUVAI THEORY: 1930-2030



The earth's immune system, so to speak, has recognized the presence of the human
species and is starting to kick in. The earth is attempting to rid itself of an
infection by the human parasite.

Richard Preston, 1994


The Olduvai theory, to review, states that the life expectancy of Industrial
Civilization is less than or equal to one hundred years, as measured by the world
average energy production person per year: ê = E/(Pop). Industrial Civilization,
defined herein, began in 1930 and is predicted to end on or before the year 2030. Our
main goals for this section are threefold: (1) to discuss the Olduvai theory from 1930
to 2030, (2) to identify the important energy events during this time, and (3) to
stress that Industrial Civilization = Electrical Civilization = the 'modern way of
life.' Figure 4 depicts the Olduvai theory.





Figure 4. The Olduvai Theory: 1930-2030








Notes: (1) 1930 => Industrial Civilization began when (ê) reached 30% of its peak
value. (2) 1979 => ê reached its peak value of 11.15 boe/c. (3) 1999 => The end of
cheap oil. (4) 2000 => Start of the "Jerusalem Jihad". (5) 2006 => Predicted peak of
world oil production (Figure 1, this paper). (6) 2008 => The OPEC crossover event
(Figure 1). (7) 2012 => Permanent blackouts occur worldwide. (8) 2030 => Industrial
Civilization ends when ê falls to its 1930 value. (9) Observe that there are three
intervals of decline in the Olduvai schema: slope, slide and cliff - each steeper than
the previous. (10) The small cartoons stress that electricity is the essential end-use
energy for Industrial Civilization.



Figure 4 shows the complete Olduvai curve from 1930 to 2030. Historic data appears
from 1930 to 1999 and hypothetical values from 2000 to 2030. These 100 years are
labeled "Industrial Civilization." The curve and the events together constitute the
"Olduvai schema." Observe that the overall curve has a pulse-like waveform - namely
overshoot and collapse. Eight key energy events define the Olduvai schema.



Eight Events: The 1st event in 1930 (see Note 1, Figure 4) marks the beginning of
Industrial Civilization when ê reached 3.32 boe/c. This is the "leading 30% point", a
standard way to define the duration of a pulse. The 2nd event in 1979 (Note 2) marks
the all-time peak of world energy production per capita when ê reached 11.15 boe/c.
The 3rd event in 1999 (Note 3) marks the end of cheap oil. The 4th event on September
28, 2000 (Note 4) marks the eruption of violence in the Middle East - i.e. the
"Jerusalem Jihad". Moreover, the "JJ" marks the end of the Olduvai "slope" wherein ê
declined at 0.33 %/year from 1979 to 1999.



Next in Figure 4 we come the future intervals in the Olduvai schema. The Olduvai
"slide", the first of the future intervals, begins in 2000 with the escalating warfare
in the Middle East. The 5th event in 2006 (Note 5) marks the all-time peak of world
oil production (Figure 1, this paper). The 6th event in 2008 (Note 6) marks the OPEC
crossover event when the 11 OPEC nations produce 51% of the world's oil and control
nearly 100% of the world's oil exports. The year 2011 marks the end of the Olduvai
slide, wherein ê declines at 0.67 %/year from 2000 to 2011.



The "cliff" is the final interval in the Olduvai schema. It begins with the 7th event
in 2012 (Note 7) when an epidemic of permanent blackouts spreads worldwide, i.e. first
there are waves of brownouts and temporary blackouts, then finally the electric power
networks themselves expire. The 8th event in 2030 (Note 8) marks the fall of world
energy production (use) per capita to the 1930 level (Figure 4). This is the lagging
30% point when Industrial Civilization has become history. The average rate of decline
of ê is 5.44 %/year from 2012 to 2030.



"The hand writes, then moves on." Decreasing electric reliability is now.



The power shortages in California and elsewhere are the product of the nation's long
economic boom, the increasing use of energy-guzzling computer devices, population
growth and a slowdown in new power-plant construction amid the deregulation of the
utility market. As the shortages threaten to spread eastward over the next few years,
more Americans may face a tradeoff they would rather not make in the long-running
conflict between energy and the environment: whether to build more power plants or to
contend with the economic headaches and inconveniences of inadequate power supplies.
(Carlton, 2000)



The electricity business has also run out of almost all-existing generating capacity,
whether this capacity is a coal-fired plant, a nuclear plant or a dam. The electricity
business has already responded to this shortage. Orders for a massive number of
natural gas-fired plants have already been placed. But these new gas plants require an
unbelievable amount of natural gas. This immediate need for so much incremental supply
is simply not there. (Simmons, 2000)



As we have emphasized, Industrial Civilization is beholden to electricity. Namely: In
1999, electricity supplied 42% (and counting) of the world's end-use energy versus 39%
for oil (the leading fossil fuel). Yet the small difference of 3% obscures the real
magnitude of the problem because it omits the quality of the different forms of
end-use energy. With apologies to George Orwell and the 2nd Law of Thermodynamics -
"All joules (J) of energy are equal. But some joules are more equal than others."
Thus, if you just want to heat your coffee, then 1 J of oil energy works just as well
as 1 J of electrical energy. However, if you want to power up your computer, then 1 J
of electricity is worth 3 J of oil. Therefore, the ratio of the importance of
electricity versus oil to Industrial Civilization is not 42:39, but more like 99:1.
Similar ratios apply to electricity versus gas and electricity versus coal.



Au Courant King Kilowatt!



Question: Where will the Olduvai die-off occur? Response: Everywhere. But large
cities, of course, will be the most dangerous places to reside when the electric grids
die. There you have millions of people densely packed in high-rise buildings,
surrounded by acres-and-acres of blacktop and concrete: no electricity, no work, and
no food. Thus the urban areas will rapidly depopulate when the electric grids die. In
fact we have already mapped out the danger zones. (e.g. See Living Earth, 1996.)
Specifically: The big cities stand out brightly as yellow-orange dots on NASA's
satellite mosaics (i.e. pictures) of the earth at night. These planetary lights blare
out "Beware", "Warning", and "Danger". The likes of Los Angeles and New York, London
and Paris, Bombay and Hong Kong are all unsustainable hot spots.



6. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS



The theory of civilization is traced from Greek philosophy in about 500 BCE to a host
of respected scientists in the 20th century. For example: The 'reference runs' of two
world simulation models in the 1970s put the life expectancy of civilization between
about 100 and 200 years. The Olduvai theory is specifically defined as the ratio of
world energy production and world population. It states that the life expectancy of
Industrial Civilization is less than or equal to 100 years: from 1930 to 2030. The
theory is tested against historic data from 1920 to 1999.



Although all primary sources of energy are important, the Olduvai theory postulates
that electricity is the quintessence of Industrial Civilization. World energy
production per capita increased strongly from 1945 to its all-time peak in 1979. Then
from 1979 to 1999 - for the first time in history - it decreased from 1979 to 1999 at
a rate of 0.33 %/year (the Olduvai 'slope', Figure 4). Next from 2000 to 2011,
according to the Olduvai schema, world energy production per capita will decrease by
about 0.70 %/year (the 'slide'). Then around year 2012 there will be a rash of
permanent electrical blackouts - worldwide. These blackouts, along with other factors,
will cause energy production per capita by 2030 to fall to 3.32 b/year, the same value
it had in 1930. The rate of decline from 2012 to 2030 is 5.44 %/year (the Olduvai
'cliff'). Thus, by definition, the duration of Industrial Civilization is less than or
equal to 100 years.



The Olduvai 'slide' from 2001 to 2011 (Figure 4) may resemble the "Great Depression"
of 1929 to 1939: unemployment, breadlines, and homelessness. As for the Olduvai
'cliff' from 2012 to 2030 - I know of no precedent in human history.



Governments have lost respect. World organizations are ineffective. Neo-tribalism is
rampant. The population is over six billion and counting. Global warming and emerging
viruses are headlines. The reliability of electric power networks is falling. And the
instant the power goes out, you are back in the Dark Age.



In 1979 I concluded, "If God made the earth for human habitation, then He made it for
the Stone Age mode of habitation." The Olduvai theory is thinkable.





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