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>A Change is Coming – 2013 & Onwards – Part II  - Julian D. W. Phillips - Gold Forecaster
Wind, solar, hydrogen, things unknown, are all worthy and may connect eventually—hopefully this century, for sure the next—but they cannot replace Fossils.

Not when the planet uses a 1,000 bbl a second on all things. Not when tens of millions of jobs rest on this platform.

Hydrocarbons account for 99% of the globe’s transportation platform; electricity 99% of its power platform.

There is no hydrocarbon shortage. I sat in lines during the eighties “gas shortage” and dug into it. No shortage then. But there had to be one in order to jack up the ppg. Otherwise America would not have sat still for the gouge. They’re doing it now and there’s more oil available than ever.

Past and present cries for oil independence and alternate fuels has been/is a decade-to- decade meme; an energy strawman used to focus our attention on the lie. Remember when America’s strategic oil reserves were “dangerously low?” Ad infinitum.

Alternates in their present form and efficiency can’t replace fossils. Industry knows this. Have for years.

Nowhere can this be seen any clearer today than in the U.S. power generation industry. Their fuel pie looks something like this:

Coal 50%
Other Fossils 21%
Nuclear 21%
Hydro-Elec. 6%
Alternatives 2%
Source: International Energy Agency

Studies have been done on utilizing free alternate fuels—old tires, wood chips, paper—to power existing generation facilities and electricity cannot be produced any cheaper than it can be with coal. (The U.S. has an unlimited supply and the industry has successfully applied scrubber technology to their stacks.)

Alternate fuels are not an option. Not now. Not this century.

If the problem isn’t a shortage of hydrocarbons, then the problem is one of corporate elites handcuffing citizens and picking their pockets at the gas pump; of looting. Like Wall Street looted the U.S. treasury.
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Peak oil? Never was enough dead dinosaurs in the world to keep oil in the ground lo these many decades at the rate humanity has uses it.

Yet, the world’s transportation and energy platforms remain based on oil. Take all the alternate energy sources in the world and combine them and it wouldn’t even approach replacement.

But, ever notice the drilling frenzy every time the price for a barrel of oil creeps up? And the "discovery" of "giant oil fields hither-to-unknown?" Eagle Ford Shale pin South Texas. The Bakkan in Montana and the Dakotas. Gull Island off the North Slope. The oil industry knew about these fields. Know all the fields on the globe and where they’re located. Russia. The arctic. That thing BP drilled into at the bottom of the Gulf or Mexico? They still don’t know how big it is. There are more like that out there. Lot’s more.

Hear anything lately about A-biotic oil? Read a couple of technical papers about it. “Google A-biotic Russia’s Deep Oil Wells” Here’s a rough ovrview: http://rense.com/general54/moreevi.htm

Then therfe's Gull Island (http://www.rense.com/general82/gull.htm)off the North Slope. . .The huge fields in Montana and the Dakotas (http://www.wnd.com/?pageId=61488 ). . . Green River Basin (http://www.oilshalegas.com/greenriveroilshale.html) in Colorado . . . the current South-to-Central Texas’ Eagle Ford Shale boom http://oilshalegas.com/eaglefordshale.html . . . ANWAR.


The only people who really know about "peak oil" are the oil companies—the town criers telling the world we're out of it.

You can forgive the average for just not knowing., but the oil companies? They know.

Peak oil fear is the perfect cover for manipulating the price of oil-based products.

Internal combustion engine? Think eternal combustion engine.

And all God’s chillern said . . .

You nailed it Julian.


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Beginning of the headline :In the first part of this article we looked at the sad events that appear unavoidable in 2013 and beyond, despite the best efforts of politicians and monetary officials. We then said events are on the way to bring nations in the developed world the ability to survive these blows. Oil Self-Sufficiency in the U... Read More
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