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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.
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Energy is the common denominator for all technological societies. Energy is required to operate automobiles, trains, aircraft, and other machines that aid movement on our planet; to enjoy telephones, radios, and televisions that permit us to supplement face-to-face exchanges; to fabricate clothing and houses that augment our body's thermostatic mechanism and that enable us to reside in terrestrial (and someday extraterrestrial) sites normally unsuited for humans; to practice medicine and nutrition that make possible longer and healthier lives; to create books and computers that help us remember all that we know. All of industrial production, not only the synthesis of foodstuffs but also the extraction of resources and the manufacture of daily goods, requires the use of energy. Most human activity has come to rely on it.
It would seem that a central predicament now confronting us is that there's simply not enough energy to go around. But that's only a superficial concern, expressed by selfish societies that happen to be alive today, and that primarily worry about filling their automobile gas tanks tomorrow. When the big energy picture is examined, we recognize that the real problem is just the opposite: our civilization may soon be producing too much energy. Although less than ten percent of the world's estimated oil capacity is gone, the current rate of oil usage will ensure depletion of the remaining supplies in less than forty years. Within little more than a generation, then, our planet will be mostly oilless - for all practical purposes devoid of a rich resource that is essentially unrenewable. Over the course of about a hundred years, our civilization will have thoroughly exhausted a fossil fuel that took hundreds of millions of years to stockpile. This is one of the legacies we are destined to leave to posterity. Looking back at us historically, our great-grandchildren and all those who succeed them will recognize that it was those twentieth-century humans who gobbled up all the oil reserves nature provided our planet. Indeed, the large view of world oil consumption resembles a thin flame in a long, dark night. |

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and web sites such as:
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