It is?It's quite simple really
Riiiiiiiight. I'll leave for work at 3am and get home in time to watch Iron Chef at 9pm. If I'm lucky. I'd be better off sleeping at work and only peddling home for the weekend.You could ride a bike
Did it ever occurr to you that there is no such thing as public transport for the millions who live outside major metropoliton areas? And those who do live there might still face a 50km or more walk or bike ride to the nearest train station.Take the train
Yes, I do. But a more fuel efficient car can't run on nothing. If everybody uses them, we might stretch petroleum supply out a little bit more, that's all.Use a more fuel efficient car
And how is everybody supposed to just pack up and move closer to work?Live closer to work
You obviously didn't grasp the part where biofuels as we know them can only replace a few percent of demand. Look it up.Use biofuels
This one's interesting. The technology is at least proven here. But the EROEI isn't very high I think and it would be a massive undertaking to replace even a small percentage of oil with it. (My father has shares in a coal-to-liquids pilot plant in the area. He held onto them as the price kept going up and up - and then crashed. Silly bugger should have sold. How's that - a former communist party member owning shares? Just taking ownership of the means of production really.)Extract it from coal
One of the most abundant elements in the universe. Will never run out. Is proven to work but we're still far from cracking all the problems with using it as fuel.Use hydrogen
I agree and I am not a doomsayer. I believe we will end up licking the problem. But I think you are being a head-in-the-sander here. You think we are not nearly as dependent on relatively cheap petroleum as we actually are. The modern world has been built on cheap petroleum. Extraction technology is always improving but there have been no new supergiant finds for decades and new finds are increasingly in difficult and expensive locations (extreme deep water, arctic conditions).The doomsayers have no grasp of human ingenuity
Oilfields have been observed to peak and then run down very rapidly. The world's largest, Saudi Arabia's Gawar field now requires constant massive injection of pumped seawater to keep the oil coming to the top.
Oil is like gold. It is a relative geological rarity and global supply is limited. The problem is, we don't know exactly how limited or just how rapidly supply will fail to meet demand in an ever-more petroleum hungry world.