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Insight: What happens when we've used the last drop?



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Published Date: 27 April 2008
SIXTY years ago the Orkney poet Edwin Muir wrote some lines which, in the panic surrounding the Grangemouth strike, feel like a premonition. They point to a world not too far in the future where our reliance on oil has become all too clear, and the way we live our lives all too fragile.
And then the thought confounds us with its strangeness.

The tractors lie about our fields; at evening

They look like dank sea-monsters crouched and waiting.

We leave them where they are and let them rust:

They'll molder away and be like other loam.

Something of his prediction seems to be forming itself. The petrol age, scarcely making much of an impact when he wrote, now seems hastening towards its end.

Around the year 2000, the Californian Delphi research institute was predicting the $15 oil barrel for about 2010. We are now over $100 and there's talk of a 'stabilisation price' as high as $300. This doesn't just reflect the problems of forecasting; once a commodity like oil is in crisis, any notion of expectations goes out of the window.

Every aspect of the use of oil is about to get argued or fought over. From the philosophical issue of whether the 'good' of individual mobility can be respected if it brings hellish climate change in its wake, to the sheer social disorientation of motorists – as at the moment – scrambling for dwindling supplies.

On the positive side there's just a chance that the Grangemouth strike is a timely warning, and that mounting scarcity and instability, along with opaque systems of control (what is Ineos, the Grangemouth firm, and who runs it?) make us ask whether we can plan a way out. An unlikely figure appears. In 1988 Margaret Thatcher seemed to sense that her 'great car economy' – with its unplanned exurbia, out-of-town shopping centres, retail parks, airports and Center Parcs, and their climatic consequences – was a potential menace.

She nailed global warming 18 years before Al Gore did. Her ministers Chris Patten and John Gummer took against sprawl and supermarkets, and so too, in his book Where There's Greed, did Gordon Brown. Let's call it unfinished business.

As we ponder our use of the car we have an unlikely role model. London boasts a sophisticated public transport catering for support workers, and only 31 cars per 100 people, compared with over 140 per 100 in the Scottish countryside.

But elsewhere the car exerts a powerful hold. 'Fordism', the joy of the open road, was the little guy's ideology as well as the name of his car. The question of how we survive past Peak Oil can be translated as: how do we survive as a society? We first of all sit on our own resources and watch their value grow. This means a deal with Norway on oil extraction from the North Sea, a commitment to low depletion and low consumption at home, and careful transport and social planning.

The car as a prime mover, dominating to-work journeys throughout the country, has major problems. Forget hybrids and forget widgetry; these are for expensive new cars and not our standard belching bangers. We have better things to spend our money on, such as carbon-free individual transport – bikes and walking – and public transport which is qualitatively superior and succeeds through speed, co-ordination and low cost. This involves distinguishing between the necessarily mobile 'useful drivers' – engineers, carers, traders, doctors, deliverers, etc – who have to get to a variety of destinations, and the commuting journeys better handled by collective transport.

There are problems with congestion charges since they are regressive; but into this Government can introduce local measures which separate the car as utility from the car as congestant. Rural areas could buy subsidised motoring by selling renewable energy, something that ought to win the approval of those motorists legitimately dependent on the car, and hit by roads clogged by inessential traffic. Systems of differential access rates, the socially equitable rationing of mobility, have a greater likelihood of public support than an unsubtle tax.

Big tranches of the population will tend anyway to give up private transport, and in the future they could steer policy. The under-26s and post-60s for a start, even now perhaps a majority of the population, could get statutory rights to cheap or free tickets and to adequate services, using German precedents which gave students and apprentices open access to town buses and trains for fifty quid a year.

The long decline of the buses – passengers are still down by over a third on 1985, and three-quarters on 1960 – can be reversed. Though when the flow back to public transport strengthens, their problems will show.

Engines and tyres depreciate completely every five years, accentuating the attraction of rail in general and electric light rail – the supertram – in particular. Timetabled, fast, predictable: the town of Karlsruhe, whose system has become the prototype for Europe, found that 40% of motorists would switch to it, compared with only 3% to a bus.

A bus may last five to 10 years before complete rebuilding. Vienna's trams and underground cars are over 40 years old. The current designs are now interchangeable with low-floor suburban trains. Lines must be laid out to facilitate this, and integrated with buses and suburban railways. If the law doesn't facilitate this, it must be changed, and fast. In this way, Princes Street could become Edinburgh's second train station.

Freight must be taken off the roads. With Deutsche Bahn taking over EWS railways and most UK rail freight, we can expect it to grow rapidly. But any real advance must come through a renaissance of sea transport. Water is still the most efficient means of bulk freight transport, though in comparison with Norway our coastal shipping is minimal, as is the use of sophisticated passenger craft such as hydrofoils, hovercraft and catamarans.

Bureaucracy and the business world must stop competing with one another in incompetence, and a new combination of enabling state and market-driven technology has to replace the extremes of Caledonian MacBrayne and Forth Ports, statist bureaucracy on one hand and a property company which regards docks as brownfield sites for speculative residential development on the other. The multiplication of uncoordinated maritime agencies: nearly 20 at the last count – must be curbed and rationalised.

This vision may be condemned as utopian or bureaucratic. But it works increasingly for Germany, Scandinavia and Switzerland. Given that the market alternatives are costly and inegalitarian, what is required is a big new European idea. There must be a Europe-wide transport executive, with coordinated control of arterial routes, with common powers and standards. The UK Ministry of Transport ought to be taken out of Whitehall control and its powers vested in a strategic planning body representing the regions and nations.

Changes are never absolute but fought over and negotiated. They also depend on icons and symbols. Three decades ago the Government was about to demolish London's St Pancras Station – now it stands for a rail renaissance. There is no reason why this crisis can't become a moment of hope, and spawn the will to produce a new and more advanced society in these islands.

• Professor Christopher Harvie is the author of Fool's Gold, a history of the North Sea oil industry. He is an SNP regional MSP for Mid Scotland and Fife

The full article contains 1241 words and appears in Scotland On Sunday newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

 
1

bus user,

edinburgh 27/04/2008 00:40:42
Opinion masquerading as fact. If nothing else, tell me why freight 'must' be taken off the roads? Do you want a railway siding at you local supermarket? Christopher Harvie is due the respect that anyone should have, and more besides, but I think he spent too long in Germany. A European wide transport executive? We can't even get an Edinburgh-wide transport consensus. Glasgow gets 80+% of its commuters into town by mass transit and that's world class. Why can't we get that as a target for the rest of Scotland instead of complaining about how bad we are?
2

The Ghost of Sir William Arrol,

The Forthy Bridge 27/04/2008 02:45:28
#1 Road freight will be displaced by more efficient rail freight, at least for longer journeys. This is happening now. When oil reaches £300, £400, £500 a barrel it would be madness to do it any other way. Enhancements will be required to make the railways up to the job. We can thank Dr.Beeching for this.

Scotland is a long way away from most places and transport costs are going to have a major impact.
A lettuce from Holland may cost £20 in the future if it is transported most of the way by rail, or £40 if transported by road. Which will you buy?

A fully laden freight train is nearly 5 times more fuel efficient than a convoy of lorries. With container based traffic its easy to switch freight from road to rail and back again. The big (and smart) hauliers are already doing this.
3

James Mackenzie,

27/04/2008 08:50:39
Let's hope his colleagues are listening at Holyrood. This is a clear exposition of where we are, where we're heading, and what we need to do.
4

Unimpressed one,

27/04/2008 09:20:07
"Big tranches of the population will tend anyway to give up private transport, and in the future they could steer policy."

What evidence is there for this statement? Given that car ownership is increasing annually, and aspirations of most are to own a car, how can this be so?
5

Margaret L,

Edinburgh 27/04/2008 09:59:16
Back to the stone age with the Greens. Count me out. Harvies's article is plagiarism of Dr Malthus' writing of 200 years ago.
6

Mcsnagpile,

27/04/2008 10:27:46
In the 1960’s our masters the USA impregnated the idea of a car society. This was despite a fuel crisis –look up bubble car. The idea was to build motorways like the M1,-- new, built for car towns like Livingston, Cumbernauld et al. Europe thought this was daft and kept their shuggly trams and trains. It was painfully obvious then, and down right painful now that Mr Beecham, (amongst others) was talking through the wrong aperture. I will try not to think Thatcher, by the way I remember she said that fast food was perfectly healthy when addressing school dinners—what a turnip. Yes I have lived all over Europe –I like the high speed (Clock Work Orange atmosphere) Snell Trams in Holland and the tram system in Vienna as else where in Europe is excellent. Countries under the cloak like Ireland went the British route and now changing back. The problem is these systems are antiquated, ‘powers that be’ are once again telling us what to do. Innovation should be the key,- here is a chance to do something out of the box. But no, we are putting back the shuggly tram. I am sure Siemens and Euro carriage makers are happy. Even for the airport, an electric shuttle bus from a new Gogarburn station or Edinburgh park for that matter would save a fortune—aye, but who wants to save a fortune of public money.
7

shivago8,

livingston 27/04/2008 11:39:12
Simple,you do a Nancy Sinatra.
Are you ready boots.
START WALKING
8

Publius,

London 27/04/2008 12:03:28
Are there really 140 cars for every 100 people in the Scottish countryside?

What does Christopher Harvie's party make of his pro-trams views? Last I heard the SNP were against trams.

That said more use of electricity and less use of oil and gas would be a very good thing. There are lots of possibilities including electric taxis - coming to London next year and doing 100 miles between recharges.

Scotland is going to need nuclear power stations after all.
9

allknowing,

27/04/2008 13:36:07
If you think I am going to give up my car, to then have to share my space with the great unwash that use public transport, you can think again.

Trains are expensive, delayed and cancelled all the time.
Buses are expensive, delayed, cancelled and you have to wait in the pouring rain, this is after you have left the house much earlier becuase it only comes every 30mins, and its poured all the way to the busstop. And you not even guarenteed a seat!!!!

Nah, I'll leave my house when I want, sit in a temperture which I dictate, listen to what I want to listen to, get to my destination in a decent time, without sharing with the general public!
10

Aceditor1,

London 27/04/2008 15:22:32
Allknowing - I hope you are rich because the problem is when petrol is £3 a litre and food prices have tripled too, most people will not be able to afford to feed themselves and drive to work. That is why we need leadership now to build the infrastructure for food production and transportation as well as more efficent heating to prepare for another tripling of oil (and gas) prices (they've gone up 5 times in as many years). If this leadership is not shown we will have the food and fuel poor in their millions.
11

ThePeter,

Glasgae 27/04/2008 19:40:00
Yes "professor" and when I try to get from Glasgow to the Borders it is virtually impossible over the weekend unless I have a car.
Give a DECENT public transport system and I'll use it. Until then stop being a pontificating prat
12

The Ghost of Sir William Arrol,

The Forthy Bridge 27/04/2008 21:27:30
Unimpressed and Allknowing are welcome to continue owning their cars and if the cars in question are fuel hungry, they might find that they can't even give them away when they want rid of them!

If they keep their cars, no matter what, will they continue to be able to afford the fuel to make them go?

It will be interesting to see how expensive fuel has to get before they consider other means. I reckon £100 - £200 a gallon would do it. Imagine that, £1000 to fill up your tank. Sadly that is where we're heading. Blame God if you don't like it - he made the finite oil reserves after all!

13

Sanny,

27/04/2008 22:38:57
May I remind all that “Necessity is the Mother of Invention”. As oil becomes scarce and therefore more expensive there will be an increasing drive to find alternative energy resources.

Basically today’s hydrocarbons, oil and coal, are very inefficient methods of capturing and storing the suns energy of some millions of years ago. Already we can see increasingly successful, attempts to harness the energy of the sun in a more efficient and direct way.

Consider PV, wind, hydro and tidal power, these can be harnessed to generate electrical energy and these systems are approaching the point where they will compete with hydrocarbon driven generators. The problems with these new systems are two fold.

First are their variability and their inability to track a variable load. Secondly is the difficulty in storing large amounts of energy. These problems are being addressed and workable solutions are being found. It should be noted that as the price of oil rises so the costs of the new technology will be falling.

Portable energy storage systems continue to present a major problem, but even here we are beginning to see potential systems emerging. Hydrogen can be readily generated from electricity and just as easily be converted back. Storage can be a problem but that too is being addressed. In twenty years I would expect half of the private cars on the road to be powered by a fuel other than petrol or diesel.

In closing may I say that despite the wailing of the Cassandra’s there is far more oil available then is published. Canada’s resources are three greater than Saudi but it is more difficult hence more expensive to extract. Brazil has just announced a huge find. The improved techniques of extraction have greatly enhanced the existing resources.
14

David Bond,

Wellington, New Zealand 28/04/2008 08:45:55
#13 Sanny:
However promising the various alternative energy strategies may seem for powering private motor transport, they all come up against the same basic problem.
A small-scale trial goes well. Making and powering a small fleet of alternative vehicles is easily achieved. Even a few thousand vehicles may operate without drama. But now multiply this by the present global fleet of 850 million, or even half or a quarter of this figure. The scale of the requirement and magnification of the impact is VAST. The bonanza of fossil fuels has enabled us to do something that will be very hard to replicate by any other means. And in a world of 6 billion people where all might aspire to motorised lifestyles given the choice, the already unsustainable figure of 850 million vehicles still falls hopelessly short of expectations.
Make no mistake. The notion of global universal car ownership is a pipe dream. As the vast populations of India and China not unreasonably clamour for their share of the goodies, the limitations of the developed-world's motor-age become all too apparent. In twenty years I would expect 95% of the private cars currently on the road not to be there any more, having been replaced by a sustainable and comprehensive public transport system, and by patterns of community-development which are far less requiring of car-dependency.
But if this doesn't happen; if foolish populations fight to cling to their motorised privileges at all costs, then we will probably all end up killing eachother, or the planet, or both.

 

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