Another crisis. This time with S&P touching 1100. But it was the bond
market that was the most affected: [Aug 08, 2011]
Corporate Bond Pipeline Snaps Shut
The Soviet Union was a nearly closed economy before collapsing; a
"mini-world" in itself. Notice how Russian oil production went down
rapidly after the peak; a classic Seneca cliff. Note also how production
picked up again afterwards. At some point, the Soviet Union ceased to
exist as an isolated economic system and it became part of the whole
world's economic system. At that point, the simple model that we have
been using does not work any longer; most likely because the capital
stock received an influx of resources that came from a region outside
the model.
Conclusion: a banquet of consequences
Very often, we fail to understand the delayed effects of our actions.
John Sterman reminds us of this point
in a talk on global warming quoting Robert Louis Stevenson as saying,
"Everybody, sooner or later, sits down to a banquet of consequences."
The models shown here tell us that the Seneca cliff is the result of
delayed consequences.
As always, the future is something that we build with our actions
and the models can only tell us what kind of actions will lead us, eventually,
to a certain outcome. Used in this way, models can be extremely useful
and can even be applied to systems which are much more modest than an
entire civilization, for instance to a single company or to our personal
relationships with other people. In all cases, the Seneca effect will
be the result of trying hard to keep things running as usual. In that
way, we may run out faster of the resource that keeps the system running:
be it a physical resource or a reserve of goodwill. The way to avoid
this outcome may be to let the system run the way it wants, without
attempting to force it to go the way we want it to go. In other words
we need to take things in life with some stoicism, as Seneca himself
would probably have said.
Thinking of the worldwide situation and of the problems involved,
global warming and resource depletion, what the models tell us is that
the Seneca cliff may be the inevitable result of putting too much strain
on already badly depleted natural resources. We should try, instead,
to develop alternative stocks of resources such as renewable (or nuclear)
energy. At the same time, we should avoid to exploit highly polluting
and expensive resources such as tar sands, oil shales, deepwater oil,
and, in general, applying the "drill, baby, drill" philosophy. All those
strategies are recipes for doom. Unfortunately, these are also examples
of exactly what we are doing.
I don't know what Seneca would say if he could see this planet-wide
effort we are making in order to put into practice the idea that he
expressed in his letter to his friend, Lucilius. I can only imagine
that he would take it with some stoicism. Or, maybe, he would comment
with what he said in his "De
Providentia" "Let Nature deal with matter, which is her own,
as she pleases; let us be cheerful and brave in the face of everything,
reflecting that it is nothing of our own that perishes."
Thanks to Dmitry Orlov for having been the source of inspiration
for this post with his article "Peak
Oil is History".
Perk Earl:
It's rather apparent with all the efforts being employed to get
more oil, such as tar sands, deep offshore, horizontal drilling
(super straws), etc. that every possible contingent effort is being
employed simply to remain on a plateau of oil production (since
05). In spite of these efforts, Brent continues to be in triple
digits per barrel.
Essentially the Seneca Cliff is being
pushed out in front of us and in so doing its edge crisply sharpened
and angled into a sharks fin. The question regarding
descent isn't if, but when and how fast and hard will we fall?
RockyMtnGuy
The article ignores or discounts the effect of non-conventional
oil technology (oil sands, enhanced oil recovery) as well as the
effects of economics (higher prices result redrilling of old oil
fields and the dragging out of oil field production in a long tail).
In reality, the amount of non-conventional oil in the world considerably
exceeds the amount of conventional oil, and in the long term most
oil production will be non-conventional. I can cite the example
of my own country, Canada, where conventional oil production peaked
during the 1970's and most of the oil production is non-conventional,
with current total production now considerably exceeding the 1970's
conventional peak.
RockyMtnGuy:
I wish for a systemic collapse.
That seems to be the motivation between a lot of the doomsters
and their doom theories. They can't live with the concept of a slow,
painful decline and desperately wish for a big crash.
In reality, geology will save the world from a Seneca cliff collapse
in oil production. You really cannot produce oil fields in a Seneca-like
fashion because oil fields (the majority of them) just don't work
that way. Toward the end of their lives they taper off gradually
and seem to last a lot longer than the producers had intended. The
big oil companies sell them off to the small companies, and then
the small companies sell them off to the mom-and-pop operations.
Most of the world's really big oil fields will still be producing
dribs and drabs of oil 100 years from now.
The Canadian production curve which I posted is really the anti-Seneca
of all anti-Seneca curves. That is a result of deliberate policy.
Canadian governments have regulated the oil industry with the intention
of turning the typical bell-shaped oil production curve into one
with a very, very long tail. Canada is still going to be a major
oil producer 100 years from now.
Luke H:
he big oil companies sell them off to the small companies, and
then the small companies sell them off to the mom-and-pop operations
Yeh in Oklahoma, Texas, and southern Alberta maybe, but how about
deep water GOM and Brazil, the Alaska North Slope and the North
Sea? More and more of our production is coming from operations like
these and they will shut down suddenly well before full field depletion
because of the shipping difficulty. Those type fields will forever
be beyond the reach of the Mom and Pop organization.
Maybe a Seneca Cliff will desribe the first third to half of
the production drop after the 'sustained peak' or plateau or whatever
you choose to call what oil producition appears to be hovering at
right now. But like you I do not feel oil production will completely
fall off the cliff--as long as we avoid the ultimate nuclear Seneca
Cliff.
Quite frankly I hope Canada is a major oil producer a century
from now--that would mean many things had managed to go right for
humanity and the bottleneck we look to be aimed at is at worst gently
tapered. Of course I had to call my loyal little dog away from a
cow and calf moose in the middle of this reply and and am watching
woodpeckers come right back to my feeders the first day they have
been restocked after being dry for a fortnight. I might not have
so optimistic a bent if I were sitting in a browned out, hundred
degree Phoenix or LA concrete and asphalt swelter.
ThisOne:
Right and wrong has nothing to do with it. If the Keystone XL
isn't built then the Canadians will build a pipeline west or east,
or there will be some other pipeline to get that oil to the coast
where it can get full market price. The economics are there to support
one of these pipelines. While I agree with the sentiment in protesting
the Keystone XL, I think it's misplaced. Even if the protesters
are successful in preventing the Keystone from being built, it's
only going to be a temporary victory before the next pipeline is
proposed. The real objective is closing down the oil sands development.
While I agree that putting any more CO2 into the atmosphere at
this point is evil, I don't think it's going to change the outcome
one bit. Those who use fossil fuels have more power than those who
do not. If the Canadians don't tap the oil sands, they will taken
over by a country that will. If you don't agree with me, google
'the carter doctrine'.
Evil is banal.
ewak
So is goodness or heroism:
"We may now entertain the notion that most people who become
perpetrators of evil deeds are directly comparable to those
who become perpetrators of heroic deeds, alike in being just
ordinary, average people. the banality of evil shares much with
the banality of heroism. Neither attribute is the direct consequence
of unique dispositional tendencies; there are no special inner
attributes of either pathology or goodness residing within the
human psyche or the human genome. Both conditions emerge in
particular situations at particular times when situational forces
play a compelling role in moving particular individuals across
a decisional line from inaction to action. There is a decisive
decisional moment when a person is caught up in a vector of
forces that emanate from a behavioral context. Those forces
combine to increase the probability of one's acting to harm
others or acting to help others. Their decision may or may not
be consciously planned or mindfully taken. Rather, strong situational
forces most often impulsively drive the person to action. Among
the situational action vectors are: group pressures and group
identity, the diffusion of responsibility for the action, a
temporal focus on the immediate moment without concern for consequences
stemming from the act in the future, presence of social models,
and commitment to an ideology."
--The Lucifer Effect, Phillip Zimbardo
Right and wrong has everything to do with it. All these actions
are moral as well as economic. Might makes right? The dollar decides?
I am helpless and inconsequential, so I cannot affect change? Shall
I profit from the banality of evil? It's BAU, can't stop it, don't
try.
Oct:
To get that product you have to rob the economy elsewhere, which
I think makes the claim difficult. You'd have to model the increase
in capital outlay for unconventional and determine the pollution
factors on the backside.
But unconventional oil is a stop-gap and not a cure for this
disease. Hard to imagine Canada supplying much net oil growth per
capita as conventional sources around the world wind down.
From my reading Canada will in the
end offset declines in Mexico.
Ghung
Sorry I missed this one, but I'll jump in up top. This first
thread, all about "unconventional oil", paying taxes, jobs, etc.,
really misses the point. Forcing oil (liquid fuel) production, whether
conventional, NG liquids, biofuels, whatever, blows bubbles and
forces consumption of arguably more necessary resources. Current
levels of liquid fuels production enables depletion of every other
finite and limited resource. Further, it enables the mother of all
unsustainable progressions: population growth. Just askin': What
happend to the big picture here?
I'm pretty much in agreement with Ugo's post. When it rains,
it pours. Oil cuts both ways. Better pack your parachutes.
jeppen:
Actually, current and increasing levels of liquids fuel
production enables the only non-starvation-and-war based path to
population stabilization and shrinkage there is. If it goes down,
the risk is high that the fertility rates will go up again.
Perk Earl:
Alright Rocky, but even if Canada has incredible amounts of non-conventional,
the flow rates are less than crude, the energy needed to extract
is greater, the cost to extract is greater and as much as Canadians
would like to think that tar sands will save them from post peak
oil, the economic reality is we'll probably all be in the same sinking
ship. Once the world economy has tanked, squeezing non-conventional
will probably not be cost effective.
So I think your idea of a positively-skewed bell-shaped curve
on the back side is at best, fantasy.
x:
Seneca background video: (3 parts)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hJ0g7IKWG7E
He believed people are too optimistic. Things going wrong should
be expected, prepared for and accepted.
drillo:
Ugo, thanks for this interesting posting.
I think it depends mainly on "timing" if there will be a rapid decline
or a smooth transition:
If mankind will find and apply solution for the challenges of peak
oil, climate change etc. then a smooth transition to a post-fossil
world is possible. But if we are too late then we will eventually
get to a point where we cannot stop the unsteerable wagon from rushing
down the spiral.
For example the British were lucky that they had coal at hand when
they had cut down all the trees on their island, so they could continue
with their industrial growth. Otherwise they would have soon declined
again to oblivion.
The timing issue is also described in the less-known second Hirsch
"report": Mitigation of maximum world oil production: Shortage scenarios
-
Energy Policy Volume 36, Issue 2, February 2008, Pages 881-889
From the abstract:
Examination of a number of future world oil production forecasts
showed multi-year rollover/roll-down periods, which represent
pseudoplateaus. Consideration of resource nationalism posits
an Oil Exporter Withholding Scenario, which could potentially
overwhelm all other considerations. Three scenarios for mitigation
planning resulted from this analysis: (1) A Best Case, where
maximum world oil production is followed by a multi-year plateau
before the onset of a monatomic decline rate of 2–5% per year;
(2) A Middling Case, where world oil production reaches a maximum,
after which it drops into a long-term, 2–5% monotonic annual
decline; and finally (3) A Worst Case, where the sharp peak
of the Middling Case is degraded by oil exporter withholding,
leading to world oil shortages growing potentially more rapidly
than 2–5% per year, creating the most dire world economic impacts.
In a nutshell he thinks: A plateau period might give us some
time to avoid a collaps. Whereas we wouldn't have this chance in
case of a sharp peak.
Ironborn:
We probably are at the point where we cannot effectively stop
the downward spiral. The plateau will last few more years, but it
will end sooner or later and the descent will then be accelerating
with passing time.
The current civilization is stagnating and I´m afraid that it´s
the best it can do. There is no impetus that would send us forward.
Renewables are not enough or they are rather too little too late.
Technology does not provide the solutions, only postpones the consequences.
When thinking about our problems, I often recall the following words
of Q about the Borg from Q Who Star Trek episode:
"You can't outrun them, you can't destroy them. If you damage
them, the essence of what they are remains. They regenerate
and keep coming. Eventually you will weaken. Your reserves will
be gone. They are relentless!"
Our reserves are not yet gone, but the systems are weakening.
Jedi Welder:
The thing that worries me wich I have been thinking about
lately is that we have many "slow declines" happening at once. Population
growth, climate change, oil decline, economic contraction, etc.
Each of those happen slowly, but when they occur at the same time,
the burden of all those combined slow faliures adds up to one big
collapse.
Mamba:
Jedi Welder said
... all those combined slow failures adds up to one big collapse.
I think most thinking people have already come to this conclusion
and are planning their lives accordingly. In my case this has amounted
to:
Having only one child and advising him to have none (he's 30
now); Learning all I can about permaculture and growing my own food;
Buying some rural land in an area not likely to be devastated by
climate change (ie not Texas); Taking early retirement; Buying essential
tools, clothing and various things (eg bikes and ancillary equipment)
to last the rest of my life (and my wife's life); Investing in precious
metals (300% gain in last few years); etc BTW, this is yet another
excellent article by Ugo Bardi, one of the most thoughtful modern
commentators.
lengould:
You're right about gold bugs, that valuation is way out of proportion,
an original speculative bubble. Compare gold to silver, platinum,
diamonds, etc.
michaeld
``Wind was 2.5% of world electricity production in 2010." and
electric energy was 16% (roughly) of the total mix ..
thus indeed a tiny contribution! even with your impossible growth
numbers ..
just look at saturation effects in growth in Germany
Yvan Dutil
Seneca effect is a consequence of an
increase in production efficiency and a simultaneous increase in
extraction difficulty. Production efficiency is a
power law function of the capital (ex: Cobb-Douglas), while extraction
cost will increase exponentially at some point. Then you end up
with a Pareto-Malthus resources extraction model.
Perk Earl :
Seneca effect is a consequence of an increase in production
efficiency and a simultaneous increase in extraction difficulty.
Very well described, and in that description it's easy to see
the progression is towards a cliff, almost like the crest of a wave
that will subsequently fall. The increase in efficiency accelerates
the top of the wave forward, while the increasing extraction difficulty
puts the brakes on the lower part of the wave, causing a crest,
a graphed shark fin shape.
enicar:
"Very well described, and in that description it's easy
to see the progression is towards a cliff, almost like the crest
of a wave that will subsequently fall. The increase in efficiency
accelerates the top of the wave forward, while the increasing extraction
difficulty puts the brakes on the lower part of the wave, causing
a crest, a graphed shark fin shape."
That is what scares me the most - because even as a "prepper"
- I realize how much ancient knowledge I have lost to become a modern
man. To provide an example" firewoood in the NorthWest corner of
Wisconsin. Yes - the house was heated via an outdoor fireplace -
built on high technology - dependent upon water pressure- dependent
upon an electrically operated well, dependent upon an electrically
operated blower.
Wood was delivered off of a semi-trailer, unloaded via a crane
mounted upon the trailer. They stacked the logs in a nice pile -
which I then cut into manageable logs with a gas -powered chainsaw.
I did split the logs with a hand operated axe - and stacked them
by hand - but imagine if it was without machines.
First: I have no idea/knowledge of the tools required to take
down a tree without a gas chainsaw - much less maintenance/construction
of such machines. How to get the quantity of logs to my place? No
knowledge of horses/skids/harnesses.... not even having access...
How to cut the logs into pieces - without a chainsaw - no idea.
If the Ax handle breaks - no idea....Of course - no electricity
- no water circulation - no blower - what then?
If I even had all the tools - how would I manage to sharpen/maintain/replace
them.
I have provided the above for thought, from actual experience.
It does lead me to believe that in any situation where power, electric/petroleum
fuel was absent for a period of time - I might not want to be present
any longer.
lengould:
I grew up in (cold!!) Northern Canada with no electricity,
gas or other fossil fuels available. We cut trees with a swedesaw
and an axe. Skidded them to a road with a horse. Sledged them to
the farm with horse-drawn sleigh. Bucked with the swedesaw, split
with an axe. Takes about three man-months work to provide a family
with heating and cooking counting a man-month as a current working
month, eg. 21 x 8 hour days (of course we worked 12 to 14 hour days
30 days per month, and I was doing a mans work by age ten to twelve,
so it only took us perhaps 5% to 10% of available time.)
Dad could, with the proper tools, precisely sharpen and set the
saw teeth so it could run in green wood. Use a hand set and files.
I know the theory but never learned how. I could probably figure
it out. I can replace an axehandle very quickly, and could make
one from ash with a drawknife fast too.
We bought a chainsaw the first year they were developed. (actually
a gas-powered reciprocating Wright even before that)
RickM
German military perspective
Drawing from Feasta's excellent "Tipping Point" (March 2010),
the Bundeswehr analysts point out how an economic tipping point
could lead to runaway effects:
"In the medium term, the global economic system and all market-oriented
economies would collapse.
1. Economic entities would realise the prolonged contraction and
would have to act on the assumption that the global economy would
continue to shrink for a long time.
2. Tipping point: In an economy shrinking over an indefinite period,
savings would not be invested because companies would not be making
any profit. For an indefinite period, companies would no longer
be in a position to pay borrowing costs or to distribute profits
to investors. The banking system, stock exchanges and financial
markets could collapse altogether.
3. Financial markets are the backbone of global economy and an integral
component of modern societies. All other subsystems have developed
hand in hand with the economic system. A disintegration can therefore
not be analysed based on today’s system. A completely new system
state would materialise" (p. 58 of new translation).
Few systems in our world respond faster than financial markets,
nor with greater oscillation/volatility, so it is easy to imagine
how some runaway effects could quickly be set in motion. The Bundeswehr
authors place a heavy emphasis on human factors like awareness and
expectation, and what the likely human responses to those perceptions
would be.
By the way, a complete English translation is now available from
Bundeswehr, so perhaps our media will finally examine and report
on this unique, credible study.
http://www.energybulletin.net/stories/2011-08-30/complete-english-transl...
phil harris
Thanks for the link to Bundeswehr doc
... a so-called “tipping point” is exceeded where linear
developments become chaotic ...
For example, if the global economy shrinks for an indeterminate
period of time, a chain reaction that might destabilise the
global economic system is imaginable. Depending
on point in time and the level of dependence of the affected
society, such a peak-oil-induced, economic tipping point might
have such severe systemic implications that only a few general
statements as to economic, political, and social developments
beyond the tipping point can be made.
Indeed
ian807
Specifically, oil at a high enough
price and low enough energy return breaks just-in-time supply chains
worldwide. I'm pretty sure that this will be our
first ratchet down and yes, it will happen suddenly. The first oil
producing country that decides to hoard oil for domestic consumption
(civilian and military), will take a large proportion of the world's
oil off the market suddenly. If more than one country does so at
the same time, the supply chain could fall very rapidly thereafter.
Sudden supply shocks will the first domino. First they break
supply chains, and then the economy. International commerce will
probably never recover to previous levels.
Oct
As I have come to understand supply chains, we are using China
as a petrochemical source for many industries including processed
foods, fertilizers, electronics, paints and other consumer items.
These feedstocks from China can make lower end items that can be
assembled in say Japan or Germany. So the question will be how well
China can export fertilizer and other essential petrochemical stocks.
It seems the world is using China to do the lower level petrochemical
stuff -- is it a greenwashing? Yep. We are shifting this pollution
to Asia. So would Seneca's cliff appear first in China? Well if
that is true then the entire industrial base would collapse in a
single shot. If China collapses, industrial production is essentially
toast.
metalRules
The first oil producing country that
decides to hoard oil for domestic consumption...
Such hoarding would be grim for the world
economy, but I wonder how likely it is on
a wide scale? Many of the current oil exporting
countries are economic and/or political
basket cases, so I’d question if they have
the capacity reduce their revenue to any
great extent by hoarding
BillH on August 31, 2011 - 11:29pm Hi, Ugo -- good article.
You might be interested in Out of Gas: A Systems Perspective on Potential
Petroleum-Fuel Depletion I did for Pegasus Communications back in 2003
(http://pegasuscom.com/aar/model5.html). It exhibits much the same behavior
as your model.
What I discovered in later experimentation is that the shape of the
fall-off is rather sensitive to the shape of the nonlinearity in the
model. So anyone working on a softer landing might look both at ways
to replace petroleum resources and at ways to modify the effective shape
of that function.
Ugo Bardi on September 1, 2011 - 2:26am Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top Thanks, Bill. I'll look at your model
as soon as I have a moment. I received several notes by people who had
developed models similar to mine. It seems that what I did was, mostly,
to give a name to something that was already well known!
dmiller on September 1, 2011 - 12:35am Ugo, the
Seneca effect sounds an awful lot like Jack Alpert's "death sprial".
As resources, mainly food, become more scarce the rich divert more of
those dwindling resources to protecting their own resources. Nobody
ever said the downside had to be a smooth transition. And my gut tells
me that things will go south very, very quickly.
Ugo Bardi on September 1, 2011 - 2:27am Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top This kind of gut feeling is shared
by many, many people, apparently!
Magnus Redin on September 1, 2011 - 11:57am Permalink | Subthread
| Parent | Parent subthread | Comments top Aye, and it is a bad feeling
leading to depressed activity.
dohboi
Good points. It is good to keep in mind
that the Eastern Roman/Byzantine Empire
lasted quite a while, and, in spite of rotating
dynasties, the complex bureaucracy that
kept Egypt and China running lasted millennia.
But we are like an Egypt that loses the
Nile, or a China that loses its Yangtse
and Huangho. FFs are the life blood of the
modern economy, and we have to walk away
from them because:
a) they are running out anyway and in
the mean time are taking more and more energy
input to get the energy out;
b) they cause devastating local and regional
harms and are due to cause ever more as
we go into the ever more risky stuff; and
c) and most damningly, their effluents
are causing the planet to swing out of the
'goldilocks' comfort zone that humans (and
most other life currently on the planet)
evolved in.
It is (c), AGW, that really has the likelihood
of taking on a 'live of its own' hurtling
us toward a hellish unlivable world in a
remarkably short time. Paleo-climatologists
now have found numerous cases of the climate
shifting suddenly, in decades or less, from
one state to another very different one.
Most PO'ers that think CC is always slow
so we don't have to worry about it are not
up to speed on this research.
Multiple feedback, some already kicking
in, and some of enormous power, and all
feeding back on themselves and each other,
can/will turn our relatively small initial
forcing into a runaway train--our pebble
(relatively speaking) becoming an avalanche...and
we all live at the bottom and on the sides
of the hill with no where to run.
Ugo Bardi on September 2, 2011 - 7:55am Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top The Roman Empire was peaking at the
time of Seneca. It had not yet started to decline, but I think the writing
was on the wall and that Seneca himself perceived it.
Ulpian on September 2, 2011 - 10:15am Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top I'm not so sure about that. No empire
lasts forever but the moment when irreversible decline sets in can only
be known with hindsight. Rome needed to keep pedalling to maintain revenue,
which meant conquering new lands and using their wealth to feed its
treasury. Unfortunately the world outside the rich Mediterranean had
little to offer and became a drain on revenue, much like Africa was
to Britain. Dacia was probably the last territory to be conquered that
brought huge wealth, and Dacia was incorporated after Seneca lived.
Pessimism is another matter of course and can colour many things, including
approaches to energy and PO. I am a pessimist!
geek7 on September 2, 2011 - 9:59pm Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top Seneca had studied Greek Stoic philosophy,
which was developed starting 3 centuries before he lived. The thought
he expressed in the letter may not have been original with him. Maybe
he had read something in the Greek and was translating to his Latin
speaking relative. Pessimism is something else than stoicism.
Constantinople was called Byzantion in Seneca's time and had not
yet fallen to the Romans. I think it fell early in the 2nd century CE,
but can't quickly find clear statement on the web. The Roman Empire
was very much still growing in Seneca's time. Constantinople remained
the capital of eastern Rome until it was captured by the Ottoman Turks
in 1453 AD. Collapse of Constantinople was very sudden and very final,
but surely not forseen by Seneca.
I think the quotation is not at all about collapse in the Grand Sweep
of History, but rather a simple observation about collapse of buildings,
fall of cities to a besieging army, crops ruined by a rainstorm, etc.
We can put our own interpretation on the words. They certainly hold
a special significance to us, after it has been suggested by Ugo, but
what significance they held for Seneca is open to speculation. And really,
if you don't see their truth in our time from your own observation of
today then you have a very different world view than I have. Or are
you trying to pick apart Ugo's blog by questioning the meaning of the
words? Think of it as a literary reference not to be taken literally
but to set the scene for the following discussion.
Ulpian:
I was taking none of it literally. That is my whole point. Sudden
collapse is the point here and I was merely responding to using
the empire as an illustration of collapse. I disagreed that it took
three hundred years and would, as I stated, prefer to call it more
like one hundred years. This might be called a quick decline and
follow the Seneca curve. And I am the pessimist by the way; I don't
confuse stoicism with pessimism, although I do believe there are
overlaps.
As for Byzantium it was conquered for Rome in 64BC and I reiterate
that I did not include the eastern - Byzantine - empire in my observation.
The eastern Roman empire can either be called a great success as
it maintained the fiction of Roman polity for a thousand years,
or it might be seen as the slowest dying of all empires and therefore
the antithesis of the Seneca idea.
hinson:
"Collapse of Constantinople was very sudden and very final"
On the contrary. The Byzantine Empire waxed and waned over many
centuries, but its road to eventual destruction was via the Crusades,
during which it suffered blow after blow over a period of about
250 years. In fact, at then end of the
Crusades it was virtually a partitioned rump state. It began to
get back on its feet somewhat by the time the Turks arrived, but
just was too weak to resist.
I strongly recommend the 3-volume history (or the shorter 1-volume
version!) "Byzantium" written by John Julius Norwich, a fascinating
history wonderfully written. It was
a great shame that this Christian/Roman/Greek civilisation was lost
so thoroughly, and that we in the West have almost completely forgotten
about it. The Crusades represented an awful "Civil
War" within the European sphere.
Feunfeun:
I think our civilization has a greater
possibility of quick panic than any other civilization before.
It all depends on how fast information travel amongst the various
structures that compose it. At the core we have a financial infrastrucutre
where 80 % of the transaction are executed within milliseconds.
On those transcations and their equilibrium depends our entire hierrachy
of what valuable and not . On the fringe of this infrastructure
we have the fact that most of the people in the west own a smartphone
or watch information continously trough a media outlet. So if a
truly negative information which destroy the precarious equilibrium
appears, it will then spread very quickly to the fringe affecting
everyone in the system ...
YvesT
Yes agree on that, another thing is that more and more some key
systems rely on just a few guys having the knowledge to run them
(at least in IT), and all this is very poorly documented, and
it is in fact getting worse over time
with ever increasing complexity, a good set up for a domino effect
...
RalphW
I am the sole surviving IT employee at my organisation. We used to
be 7. I hold together a disparate system of servers and desktops
and websites that is essential to every job here, jerry-built together
over a decade. Everything is bespoke, no two systems have the same
OS and patch level. When I take a week off the other 30-odd employees
cross their fingers and pray that nothing major goes down.
YvesT
1, 2011 - 12:49pm Wow, and is there a plan for at least another
guy for backup and knowledge transfer or is it seen as "normal situation"
? Do you still do some modifications/"improvments" ? The organisation
I work for is much bigger (a telco), but there are so many f#àking
systems it's truly amazing, many outsourced here and there with
so many layers of specifications or whatever between users and developers,
and in the end plenty of key systems with one or two guys able to
modify/repair them. Not to mention that we keep on adding some while
saying we should reduce ...
FMagyar
1, 2011 - 2:05pm True story: I know of a situation in the corporate
finance department of a large hospital where the sole surviving
IT person with the requisite level of knowledge to keep the whole
system up and running actually died of a heart attack while on the
job... They had a hell of a time and enormous expense for hiring
outside expertise to come in and figure out what that one guy knew...
They could have hired help, given the poor guy a thorough physical
and given him a raise and a vacation and it probably would have
been a lot cheaper! That's what you get when bean counters get to
run organizations that depend on systems which they do not understand,
nor do they get why those systems are so important.
notanoilman
1, 2011 - 3:50pm I used to contract in to cover people. Winging
it doesn't even start to cover it. Organisations really have no
idea of the financial value of such people. Companies should at
least take out 'key man' insurance cover to pay for what it would
take in an emergency. Having another trained person is a must. Oh,
the companies used to whinge about how much they had to pay me,
IMHO it was nowhere near enough.
NAOM
eric blair
1, 2011 - 7:51pm It all depends on how fast information travel amongst
the various structures that compose it
Except information flow is controlled. Or even faked.
Twitter shutdowns, things like BART blocking cell phones, historical
things like "Remember the Maine" "The Lusitania did not carry weapons/ammunition"
"Gulf of Tomkin" "Lavion Affair" Deletions of posts on web forums.
So if a truly negative information which destroy the precarious
equilibrium appears, it will then spread very quickly to the fringe
affecting everyone in the system
Not if the control of information is applied. Like the 80% of
the transaction are executed within milliseconds shows there is
not a viable 'hand of the market' - there is not an effective open
information system.
Doomer_Dan
This was a great post until the end:
We should try, instead, to develop alternative stocks of resources
such as renewable (or nuclear) energy. At the same time, we should
avoid to exploit highly polluting and expensive resources such as
tar sands, oil shales, deepwater oil, and, in general, applying
the "drill, baby, drill" philosophy.
Good lord, man! Nuclear!?! You just want to move the pollution
problem from fossil fuels to something even more dangerous!? The
entire post up to that point was a warning about the consequences
of pollution!
Every nuclear plant needs to be shut down before the collapse
occurs, or we may not be able to shut them all down when we need
to. Loss of capital virtually guarantees
that we will be unable to properly manage these plants at some point
after we hit that Seneca cliff.
DD
DoomInTheUK
1, 2011 - 11:59am Maybe the term "Parasitic Losses" would be more
apt than pollution. In this model anything that chokes the flow
from the resource is "pollution". So bureaucracy can be just as
much a detrimental effect as conventional ideas of pollution as
CO2 emissions and industrial waste or even soil erosion or over-fishing.
Nuclear would fit within an idea initial low parasitic loss,
the decommissioning is a problem though. I can imagine a time when
all our energy needs to be diverted to safely decommission the ageing
fleet of reactors.
forbin
unlikely , the scenario will be that will be plenty of "serfs" or
"dole people" to manually dig and move all that radio active stuff
to a "safer" place, away from anything the local "king" decides
is his. think feudal ......
Forbin.
YvesT
"I can imagine a time when all our energy needs to be diverted to
safely decommission the ageing fleet of reactors."
Personnally I cannot, in that case
that would be chaos for sometimes already, and the energy left would
for sure be used to heat houses or cook food and not to decommission
reactors, reactors that would be left doing whatever they "want"
...
On the other hand I cannot imagine keeping a somehow modern society
without nuclear
DoomInTheUK
2, 2011 - 3:41am OK, for the literal minded amongst us, I know it's
an absurd extrapolation to suggest all our energy production would
go to decommissioning. The point was intended to show that in Ugo's
model, the long time lag of the cost of the pollution from nuclear
power allows the downslope to be less severe. It's just another
type of kicking the can down the road.
-- note to self....remember that on TOD, irony means a bit like
iron ---
notadoomerwellmaybe
1, 2011 - 1:34pm The model described seems rather too
linear to me. In the real world things are often more digital and
this creates the Sencea effect.
For example we build parts in our factory, there is about 20
subcomponents. Ramping up production is slow, 20 suppliers have
to ramp up their production, people have to be trained, problems
solved etc. On the downside however if even one of these components
is missing production stops immediately.
In the larger world if one input becomes unavailable (food, rare
earth metals etc) then production of many other things also becomes
immediately impossible in a cascade of failures. How does this model
capture this behavior?
AlanfromBigEasy
1, 2011 - 2:49pm An excellent article that I forwarded
to a modeler friend of mine (from Milano).
Upon reflection, a non-complex system (hunting whales, cutting
down forests, expanding cultivated fields in virgin land) should
show some rough symmetry between rise and decline. If you will,
a one dimensional problem.
However, complexity in just two dimensions means that growth
is constrained to the most limiting factor, even if both factors
interact. So a two dimensional system grows much like a one dimensional
"system".
However, in a two dimensional system, if the two dimensions are
equally sized and interact equally, the decline should decline at
x^2. If one dimension dominates, the decline is somewhere between
the symmetric decline and x^2.
Real world systems, such as the Soviet Union decline, are mufti-variate
and decline is x^Y and looks much like a complete collapse "off
a cliff".
The severity of the Seneca Effect may be directly related to
the complexity of the system.
Thanks for Your Efforts,
Alan
ROCKMAN
1, 2011 - 3:13pm Excellent points Alan. But I would go one step
further. I made the point a few days ago: just look at one portion
of the model: Hubbert. Hubbert’s curve is not a single function.
The global flow of max oil flow potential at any point in time is
a function the decline of existing fields and the gains from new
discoveries. And to a large degree these two factors are independent.
Had I the data I could generate a fairly accurate decline curve
of all EXISITNG global production. Many folks have offered models
of future oil discoveries. A much more difficult task to predict
what you’ll find before you find it. But even many of those efforts,
however accurate or not, offer just future volumes of new discoveries…not
their timing nor their production rates as they come on. Consider
the many billions of bbls of oil discovered in DW Brazil. Lots of
oil for sure…in the ground. But have you seen a credible forecast
of Bz oil production rate for the next 40 years? I haven’t.
So the future shape of the Hubbert curve would be the composite
of the decline curve and the discovery curve. And even as it would
be so difficult to generate that composite curve it wouldn't really
tell the future story accurately IMHO. Let’s say by some great magic
we can predict the future oil POTENTIAL global production curve
between 2025 and 2040...what would that tell us about the availability
of oil to the US economy? Perhaps the KSA has the capability to
produce 10 million bopd in 2030. But how much will they be exporting…50%....10%?
And at what price? And let’s say it’s 50%: how much will be exported
to the US…80%...20%?
Granted no matter how difficult it might be to predict the right
side of the Hubbert curve with great accuracy, how important is
that physical relationship compared to the very complex and wholly
unpredictable (IMHO) of the above ground factors? Having an adequate
air supply in a sub is very important if someone is chocking you
to death.
AlanfromBigEasy
1, 2011 - 3:48pm I think that there is one prediction that one can
make about the "above ground factors" during the decline phase that
you claim are "unpredictable".
To wit - The "above ground factors" will be more active and chaotic
in the decline phase than during the growth phase.
Outside of TOD and fellow travelers, growth is not just seen
as desirable but absolutely essential. Our economic and social systems,
and our psychology, are all well adapted to growth.
These systems dysfunction, and interact in their dysfunction,
when growth turns to shrinkage.
Personally, I see the Tea Party as a dysfunctional response to
a lack of growth. Their dysfunction breeds additional dysfunctionality.
And this dysfunctionality increases the rate of decline due to "above
ground factors".
Best Hopes for Creating Efficient, Durable, Stable Subsystems,
Alan
writerman
1, 2011 - 4:21pm I don't post much anymore because... well, I think
the chance of us dealing with Peak Oil is about as likely as a socialist
party candidate becoming president of the United States. So I'm
following Princes advice and am partying like it's 1999, spending
everything I have on buying my daughters the very best education
money can buy, and letting them travel as much as they like, on
my platinum card. Easy come, easy go.
Seneca's cliff, or something like it, is refered to in an amazingly
well-argued, detailed, and thorough report by the German Bundeswehr's
Future Analysis Department, which is a military think tank. It's
about peak oil, which they calculate occured in 2010. It's like
the Hirsh Report but pulls no punches.
One of the central arguments is that for complex reasons the
fall in economic activity will probably be far, far, steeper, and
not mirror the Hubble bell curve. That's the Seneca bit.
The German report, which one can find on the web in full and
through Der Spiegel, is interesting for a number of reasons. Firstly
it's the best military report so far, as far as we know, as it fearlessly
confronts the enromous economic, political, social, and security
challenges we face. It almost reads like science fiction, or a doomsday
report. It's the military going public with the bad news, regardless.
It's also interesting that the military has 'leaked' the report
in an attempt to give it a life of its own and put pressure on the
politicians to begin getting the public ready for what's just around
the corner. That is waking them from their induced slumber.
The report also puts the Nato attack on Libya in a proper perspective.
pi
1, 2011 - 11:37pm But people are strong and resiliant...I see a
Seneca's cliff of maybe money, economic activity (trade), banking
transactions, airline travel, advertising, retail space rented,
plastic packaging generated, miles driven, etc and other things
that are more on the surface.
But that will mean that the world is throwing off or casting
off its oil-induced capitalist, commercial mantle. There will be
a great deal of desperation if such a thing occurred. The desperation
would find a focus on producing food and on getting the government
to procure it, even just a little. All of that commercial activity
that was knocked out by the financial cataclysm would leave a lot
of oil for governments to play around with.....and they would start
focusing on food production. I think population might decline more
slowly than we think. If this sort ofthing happens in different
places at different times, it could be slow.
flametree
1, 2011 - 6:19pm I live in southern Tasmania, I can tell you whale
hunting and tree cutting don't stop slowly. It takes time to gear
up, import machinery etc. There were several thousand people involved
in hunting and tree cutting. Cockle creek had six pubs. Now it does
not exist. Whale hunting stopped because of a sudden fallen in whales.
You harpoon a baby whale drag it to where you want the adults to
go and then kill the adults. Easy. For 10's of years you get 1000's
of whale. One or two years you you get 100's next you get about
none.
Trees go just as quickly, they good ones take hundreds of years
to grow. A generation or two to cut down.
Cheers
Hide_away
1, 2011 - 7:39pm After reading all the comments from
people about the seneca cliff, it is not easy to form an opinion
of what is likely to happen. Lots of talk of feedback loops "above
ground factors" and the like, yet no realistically possible examples.
So here is one..
Given that Westexas is correct in the ANE or close to it, then
a country like Australia will run into big problems very quickly
in a few short years. Australia produces just over 300,000 b/d (falling)
and imports ~600,000 b/d. Of those imports ~178,000 b/d are diesel
fuel. These figures from this source....
http://www.ret.gov.au/resources/fuels/aps/pages/default.aspx
If/when Australia's imports are suddenly stopped/greatly reduced
the effect will reverberate around the world. The diesel here is
used for agriculture, mining and heavy transport in the main. The
curtailment of wheat, coal and uranium exports will have massive
implications for the importing countries of those commodities. Countries
in the middle east import a lot of wheat from Australia. If the
price there suddenly skyrockets, how stable will those 'still stable'
remain.
Assumptions are made by many that the price mechanism will continue
to allocate oil, yet it is becoming abundantly clear that the bigger
stick has a lot of sway. Countries like Australia have small sticks,
yet missing out on the oil will have massive effects. Examples of
slow collapse are very hard to find (I haven't found any), yet examples
of fast collapse or the seneca cliff are very easy to find.
metalRules
1, 2011 - 8:28pm I'm hoping Australia's massive commitment to LNG
will mitigate this. By next decade the plan is that Australia will
rival Qatar as an exporter of LNG. Should the Woodside, Shell, and
other LNG projects succeed, Austalia may in fact be in a relatively
good position.
Hide_away
1, 2011 - 8:48pm The point about the seneca cliff and my post is
that what is used now is diesel, the equipment to run things now
is what is important. Massive LNG production will not happen if
there is a sudden drop in diesel supplies.
Westexas has ANE dropping from ~35 mbpd down to ~23 mbpd from
2010 to 2015. That does not give us "By next decade the plan". Given
a nice gentle BAU approach then the long term plans will probably
happen, the seneca cliff implies that those plans may not reach
fruition.
metalRules
1, 2011 - 9:23pm re: "Massive LNG production will not happen if
there is a sudden drop in diesel supplies." For the current plans
not to come to fruition due to diesel supply alone the Seneca Cliff
would need to be almost vertical, and total, (and pretty soon) otherwise
any remaining resource would be poured into completion of the LNG
projects. Yes, that is definitely a possibility, but I'm just more
optimist that that.
That still leaves the question of what happens when LNG production
declines, but being the eternal optimist I hope the message of the
inevitable and permanent decline of world resources will of got
through by then. Otherwise we face the mother of all Seneca Cliffs.
Hide_away
2, 2011 - 1:50am MetalRules,
If the LNG sector gets all the fuel they need when there is a
crunch, then who misses out? Is it going to be the farmers? or perhaps
other miners? Heavy transport cannot miss out because that is needed
to move the materials to build the LNG plants.
While being optimistic is nice, it does little in helping to
understand and prepare for what is about to hit us. A sudden fuel
crisis will inevitably have the politicians bring in fuel rationing,
with motorists feeling the pinch. Yet that will save petrol, not
diesel. Rationing diesel means some miss out, while price rises
and delays kick in.
The Seneca cliff will happen because people do not understand
the immediacy of the problem and the multiple feedback loops of
constrained fuel supplies.
metalRules
2, 2011 - 6:52am Really, I'm quite confident of completion of several
major LNG projects such as Pluto (Woodside) and Gladstone (Santos,
Petronas, Shell) because they are under development and will be
completed with a few years. Personally I do not believe we'll be
hit by a Senaca Cliff senario due to PO within that timeframe. If
you think the SWHTF earlier, then yes, you are right on (would be
very nasty indeed, since we would be totally unprepared)
Just so I don't sound like I'm being a total optimist, I'll give
you an example of a 'feedback loop' that paints a darker picture
for Australia. The way Woodside (and others I think but I can't
recall the details) funded, or where able to get approval, for these
hugely expensive projects was to forward sell much of next decade's
LNG supply to China. So while at first glance Australia's dependence
on imported fossil fuels may seem to be highly mitigated, the reality
could be a significant proportion of LNG production will actually
be exported, while we could suffer domestic fuel shortages.
National economies are so interwtined now I don't see how anyone
can divine with certainty what will happen when resource shortages
start to hit (oil will probably be the first, but not the last,
shortage we will face). I don't think it's gonna be pretty, but
I don't know if we will inevitably face a Senaca cliff.
EDIT: since I mention particular projects I should declare I've
got a small share holding of Woodside, and a larger holding of a
small spec oil and gas explorer that could do well if a Queensland
LNG facility is built (both stocks doing crap now, but hey, ever
the optimist)
RalphW
2, 2011 - 9:12am Australia is a major energy exporter. It will ALWAYS
be able to out-compete other diesel importers for the remaining
world supply of diesel exports.
Australia will not collapse unless the collapse is global. Here
in the UK, on the other hand...
Hide_away
2, 2011 - 7:49pm I would fully agree with you if price was the only
criteria for obtaining fuel.
However I feel this is a false assumption. In a world of declining
oil production other factors will come into play besides price.
westexas
1, 2011 - 9:45pm Strictly speaking, I outlined some scenarios. Note
that there are three key variables for what I define as ANE (Global
Net Exports less Chindia's combined net oil imports):
The rate of change in production for the top 33 oil exporting
countries;
The rate of change in consumption for the top 33 oil exporting
countries;
The rate of change in Chindia's net oil imports.
If we see a 2%/year production decline rate from 2010 to 2015,
and if internal consumption continues to increase at the current
rate and if Chindia's net oil imports increase at their current
rate, then ANE would be down to around 23 mbpd, versus 35 mbpd in
2010 and versus 40 mbpd in 2005. Basically, the volumetric ANE decline
rate would accelerate from an average rate of one mbpd per year,
2005 to 2010, to about 2.4 mbpd per year, 2010 to 2015.
Hide_away
2, 2011 - 1:27am Thanks Jeffrey, I really wish your numbers were
totally incorrect, however the realist in me knows that you are
right. They are scary numbers that have many just turning a blind
eye to them. I cannot see any fault in them other than you may be
to optimistic. Sudden "above ground factors" like what is happening
in Libya could easily accelerate the decline and are far more likely
as ANE decline.
I believe you work on GNE and ANE are close to a best case scenario.
It really is the business as usual case, yet people do not want
to believe it.
westexas
2, 2011 - 7:08am I think that there is a certain level of denial,
even among Peak Oilers, regarding "Net Export Math." I frequently
get qualitative objections to what is basically a quantitative argument.
My usual response is, show me some counterexamples, to-wit, find
an example of an oil exporting country, showing a sustained production
decline, with a meaningful level of consumption, that has cut that
consumption sufficiently so that the net export decline rate is
the same as, or less than, the production decline rate.
Note that 20 of the 33 top net oil exporters in 2005 showed lower
production in 2010, versus 2005.
Given an ongoing production decline rate in an oil exporting
country, unless the country's rate of change in consumption falls
at the same rate as, or at a rate faster than, the rate of decline
in production, the resulting net export decline rate will exceed
the production decline rate and the net export decline rate will
accelerate with time.
Jedi Welder
2, 2011 - 7:11am I am not sure how long India will keep growing.
More and more news are comming out about how they are struggling
with their electric grid. If you don't grow electric supply, you
don't grow the economy. Also it apears lots of the growth in the
economy has been on the credit card. Such a development is not sustainable.
My guess is China will outrun India vary fast in the grouth run
ahead of now.
westexas
As Yogi reportedly said, "It's tough to make predictions, especially
about the future." But the recent numbers do indicate some deceleration
in India. India's 2002 to 2010 rate of increase in net imports was
5.4%/year, but in 2010 they showed only a very slight increase in
net imports over 2009, partly because of an increase in production.
China's 2002 to 2010 rate of increase in net imports was 12%/year,
with a year over year rate of increase of 12.5%/year from 2009 to
2010. "Chindia's" overall 2002 to 2010 rate of increase in net imports
was 9.4%/year from 2002 to 2010.
lumina
After reading this post and the BBC article below, I think I saw
a potential Seneca cliff in the "projected number of functioning
LEO orbiting satellites":
Space Junk at Tipping Point, Says Report
Some computer models show the amount of orbital rubbish "has
reached a tipping point, with enough currently in orbit to continually
collide and create even more debris, raising the risk of spacecraft
failures," the research council said in a statement on Thursday.
...
The situation is critical, said Mr Kessler, a retired Nasa scientist,
because colliding debris creates even more of the junk.
"We've lost control of the environment," he said.
geek7
"We've lost control of the environment," he said.
Of course, we never had control of the space environment. What
is happening is that it is becoming painfully obvious that we never
really had control and that all planned activity based on the supposition
on control is now at risk.
Look for calls to develop spider web type sticky strands that
work in space. Yah, right!
augjohnson
I wish I could remember the Science Fiction story I read maybe a
couple decades ago. Seems that we earthlings had lost the ability
for space travel because of so much space junk that any additional
flights got hit and destroyed. Some alien race came along and offered,
for a huge fee, to clean out all the space junk so we could again
have access to space flight.
geek7
Ugo, Thanks for a brilliant article. Unfortunately, some readers
missed your point. Comments like "Your model is too simple, it doesn't
include (whatever)." and "Your model is too complicated. You made
a mistake, which I don't have time to identify.". But keep up the
good work. This isn't your first attempt, and I'm sure it won't
be your last.
One more substantive comment. Malthus and Verhulst models were
models of stocks and flows, but of one stock only, namely people.
Subsequent authors cast their models in terms of differential equations,
but historically there is a remarkable uniformity to how we model
nature. What changes over time is the number of stocks and the number
of flows, which always seems to increase. Trying to keep the model
simple enough for the reader to understand is, I think, a useful
innovation. But something is still needed to reach the whole audience.
Cheers
Ugo Bardi
Thanks, geek. The point I was trying to make has to do exactly with
this point: after having studied the whole story of "The Limits
to Growth" I was surprised to see how many people had criticized
the study without understanding it. Entire academic papers had been
written by people who didn't have the smallest idea of what they
were talking about. And they were world-renown economists!
So, I think there is a strong need for mind sized models but,
also, the other point which maybe I should have stressed more in
my post is that the models must also be based on thermodynamics.
This is a point that the authors of "The Limits to Growth" failed
to mention with sufficient strength - although they did say it.
So, I hope that this approach moves something, even though, I am
afraid, it won't so much!
Picarita_Basura
Great article, great discussion. Since most people don't know that
much about the less salacious parts of ancient Roman history, how
about changing the name, Seneca Effect, to one more well-known in
popular culture: the Wiley Coyote Effect? You know, he runs off
a cliff and his legs keep churning as if he could keep running?
Ugo Bardi
Wiley Coyote was mentioned in an earlier version of the post; I
deleted it to make the post shorter but - yes - you have a good
point. The Seneca effect starts when the Coyote suddenly discovers
that he is walking on thin air!
browning
Excellent article. I've been passing it around.
I do wish the system dynamics math were a bit clearer. The y-axis
values appear mixed up. I tried to replicate the second chart, and
succeeded only after applying multipliers to each of the stocks
and rates. It would have been nice to provide the small amount of
additional information, for those like me who want to replicate
these damn things.
This is good stuff.
AlanfromBigEasy
One of my areas of interest :-) is rail - intercity and urban.
I noted that many economic functions
would decline, at varying rates, as oil declined and economic dysfunctions
spread.
However, what if an economic function - two subsets of transportation
- expanded and dramatically increased efficiency (with virtually
no oil use) in the midst of an overall economic decline ?
My thought is that the remaining economic activity would reform
around the more efficient, oil free technologies and the last half,
2/3rds or 1/3rd of the Seneca decline would be aborted and converted
into either a much more moderate decline or even a steady state
economy.
Any thoughts ?
Alan
2ndlawrules
H.T. Odum would be quite pleased with your simple storage components/flows/dissipation-to-entropy
model. He was a great proponent of simple models to enhance understanding
of very complex systems. In reviewing your numerous articles on
TOD, I think that I perceive the hand of H.T.Odum in your understanding
of energy-materials systems. Were you at one time one of his graduate
students?
Having been such, on a regular basis I see on TOD the reverberations
of projections that Odum made time and again almost 40 years ago.
Keep up the good work Professor Bardi.
The Soviet Union was a nearly closed economy before collapsing; a
"mini-world" in itself. Notice how Russian oil production went down
rapidly after the peak; a classic Seneca cliff. Note also how production
picked up again afterwards. At some point, the Soviet Union ceased to
exist as an isolated economic system and it became part of the whole
world's economic system. At that point, the simple model that we have
been using does not work any longer; most likely because the capital
stock received an influx of resources that came from a region outside
the model.
Conclusion: a banquet of consequences
Very often, we fail to understand the delayed effects of our actions.
John Sterman reminds us of this point
in a talk on global warming quoting Robert Louis Stevenson as saying,
"Everybody, sooner or later, sits down to a banquet of consequences."
The models shown here tell us that the Seneca cliff is the result of
delayed consequences.
As always, the future is something that we build with our actions
and the models can only tell us what kind of actions will lead us, eventually,
to a certain outcome. Used in this way, models can be extremely useful
and can even be applied to systems which are much more modest than an
entire civilization, for instance to a single company or to our personal
relationships with other people. In all cases, the Seneca effect will
be the result of trying hard to keep things running as usual. In that
way, we may run out faster of the resource that keeps the system running:
be it a physical resource or a reserve of goodwill. The way to avoid
this outcome may be to let the system run the way it wants, without
attempting to force it to go the way we want it to go. In other words
we need to take things in life with some stoicism, as Seneca himself
would probably have said.
Thinking of the worldwide situation and of the problems involved,
global warming and resource depletion, what the models tell us is that
the Seneca cliff may be the inevitable result of putting too much strain
on already badly depleted natural resources. We should try, instead,
to develop alternative stocks of resources such as renewable (or nuclear)
energy. At the same time, we should avoid to exploit highly polluting
and expensive resources such as tar sands, oil shales, deepwater oil,
and, in general, applying the "drill, baby, drill" philosophy. All those
strategies are recipes for doom. Unfortunately, these are also examples
of exactly what we are doing.
I don't know what Seneca would say if he could see this planet-wide
effort we are making in order to put into practice the idea that he
expressed in his letter to his friend, Lucilius. I can only imagine
that he would take it with some stoicism. Or, maybe, he would comment
with what he said in his "De
Providentia" "Let Nature deal with matter, which is her own,
as she pleases; let us be cheerful and brave in the face of everything,
reflecting that it is nothing of our own that perishes."
Thanks to Dmitry Orlov for having been the source of inspiration
for this post with his article "Peak
Oil is History".
Perk Earl:
It's rather apparent with all the efforts being employed to get
more oil, such as tar sands, deep offshore, horizontal drilling
(super straws), etc. that every possible contingent effort is being
employed simply to remain on a plateau of oil production (since
05). In spite of these efforts, Brent continues to be in triple
digits per barrel.
Essentially the Seneca Cliff is being
pushed out in front of us and in so doing its edge crisply sharpened
and angled into a sharks fin. The question regarding
descent isn't if, but when and how fast and hard will we fall?
RockyMtnGuy
The article ignores or discounts the effect of non-conventional
oil technology (oil sands, enhanced oil recovery) as well as the
effects of economics (higher prices result redrilling of old oil
fields and the dragging out of oil field production in a long tail).
In reality, the amount of non-conventional oil in the world considerably
exceeds the amount of conventional oil, and in the long term most
oil production will be non-conventional. I can cite the example
of my own country, Canada, where conventional oil production peaked
during the 1970's and most of the oil production is non-conventional,
with current total production now considerably exceeding the 1970's
conventional peak.
RockyMtnGuy:
I wish for a systemic collapse.
That seems to be the motivation between a lot of the doomsters
and their doom theories. They can't live with the concept of a slow,
painful decline and desperately wish for a big crash.
In reality, geology will save the world from a Seneca cliff collapse
in oil production. You really cannot produce oil fields in a Seneca-like
fashion because oil fields (the majority of them) just don't work
that way. Toward the end of their lives they taper off gradually
and seem to last a lot longer than the producers had intended. The
big oil companies sell them off to the small companies, and then
the small companies sell them off to the mom-and-pop operations.
Most of the world's really big oil fields will still be producing
dribs and drabs of oil 100 years from now.
The Canadian production curve which I posted is really the anti-Seneca
of all anti-Seneca curves. That is a result of deliberate policy.
Canadian governments have regulated the oil industry with the intention
of turning the typical bell-shaped oil production curve into one
with a very, very long tail. Canada is still going to be a major
oil producer 100 years from now.
Luke H:
he big oil companies sell them off to the small companies, and
then the small companies sell them off to the mom-and-pop operations
Yeh in Oklahoma, Texas, and southern Alberta maybe, but how about
deep water GOM and Brazil, the Alaska North Slope and the North
Sea? More and more of our production is coming from operations like
these and they will shut down suddenly well before full field depletion
because of the shipping difficulty. Those type fields will forever
be beyond the reach of the Mom and Pop organization.
Maybe a Seneca Cliff will desribe the first third to half of
the production drop after the 'sustained peak' or plateau or whatever
you choose to call what oil producition appears to be hovering at
right now. But like you I do not feel oil production will completely
fall off the cliff--as long as we avoid the ultimate nuclear Seneca
Cliff.
Quite frankly I hope Canada is a major oil producer a century
from now--that would mean many things had managed to go right for
humanity and the bottleneck we look to be aimed at is at worst gently
tapered. Of course I had to call my loyal little dog away from a
cow and calf moose in the middle of this reply and and am watching
woodpeckers come right back to my feeders the first day they have
been restocked after being dry for a fortnight. I might not have
so optimistic a bent if I were sitting in a browned out, hundred
degree Phoenix or LA concrete and asphalt swelter.
ThisOne:
Right and wrong has nothing to do with it. If the Keystone XL
isn't built then the Canadians will build a pipeline west or east,
or there will be some other pipeline to get that oil to the coast
where it can get full market price. The economics are there to support
one of these pipelines. While I agree with the sentiment in protesting
the Keystone XL, I think it's misplaced. Even if the protesters
are successful in preventing the Keystone from being built, it's
only going to be a temporary victory before the next pipeline is
proposed. The real objective is closing down the oil sands development.
While I agree that putting any more CO2 into the atmosphere at
this point is evil, I don't think it's going to change the outcome
one bit. Those who use fossil fuels have more power than those who
do not. If the Canadians don't tap the oil sands, they will taken
over by a country that will. If you don't agree with me, google
'the carter doctrine'.
Evil is banal.
ewak
So is goodness or heroism:
"We may now entertain the notion that most people who become
perpetrators of evil deeds are directly comparable to those
who become perpetrators of heroic deeds, alike in being just
ordinary, average people. the banality of evil shares much with
the banality of heroism. Neither attribute is the direct consequence
of unique dispositional tendencies; there are no special inner
attributes of either pathology or goodness residing within the
human psyche or the human genome. Both conditions emerge in
particular situations at particular times when situational forces
play a compelling role in moving particular individuals across
a decisional line from inaction to action. There is a decisive
decisional moment when a person is caught up in a vector of
forces that emanate from a behavioral context. Those forces
combine to increase the probability of one's acting to harm
others or acting to help others. Their decision may or may not
be consciously planned or mindfully taken. Rather, strong situational
forces most often impulsively drive the person to action. Among
the situational action vectors are: group pressures and group
identity, the diffusion of responsibility for the action, a
temporal focus on the immediate moment without concern for consequences
stemming from the act in the future, presence of social models,
and commitment to an ideology."
--The Lucifer Effect, Phillip Zimbardo
Right and wrong has everything to do with it. All these actions
are moral as well as economic. Might makes right? The dollar decides?
I am helpless and inconsequential, so I cannot affect change? Shall
I profit from the banality of evil? It's BAU, can't stop it, don't
try.
Oct:
To get that product you have to rob the economy elsewhere, which
I think makes the claim difficult. You'd have to model the increase
in capital outlay for unconventional and determine the pollution
factors on the backside.
But unconventional oil is a stop-gap and not a cure for this
disease. Hard to imagine Canada supplying much net oil growth per
capita as conventional sources around the world wind down.
From my reading Canada will in the
end offset declines in Mexico.
Ghung
Sorry I missed this one, but I'll jump in up top. This first
thread, all about "unconventional oil", paying taxes, jobs, etc.,
really misses the point. Forcing oil (liquid fuel) production, whether
conventional, NG liquids, biofuels, whatever, blows bubbles and
forces consumption of arguably more necessary resources. Current
levels of liquid fuels production enables depletion of every other
finite and limited resource. Further, it enables the mother of all
unsustainable progressions: population growth. Just askin': What
happend to the big picture here?
I'm pretty much in agreement with Ugo's post. When it rains,
it pours. Oil cuts both ways. Better pack your parachutes.
jeppen:
Actually, current and increasing levels of liquids fuel
production enables the only non-starvation-and-war based path to
population stabilization and shrinkage there is. If it goes down,
the risk is high that the fertility rates will go up again.
Perk Earl:
Alright Rocky, but even if Canada has incredible amounts of non-conventional,
the flow rates are less than crude, the energy needed to extract
is greater, the cost to extract is greater and as much as Canadians
would like to think that tar sands will save them from post peak
oil, the economic reality is we'll probably all be in the same sinking
ship. Once the world economy has tanked, squeezing non-conventional
will probably not be cost effective.
So I think your idea of a positively-skewed bell-shaped curve
on the back side is at best, fantasy.
x:
Seneca background video: (3 parts)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hJ0g7IKWG7E
He believed people are too optimistic. Things going wrong should
be expected, prepared for and accepted.
drillo:
Ugo, thanks for this interesting posting.
I think it depends mainly on "timing" if there will be a rapid decline
or a smooth transition:
If mankind will find and apply solution for the challenges of peak
oil, climate change etc. then a smooth transition to a post-fossil
world is possible. But if we are too late then we will eventually
get to a point where we cannot stop the unsteerable wagon from rushing
down the spiral.
For example the British were lucky that they had coal at hand when
they had cut down all the trees on their island, so they could continue
with their industrial growth. Otherwise they would have soon declined
again to oblivion.
The timing issue is also described in the less-known second Hirsch
"report": Mitigation of maximum world oil production: Shortage scenarios
-
Energy Policy Volume 36, Issue 2, February 2008, Pages 881-889
From the abstract:
Examination of a number of future world oil production forecasts
showed multi-year rollover/roll-down periods, which represent
pseudoplateaus. Consideration of resource nationalism posits
an Oil Exporter Withholding Scenario, which could potentially
overwhelm all other considerations. Three scenarios for mitigation
planning resulted from this analysis: (1) A Best Case, where
maximum world oil production is followed by a multi-year plateau
before the onset of a monatomic decline rate of 2–5% per year;
(2) A Middling Case, where world oil production reaches a maximum,
after which it drops into a long-term, 2–5% monotonic annual
decline; and finally (3) A Worst Case, where the sharp peak
of the Middling Case is degraded by oil exporter withholding,
leading to world oil shortages growing potentially more rapidly
than 2–5% per year, creating the most dire world economic impacts.
In a nutshell he thinks: A plateau period might give us some
time to avoid a collaps. Whereas we wouldn't have this chance in
case of a sharp peak.
Ironborn:
We probably are at the point where we cannot effectively stop
the downward spiral. The plateau will last few more years, but it
will end sooner or later and the descent will then be accelerating
with passing time.
The current civilization is stagnating and I´m afraid that it´s
the best it can do. There is no impetus that would send us forward.
Renewables are not enough or they are rather too little too late.
Technology does not provide the solutions, only postpones the consequences.
When thinking about our problems, I often recall the following words
of Q about the Borg from Q Who Star Trek episode:
"You can't outrun them, you can't destroy them. If you damage
them, the essence of what they are remains. They regenerate
and keep coming. Eventually you will weaken. Your reserves will
be gone. They are relentless!"
Our reserves are not yet gone, but the systems are weakening.
Jedi Welder:
The thing that worries me wich I have been thinking about
lately is that we have many "slow declines" happening at once. Population
growth, climate change, oil decline, economic contraction, etc.
Each of those happen slowly, but when they occur at the same time,
the burden of all those combined slow faliures adds up to one big
collapse.
Mamba:
Jedi Welder said
... all those combined slow failures adds up to one big collapse.
I think most thinking people have already come to this conclusion
and are planning their lives accordingly. In my case this has amounted
to:
Having only one child and advising him to have none (he's 30
now); Learning all I can about permaculture and growing my own food;
Buying some rural land in an area not likely to be devastated by
climate change (ie not Texas); Taking early retirement; Buying essential
tools, clothing and various things (eg bikes and ancillary equipment)
to last the rest of my life (and my wife's life); Investing in precious
metals (300% gain in last few years); etc BTW, this is yet another
excellent article by Ugo Bardi, one of the most thoughtful modern
commentators.
lengould:
You're right about gold bugs, that valuation is way out of proportion,
an original speculative bubble. Compare gold to silver, platinum,
diamonds, etc.
michaeld
``Wind was 2.5% of world electricity production in 2010." and
electric energy was 16% (roughly) of the total mix ..
thus indeed a tiny contribution! even with your impossible growth
numbers ..
just look at saturation effects in growth in Germany
Yvan Dutil
Seneca effect is a consequence of an
increase in production efficiency and a simultaneous increase in
extraction difficulty. Production efficiency is a
power law function of the capital (ex: Cobb-Douglas), while extraction
cost will increase exponentially at some point. Then you end up
with a Pareto-Malthus resources extraction model.
Perk Earl :
Seneca effect is a consequence of an increase in production
efficiency and a simultaneous increase in extraction difficulty.
Very well described, and in that description it's easy to see
the progression is towards a cliff, almost like the crest of a wave
that will subsequently fall. The increase in efficiency accelerates
the top of the wave forward, while the increasing extraction difficulty
puts the brakes on the lower part of the wave, causing a crest,
a graphed shark fin shape.
enicar:
"Very well described, and in that description it's easy
to see the progression is towards a cliff, almost like the crest
of a wave that will subsequently fall. The increase in efficiency
accelerates the top of the wave forward, while the increasing extraction
difficulty puts the brakes on the lower part of the wave, causing
a crest, a graphed shark fin shape."
That is what scares me the most - because even as a "prepper"
- I realize how much ancient knowledge I have lost to become a modern
man. To provide an example" firewoood in the NorthWest corner of
Wisconsin. Yes - the house was heated via an outdoor fireplace -
built on high technology - dependent upon water pressure- dependent
upon an electrically operated well, dependent upon an electrically
operated blower.
Wood was delivered off of a semi-trailer, unloaded via a crane
mounted upon the trailer. They stacked the logs in a nice pile -
which I then cut into manageable logs with a gas -powered chainsaw.
I did split the logs with a hand operated axe - and stacked them
by hand - but imagine if it was without machines.
First: I have no idea/knowledge of the tools required to take
down a tree without a gas chainsaw - much less maintenance/construction
of such machines. How to get the quantity of logs to my place? No
knowledge of horses/skids/harnesses.... not even having access...
How to cut the logs into pieces - without a chainsaw - no idea.
If the Ax handle breaks - no idea....Of course - no electricity
- no water circulation - no blower - what then?
If I even had all the tools - how would I manage to sharpen/maintain/replace
them.
I have provided the above for thought, from actual experience.
It does lead me to believe that in any situation where power, electric/petroleum
fuel was absent for a period of time - I might not want to be present
any longer.
lengould:
I grew up in (cold!!) Northern Canada with no electricity,
gas or other fossil fuels available. We cut trees with a swedesaw
and an axe. Skidded them to a road with a horse. Sledged them to
the farm with horse-drawn sleigh. Bucked with the swedesaw, split
with an axe. Takes about three man-months work to provide a family
with heating and cooking counting a man-month as a current working
month, eg. 21 x 8 hour days (of course we worked 12 to 14 hour days
30 days per month, and I was doing a mans work by age ten to twelve,
so it only took us perhaps 5% to 10% of available time.)
Dad could, with the proper tools, precisely sharpen and set the
saw teeth so it could run in green wood. Use a hand set and files.
I know the theory but never learned how. I could probably figure
it out. I can replace an axehandle very quickly, and could make
one from ash with a drawknife fast too.
We bought a chainsaw the first year they were developed. (actually
a gas-powered reciprocating Wright even before that)
RickM
German military perspective
Drawing from Feasta's excellent "Tipping Point" (March 2010),
the Bundeswehr analysts point out how an economic tipping point
could lead to runaway effects:
"In the medium term, the global economic system and all market-oriented
economies would collapse.
1. Economic entities would realise the prolonged contraction and
would have to act on the assumption that the global economy would
continue to shrink for a long time.
2. Tipping point: In an economy shrinking over an indefinite period,
savings would not be invested because companies would not be making
any profit. For an indefinite period, companies would no longer
be in a position to pay borrowing costs or to distribute profits
to investors. The banking system, stock exchanges and financial
markets could collapse altogether.
3. Financial markets are the backbone of global economy and an integral
component of modern societies. All other subsystems have developed
hand in hand with the economic system. A disintegration can therefore
not be analysed based on today’s system. A completely new system
state would materialise" (p. 58 of new translation).
Few systems in our world respond faster than financial markets,
nor with greater oscillation/volatility, so it is easy to imagine
how some runaway effects could quickly be set in motion. The Bundeswehr
authors place a heavy emphasis on human factors like awareness and
expectation, and what the likely human responses to those perceptions
would be.
By the way, a complete English translation is now available from
Bundeswehr, so perhaps our media will finally examine and report
on this unique, credible study.
http://www.energybulletin.net/stories/2011-08-30/complete-english-transl...
phil harris
Thanks for the link to Bundeswehr doc
... a so-called “tipping point” is exceeded where linear
developments become chaotic ...
For example, if the global economy shrinks for an indeterminate
period of time, a chain reaction that might destabilise the
global economic system is imaginable. Depending
on point in time and the level of dependence of the affected
society, such a peak-oil-induced, economic tipping point might
have such severe systemic implications that only a few general
statements as to economic, political, and social developments
beyond the tipping point can be made.
Indeed
ian807
Specifically, oil at a high enough
price and low enough energy return breaks just-in-time supply chains
worldwide. I'm pretty sure that this will be our
first ratchet down and yes, it will happen suddenly. The first oil
producing country that decides to hoard oil for domestic consumption
(civilian and military), will take a large proportion of the world's
oil off the market suddenly. If more than one country does so at
the same time, the supply chain could fall very rapidly thereafter.
Sudden supply shocks will the first domino. First they break
supply chains, and then the economy. International commerce will
probably never recover to previous levels.
Oct
As I have come to understand supply chains, we are using China
as a petrochemical source for many industries including processed
foods, fertilizers, electronics, paints and other consumer items.
These feedstocks from China can make lower end items that can be
assembled in say Japan or Germany. So the question will be how well
China can export fertilizer and other essential petrochemical stocks.
It seems the world is using China to do the lower level petrochemical
stuff -- is it a greenwashing? Yep. We are shifting this pollution
to Asia. So would Seneca's cliff appear first in China? Well if
that is true then the entire industrial base would collapse in a
single shot. If China collapses, industrial production is essentially
toast.
metalRules
The first oil producing country that
decides to hoard oil for domestic consumption...
Such hoarding would be grim for the world
economy, but I wonder how likely it is on
a wide scale? Many of the current oil exporting
countries are economic and/or political
basket cases, so I’d question if they have
the capacity reduce their revenue to any
great extent by hoarding
BillH on August 31, 2011 - 11:29pm Hi, Ugo -- good article.
You might be interested in Out of Gas: A Systems Perspective on Potential
Petroleum-Fuel Depletion I did for Pegasus Communications back in 2003
(http://pegasuscom.com/aar/model5.html). It exhibits much the same behavior
as your model.
What I discovered in later experimentation is that the shape of the
fall-off is rather sensitive to the shape of the nonlinearity in the
model. So anyone working on a softer landing might look both at ways
to replace petroleum resources and at ways to modify the effective shape
of that function.
Ugo Bardi on September 1, 2011 - 2:26am Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top Thanks, Bill. I'll look at your model
as soon as I have a moment. I received several notes by people who had
developed models similar to mine. It seems that what I did was, mostly,
to give a name to something that was already well known!
dmiller on September 1, 2011 - 12:35am Ugo, the
Seneca effect sounds an awful lot like Jack Alpert's "death sprial".
As resources, mainly food, become more scarce the rich divert more of
those dwindling resources to protecting their own resources. Nobody
ever said the downside had to be a smooth transition. And my gut tells
me that things will go south very, very quickly.
Ugo Bardi on September 1, 2011 - 2:27am Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top This kind of gut feeling is shared
by many, many people, apparently!
Magnus Redin on September 1, 2011 - 11:57am Permalink | Subthread
| Parent | Parent subthread | Comments top Aye, and it is a bad feeling
leading to depressed activity.
dohboi
Good points. It is good to keep in mind
that the Eastern Roman/Byzantine Empire
lasted quite a while, and, in spite of rotating
dynasties, the complex bureaucracy that
kept Egypt and China running lasted millennia.
But we are like an Egypt that loses the
Nile, or a China that loses its Yangtse
and Huangho. FFs are the life blood of the
modern economy, and we have to walk away
from them because:
a) they are running out anyway and in
the mean time are taking more and more energy
input to get the energy out;
b) they cause devastating local and regional
harms and are due to cause ever more as
we go into the ever more risky stuff; and
c) and most damningly, their effluents
are causing the planet to swing out of the
'goldilocks' comfort zone that humans (and
most other life currently on the planet)
evolved in.
It is (c), AGW, that really has the likelihood
of taking on a 'live of its own' hurtling
us toward a hellish unlivable world in a
remarkably short time. Paleo-climatologists
now have found numerous cases of the climate
shifting suddenly, in decades or less, from
one state to another very different one.
Most PO'ers that think CC is always slow
so we don't have to worry about it are not
up to speed on this research.
Multiple feedback, some already kicking
in, and some of enormous power, and all
feeding back on themselves and each other,
can/will turn our relatively small initial
forcing into a runaway train--our pebble
(relatively speaking) becoming an avalanche...and
we all live at the bottom and on the sides
of the hill with no where to run.
Ugo Bardi on September 2, 2011 - 7:55am Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top The Roman Empire was peaking at the
time of Seneca. It had not yet started to decline, but I think the writing
was on the wall and that Seneca himself perceived it.
Ulpian on September 2, 2011 - 10:15am Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top I'm not so sure about that. No empire
lasts forever but the moment when irreversible decline sets in can only
be known with hindsight. Rome needed to keep pedalling to maintain revenue,
which meant conquering new lands and using their wealth to feed its
treasury. Unfortunately the world outside the rich Mediterranean had
little to offer and became a drain on revenue, much like Africa was
to Britain. Dacia was probably the last territory to be conquered that
brought huge wealth, and Dacia was incorporated after Seneca lived.
Pessimism is another matter of course and can colour many things, including
approaches to energy and PO. I am a pessimist!
geek7 on September 2, 2011 - 9:59pm Permalink | Subthread | Parent
| Parent subthread | Comments top Seneca had studied Greek Stoic philosophy,
which was developed starting 3 centuries before he lived. The thought
he expressed in the letter may not have been original with him. Maybe
he had read something in the Greek and was translating to his Latin
speaking relative. Pessimism is something else than stoicism.
Constantinople was called Byzantion in Seneca's time and had not
yet fallen to the Romans. I think it fell early in the 2nd century CE,
but can't quickly find clear statement on the web. The Roman Empire
was very much still growing in Seneca's time. Constantinople remained
the capital of eastern Rome until it was captured by the Ottoman Turks
in 1453 AD. Collapse of Constantinople was very sudden and very final,
but surely not forseen by Seneca.
I think the quotation is not at all about collapse in the Grand Sweep
of History, but rather a simple observation about collapse of buildings,
fall of cities to a besieging army, crops ruined by a rainstorm, etc.
We can put our own interpretation on the words. They certainly hold
a special significance to us, after it has been suggested by Ugo, but
what significance they held for Seneca is open to speculation. And really,
if you don't see their truth in our time from your own observation of
today then you have a very different world view than I have. Or are
you trying to pick apart Ugo's blog by questioning the meaning of the
words? Think of it as a literary reference not to be taken literally
but to set the scene for the following discussion.
Ulpian:
I was taking none of it literally. That is my whole point. Sudden
collapse is the point here and I was merely responding to using
the empire as an illustration of collapse. I disagreed that it took
three hundred years and would, as I stated, prefer to call it more
like one hundred years. This might be called a quick decline and
follow the Seneca curve. And I am the pessimist by the way; I don't
confuse stoicism with pessimism, although I do believe there are
overlaps.
As for Byzantium it was conquered for Rome in 64BC and I reiterate
that I did not include the eastern - Byzantine - empire in my observation.
The eastern Roman empire can either be called a great success as
it maintained the fiction of Roman polity for a thousand years,
or it might be seen as the slowest dying of all empires and therefore
the antithesis of the Seneca idea.
hinson:
"Collapse of Constantinople was very sudden and very final"
On the contrary. The Byzantine Empire waxed and waned over many
centuries, but its road to eventual destruction was via the Crusades,
during which it suffered blow after blow over a period of about
250 years. In fact, at then end of the
Crusades it was virtually a partitioned rump state. It began to
get back on its feet somewhat by the time the Turks arrived, but
just was too weak to resist.
I strongly recommend the 3-volume history (or the shorter 1-volume
version!) "Byzantium" written by John Julius Norwich, a fascinating
history wonderfully written. It was
a great shame that this Christian/Roman/Greek civilisation was lost
so thoroughly, and that we in the West have almost completely forgotten
about it. The Crusades represented an awful "Civil
War" within the European sphere.
Feunfeun:
I think our civilization has a greater
possibility of quick panic than any other civilization before.
It all depends on how fast information travel amongst the various
structures that compose it. At the core we have a financial infrastrucutre
where 80 % of the transaction are executed within milliseconds.
On those transcations and their equilibrium depends our entire hierrachy
of what valuable and not . On the fringe of this infrastructure
we have the fact that most of the people in the west own a smartphone
or watch information continously trough a media outlet. So if a
truly negative information which destroy the precarious equilibrium
appears, it will then spread very quickly to the fringe affecting
everyone in the system ...
YvesT
Yes agree on that, another thing is that more and more some key
systems rely on just a few guys having the knowledge to run them
(at least in IT), and all this is very poorly documented, and
it is in fact getting worse over time
with ever increasing complexity, a good set up for a domino effect
...
RalphW
I am the sole surviving IT employee at my organisation. We used to
be 7. I hold together a disparate system of servers and desktops
and websites that is essential to every job here, jerry-built together
over a decade. Everything is bespoke, no two systems have the same
OS and patch level. When I take a week off the other 30-odd employees
cross their fingers and pray that nothing major goes down.
YvesT
1, 2011 - 12:49pm Wow, and is there a plan for at least another
guy for backup and knowledge transfer or is it seen as "normal situation"
? Do you still do some modifications/"improvments" ? The organisation
I work for is much bigger (a telco), but there are so many f#àking
systems it's truly amazing, many outsourced here and there with
so many layers of specifications or whatever between users and developers,
and in the end plenty of key systems with one or two guys able to
modify/repair them. Not to mention that we keep on adding some while
saying we should reduce ...
FMagyar
1, 2011 - 2:05pm True story: I know of a situation in the corporate
finance department of a large hospital where the sole surviving
IT person with the requisite level of knowledge to keep the whole
system up and running actually died of a heart attack while on the
job... They had a hell of a time and enormous expense for hiring
outside expertise to come in and figure out what that one guy knew...
They could have hired help, given the poor guy a thorough physical
and given him a raise and a vacation and it probably would have
been a lot cheaper! That's what you get when bean counters get to
run organizations that depend on systems which they do not understand,
nor do they get why those systems are so important.
notanoilman
1, 2011 - 3:50pm I used to contract in to cover people. Winging
it doesn't even start to cover it. Organisations really have no
idea of the financial value of such people. Companies should at
least take out 'key man' insurance cover to pay for what it would
take in an emergency. Having another trained person is a must. Oh,
the companies used to whinge about how much they had to pay me,
IMHO it was nowhere near enough.
NAOM
eric blair
1, 2011 - 7:51pm It all depends on how fast information travel amongst
the various structures that compose it
Except information flow is controlled. Or even faked.
Twitter shutdowns, things like BART blocking cell phones, historical
things like "Remember the Maine" "The Lusitania did not carry weapons/ammunition"
"Gulf of Tomkin" "Lavion Affair" Deletions of posts on web forums.
So if a truly negative information which destroy the precarious
equilibrium appears, it will then spread very quickly to the fringe
affecting everyone in the system
Not if the control of information is applied. Like the 80% of
the transaction are executed within milliseconds shows there is
not a viable 'hand of the market' - there is not an effective open
information system.
Doomer_Dan
This was a great post until the end:
We should try, instead, to develop alternative stocks of resources
such as renewable (or nuclear) energy. At the same time, we should
avoid to exploit highly polluting and expensive resources such as
tar sands, oil shales, deepwater oil, and, in general, applying
the "drill, baby, drill" philosophy.
Good lord, man! Nuclear!?! You just want to move the pollution
problem from fossil fuels to something even more dangerous!? The
entire post up to that point was a warning about the consequences
of pollution!
Every nuclear plant needs to be shut down before the collapse
occurs, or we may not be able to shut them all down when we need
to. Loss of capital virtually guarantees
that we will be unable to properly manage these plants at some point
after we hit that Seneca cliff.
DD
DoomInTheUK
1, 2011 - 11:59am Maybe the term "Parasitic Losses" would be more
apt than pollution. In this model anything that chokes the flow
from the resource is "pollution". So bureaucracy can be just as
much a detrimental effect as conventional ideas of pollution as
CO2 emissions and industrial waste or even soil erosion or over-fishing.
Nuclear would fit within an idea initial low parasitic loss,
the decommissioning is a problem though. I can imagine a time when
all our energy needs to be diverted to safely decommission the ageing
fleet of reactors.
forbin
unlikely , the scenario will be that will be plenty of "serfs" or
"dole people" to manually dig and move all that radio active stuff
to a "safer" place, away from anything the local "king" decides
is his. think feudal ......
Forbin.
YvesT
"I can imagine a time when all our energy needs to be diverted to
safely decommission the ageing fleet of reactors."
Personnally I cannot, in that case
that would be chaos for sometimes already, and the energy left would
for sure be used to heat houses or cook food and not to decommission
reactors, reactors that would be left doing whatever they "want"
...
On the other hand I cannot imagine keeping a somehow modern society
without nuclear
DoomInTheUK
2, 2011 - 3:41am OK, for the literal minded amongst us, I know it's
an absurd extrapolation to suggest all our energy production would
go to decommissioning. The point was intended to show that in Ugo's
model, the long time lag of the cost of the pollution from nuclear
power allows the downslope to be less severe. It's just another
type of kicking the can down the road.
-- note to self....remember that on TOD, irony means a bit like
iron ---
notadoomerwellmaybe
1, 2011 - 1:34pm The model described seems rather too
linear to me. In the real world things are often more digital and
this creates the Sencea effect.
For example we build parts in our factory, there is about 20
subcomponents. Ramping up production is slow, 20 suppliers have
to ramp up their production, people have to be trained, problems
solved etc. On the downside however if even one of these components
is missing production stops immediately.
In the larger world if one input becomes unavailable (food, rare
earth metals etc) then production of many other things also becomes
immediately impossible in a cascade of failures. How does this model
capture this behavior?
AlanfromBigEasy
1, 2011 - 2:49pm An excellent article that I forwarded
to a modeler friend of mine (from Milano).
Upon reflection, a non-complex system (hunting whales, cutting
down forests, expanding cultivated fields in virgin land) should
show some rough symmetry between rise and decline. If you will,
a one dimensional problem.
However, complexity in just two dimensions means that growth
is constrained to the most limiting factor, even if both factors
interact. So a two dimensional system grows much like a one dimensional
"system".
However, in a two dimensional system, if the two dimensions are
equally sized and interact equally, the decline should decline at
x^2. If one dimension dominates, the decline is somewhere between
the symmetric decline and x^2.
Real world systems, such as the Soviet Union decline, are mufti-variate
and decline is x^Y and looks much like a complete collapse "off
a cliff".
The severity of the Seneca Effect may be directly related to
the complexity of the system.
Thanks for Your Efforts,
Alan
ROCKMAN
1, 2011 - 3:13pm Excellent points Alan. But I would go one step
further. I made the point a few days ago: just look at one portion
of the model: Hubbert. Hubbert’s curve is not a single function.
The global flow of max oil flow potential at any point in time is
a function the decline of existing fields and the gains from new
discoveries. And to a large degree these two factors are independent.
Had I the data I could generate a fairly accurate decline curve
of all EXISITNG global production. Many folks have offered models
of future oil discoveries. A much more difficult task to predict
what you’ll find before you find it. But even many of those efforts,
however accurate or not, offer just future volumes of new discoveries…not
their timing nor their production rates as they come on. Consider
the many billions of bbls of oil discovered in DW Brazil. Lots of
oil for sure…in the ground. But have you seen a credible forecast
of Bz oil production rate for the next 40 years? I haven’t.
So the future shape of the Hubbert curve would be the composite
of the decline curve and the discovery curve. And even as it would
be so difficult to generate that composite curve it wouldn't really
tell the future story accurately IMHO. Let’s say by some great magic
we can predict the future oil POTENTIAL global production curve
between 2025 and 2040...what would that tell us about the availability
of oil to the US economy? Perhaps the KSA has the capability to
produce 10 million bopd in 2030. But how much will they be exporting…50%....10%?
And at what price? And let’s say it’s 50%: how much will be exported
to the US…80%...20%?
Granted no matter how difficult it might be to predict the right
side of the Hubbert curve with great accuracy, how important is
that physical relationship compared to the very complex and wholly
unpredictable (IMHO) of the above ground factors? Having an adequate
air supply in a sub is very important if someone is chocking you
to death.
AlanfromBigEasy
1, 2011 - 3:48pm I think that there is one prediction that one can
make about the "above ground factors" during the decline phase that
you claim are "unpredictable".
To wit - The "above ground factors" will be more active and chaotic
in the decline phase than during the growth phase.
Outside of TOD and fellow travelers, growth is not just seen
as desirable but absolutely essential. Our economic and social systems,
and our psychology, are all well adapted to growth.
These systems dysfunction, and interact in their dysfunction,
when growth turns to shrinkage.
Personally, I see the Tea Party as a dysfunctional response to
a lack of growth. Their dysfunction breeds additional dysfunctionality.
And this dysfunctionality increases the rate of decline due to "above
ground factors".
Best Hopes for Creating Efficient, Durable, Stable Subsystems,
Alan
writerman
1, 2011 - 4:21pm I don't post much anymore because... well, I think
the chance of us dealing with Peak Oil is about as likely as a socialist
party candidate becoming president of the United States. So I'm
following Princes advice and am partying like it's 1999, spending
everything I have on buying my daughters the very best education
money can buy, and letting them travel as much as they like, on
my platinum card. Easy come, easy go.
Seneca's cliff, or something like it, is refered to in an amazingly
well-argued, detailed, and thorough report by the German Bundeswehr's
Future Analysis Department, which is a military think tank. It's
about peak oil, which they calculate occured in 2010. It's like
the Hirsh Report but pulls no punches.
One of the central arguments is that for complex reasons the
fall in economic activity will probably be far, far, steeper, and
not mirror the Hubble bell curve. That's the Seneca bit.
The German report, which one can find on the web in full and
through Der Spiegel, is interesting for a number of reasons. Firstly
it's the best military report so far, as far as we know, as it fearlessly
confronts the enromous economic, political, social, and security
challenges we face. It almost reads like science fiction, or a doomsday
report. It's the military going public with the bad news, regardless.
It's also interesting that the military has 'leaked' the report
in an attempt to give it a life of its own and put pressure on the
politicians to begin getting the public ready for what's just around
the corner. That is waking them from their induced slumber.
The report also puts the Nato attack on Libya in a proper perspective.
pi
1, 2011 - 11:37pm But people are strong and resiliant...I see a
Seneca's cliff of maybe money, economic activity (trade), banking
transactions, airline travel, advertising, retail space rented,
plastic packaging generated, miles driven, etc and other things
that are more on the surface.
But that will mean that the world is throwing off or casting
off its oil-induced capitalist, commercial mantle. There will be
a great deal of desperation if such a thing occurred. The desperation
would find a focus on producing food and on getting the government
to procure it, even just a little. All of that commercial activity
that was knocked out by the financial cataclysm would leave a lot
of oil for governments to play around with.....and they would start
focusing on food production. I think population might decline more
slowly than we think. If this sort ofthing happens in different
places at different times, it could be slow.
flametree
1, 2011 - 6:19pm I live in southern Tasmania, I can tell you whale
hunting and tree cutting don't stop slowly. It takes time to gear
up, import machinery etc. There were several thousand people involved
in hunting and tree cutting. Cockle creek had six pubs. Now it does
not exist. Whale hunting stopped because of a sudden fallen in whales.
You harpoon a baby whale drag it to where you want the adults to
go and then kill the adults. Easy. For 10's of years you get 1000's
of whale. One or two years you you get 100's next you get about
none.
Trees go just as quickly, they good ones take hundreds of years
to grow. A generation or two to cut down.
Cheers
Hide_away
1, 2011 - 7:39pm After reading all the comments from
people about the seneca cliff, it is not easy to form an opinion
of what is likely to happen. Lots of talk of feedback loops "above
ground factors" and the like, yet no realistically possible examples.
So here is one..
Given that Westexas is correct in the ANE or close to it, then
a country like Australia will run into big problems very quickly
in a few short years. Australia produces just over 300,000 b/d (falling)
and imports ~600,000 b/d. Of those imports ~178,000 b/d are diesel
fuel. These figures from this source....
http://www.ret.gov.au/resources/fuels/aps/pages/default.aspx
If/when Australia's imports are suddenly stopped/greatly reduced
the effect will reverberate around the world. The diesel here is
used for agriculture, mining and heavy transport in the main. The
curtailment of wheat, coal and uranium exports will have massive
implications for the importing countries of those commodities. Countries
in the middle east import a lot of wheat from Australia. If the
price there suddenly skyrockets, how stable will those 'still stable'
remain.
Assumptions are made by many that the price mechanism will continue
to allocate oil, yet it is becoming abundantly clear that the bigger
stick has a lot of sway. Countries like Australia have small sticks,
yet missing out on the oil will have massive effects. Examples of
slow collapse are very hard to find (I haven't found any), yet examples
of fast collapse or the seneca cliff are very easy to find.
metalRules
1, 2011 - 8:28pm I'm hoping Australia's massive commitment to LNG
will mitigate this. By next decade the plan is that Australia will
rival Qatar as an exporter of LNG. Should the Woodside, Shell, and
other LNG projects succeed, Austalia may in fact be in a relatively
good position.
Hide_away
1, 2011 - 8:48pm The point about the seneca cliff and my post is
that what is used now is diesel, the equipment to run things now
is what is important. Massive LNG production will not happen if
there is a sudden drop in diesel supplies.
Westexas has ANE dropping from ~35 mbpd down to ~23 mbpd from
2010 to 2015. That does not give us "By next decade the plan". Given
a nice gentle BAU approach then the long term plans will probably
happen, the seneca cliff implies that those plans may not reach
fruition.
metalRules
1, 2011 - 9:23pm re: "Massive LNG production will not happen if
there is a sudden drop in diesel supplies." For the current plans
not to come to fruition due to diesel supply alone the Seneca Cliff
would need to be almost vertical, and total, (and pretty soon) otherwise
any remaining resource would be poured into completion of the LNG
projects. Yes, that is definitely a possibility, but I'm just more
optimist that that.
That still leaves the question of what happens when LNG production
declines, but being the eternal optimist I hope the message of the
inevitable and permanent decline of world resources will of got
through by then. Otherwise we face the mother of all Seneca Cliffs.
Hide_away
2, 2011 - 1:50am MetalRules,
If the LNG sector gets all the fuel they need when there is a
crunch, then who misses out? Is it going to be the farmers? or perhaps
other miners? Heavy transport cannot miss out because that is needed
to move the materials to build the LNG plants.
While being optimistic is nice, it does little in helping to
understand and prepare for what is about to hit us. A sudden fuel
crisis will inevitably have the politicians bring in fuel rationing,
with motorists feeling the pinch. Yet that will save petrol, not
diesel. Rationing diesel means some miss out, while price rises
and delays kick in.
The Seneca cliff will happen because people do not understand
the immediacy of the problem and the multiple feedback loops of
constrained fuel supplies.
metalRules
2, 2011 - 6:52am Really, I'm quite confident of completion of several
major LNG projects such as Pluto (Woodside) and Gladstone (Santos,
Petronas, Shell) because they are under development and will be
completed with a few years. Personally I do not believe we'll be
hit by a Senaca Cliff senario due to PO within that timeframe. If
you think the SWHTF earlier, then yes, you are right on (would be
very nasty indeed, since we would be totally unprepared)
Just so I don't sound like I'm being a total optimist, I'll give
you an example of a 'feedback loop' that paints a darker picture
for Australia. The way Woodside (and others I think but I can't
recall the details) funded, or where able to get approval, for these
hugely expensive projects was to forward sell much of next decade's
LNG supply to China. So while at first glance Australia's dependence
on imported fossil fuels may seem to be highly mitigated, the reality
could be a significant proportion of LNG production will actually
be exported, while we could suffer domestic fuel shortages.
National economies are so interwtined now I don't see how anyone
can divine with certainty what will happen when resource shortages
start to hit (oil will probably be the first, but not the last,
shortage we will face). I don't think it's gonna be pretty, but
I don't know if we will inevitably face a Senaca cliff.
EDIT: since I mention particular projects I should declare I've
got a small share holding of Woodside, and a larger holding of a
small spec oil and gas explorer that could do well if a Queensland
LNG facility is built (both stocks doing crap now, but hey, ever
the optimist)
RalphW
2, 2011 - 9:12am Australia is a major energy exporter. It will ALWAYS
be able to out-compete other diesel importers for the remaining
world supply of diesel exports.
Australia will not collapse unless the collapse is global. Here
in the UK, on the other hand...
Hide_away
2, 2011 - 7:49pm I would fully agree with you if price was the only
criteria for obtaining fuel.
However I feel this is a false assumption. In a world of declining
oil production other factors will come into play besides price.
westexas
1, 2011 - 9:45pm Strictly speaking, I outlined some scenarios. Note
that there are three key variables for what I define as ANE (Global
Net Exports less Chindia's combined net oil imports):
The rate of change in production for the top 33 oil exporting
countries;
The rate of change in consumption for the top 33 oil exporting
countries;
The rate of change in Chindia's net oil imports.
If we see a 2%/year production decline rate from 2010 to 2015,
and if internal consumption continues to increase at the current
rate and if Chindia's net oil imports increase at their current
rate, then ANE would be down to around 23 mbpd, versus 35 mbpd in
2010 and versus 40 mbpd in 2005. Basically, the volumetric ANE decline
rate would accelerate from an average rate of one mbpd per year,
2005 to 2010, to about 2.4 mbpd per year, 2010 to 2015.
Hide_away
2, 2011 - 1:27am Thanks Jeffrey, I really wish your numbers were
totally incorrect, however the realist in me knows that you are
right. They are scary numbers that have many just turning a blind
eye to them. I cannot see any fault in them other than you may be
to optimistic. Sudden "above ground factors" like what is happening
in Libya could easily accelerate the decline and are far more likely
as ANE decline.
I believe you work on GNE and ANE are close to a best case scenario.
It really is the business as usual case, yet people do not want
to believe it.
westexas
2, 2011 - 7:08am I think that there is a certain level of denial,
even among Peak Oilers, regarding "Net Export Math." I frequently
get qualitative objections to what is basically a quantitative argument.
My usual response is, show me some counterexamples, to-wit, find
an example of an oil exporting country, showing a sustained production
decline, with a meaningful level of consumption, that has cut that
consumption sufficiently so that the net export decline rate is
the same as, or less than, the production decline rate.
Note that 20 of the 33 top net oil exporters in 2005 showed lower
production in 2010, versus 2005.
Given an ongoing production decline rate in an oil exporting
country, unless the country's rate of change in consumption falls
at the same rate as, or at a rate faster than, the rate of decline
in production, the resulting net export decline rate will exceed
the production decline rate and the net export decline rate will
accelerate with time.
Jedi Welder
2, 2011 - 7:11am I am not sure how long India will keep growing.
More and more news are comming out about how they are struggling
with their electric grid. If you don't grow electric supply, you
don't grow the economy. Also it apears lots of the growth in the
economy has been on the credit card. Such a development is not sustainable.
My guess is China will outrun India vary fast in the grouth run
ahead of now.
westexas
As Yogi reportedly said, "It's tough to make predictions, especially
about the future." But the recent numbers do indicate some deceleration
in India. India's 2002 to 2010 rate of increase in net imports was
5.4%/year, but in 2010 they showed only a very slight increase in
net imports over 2009, partly because of an increase in production.
China's 2002 to 2010 rate of increase in net imports was 12%/year,
with a year over year rate of increase of 12.5%/year from 2009 to
2010. "Chindia's" overall 2002 to 2010 rate of increase in net imports
was 9.4%/year from 2002 to 2010.
lumina
After reading this post and the BBC article below, I think I saw
a potential Seneca cliff in the "projected number of functioning
LEO orbiting satellites":
Space Junk at Tipping Point, Says Report
Some computer models show the amount of orbital rubbish "has
reached a tipping point, with enough currently in orbit to continually
collide and create even more debris, raising the risk of spacecraft
failures," the research council said in a statement on Thursday.
...
The situation is critical, said Mr Kessler, a retired Nasa scientist,
because colliding debris creates even more of the junk.
"We've lost control of the environment," he said.
geek7
"We've lost control of the environment," he said.
Of course, we never had control of the space environment. What
is happening is that it is becoming painfully obvious that we never
really had control and that all planned activity based on the supposition
on control is now at risk.
Look for calls to develop spider web type sticky strands that
work in space. Yah, right!
augjohnson
I wish I could remember the Science Fiction story I read maybe a
couple decades ago. Seems that we earthlings had lost the ability
for space travel because of so much space junk that any additional
flights got hit and destroyed. Some alien race came along and offered,
for a huge fee, to clean out all the space junk so we could again
have access to space flight.
geek7
Ugo, Thanks for a brilliant article. Unfortunately, some readers
missed your point. Comments like "Your model is too simple, it doesn't
include (whatever)." and "Your model is too complicated. You made
a mistake, which I don't have time to identify.". But keep up the
good work. This isn't your first attempt, and I'm sure it won't
be your last.
One more substantive comment. Malthus and Verhulst models were
models of stocks and flows, but of one stock only, namely people.
Subsequent authors cast their models in terms of differential equations,
but historically there is a remarkable uniformity to how we model
nature. What changes over time is the number of stocks and the number
of flows, which always seems to increase. Trying to keep the model
simple enough for the reader to understand is, I think, a useful
innovation. But something is still needed to reach the whole audience.
Cheers
Ugo Bardi
Thanks, geek. The point I was trying to make has to do exactly with
this point: after having studied the whole story of "The Limits
to Growth" I was surprised to see how many people had criticized
the study without understanding it. Entire academic papers had been
written by people who didn't have the smallest idea of what they
were talking about. And they were world-renown economists!
So, I think there is a strong need for mind sized models but,
also, the other point which maybe I should have stressed more in
my post is that the models must also be based on thermodynamics.
This is a point that the authors of "The Limits to Growth" failed
to mention with sufficient strength - although they did say it.
So, I hope that this approach moves something, even though, I am
afraid, it won't so much!
Picarita_Basura
Great article, great discussion. Since most people don't know that
much about the less salacious parts of ancient Roman history, how
about changing the name, Seneca Effect, to one more well-known in
popular culture: the Wiley Coyote Effect? You know, he runs off
a cliff and his legs keep churning as if he could keep running?
Ugo Bardi
Wiley Coyote was mentioned in an earlier version of the post; I
deleted it to make the post shorter but - yes - you have a good
point. The Seneca effect starts when the Coyote suddenly discovers
that he is walking on thin air!
browning
Excellent article. I've been passing it around.
I do wish the system dynamics math were a bit clearer. The y-axis
values appear mixed up. I tried to replicate the second chart, and
succeeded only after applying multipliers to each of the stocks
and rates. It would have been nice to provide the small amount of
additional information, for those like me who want to replicate
these damn things.
This is good stuff.
AlanfromBigEasy
One of my areas of interest :-) is rail - intercity and urban.
I noted that many economic functions
would decline, at varying rates, as oil declined and economic dysfunctions
spread.
However, what if an economic function - two subsets of transportation
- expanded and dramatically increased efficiency (with virtually
no oil use) in the midst of an overall economic decline ?
My thought is that the remaining economic activity would reform
around the more efficient, oil free technologies and the last half,
2/3rds or 1/3rd of the Seneca decline would be aborted and converted
into either a much more moderate decline or even a steady state
economy.
Any thoughts ?
Alan
2ndlawrules
H.T. Odum would be quite pleased with your simple storage components/flows/dissipation-to-entropy
model. He was a great proponent of simple models to enhance understanding
of very complex systems. In reviewing your numerous articles on
TOD, I think that I perceive the hand of H.T.Odum in your understanding
of energy-materials systems. Were you at one time one of his graduate
students?
Having been such, on a regular basis I see on TOD the reverberations
of projections that Odum made time and again almost 40 years ago.
Keep up the good work Professor Bardi.
naked capitalism
Interview conducted by Philip Pilkington, a journalist and writer
based in Dublin, Ireland.
Philip Pilkington: Your new book ‘Extreme Money’ is primarily
a story about what our society has become — or rather: what we have
become. It tells the tale of a sort of — although I hate to use jargonistic
neo-English — hyper-financialised world
in which money, or perhaps even the idea of money, has knitted itself
into the social fabric and taken over. While there are
some fascinating caveats in the book dealing with the inner-workings
of this strange world, it is primarily the culture that I wish to focus
on here.
So, let’s begin.
At the end of the debt-chains that blew up in the US in 2008 there
was tied a mortgage-holder. In your book you describe the architecture
that was built up to ensure that people who should not have received
these mortgages did. It struck me that it was a remarkably cynical culture
that grew up around this industry in the US — far more so than what
formed in Ireland, where I’m from. Indeed, an entire dialect of fraud
seems to have mushroomed in this industry during this period. Can you
talk a little about all this?
Satyijat Das: It goes back to how financial institutions make
money – primarily, by lending other people money (that has always been
and still remains the core of banking profits).
But there are a limited number of people
you can lend to who will pay you back. Initially, when finance de-regulated
(in the 1980s) there were opportunities to lend to people who were good
credits but were restricted in their access to money. However, as banks
expanded you exhausted the pool of people who could lend to and then
moved onto the others – until you came to people who couldn’t ever really
pay you back.
So the trick was to hide or get rid of the risk of non-payment –
it became a case of ‘NMP’ (not my problem!) or as it is termed by the
finance-crats: ‘risk transfer’. So you made loans that you shouldn’t
and then transferred them to people who probably didn’t quite grasp
the risk fully or were incentivised to look the other way. It was a
culture of fraud and self delusion.
Mortgage brokers just lent to anyone
they could find. Once they figured out the game borrowers just lied
about their finances – this is why terms like ‘liar loans’ and ‘NINJAs’
(no assets no jobs or assets) sprung up in the mortgage industry. In
a way it would have been downright unpatriotic of these consumers not
to participate in this game – as remember they were now the engine of
economic growth. Even minor players like valuers were complicit. There
were ‘drive-by valuations’, where the valuer literally drove past the
property in order to assess it. If the property value was insufficient
to justify the loan, then the valuer added the required margin for kerb
value.
Everybody cynically took advantage of the system that developed.
Mortgage brokers didn’t disclose the risk to banks who didn’t disclose
them to rating agencies who then rated them at levels inconsistent with
the real risk and investors bought this whole nonsense because they
were AAA securities. The whole thing took on a momentum of its own as
everyone was making too much money to care how it was being made. No
one was interested in that quaint thing called the ‘truth’.
The self delusion was astonishing. When the ratings proved to be
egregiously wrong, chairman and chief executive Harold ‘Terry’ McGraw
III defended S&P: ‘A couple of assumptions we made didn’t work out and
we just totally missed on the US housing recession.’
There was the proverbial conga line of people who all participated
in and deluded themselves into this the dialectic of fraud. I suppose
no one cared as long as they thought it was working and they were getting
richer. Predictably it ended in tears.
PP: There’s something so enclosed, so incestuous with those
involved in the financial markets. In your book you document how the
hedge fund industry in particular displayed this insularity to a rather
remarkable degree. Some of your anecdotes remind me of a group of late-adolescent
males preparing for a drinking trip or a football match. You worked
in and around this industry, what do you make of this dynamic? What
effects does it have on the way these people make decisions?
SD: Fraternities; ‘frat boys’ (and they are mainly boys) as
the Americans would say. It’s a monoculture. They generally go to the
same schools, the same universities; they have similar backgrounds and
spend time with each other reinforcing their narrow worldview. Even
the few outsiders who make it in – usually by dint of sheer desire and
skill, usually in making money – seek to be ‘insiders’. It means that
they can only see the world through the same lenses and perspectives.
They can’t think outside the consensus – whatever it is at a given time.
They can’t see that things could be different to what they perceive
it to be.
They also see themselves as superior beings – ‘God but with a better
suit’. The reason for their superiority is that they make more money
than anyone else which in my view is purely accidental. But in their
minds they see money and brilliance as synonymous. David Hare captured
this neatly in his play ‘The Power of One’. He has a character, who
looks remarkably like Gillian Tett from the Financial Times, say: “These
people genuinely believe they’re masters of the universe. And why are
they masters of the universe? Because they’re paid fifty times as much
as anyone else. So they must be cleverer than anyone else.” Unfortunately,
as subsequent events demonstrated, they weren’t that clever; they were
just in the right place at the right time, at least for a while.
This culture creates a kind of ‘financial nihilism’ – those on the
inside can’t see the consequences of their actions on other people at
all. That’s because other people are inferior – outside the bubble.
Justin Cartwright in his novel ‘Other People’s Money’ has one of his
characters describe how financiers see ordinary people: “The rest of
us are just the extras, without speaking parts, just fill in the blank
spaces in the frame.” I think that’s accurate – these people really
have a weird sense of being always right, not to mention generally superior.
They can’t see what damage they have caused. They still think that they
were right. The fascinating thing is that ordinary people and even powerful
people like politicians actually believed that they were really special.
Maybe, they still do.
PP: How disturbing. And this seems to reach all levels, right?
In your book you portray the upper-management as vacuous clones. They
come across as simply mouthpieces that spout vague jargon in order to
ensure that everyone continues to ‘believe’ in whatever it is that they’re
selling at a given time. Surely this isn’t the typical picture of an
‘entrepreneur’ taking risks and innovating to make money while shattering
bureaucracies and truisms?
SD: It’s amazing how much money you can make just shuffling
paper backwards and forwards. Malcolm Gladwell wrote a piece praising
John Paulson who made a killing from the subprime disaster as an entrepreneur.
But what did he make? What did he leave behind? Paul Volcker, the former
chairman of the Federal Reserve, argued: “I wish someone would give
me one shred of neutral evidence that financial innovation has led to
economic growth — one shred of evidence. US financial services increased
its share of value added from 2% to 6.5% but is that a reflection of
your financial innovation, or just a reflection of what you’re paid?”
Management and directors of financial institutions cannot really
understand what is going on – it’s simply not practical. They cannot
be across all the products. For example, Robert Rubin, the former head
of Goldman Sachs and Treasury Secretary under President Clinton, encouraged
increased risk taking at CitiGroup. He was guided by a consultant’s
report and famously stated that risk was the only underpriced asset.
He encouraged investment in AAA securities assuming that they were ‘money
good’. He seemed not to be aware of the liquidity puts that Citi had
written which meant that toxic off-balance sheet assets would come back
to the mother ship in the case of a crisis. Now, if he didn’t understand,
others would find it near impossible. And I’m talking about executive
management.
Non executives are even further removed. Upon joining the Salomon
Brothers Board, Henry Kaufman, the original Dr. Doom found that most
non-executive directors had little experience or understanding of banking.
They relied on board reports that were, “neither comprehensive … nor
detailed enough … about the diversity and complexity of our operations.”
Non-executive directors were reliant “on the veracity and competency
of senior managers, who in turn … are beholden to the veracity of middle
managers, who are themselves motivated to take risks through a variety
of profit compensation formulas.”
Kaufman later joined the board of Lehman Brothers. Nine out of ten
members of the Lehman board were retired, four were 75 years or more
in age, only two had banking experience, but in a different era. The
octogenarian Kaufman sat on the Lehman Risk Committee with a Broadway
producer, a former Navy admiral, a former CEO of a Spanish-language
TV station and the former chairman of IBM. The Committee only had two
meetings in 2006 and 2007. AIG’s board included several heavyweight
diplomats and admirals; even though Richard Breeden, former head of
the SEC told a reporter, “AIG, as far as I know, didn’t own any aircraft
carriers and didn’t have a seat in the United Nations.”
PP: Okay, you say that it’s impossible to tell what’s really
behind many financial assets. I think most people would accept that.
But a lot of things in this world are uncertain and most of us seem
to get by fairly well. Are you sure we’re talking about simple ignorance
here or are we talking about willed ignorance? I mean, there’s a fine
line between the two but still, at some level these executives must
say to themselves, “Wow! I really have no idea what’s going on here!
I have responsibility for a great deal of societal wealth, of pension
funds, of taxpayer guaranteed money — and yet, I have no idea what I’m
doing.”
I don’t want to make it out that they’re all engaged in fraud — I
don’t believe that, although some undoubtedly are — but if a doctor
can tried and convicted for criminal negligence, then surely we are
not dealing with simple ignorance. You’ve worked in the industry; you’ve
met these people; what do you think?
SD: It’s silly to think that everybody in finance is ‘evil’
or engaged in fraud (though there are people who assert that). Most
people involved are very smart, diligent, hard working and passionate
about what they do. Ironically, so were most of the people who created
great social upheavals – the Chinese Cultural Revolution, Pol Pot’s
Year Zero project, pogroms etc.
It’s ‘groupthink’. They have ways of thinking about the world. They
think it’s the right way so they keep trying it again and again. At
least until there is a horrendous disruption and then they go: “Oh dear!
There’s a problem.”
Take Alan Greenspan. He thought deregulated markets were the solution.
He thought that any problem could be fixed by flooding the system with
money. He was wrong, but even today he doesn’t really see that his world
view is erroneous. They are very good at rationalisation and don’t tolerate
dissent.
As for responsibility, they are doing what is accepted practice –
they think they are doing the best for their stake holders. Galbraith’s
observation is very accurate: “The conventional having been made more
or less identical with sound scholarship, its position is virtually
impregnable. The sceptic is disqualified by his very tendency to go
brashly from the old to the new. Were he a sound scholar… he would remain
with the conventional wisdom.”
As you long as you follow convention you are unlikely to be successfully
prosecuted or made liable. Ultimately that’s the only purpose of corporate
governance – to ensure that by following a set of accepted practices
you make yourself and your organisation litigation proof.
That’s what is really interesting about this period of history. I
think you parsed it accurately when you said that extreme money changed
the world by altering the way we think about money; by embedding it
into the social fabric. I would go further though; it changed our ways
of approaching problems and thinking. That’s the most interesting thing
about it – some would say sinister.
This is also why it’s so difficult to fix. It’s like a shift in our
views of the cosmos – does the sun spin around the earth or vice versa?
It took a few centuries to change that – despite evidence as to the
correct view. I think David Hume was right when he noted: “All plans
of government, which suppose great reformation in the manners of mankind,
are plainly imaginary.”
PP: One much commented on phenomenon in the financial markets
is that they’ve started recruiting very highly educated people, such
as physicists. This seems like a total waste of resources – Fukushima
melts down, as physicists help create turbulence in the markets. Maybe
you could say something about this? But also, in the book you give the
impression that, even though these people are highly educated, perhaps
even overly educated for their role, they still engage in groupthink.
I’d love to get your perspective on that.
SD: Finance has led to a serious misallocation of resources.
The best and the brightest moved from real engineering into financial
engineering. If you believe that real growth comes from innovation,
improvements in productivity etc. then this was a serious issue.
The reasons were also interesting. The supply of jobs in science,
for example, decreased as the Cold War wound down and the research jobs
in academic institutions and things like the Bell Labs became scarcer.
Another reason was the disproportionate rewards available in finance.
It wasn’t related to the value created by finance. It was really the
fact that financial products were sometimes mispriced because of complexity
and lack of transparency and also because it was possible to measure
contributions more directly. How do you measure a surgeon’s or nurse’s
value in terms of the work they do? In contrast, a trader can tell you
immediately what they think they made.
Scientists applied their approaches to modelling to markets. The
problem is that it is much more difficult to model financial outcomes
than people think because we don’t really understand the process very
well. Former Goldman Sachs’ quant Emanuel Derman, a trained physicist,
was right when he observed that : “In physics, a model is correct if
it predicts the future trajectories of planets or the existence and
properties of new planets… In finance, you cannot easily prove a model
right by such observations.” Derman concluded that: “Trained economists
have never seen a really first-class model.” Most financial models are
wrong, only the degree of error is in question. Differential equations,
positive definite matrices or the desirable statistical properties of
an estimator rarely determine the price of traded financial instruments.
So this was all an egregious waste of resources.
Of course, it begs the question why people used these models and
spent so much money on them. The answer to this is quite troubling:
it was for a significant part a gigantic fudging exercise. The models
were really created to package up relatively simple products and make
them more complicated to allow banks to earn economic rents – that is,
excess returns – from them. They were designed to arbitrage capital
rules and increase leverage. They were also useful in helping banks’
upfront earnings. Everybody appeared very clever, but it was all kind
of a fake sophistication. Why would anyone want to trade a dollar/yen
double barrier digital knockout with Elvis pelvic thrusts? None of this
appears productive to me, but a lot of resources went into the process.
And as everybody was making a lot of money doing this stuff it was hardly
in anyone’s interest to stand up and point out the reality of what modern
finance had become.
PP: It’s really interesting that you mention the lack of scientific
funding after the Cold War. The eminent economic historian Philip Mirowski
has noted this time and again. In his books he writes about how scientists
found themselves increasingly in oversupply as the Cold War ran down
and spending on military research dwindled. He contends that much of
the ‘mathematicisation’ of modern economics – that is, the move away
from realistic theories that help the public purpose and into ‘pure’
models that don’t really do or say anything – was due to this emigration
from the hard sciences. Clearly without the threat of the ‘Evil Empire’
Western governments no longer see as much need to spend on expensive
research. I mean, while I’m not hugely keen on the military-industrial
complex, at least a lot of this research ended up serving the public
purpose when it was released by the military.
Now we’re seeing less interest in real innovation and more interest
in releasing our best and brightest into the toxic waste dump that is
the financial sector. Without the government to spend large outlays
on serious research, these people have moved into the private sector.
And since the private sector is geared toward nothing but making a quick
buck the results are catastrophic. While it’s difficult to make prognostications
do you see any evidence of this changing? In your experience were the
scientists you encountered in the finance sector in any way disillusioned
with what they were doing? Especially so after the 2008 crash?
SD: You probably need to ask the ‘quants’ that question. After
Traders… came out, I was outed as “anti-quant” (whatever that means!).
My observation would be that most people who are honest think the
science is trivial. Many really don’t quite get the impact of what they
do – it’s a sort of ‘cogs in a machine’ syndrome. I know a few who find
their work less than satisfying – it’s a lot like Stfan Zweig’s observations
of chess in The Royal Game. “Thought that leads nowhere, mathematics
that adds up to nothing, art without an end product, architecture without
substance.”
But they have their consolations. They get paid a lot for what they
do, certainly more than they could ever make in their scientific pursuits,
unless they struck it really lucky. They have also created a fascinating
tribal culture – awards, societies, tribal leaders and, naturally, critics
(most notably Nassim Nicolas Taleb). The culture would excite anthropologists
and ethnographers and you wouldn’t have to go to the Gobi desert to
do the fieldwork.
As for changes. It’s hard to make the types of changes that you need.
Keynes hit it on the head when he observed that: “the difficulty lies
not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones.” Unfortunately,
finance generally approximates what John Kenneth Galbraith astutely
predicted does happen: “faced with the choice between changing one’s
mind and proving there is no need to do so, almost everyone gets busy
on the proof.”
Part II coming soon, in which Satyajit Das and Philip Pilkington
discuss carnivalesque ‘money shows’, the function of the financial system,
‘haves and have nots’ and much more…
Posted by Yves Smith at 12:01 am
Innocent Bystander
12:11 am I take issue with the notion that the sad mathematization
of economics is the fault of physicists. Having studied both math
and economics, the level of math used in economics is laughable.
When physicists get involved in economics you do not get kindergarden
notions like the Black Scholes option pricing model (a “Nobel Prize”
for solving a stock second year college differential equation) but
something a lot more sophisticated. See for example Bouchaud’s “Theory
of financial risk” or Sornette’s “Why markets crash”.
The first thing all these physicists do is look at the data,
something economists forgot to do after Adam Smith. They have only
recently started dipping their toes into the water of actual data.
Look at the hard time Mandelbrot was given for pointing out that
changes in financial market prices did not obey a normal distribution,
which economists had decided, from pure thought, they must have.
Yves Smith
2:04 am You seem to be missing Das’ point. Physicists and mathematicians
HAVE been hired in droves by Wall Street, including ones with top
pedigrees (as in PhDs in pure math from top rated programs). He
clearly says he does not think this is a good thing
And as Das has explained elsewhere, quite a few of these “quants”
do not bother understanding the phenomena underlying the data they
have been asked to parse.
Maju
2:11 am Most delicious interview. Laugh and cry all at the same
time. Thanks, Philip.
DocG
3:02 am There’s plenty a gold, so I been told:
http://amoleintheground.blogspot.com/
Fraud Guy
3:11 am What I take out of this is that you have a large number
of people who are highly skilled in mathematics, trained to analyze
and find a solution to a problem on a purely theoritical level,
and hired to find solutions to the problem “$OURS > $THEIRS”,
then put into a tribal structure where
personal value is strongly correlated to compensation, then managed
and abetted by persons who, are borderline or actual sociopaths,
and who got their experience during a time when all valuations tended
strongly positive.
I can see how this turns out well.
Hugh
3:30 am Pilkington: “I don’t want to make it out that they’re all
engaged in fraud — I don’t believe that”
Das: “It’s silly to think that everybody in finance is ‘evil’
or engaged in fraud (though there are people who assert that).”
For Pilkington and Das, it is a toxic mixture of attitude, bad
behavior, and yes, some fraud, but basically they believe that the
underlying system is sound. But what gives the lie to their views
is the houcoudanode upon which it depends. We are to believe that
no one in the finance industry could see or be expected to see a
multi-trillion dollar housing bubble built on millions of individual
frauds with scams and cons at every point overlain by an even larger
system of multi-multi-trillion dollar bets and Ponzis, none of which
could be paid off on. Except there were many of us out here who
did see these things. Precisely because they were so vast A) they
were dead easy to see and B) so were their consequences.
There is this weird push and pull
between downplaying fraud and seeing it everywhere, the financial
world as toxic dump. I mean which is it? Fraud receives
a few mentions, but not a word about criminality so of course nothing
about kleptocracy. The result is a mishmash. People did things.
Things happened. It is all so agentless. It’s like some people stored
some gas cans. Oh, and the cans happened to be near your house.
They also like to smoke, flick matches and other harmless fratboy
fun like throwing flares and grenades. As it was no one really understood
that this would cause the gas cans to go up, did I mention they
stored them not so much near your house but against your house,
and oh yes, they leaked. Anyway it was a complete surprise that
your house burnt down. And it is purely coincidence that they had
taken out insurance on your house a few days before, just in case
it did go up in flames. But it is preposterous that there was anything
like a criminal conspiracy in this. Just because the judge was their
uncle and the police their cousins, and there was no investigation
or prosecution, anyone could tell it was just a series of unfortunate
events, at most some immature and misguided behavior.
attempter
3:55 am Hugh, you selected the exact two quotes I did.I’ll just
add that both of these flat-earth assertions are made with zero
evidence offered. Neither offers even a single example of what a
big bank does which isn’t fraudulent, or a single example of anything
it does which is productive or necessary at all.
This is religious fundamentalism, or insidious lying.
It goes back to how financial institutions make money – primarily,
by lending other people money (that has always been and still remains
the core of banking profits).
Let them explain why this lending,
the alleged “purpose” of banks, should exist at all. The answer
can’t include any reference to capitalist imperatives. It must be
prior to capitalism and stand on its own if capitalism ceased to
exist. (Like the way it’s inadmissible to define a term using other
forms of the same term.)
IbiLeaks
3:32 am Wonderful read…did Satyajit Das quoted all those dead economists
verbatim or did the interviewer later pulled a Johann Hari when
transcribing the interview?
Can’t wait for part two of the interview
Matt Stoller the former Senior Policy Advisor to
Rep. Alan Grayson and a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute. You can
reach him at stoller (at) gmail.com or follow him on Twitter at
@matthewstoller
Last month we had New York Fed Board Member Kathryn Wylde whining
and meddling about Eric Schneiderman’s investigation into big banks.
That seriously backfired. HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan put pressure
on him as well, and that didn’t go over so well. And after Tom Miller
petulantly stopped allowing Schneiderman on his AG conference calls,
there was a mini-media storm over the rancid character of the DOJ
and bankster-owned Miller. None of the insider signals worked, so
now it’s on to stage two of neutralize Schneiderman. It’s time for….
the smear campaign!
Two editorial boards are coming out and using innuendo to paint
Schneiderman as a self-promoter looking to make a name for himself
by unfairly tarnishing banks. It’s pretty standard – throw up rumors
that have a narrative basis in the American psyche, and chip away
at public faith. Here’s the Washington Post’s editorial.
The majority of the other attorneys general, led by Tom Miller
of Iowa, have kicked Mr. Schneiderman out of the negotiations, accusing
him of making excessive demands. Mr. Schneiderman protests that
the banks are to blame, for trying to use the robo-signing case
to get immunity they could use on the securities front. Mr. Miller
and his colleagues respond that they have no intention of letting
the banks off that particular hook.
We’re tempted to declare a pox on everyone’s house — or at least
say that the banks are getting what they deserve for being sloppy,
and that the attorneys general are getting what they deserve for
exploiting an overblown scandal to shake down the banks.
After all, the banks will have to come up with that $20 billion
somehow — perhaps through reduced lending and higher fees. That
wouldn’t be a problem if the money were going to compensate victims.
But it won’t, because there don’t seem to be many victims
Notice the lie (repeated below in the other editorial) – that
the majority of Attorneys General threw Schneiderman off the 50
state task force. No, it was Tom Miller’s decision, period. Or at
least, that’s what some newspaper called The Washington Post reported
last week.
So why is the Post lying about this situation? Why the split
between the news and editorial? It might have something to do with,
well, money! You see, the Washington Post newspaper isn’t profitable,
the company makes most of its money from its for-profit educational
subsidiaries (hence the nickname “Kaplan Test Prep Daily), including
its for-profit university. And guess who is investigating the shady
practices of the subprime university educational racket?
Mr. Schneiderman is looking into whether the schools and their
recruiters misrepresent their ability to find students jobs, the
quality of instruction, the cost of attending, and their programs
accreditation, among other things. Such activities could constitute
deceptive trade practices or fraud.
Oops. Looks like the Washington Post has a financial interest
in kneecapping the New York Attorney General. While Kaplan isn’t
being investigated, the entire sector is reliant on government subsidies
that are at risk should criminal charges nail a few of the schools.
Next up is the New York Daily News, a paper which has now gone
after Schneiderman twice for… being an elected official. The latest
hit is that Schneiderman sent out an email to his political list
after getting pressure from Tom Miller and the Obama administration.
The horror! A politician wants to communicate his side of the story
after the President, major money center banks and the New York Fed
go after him. How inappropriate! For shame!
It’s not like the regulators, banks, and Tom Miller’s office
have been leaking like a sieve and lying to the press for months.
Oh wait, they have. And it’s not like Tom Miller took enormous sums
of money from out of state banks and then turned around to negotiate
a sweetheart deal with those same banks. Oh wait, he did.
Finally, there’s Mort Zuckerman himself, the real estate billionaire
who owns the New York Daily News. He wouldn’t have a financial interest
in the banks, would he? Well, let’s see. In 2008, he was busted
shilling for a bailout of Citigroup, because Citigroup rented more
than a million square feet of space from his company. The guy went
on TV and passionately advocated public policy positions that would
help his bottom line, while owning major media outlets. Fascinating.
Schneiderman’s gotten on the wrong side of some very aggressive
and very powerful people. It’s enjoyable to watch them flail around,
at least for a little while.. They have given him hints, they have
told him publicly and privately to back down, and you can hear the
increasing frustration at New York cocktail parties. He should just
know better, right? For now, it’s fruitless – they can’t sway him,
and they can’t destroy him, and everything they try backfires. It’s
not only hilarious, it’s also a window into just how these people
exercise power.
More on this topic (What's this?) Chuvit cursing corrupt politicians
(The Analytic, 7/19/11) Indian Government shamelessly defends Corrupt
Officials,Black Money despite claims to the contrary (Green World
Investor, 1/25/11) Report: U.S. Moving Up the Ladder Amongst Corrupt
Nations (Fund my Mutual Fund, 10/26/10) Read more on Corrupt at
Wikinvest Topics: Banana republic, Banking industry, Guest Post,
Legal, Politics
Email This Post Posted by Yves Smith at 6:30 pm
37 Comments » Links to this post
37 Comments: •Cheyenne
6:56 pm Drew my conclusion when I came across this:
“the Washington Post newspaper
isn’t profitable, the company makes most of its money from
its for-profit educational subsidiaries (hence the nickname
Kaplan Test Prep Daily), including its for-profit university.
And guess who is investigating the shady practices of the
subprime university educational racket?
Mr. Schneiderman is looking
into whether the schools and their recruiters misrepresent
their ability to find students jobs, the quality of instruction,
the cost of attending, and their programs accreditation,
among other things. Such activities could constitute deceptive
trade practices or fraud.
Oops. Looks like the Washington Post has a financial interest
in kneecapping the New York Attorney General.”
What an old-school ass-kickng Stoller has delivered here.
Does the Washington Post have the nut sack to posit an explanation?
Economista Non Grata
“… the company makes most
of its money from its for-profit educational subsidiaries
(hence the nickname Kaplan Test Prep Daily), including its
for-profit university…”
Wrong…..! They are whores… That’s how they make their money….
K Ackermann
2:45 am But “whores” makes them sound like they only care about
money.
They are really whores with cloaked agendas that go beyond
mere money.
wunsacon
6:58 pm Good eye, Matt. Nicely done.
barrisj
7:00 pm Re: WaPo editorial, “…shaking down the banks”. I say,
“……shaking down the banks”?? WTF? Banksters have proven themselves
time and time again over these several years to be exemplary
practitioners of outright extortion of taxpayer coin, and if
there ever was a reason to invoke RICO indictments, the actions
and tactics of the TBTF brotherhood would head the list. Oh,BTW,
how’s that Buffet investment in BAC working out? Rather bloody-awful,
as Moynihan sent to the gallows two more senior staff, in a
flailing effort to be seen “doing something”. http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Krawcheck-Price-Out-in-Bank-nytimes-1796049170.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=main&asset=&ccode=
Maybe this will draw a fawning WaPo editorial.
PQS
8:02 pm Clearly the editors of the WaPO don’t get out much.
I doubt you’d find even two people 100 miles outside of DC
that think shaking down the banks is immoral or wrong. Or even
slightly off color.
The pitchforks in America are sharp.
citalopram
12:16 am The pitchforks aren’t even out. Not yet anyway.
Cody Willard
7:23 pm From Elizabeth Warren to Tom Miller, how many times
have we built up one of these Republican/Democrat elites into
a supposed anti-elite force who “might be the only elected official
willing to stick his/her neck out” only to see them cave and
then have to backtrack our embrace of said hypocrite. How long
til we/you/I have to admit that Schneiderman is just another
spoke in their wheel who is playing their game and simply faking
their resistance?
I had hoped Elizabeth Warren would join with Ron Paul or
something so that we could finally end this false Right/Left/Repub/Democ
paradigm…and I had hoped Tom Miller really would “send some
of these bankers to jail”. Now we have Warren trying to paint
herself into a Democrat-pay-for-play Senate seat and of course
Miller’s backtracking from prosecutor to crony is legendary
now among the educated blogosphere.
Schneiderman will betray us all in a similar fashion — he
is fully endorsed, stamped and funded by the same Republican/Democrat
Fascist Regime as the rest of them.
Our only chance is to go post-partisan and vote exclusively
away from the R/D paradigm. How hard can that really be?
Because
7:40 pm Uh, Ron Paul is part of it. You don’t get the games’s
rules at all, thus you don’t understand the game.
Cody Willard
7:50 pm Who said Ron Paul wasn’t part of it? I said Elizabeth
Warren and Ron Paul together would at least destroy the false
left/right paradigm in most American voters’ heads.
Yves Smith
10:17 pm Warren would NEVER join Ron Paul. He is refreshingly
candid on many topics, but some of his views are batshit.
Warren’s strength and weakness is she is a brilliant technocrat.
She is very data and research driven and will describe the pathologies
of the system in great detail. But her instincts are to work
within the system, and she is not willing to see that the elites
as a class are deeply corrupt.
Pitchfork
11:39 pm I humbly submit that this attitude (“NEVER”) is part
of the problem, especially when you consider that most of what
you consider “batshit” about Ron Paul are the things least likely
to be implemented as actual policy.
As President, of course, Ron Paul could immediately end the
wars, which, as all right-thinking people understand, is the
most important policy position of all.
Never? Really?
citalopram
12:22 am That is exactly what I said the other day of Huffpo
– he’d end the wars and prevent thousands upon thousands of
potential deaths. He is firmly anti-establishment and that really
has the insiders worried. There are all these webpages from
liberals themselves on how the man is anti-abortion, anti-science
blah blah blah. My guess is they want you to vote Obama.
What they’re forgetting is that Paul ain’t gonna be able
to do much about abortion, that would require passing legislation.
I don’t think that’s possible, but as President he’d have the
authority to end the occupation of the Middle East, and I think
that in itself would be worth it.
Yves Smith
1:23 am As much as I appreciate the fact that Ron Paul is deeply
suspicious of the Fed, which is the right attitude, most of
his views about economics are disastrously wrongheaded. And
I’m also no fan of much of economics.
JohnnyGL
11:58 pm Yves, I had the chance to meet Elizabeth Warren the
other day at one of her rather low-key events. She certainly
seems quite sincere in her aims. She comes across as genuine
and unpretentious. I think she’s managed to make enough progress
while playing nice ‘inside’ the tent to give her further encouragement
to continue with the strategy. She spoke highly of the fact
that the Consumer Protection Bureau exists and that she got
the single page mortgage form completed. I mentioned your idea
of running for President and she’s quite familiar with your
blog and she seemed to think the that the idea was over the
top.
I figure she’s going to exhaust the ‘inside’ strategy before
going outside and running for president would obviously lose
a lot of Democratic Party insiders (not that she’s got a ton
on her side). She didn’t seem too thrilled at the Senate idea,
but settled on it as the least bad option. There were a few
local political figures there, so she didn’t say anything bad
about Democrats until pressed, and certainly didn’t name names.
I made a remark to her about how I enjoyed her exchanges with
Geithner and she cracked a smile that looked too big to be a
courtesy smile. I still think it was one of her finest moments.
Johnny
Yves Smith
1:24 am Thanks for the report.
If she is not wild about running for the Senate, she should
not be running. No oe is holding a gun to her head. If you can
detect her lack of enthusiasm, so will others.
TR
12:06 am It’s all George Carlin’s “BIG CLUB”
wunsacon
12:30 am And you (and I) ain’t in it.
EJ Milbank Dionne Ignatius
7:46 pm Who can forget the health care payola. What was it,
25K for access? It’s a country club, and you ain’t in it.
decora
7:47 pm “We are hurtling back into a Soviet abyss, into an information
vacuum that spells death from our own ignorance. All we have
left is the internet, where information is still freely available.
For the rest, if you want to go on working as a journalist,
it’s total servility to Putin. Otherwise, it can be death, the
bullet, poison, or trial—whatever our special services, Putin’s
guard dogs, see fit.”
– Anna Politkovskaya
i dont think we are there in the US…. yet…..
Brian
9:37 pm We’re there. Been there for a while now. But here we’re
more velvet glove than Iron Fist. They don’t poison you, they
just kill your career and blacklist you – which in America is
essentially the same thing.
Missed a Zero
7:52 pm “KURTZ (7/3/09): Washington Post Publisher Katharine
Weymouth yesterday canceled plans for a series of policy dinners
at her home after learning that marketing fliers offered corporate
underwriters access to Post journalists, Obama administration
officials and members of Congress in exchange for payments as
high as $250,000.”
steelhead23
7:53 pm Matt, I would not be so sanguine about the humor in
all this. Words are not machetes, but they can cut you down.
This is a dangerous time for Mr. Schneiderman. They are hunting
him. I am a complete neophyte at this, but having watched how
this game is played, I offer Mr. Schneiderman the following
advice. From now on, at any event where you may be asked a question
or two, think this way: you have no ambition for higher elected
office, none; your goal is to protect the people of NY by enforcing
the law, period; you love your wife and children; etc., etc.
Stay the hell out of bars and brothels. Put your wife on your
arm and display open affection (kiss her you fool). Don’t forget
what they did to Eliot. TPTB have declared open season on you
– don’t expect mercy. Indeed, if you have something on these
guys, some minor faux pas, bust ‘em. Yes, bust em. Not as revenge,
but as a warning to others not to kick dirt in your face. That
is the kind of game you are in. Nice guys finish last.
lambert strether
8:12 pm And Eric? Don’t go up in small planes.
Yves Smith
10:13 pm My impression is he has no ambition for higher office.
That is what makes him so dangerous.
attempter
4:09 am Assuming for the sake of argument that he’s sincere
in all this, he still wants to work only within the same criminal
system, and toward the same criminal goals, just in a “reformed”
way. (He explicitly said his goal is to “restore faith” in the
mortgage delusion. So he’s really pushing another version of
the HAMP scam, just at the broader cultural level.)
So in that case, he’ll end up destroyed on account of that
he was neither hot nor cold but lukewarm. It’s not possible
to fight the elites from within their premises.
Blurtman
8:04 pm Tom “”Shitty” Deal” Montag, leaving behind the crimes
committed at Goldman Sachs, is promoted to COO at BAC, reporting
directly to its CEO.
Mr. Montag remarked about his promotion, “Thank god for crime,
amd firms that appreciate a good sleaze-ball like Bank of America.”
http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Krawcheck-Price-Out-in-Bank-nytimes-1796049170.html?x=0&sec=topStories&pos=main&asset=&ccode=
Sam
8:20 pm Particularly stupid when you realize the fix is to do
away with all bank-friendly regulation from the past 30 years.
The State Bank of North Dakota is a wonderful bank, from what
I can tell, and the unemployment rate in North Dakota is extremely
low.
alia michelle
10:33 pm way to out the post for being full of shit dude. another
permutation of SHUT THE FOX UP and other inaccurate media outlets.
show those repugnantcunts whose boss.
xxooo alia
scraping_by
11:03 pm In a somewhat fussbudget moment, it seems important
to point out that Mr. Stoller is not, repeat not, engaging in
guilt by association, those bizarre chains right wing blowhards
offer with Wagnerian gravitas.
While, on paper, Kaplan and WaPo and WaPo editorial are separate
and independent, the daily reality is one entity under management,
with a handful of technocrats calling the shots. Nobody is going
to step on the airhose.
http://www.truth-out.org/14-propaganda-techniques-fox-news-uses-brainwash-americans/1309612678
Justicia
11:16 pm So, where are the RICO indictments?
American Bankster
http://www.americanbanker.com/issues/176_173/mortgage-reinsurance-respa-kickbacks-hud-investigation-doj-1041928-1.html
Banks Took $6B in Reinsurance Kickbacks, Investigators Say
Many of the country’s largest banks received $6 billion in
kickbacks from mortgage insurers over the course of a decade,
according to a previously undisclosed investigation by the Inspector
General of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
[...] Documents from the investigation show that the inspector
general’s staff concluded that banks and insurance companies
had created elaborate financial structures that had the appearance
of reinsurance but failed to transfer significant amounts of
risk to their bank underwriters.
Some of the deals were designed to return a 400% profit on
a bank’s investment during good years and remain profitable
even in the event of a real estate collapse.
Making matters worse, banks allegedly forced unknowing consumers
to buy more insurance than they needed and failed to properly
disclose the reinsurance agreements, another RESPA violation.
Ray Phenicie
11:30 pm So what if . . . Everyone who had a mortgage from one
of these barons–2008 total deposit in Billions- JP Morgan Chase
& Co. New York, NY$1,0092 Bank of America Charlotte, NC$8843
Wells FargoSan Francisco, CA$7854 CitigroupNew York, NY$7745
PNC Financial Services GroupPittsburgh, PA$1936 HSBC HoldingsLondon$1617
Bank of New York MellonNew York, NY$1608 U.S. BancorpMinneapolis,
MN$1599 SunTrust BankAtlanta, GA$11310 State Street Corp.Boston,
MA$11211 Capital One FinancialMcClean, VA$10912 BB&T Corporation
Winston-Salem, NC$98.7 -were to suddenly call up and say “Prove
to me that you’re no fool and show legit lines of ownership
for my mortgage which you supposedly securitized.”
Upon failure of that little question, for those who are able,
hire a lawyer and refuse to make anymore payments.
Have a credit card balance from one of these feudal-like
viscounts? Stop paying immediately
If even a small percentage of the consumers in debt, large
or small stopped their payments maybe someone would wake up.
aletheia33
1:48 am i suspect that many people have in fact stopped paying
on their credit cards, far more people than the banks would
like it to be known. i remember seeing the term “de facto bankruptcy”
awhile back as a term for an action that will spread as people
lose jobs, homes, everything. yves has noted, IIRC, that since
the 2008 meltdown HELOCs have been considered uncollectable–though
Treasury has instructed the TBTF banks to retain them on their
books as assets (hope i remember this right). if this is true
of HELOCs, it would seem likely of other forms of debt outstanding.
once your credit rating is gone, there’s not much they can
do to induce you to pay up. more and more people are beginning
to realize they’ve been literally robbed up down and sideways
by the financial industry and that not repaying what they “owe”
is a way to right the balance, without any moral compunction
left. and some commenters see a debt revolt on the horizon.
some states have legal protections of debtors that prohibit
garnishment of more than a specified fraction of a debtor’s
income, so as to help people to some extent to meet their basic
needs no matter how big their debt. people considering not paying
should look into these protections in the law of their home
state. the website or office of the state AG is a good place
to start–no lawyer required.
banks are also making very favorable settlement offers to
large numbers of such creditors. they are becoming increasingly
desperate, as more and more people simply don’t have the means
to repay.
Fraud Guy
11:50 pm On my blog, you can see a copy of the letter Schneiderman
sent to his supporters:
http://www.fraudism.com/
What’s so offensive here, I don’t see.
Also, it never ceases to amaze me that the mainstream media,
in this case the NY Daily News, refuse to post documents that
are the subject of stories. Clearly, they don’t want readers
to be able to form their own conclusions. And they wonder why
their business is dying.
Also, I started my blog after becoming an avid fan of Yves.
So she should view imitation as the sincerest form of flattery.
Fraud Guy
3:42 am Thank you, but already had the name and my own blog.
Dan The Man
12:33 am Every year tobacco related disease kills 400,000 people
in the U.S. In 2010 The government paid tobacco companies $194,435,671
in subsidies for this service. I’m starting to believe the government
might not have are best interests in mind.
babaganush
3:11 am Good article. Reminds me a little of Elliot Ness. Go
Schneiderman!