Petrocollapse conference: Oct. 5, 2005 NYC

August 27, 2005

The first Petrocollapse Conference will be held on October 5, 2005 in New York City, at the City University of New York (CUNY) Graduate Center.

[Sept 8 update: The venue may change. Please visit the Petrocollapse website before the event to confirm the venue.]

Speakers include James Howard Kunstler, John Darnell, Ph.D., David Pimentel, Ph.D., Michael Ruppert, Andrew McKillop, David Room, Catherine Austin Fitts, Pincas Jawetz, Jenna Orkin, and Jan Lundberg.

Besides covering peak oil and what to expect from “petrocollapse,” there will be panels such as the role of government and what people can do to improve their ability to cope with an expected crash in petroleum supply.

Although the public has recently started to hear about peak oil in mainstream news media, the complete story is still suppressed, and misundertanding abounds even among students of peak oil. The New York Petrocollapse conference will, among other things, clarify the role of the market in determining how severe will be the effect of shortage stemming from geological depletion.

Upon price jumps and petroleum supply tightness that may trigger upheaval followed by deprivation, people will be looking for answers and relief. A restructuring of social relations in a “new” local economics system appears inevitable, so will we choose to create a sustainable culture?

As oil prices generally rise and crude oil supplies and refined products strain to keep up with demand, the public remains in the dark about the vast array of consequences of the looming crisis known as Peak Oil. Dishonest reporting by OPEC countries and even major oil companies have contributed to the illusion that there is sufficient time before we ‘run out of oil’ to transition to a solution, whether it be coal, nuclear, cold fusion, hydrogen, other renewables or some combination of these energy options.

In fact, some dozen significant oil producing countries are past their peak in extraction and it is possible that world Peak has already arrived. (This cannot be conclusively determined until after the fact.) The sudden effects of shortage are likely to hit the global economy within the next three years, possibly even as early as this winter.

The public is also not fully aware of the extent to which oil pervades our lives not simply as fuel for transportation and freight but also in the form of pesticides, fertilizers and plastics. A decline in oil supplies will affect our ability to grow enough food for the current global population of six and a half billion people. Malnutrition and resulting illness can be expected to spread far beyond the 3.7 billion who are currently affected into the developed world.

Our economy also depends on indefinite growth that will not be sustainable once Peak Oil hits. Its arrival is likely to have a paralyzing affect on key sectors of the economy which will in turn spread both nationally and globally.

At The Petrocollapse Conference we will ask:

* What are we facing now as the economy prepares to hit the wall known as resource limits? Will growth suddenly implode?
* What will be the effects of Peak Oil (a geological phenomenon) and petrocollapse (an economic and social phenomenon) on food supply and other services we depend on?
* What humane, ethical means are available to reduce the population (over the course of several generations) to a sustainable number?
* What other mitigation strategies are possible? Is there a “Plan B” to ease a transition to sustainable living in a world without plentiful energy and materials made with petroleum?

The idea for a conference in New York titled Petrocollapse is the brainchild of Andrew McKillop, who will be one of the speakers at the conference. His idea was to have key peak oil experts present their knowledge to the public in New York City. Our speakers are tremendous authorities offering a wide range of expertise. The audience is encouraged to be participants at the conference, and we all hope to come away well informed, better connected and hopeful of positive action for these interesting times.

James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency, and Jan Lundberg, former oil industry analyst now of culturechange.org, were two of McKillop’s suggestions besides himself. McKillop, editor of The Final Energy Crisis, is based in France and he has prepared and will present special studies for the event.

Jenna Orkin, conference coordinator, spent much of the spring and early summer of 2005 “lobbying” members of the U.S. Congress to consider peak oil and to read reports by Michael Ruppert of From The Wilderness, by Jan Lundberg, and especially the speeches on peak oil by Congressman Roscoe Bartlett (Republican of Maryland) that he made in the U.S. House of Representatives. It was Ms. Orkin’s experience with this “lobbying” and outreach to news media that helped prompt her to join the effort to make this conference a reality

Dealing with upcoming petrocollapse is an urgent cause, and our conference-planning is not able to benefit from months of preparation. Your participation and contribution, in whatever form, would be appreciated.

Price for attending the conference is $100. Discounts or full scholarships are available for students and low-income persons.

To register for the conference and see speakers’ bios, visit the Petrocollapse Conference website:
www.petrocollapse.org

To learn more about peak oil and petrocollapse, see articles and their links in this website [Culture Change] (go to home page and News section).

To support Culture Change, please go up to our funding page at culturechange.org/funding.htm

Jan Lundberg

Jan C. Lundberg, a national speaker, writer and publisher, is best known for running what was widely considered "the bible of the oil industry," Lundberg Survey Inc. In 1979 the firm predicted the Second Oil Shock. After 14 years there, he left for-profit work to found the nonprofit Sustainable Energy Institute, now Culture Change. For almost twenty years he has studied peak oil, energy alternatives, and conservation based primarily on grassroots change in lifestyle. He has assisted clients interested in the impacts of peak oil and climate change on material security and community connection. Educated in Europe and on the high seas, he has pursued an adventure called a career that is still evolving.

Tags: Education, Overshoot