What is Peak oil?
"The term Peak Oil refers to the maximum rate of the production of oil in any area under consideration, recognising that it is a finite natural resource, subject to depletion."
--Colin Campbell
Peak globalization: Climate change, oil depletion and global tradePublication date: 2009-12-15 First published in: Ecological Economics Abstract: The global trade in goods depends upon reliable, inexpensive transportation of freight along complex and long-distance supply chains. Global warming and peak oil undermine globalization by their effects on both transportation costs and the reliable movement of freight. Countering the current geographic pattern of comparative advantage with higher transportation costs, climate change and peak oil will thus result in peak globalization, after which the volume of exports will decline as measured by ton-miles of freight. Policies designed to mitigate climate change and peak oil are very unlikely to change this result due to their late implementation, contradictory effects and insufficient magnitude. The implication is that supply chains will become shorter for most products and that production of goods will be located closer to where they are consumed. Published in: Ecological Economics, Volume 69, Issue 2, 15 December 2009, Pages 427-434 |
Upcoming eventsPublication tagsPeopleKjell Aleklett, ASPO President Mikael Höök, ASPO Secretary Colin Campbell, ASPO's founder, ASPO Honorary Chairman |