Takeaway: “Peak Oil” has not only peaked. It has flipped.

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Whatever Happened to Peak Oil? - peakoil

Remember “Peak Oil”? 

The notion was making the rounds a few years ago that the world had run out of its readily-producible supply of oil, and that Life As We Know It would soon grind to a halt, predicated as it has been since WWII on an unending supply of cheap oil. 

Oil is already no longer cheap – the US Department of Energy says that, in constant 2011 dollars, the price of gasoline rose from under $1.50 a gallon on the eve of the Arab Oil Embargo of 1974, to over $3.50 by the end of 2011.  Peak Oil says oil is also no longer plentiful, because we have drilled the world down to a diminishing petroleum reserve. 

Books and articles proliferated – because not many people can make money trading markets, but a whole lot of folks can make money writing about how to trade markets – predicting how dire our lives were about to turn, and how soon.

Now “Peak Oil” has not only peaked.  It has flipped. 

Now, when folks use the term, they mean that demand for oil has peaked and the combination of fracking and newly-discovered US gas reserves will make our energy woes a thing of the past. 

We have no idea who will be proved right, but we again observe that it pays to speak in superlatives and paint extreme scenarios if you want to sell books about investing.