Item of General Interest
Oct. 23 . A new interview by Chris Martenson is now up. He calls it Why There's No Economically Sustainable Price for Oil Anymore.
Category Archives: Financial Implications
EROEI Calculations for Solar PV Are Misleading
The Energy Returned on Energy Invested (EROEI) concept is very frequently used in energy studies. In fact, many readers seem to think, “Of course, EROEI is what we should be looking at when comparing different types of energy. What else … Continue reading
What has gone wrong with oil prices, debt, and GDP growth?
Our economy is a mystery to almost everyone, including economists. Let me explain the way I see the situation: (1) The big thing that pulls the economy forward is the time-shifting nature of debt and debt-like instruments. If we want … Continue reading
Posted in Financial Implications
Tagged Debt, economic growth, GDP growth, low oil prices, oil prices
1,637 Comments
The Energy Problem behind Trump’s Election
The energy problem behind Trump’s election is not the one people have been looking for. Instead, it is an energy problem that leads to low wages for many workers in the US, and high unemployment rates in the European Union. … Continue reading
Posted in Financial Implications
Tagged complexity, Donald Trump, election, energy shortage, low oil prices, low wages
1,893 Comments
How Researchers Could Miss the Real Energy Story
I have been telling a fairly different energy story from most energy researchers. How could I possibly be correct? What have other researchers been missing? The “standard” approach is to start from the amount of resources that we have of … Continue reading
Posted in Financial Implications
Tagged energy research, EROEI, King Hubbert, low oil price, oil price, peak oil
1,836 Comments
Why energy prices are ultimately headed lower; what the IMF missed
We have been hearing a great deal about IMF concerns recently, after the release of its October 2016 World Economic Outlook and its Annual Meeting October 7-9. The concerns mentioned include the following: Too much growth in debt, with China particularly … Continue reading
Posted in Financial Implications
Tagged economic growth, energy prices, GDP growth, oil prices
1,582 Comments


