A good analysis of what is going on – and where it’s going

This is an excellent article outlining both Russian strategy and Russian/Chinese strengths compared to US weakness in the changing situation.

I can’t help thinking of the turn of the 19th/20th centuries, when decades of British advantage in Naval warfare were suddenly rendered irrelevant by the invention of the steel battleship. Something very similar is happening now. The problem is not that the US is a hyperpower, the problem is that the US is fundamentally hugely weaker than it thinks it is. It will therefore over-reach, and cause chaos. It may bounce back in a decade or two (I respect the Dynamic Quality of the US system) but getting there will be hard, and hegemonism is not going to happen.

Why so much about Peak Oil?

Teresa asked a question in the comments: “why so much on Peak Oil and not any other of the other world problems?” This is a good question, so I thought I’d give my answer to her in a post:

1. I’m currently interested in Peak Oil, and the blog is the place for my ‘thinking out loud’. Long time friends are aware that I take up an issue, study it intensely until I grok it, and then move on – at which point it has either been absorbed into my view of the world and effectively becomes unconscious, or else I reject it and have sound reasons for doing so.

2. More personally, Peak Oil seems to be something of a ‘seed crystal’ for me – as the ripples from understanding it spread out further in my psyche, it seems to be a focus for integrating lots of things which had previously been separate, in terms most of all of theology and politics, but also the daily patterns of my human life.

3. Peak Oil can’t be separated from all the other problems which afflict the world, most especially the nexus between the concentration of power in the hands of western governments and the immiseration of the majority of the world’s population. It is the access to (and reliance upon) abundant and easy energy that gave western governments (specifically the US) the ‘first mover’ advantage enabling them to assert their values (for better and for worse) within the world. In terms of shaping our lives so that we a) live more humanely ourselves, and b) allow other people to flourish, we cannot avoid the issue of our use of a valuable and rapidly diminishing resource. It’s a justice issue. This is something on which I expect to post more substantially in due course as I think it is at the heart of it for me.

4. Peak Oil is imminent and potentially catastrophic; even if our politicians act with wisdom it will necessitate a drastic change in our culture and lifestyle within the next fifteen years. Have a look at the powerpoint slides from my Learning Church presentation, where I indicate the sort of things that will happen in Mersea. The downside – if we don’t get our act together – is what initially terrified me (and provoked your ‘Chicken Little’ comment!). The potential downside is real, even if I don’t personally expect it to happen. I am by nature profoundly optimistic – and I do trust in God – but I think we shouldn’t be ‘naively optimistic’. Whilst I disagree with much of the die-off.org approach, I do think their motto is valid: “If a path to the better there be, it begins with a full look at the worst”. Acknowledging the fact that we are waltzing along a precipice is the first move in taking steps away from the edge.

5. I also now think that the link between oil supply and world affairs is more intimate than I had previously believed – and I expect that to be shown this year…

Learning Church update

I was very pleased with the response to the Learning Church session on Peak Oil, which went very well – standing room only at the back!!

I’ve set up a website with some links, including one to download my powerpoint presentation here.

I’ve also taken the opportunity to update the links for MS Word files on the talks last autumn – three on St Paul, three on mysticism (including Julian of Norwich) and one each on the four gospels. At some point I’ll get round to doing the webpages for those as well. Link to the Learning Church homepage is here.

The Autumn season went well, on the whole. I was most pleased with the sessions on Julian and John’s gospel; least happy with Luke’s gospel.

Forthcoming highlights – I’m about to start a sequence covering three of my favourite theologians: Girard, Hauerwas, Milbank. From then through to May we’ll be covering the creed, other faiths and fundamentalism. Should be fun.

Powaqqatsi

Just to prove that I don’t only watch junk :o)

I have rather a lot to say about this tremendously thought-provoking film, but I have now ordered my own copy (along with the other two in the trilogy) so there will be more substantive musings in due course.

Wonderful.

Goblet of Fire


This was really rather good; I especially enjoyed the presentation of he who must not be named. Excellent tonic for an overtaxed brain – must get hold of a pensieve somewhere….

Thoughts on investment, January 2006

The impact of Peak Oil on the world economy has been on my mind for the last few months. I want in this post to look at the initial phase (say – five to ten years) and consider what it means as a context for investment. I also want to air some thoughts about specific investment strategies. I’m more confident of the first half of the analysis though – be warned!!

The context
The specific problem which the world economy faces is the constricted nature of the oil supply, ie there is now almost no ‘spare capacity’ within the system – and this is unprecedented. In previous decades the Saudi government in particular had the capacity to ‘turn on the taps’ to cope with short term fluctuations in supply, and thereby ‘smooth out’ any problems. They no longer have that ability. The Strategic Petroleum Reserves, especially of the US, has some ability to replace that spare capacity, but that is a ‘one shot gun’, and for the purposes of this analysis I consider it largely irrelevant.

Consider a piece of clingfilm placed across a bowl of food. If the clingfilm is loose then puncturing the clingfilm will simply produce a hole. If, however, the clingfilm is tight then a puncture will produce a significant tear. The same phenomenon can be seen in many other contexts: where a covering is taut and under strain, a small breach causes disproportionate adverse consequences. This is the situation that the world oil supply is now in.

Global production (extraction) of oil has not increased significantly for eighteen months, despite the high prices available for more production, and this has been the primary driver of the rapid increase in the oil price over the last few years. The impact of, eg, Katrina, Iraqi shortages, or lack of refining capacity, these are largely irrelevant.

The trigger
In this situation of unprecedented tightness, the question becomes: are there events which could act as the ‘puncture’, causing a disproportionate reaction within the system, causing an oil price shock and consequent recession? I think there are many possibilities; here are four:

1. Iran closes off the Straits of Hormuz in response to an attack by Israel;
2. Al-Qaeda succeed in an attack on Ras Tanura or equivalent facility;
3. There is civil war in Nigeria;
4. Saudi Arabia announces that the Ghawar oilfield has passed Peak production (compare with Kuwait).

I see the first of those as the ‘biggest’ puncture to the system, but any of them – and there are many other possibilities – could serve as the ‘trigger’ to a global recession. The pattern of that recession cannot be determined with precision, but is likely to have some of the following characteristics:

1. the rise in energy prices cause the closing of businesses and a rise in unemployment, thus reducing overall demand;
2. the rise in energy prices causes inflation in essential goods and services, thereby starving the market of purchasing power and reinforcing 1.;
3. the reduction in purchasing power and subsequent contraction of the economy trigger a collapse in the housing market, and that bubble deflates rapidly (esp US/UK);
4. those who have highly geared mortgages find themselves in negative equity; there is a major rise in house repossession; this induces a climate of greater fear and desire for saving – reinforcing 1.;
5. the cycle continues until a new point of equilibrium – probably temporary – is reached.

Investment directions
In this situation it is unclear whether deflation or inflation will be dominant – it is possible that there will be massive deflation in some areas (eg housing market) coupled with inflation in others (eg transport, food). In any case, these are my initial thoughts:

1. oil companies will make a lot of money; as their resource enjoys a relatively inelastic demand, especially as oil becomes scarcer, they will likely thrive in the initial stages (five to ten years) of the recession;
2. commodities, ie all those items which possess intrinsic value, will be ideal hedges against either inflation or deflation. Owning a home outright (ie no mortgage) will be a major determinant of financial health over the next ten years. Precious metals will also be prize investments, not least in the case of silver and platinum for their role in alternative energy systems;
3. some technological firms will be worth investing in: wind and solar, wind-up technology, probably coal also in the shorter term;
4. on the negative side, the housing market, especially new build, will contract hugely; retail will suffer terribly, the main supermarket chains may even fail; tourism and the airline industry will collapse;
5. in international terms, the US dollar is facing a ‘perfect storm’ in any case and will likely drop heavily in value, especially if oil sales become denominated in alternative currencies; consequently all US stocks are poor investments for non-US investors, at least until after the ‘correction’, by which time the opposite will probably apply, and they will be hugely cheaper;
6. alternatively, I see Japan – once the initial shock has passed – as being a better location for investment.

Clearly there are large uncertainties in the above. In particular it may well be the case that 2006 proceeds without interruption, and the ‘trigger’ event is deferred. However, I believe it inevitable that a trigger event will take place – perhaps many together in a short space of time – so these considerations are really directed towards those prepared to ‘buy and hold’, at least until some time has elapsed after the trigger event, and some of the dust has settled. I see no realistic alternative to a general economic contraction over the next ten to fifteen years. That does not, however, mean that all investment accounts have to contract. I do not believe that the economy as a whole will collapse – in that situation, the correct investment strategy would involve seeds and bullets rather than shares and bullion.

Lucky he didn’t ask about the Virgin Birth

Good quiz, written by Sven who’s a good guy.

You scored as Chalcedon compliant. You are Chalcedon compliant. Congratulations, you’re not a heretic. You believe that Jesus is truly God and truly man and like us in every respect, apart from sin. Officially approved in 451.

Chalcedon compliant

100%

Pelagianism

67%

Nestorianism

33%

Apollanarian

33%

Monophysitism

33%

Adoptionist

25%

Arianism

0%

Monarchianism

0%

Docetism

0%

Donatism

0%

Albigensianism

0%

Modalism

0%

Gnosticism

0%

Socinianism

0%

Are you a heretic?
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