Half of all the oil consumed since the dawn of the modern oil age in 1859
has been consumed from 1998 through 2021 inclusive based on
data available from the BP
Statistical Review of World Energy. Approximately
1.4 trillion barrels of oil is thought to have been consumed to date
(though there are estimates as low as 1.1 trillion). That means that in
just the last 24 years total historical oil consumption has doubled.
It is hard for most people to imagine the vast increases in the rate of
consumption of practically everything that makes modern life possible.
Resources appear without most of us ever thinking about how or whether the
rising rates of consumption can be sustained.
For copper, one of the critical metals we depend on for electrical,
mechanical and even monetary purposes, the story is similar. The
U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) estimates that about 700 million metric
tons of copper have been extracted to date. Based on mining
statistics from the Copper
Development Association, that means about half of all the copper
ever mined has been mined from the year 2000 through 2018 inclusive.
Could we double total oil and copper consumption again in the next 24 and
19 years, respectively?
Just for comparison, the world's population grew 32 percent from the year
2000 through 2022 to date based on the U.S.
Census Bureau population clock and historical
data. This means that, at least for these two commodities, the per
capita consumption rose over this period. We are not becoming more
efficient with these resources per person.
Is it likely that both population and per capita consumption can continue
to grow at these historical rates? If so, the doubling of total historical
consumption of oil and copper would come even sooner than calculated
above.
Although historical estimates of total production for other minerals are
hard to find, recent production statistics illustrate that an acceleration
is taking place across a wide range of critical metals. Below I compare
the increase in the rate of production across time. All information is
from the USGS using the latest annual data available, through either 2017 or 2018 ("Present" in the table below).
Increase in Rate of Annual Production in Percent
Metal |
% Increase from 2000 to Present |
% Increase from 1970 to Present |
Aluminum |
162%
|
559% |
Cobalt
|
208%
|
369% |
Indium
|
113%
|
944%* |
Iron Ore
|
154%
|
225%
|
Lithium |
846% |
2,539% |
Nickel
|
67%
|
244% |
Silver
|
54%
|
197% |
Zinc
|
57%
|
153%
|
*1972
Just to be clear, looking at aluminum in the second column, since 1970 the annual rate of production worldwide has gone up 5.59 times. For lithium annual production is now 25.39 times the 1970 rate.
The most quoted sentence in Albert
Bartlett's famous lecture Arithmetic,
Population and Energy—which he gave 1,742 times during his life—is this, "The greatest shortcoming of the human
race is our inability to understand the exponential function."
That function is on display in publicly available information about
production of key minerals and many other resources we consider
critical to our way of life. And, yet it is ignored in plain site because
the governing ideology of the age is that technology will always give us a
way out of scarcity—providing the substitutes we need at the time that we need
them in the quantities we require and at the prices we can afford.
The flip side of this delusion is the reality that the sustained scarcity
of critical inputs to modern industrial society could cascade through our
entire worldwide system and cause it to crumble, gradually or quickly depending
on the number and nature of the inputs involved.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Kurt Cobb is a freelance writer and communications consultant who writes frequently about energy and environment. His work has appeared in The Christian Science Monitor, Resilience, Common Dreams, Naked Capitalism, Le Monde Diplomatique, Oilprice.com, OilVoice, TalkMarkets, Investing.com, Business Insider and many other places. He is the author of an oil-themed novel entitled Prelude and has a widely followed blog called Resource Insights. Point of contact: kurtcobb2001@yahoo.com.
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