Running on empty
The San Francisco Peak Oil Preparedness Task Force explores life after fossil fuels — an era that may be coming sooner than most people think

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The fourth floor of San Francisco's City Hall feels remote. Dimly lit and strangely quiet, it conveys a sense of isolation from the powerful people who do their work in the lower levels of the building.

Here, in an unremarkable conference room, is where the San Francisco Peak Oil Preparedness Task Force is conducting its second meeting. Two of its officers are absent, and only one member of the public has turned up to participate. It is an atmosphere that belies the issue's cataclysmic potential.

The day's breaking news headlines of oil reaching $100 per barrel for the first time in history is perhaps a harbinger of things to come. One year earlier the price was $58 per barrel. This dramatic increase in such a short span would devastate economies around the world if it continued at anywhere close to that rate.

Chairperson Jeanne Rosenmeier, an articulate, contemplative woman, reiterates the task force's purpose: "Our charge is to examine how the city is going to handle rising oil prices and possible shortages.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


That is what we have been asked to do."

The assessment seems like an understatement, perhaps suggesting that the group is merely looking for solutions to how the average citizen could function better without an automobile. Yet in a society built on oil, the consequences of such an energy crisis are likely to be far more sweeping and problematic than merely high gas prices.

While considering models for the study the task force will prepare, Rosenmeier points to Portland, Ore.'s recently completed peak oil report and talks about limiting San Francisco's effort to outlining the range of scenarios, from small impacts to large. She's reluctant to acknowledge the extralarge scenario — massive worldwide social unrest and full-scale anarchy in the streets of San Francisco — which she argues would be harmful to the group's focus.

Jan Lundberg, the task force member in charge of "societal functioning," politely disagrees. Insightful and exuding a sort of deeply ingrained experience, Lundberg has a goatee and a big mane of blond hair that make him look like a Berkeley-ish version of billionaire Virgin CEO Richard Branson. The resemblance is strangely apt when you consider that Lundberg has defected from more lucrative ventures. His family's business, the Lundberg Survey, has been one of the premier oil industry research authorities in the world for the past few decades, but today Lundberg is volunteering his time to the task force.

"You have to look honestly at what we are up against," Lundberg tells the Guardian. "Only then can you come up with intelligent responses to what is occurring. If it is a tsunami coming, then you take action for a tsunami."

It might come as news to most San Franciscans that a team of seven relatively unknown, politically appointed volunteers is hashing out the hard realities and dire implications of a potentially massive energy crisis. When the Board of Supervisors unanimously passed a resolution (with Sup. Michela Alioto-Pier absent) in April 2006 to acknowledge the looming phenomenon of the global oil supply being exceeded by demand, San Francisco was the first city in the country to do so. It was a precedent ...

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( 2 comments | Comment on this article )
freemedium on Saturday, February 2, 2008 at 07:14 PM
Charles,

Thank you for your insightful article concerning Peak Oil.

Curious am I as to why you did not mention bio-diesel toward the end of your piece.

I live in West County Sonoma. A number of us enthusiastic post carbon thinkers make our own bio-diesel from waste product, and run our diesel engine vehicles with it.

The people who deliver Kettle Potato Chips deliver their product with bio-diesel fueled delivery trucks.

Mendocino County is home to the first locally manufactured bio-diesel production and distribution facility which sources local product to meet local demand.

I am finding that slowly but surely the migration away from petroleum based fuels occurs unilaterally in small communities like mine. To be informed is the key...thanks for keeping the issue alive. More people can see alternatives and not lose hope for the future.

On Thursday the 7th, Sonoma State University will participate in the nation-wide Climate Change "teach-in." No doubt a number of people like myself will be carpooling out to the campus in our renovated veggie-oil or bio-diesel powered mercedes, volvo's, vw's and the like.

So refreshing to find your research available out there in the forefront.

Best Regards,

Gina Fregosi

Sebastopol

cjwirth on Saturday, June 21, 2008 at 10:13 PM
The Peak Oil situation is worse than just about anyone imagines. Google or Yahoo search: peak oil impacts, and there you will find a 50 page report that explains the Peak Oil catastrophe.

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