The oil and gas exploration and production sector has inevitably been a focus of much of this attention, with many protestors seeking an immediate halt to all oil and gas activity.
Their focus is on stopping production now, but this does not take into account the real life impact if this were to happen.
Spiralling costs and fuel and energy outages; leading to major disruption to the transportation of people and goods, food shortages, power blackouts, and transport disruption in the short term. Potential civil unrest. Stock market chaos.
A huge impact on the global economy; the outcome would be chaotic and the impact far-reaching.
The reality is that our infrastructure – transport and energy supply – is set up to work primarily on hydrocarbons – and that cannot be changed overnight.
Consider the impact of the recent National Grid power outage, then multiply this across the entire country and apply it to all forms of transport and heat – for a considerably longer period. That is what we would face.
The significant environmental impact of other energy forms is also often overlooked – concrete use (itself a large contributor to greenhouse gas emissions), construction, land use, risks to wildlife and habitats, hazardous materials and air emissions, to name a few.
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