I think this is the beginnings of an economy based on perpetual growth and fossil fuel energy running headlong into geological energy constraints. Basically I see an undulatory downward path for the rest of my life. From here out, I think any rallies in our economic condition are going to be met with spiking commodity prices that knock us right back down.
Posted: Fri Jun 13, 2008 4:34 am Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
Each day seems to carry a bad new.
Now taxi drivers in Catalonia (where I live) and Valencia are going on strike. Expect caos at the airports. What do they want? the same as everybody, cheaper fuel.
The supply situation is beggining to look better, now that police has cleared the roads from some of the most radical truck drivers. There are still shortages of certain things, it depends of where you live. Anyway, still convoy trucks have to be escorted by police into the city.
It's not that easy to fill the car's tanks, but the blame here is not on the lack of gas itself, but on pepole's reaction: everybody is filling up their tanks at once! I'm lucky i go to work by bicycle.
(Note: of course I was talking about bottled water. The day there is no drinkable water from our taps, then there will be a problem.)
I gotta tell you that live goes on as usual. This is not doomsday, you can come to Spain and enjoy your holidays and the only thing you'll notice, maybe, are the long lines at the gas stations. But it brings the feeling of the change, gives you a real warning about something you only knew as paper theory or some numbers on a screen.
It all looks like the begining of an adjustment phase, where people still does not realize they are not going to get cheap diesel anymore. We are heading fast into a hig-prices, job destruction era. What amazes me is that here, today, there is no real talk about the real problem "how much oil is left?"
In a week I'm going on holiday to Canary islands with my wife and kids. I'm going by plane and will rent a car. Enjoy things as they are now.
Last night we were watching a very good Peak Oil report on catalan TV. They talked about Hubbert, US Peak Oil, alternative energy and, yes, doomsday scenarios.
My younger kid, 8 years old Lucas, told me: "This is not fair. You've lived all your life in a world with oil, and I won't".
"We'll see" is all I could tell him.
Posted: Fri Jun 13, 2008 4:54 am Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
Quote:
Karlos there is a really good article on the front page of Peak oil with some very disturbing pictures. Farmers are rioting in southern spain. It seems the situation there is quite fragile at the moment
Troyboy,
The situation is pretty normal, I dont see "fragile" anywhere. People protesting, as usual.
Quote:
By the way, although I think the question was raised, in this thread and elsewhere, I never saw any answer as to why these hauliers can't just exert pricing power, and pass on the extra fuel cost to their end consumers..?
ekaggata,
I sort of answered your question a few post back. The truckers are affected by the housing bubble bursting, and their business is contracting. In this situation is very difficult to raise fares and remain competitive, and more so when you are competing against bigger companies (that are not in strike, by the way).
Regarding some other post, I am not aware of laws that not allow the raising of fares.
Quote:
I gotta tell you that live goes on as usual. This is not doomsday, you can come to Spain and enjoy your holidays and the only thing you'll notice, maybe, are the long lines at the gas stations
I subscribe this totally. The situation never was bad. In fact, I live in Madrid and I have been not affected AT ALL (mind you, I dont use car to go to work). If I didnt watch the news, I wouldnt have noticed it.
I remember much more violent strikes, miners and shipyard workers amongst others.
The only remarkable thing about this strike is that one of the reasons for it is the price of oil.
Joined: Mar 09, 2006 Posts: 540 Location: Al-Mariyya, Al-Andalus
Posted: Fri Jun 13, 2008 11:07 pm Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
SPG: You're right, of course, but this is Europe. It's hard for you to imagine how fundamentally different are the mind sets of Americans and Europeans. The idea of letting fishermen or any other tradesman simply shrivel and lose business is so un-European, especially so un-Socialist.
As for those exact laws, I would not have neither the time nor the inclination to get into a translation of these pernickity 'normativas' and where and how they apply, in which different autonomous region and in which circumstances. Euro-beaurocracy is legendary for a reason! I'm just repeating what I've learned from a few news sources.
It is true that many new jobs were created by the housing boom, lots of small scale hauliers for example, and grom is right: the economic contraction means they literally don't have anything to haul, so what's the European response?: let's go on strike and demand the government do something. This turmoil across the country has been caused by a minority, would you believe, who's aggresive picketing has stunned the nation.
Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 4:36 pm Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
This could be considered the first peak oil simulation.
Shortages in the shops, petrol convoys scorted by the police, some little riots, big factories stopped by lack of supplies and spare parts, workers without work ( no work, no money, no consume and the circle is closed) and other weird effects.
What would happen when the things are real and worse ??
Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 7:15 pm Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
Those taxi drivers at El Prat airport or the ruthless truck drivers are nothing but animals ( they even burned almost to death a fellow truck driver!) reclaiming a Socialist wellfare system that will subsidize the gas for them! just plain nuts!!!.
I wonder if any of these idiots (same goes for the Spanish fishermen that went on strike recently too) know the futures market exist and there - AT A SMALL FRACTION OF THEIR ACTUAL COST EXPOSURE- they can HEDGE their gas/oil cost exposure!!! So if oil and liquid fuels go up a lot they cover their normal margins, and if (unlikely) oil and/or liquid fuekls go down they only lose that fraction I spoke of (again, unlikely in a roaring bull market for energy).
But of course they were not prepared for this. Spaniards are told everyday the futures market is ripe for the evils of "speculators" ( real funny in a country where a flat in cheesy Sevilla can cost you 5 times the same in a Euro/square meter basis than in Berlin (!) )
Nor was any bank in Spain who could have sold commodity hedge products to actual consumers or producers ( from fuelsto drivers to grains to Agriculture guys ) .
Nor was the Goverment of Spain ( whose Funny Stand Up Commedian Economy(!) Minister Pedro Solbes recently announced a Price for Oil prevision in 2016 of 60 USD / Barrel---ROFLMAO )
And oh.... the real estate bubble burst in Spain as of recent...another case of laissez fair and absolutely no prevision on what could happen..... I ve heard African inmigrants on the radio saying " No one expected this. The "brick" betrayed us! " . OH MY GAWD!!! no one??? Fark NO ONE!. Get a life!!!
I have BETTED on this for long. I m long OIL and oil companies for years. And I shorted the real estate companies in Spain when the bubble forming was WAY too obvious. For Christs Sake! Too easy...
IN MY BOOK:
Part of a sound preparedness on Peak Oil should be INVESTING according to it and making economic progress way beyond the wild inflation I see coming up, if anyone is interested in opening a thread on that I will colaborate, I am really skilled at that.... but that will not give any comfort when the lights will go off...I wont eat off shares, ETFs or bonds!
I want to be very honest on this:
I m making some money right now, but I WOULD PREFER to lose A LOT the next few years and be PROVEN WRONG. I want my 3 year old kid to have a chance to have grandkinds. The way I see things now, I dont think he has any chance...
recent events as exposed in Spain I dont agree are a trial for Peak Oil anyway....that was just some dumb ass disruption...
Joined: Mar 09, 2006 Posts: 540 Location: Al-Mariyya, Al-Andalus
Posted: Sun Jun 15, 2008 11:55 pm Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
cartonet, thanks for your input. I'm sure the few Spaniards on this board are delighted to be insulted by you and your overbearing arrogance.
Calling Spaniards idiots, calling Sevilla 'cheesy' shouting at Sub-saharan immigrants for not having kept up with the news on their sattelite TVs, radios, or abundant foreign press during the run up to the housing market collapse, yes, sounds like you're really, really knowledgable.
Capullo.
Posted: Mon Jun 16, 2008 2:00 am Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
Quote:
cartonet, thanks for your input. I'm sure the few Spaniards on this board are delighted to be insulted by you and your overbearing arrogance.
Calling Spaniards idiots, calling Sevilla 'cheesy' shouting at Sub-saharan immigrants for not having kept up with the news on their sattelite TVs, radios, or abundant foreign press during the run up to the housing market collapse, yes, sounds like you're really, really knowledgable.
Capullo.
Although I dont like cartonet's way of writing, I have to agree with him.
The situation is bad and the politicians do not want to acknowledge this. Only that this is happening everywhere, not only in Spain. Spanish politicians follow suit, same as everyone, everywhere.
And he is right again about the housing bubble, it was (still is) soooooo ridiculous! and has been for years! and everyone was so damm pleased! and I mean everyone, politicians, banks, builders, buyers, sellers, workers, young couples happy to sell their life for a flat!
Quote:
recent events as exposed in Spain I dont agree are a trial for Peak Oil anyway....that was just some dumb ass disruption...
Joined: May 10, 2007 Posts: 3228 Location: Resiliency Farm
Posted: Mon Jun 16, 2008 2:07 am Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
virgincrude wrote:
cartonet, thanks for your input. I'm sure the few Spaniards on this board are delighted to be insulted by you and your overbearing arrogance.
Calling Spaniards idiots, calling Sevilla 'cheesy' shouting at Sub-saharan immigrants for not having kept up with the news on their sattelite TVs, radios, or abundant foreign press during the run up to the housing market collapse, yes, sounds like you're really, really knowledgable.
Capullo.
I'll go out on a limb here with a bit of speculation. Cartonet sounds like he or she is spanish, at the very least he/she has had a lot of interactions with the area.
It is quite popular to be an American who hates Americans, I see no reason why a Spaniard could not be equally critical (rightly or wrongly) of his own fellow citizens. _________________ “It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him.”
Joined: Mar 09, 2006 Posts: 540 Location: Al-Mariyya, Al-Andalus
Posted: Mon Jun 16, 2008 4:46 am Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
I have no problem with Spaniards criticizing other Spaniards. Calling desperate fishermen and immigrants stupid because they did not know what cartonet says he knows, is not a criticism: it is an insult.
Ignorance has a cure: knowledge, it's available to all. Stupidity is inborn and often has no remedy.
Las Vegas is cheesy. Sevilla has its tacky tourist trade, but a city with several millenia of history and culture could only be termed ‘cheesy’ by someone severely lacking in intellect and education, or someone trying to impress others by their disdane of another’s culture (or pretending to be ‘above’ their own culture): i.e an insult.
He mentions African immigrants on the radio complaining nobody told them of the imminent housing crisis. What makes him think an African immigrant (who knows whether literate or not) could have any interest or details about a country’s economic outlook? To say how stupid they were, and suggest the get a life is not only ignorant it is callous.
Joined: May 10, 2007 Posts: 3228 Location: Resiliency Farm
Posted: Mon Jun 16, 2008 8:39 am Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
virgincrude wrote:
I have no problem with Spaniards criticizing other Spaniards. Calling desperate fishermen and immigrants stupid because they did not know what cartonet says he knows, is not a criticism: it is an insult.
Ignorance has a cure: knowledge, it's available to all. Stupidity is inborn and often has no remedy.
Las Vegas is cheesy. Sevilla has its tacky tourist trade, but a city with several millenia of history and culture could only be termed ‘cheesy’ by someone severely lacking in intellect and education, or someone trying to impress others by their disdane of another’s culture (or pretending to be ‘above’ their own culture): i.e an insult.
He mentions African immigrants on the radio complaining nobody told them of the imminent housing crisis. What makes him think an African immigrant (who knows whether literate or not) could have any interest or details about a country’s economic outlook? To say how stupid they were, and suggest the get a life is not only ignorant it is callous.
So do you confront every american who uses the phrase "sheeple" to describe the people around them who are ignorantly following the herd/ _________________ “It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him.”
Joined: Mar 09, 2006 Posts: 540 Location: Al-Mariyya, Al-Andalus
Posted: Mon Jun 16, 2008 11:46 am Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
SoylentGreen:
Quote:
I could see fascism re-emerge in Europe.?
It never really went away, just changed its name: corporatism. If the EU simply ignores the Irish vote against the Lisbon 'constitution', they are proving that democracy in Europe is only respected when it suits them.
Posted: Mon Jun 16, 2008 2:50 pm Post subject: Re: Today in Spain I got scared
Fascim again ? i don´t think so, i think that is more about an confidence excess in the market and the power of the economy but the world is like a Titanic at full speed heading directly to the iceberg, and the inertia of the system makes changes very difficult and the "captains" think that it could´t sink.
they continue doing sweet predictions for the future and the endless and continuous grow of the economy, when in reality it can´t continue forever and the collapse can arrive at some point.
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