Oil prices reached a two-year high of US$117 (Dh429) per barrel last week, as world markets prepared for a US strike on Syria. While Syria itself is not a major oil producer, investors fear that intervention in that country could lead to tumult across the region, choking off oil supplies from Iraq and elsewhere. Some analysts fear a spike to $150 per barrel. Higher oil prices reverberate around the world, pushing up the price of petrol, affecting food prices and weakening economic growth. But some experts say that current high prices reflect a deeper, more worrying reality: the world is running out of oil. Are we really at “peak oil”? And how can we prepare for a post-oil future? Peak oil refers to the idea that at some point – and some say it will be soon – oil production will reach a historic maximum and it will be all downhill after that. For an introduction, read The Last Oil Shock: A Survival Guide to the Imminent Extinction of Petroleum Man (John Murray, Dh57) by the journalist David Strahan. We’re on the verge, he says, of the largest and last oil crunch in history: car use and leisure flights could be two causalities. One consequence of peak oil? The end of perpetual economic growth. In The End of Growth (Clairview Books, Dh85), Richard Heinberg argues that the economic growth of industrial countries has reached a natural limit imposed by resource depletion and environmental change. We must come to accept, he says, lower or zero levels of growth – and that means eating less, buying less and travelling less. But amid all that, says Heinberg, we have the chance to escape the trap that is our relentless consumer culture and rediscover what really makes us happy. For a more vivid image of life after oil, though, turn to fiction. In Last Light (Orion, Dh46), the novelist Alex Scarrow imagines a world in which the oil has finally dried up. It’s not good news: widespread riots and societal breakdown keep Jenny and her husband Andy thousands of miles apart, with little hope of a reunion. Still, even if peak oil means economic pain, at least it makes for good reading.
GMT 10:11 2018 Thursday ,15 November
Big Little Lies author Liane Moriarty: Sibling rivalry made me write booksGMT 11:21 2018 Tuesday ,16 October
Young British writer's novel among Man Booker Prize favouritesGMT 07:49 2017 Monday ,11 December
1,229 titles on display at Oman book fairGMT 12:43 2017 Sunday ,05 November
The Fourth Bin-dustrial Revolution at Sharjah International Book FairGMT 10:45 2017 Saturday ,22 July
Harry Potter fan? Two new books set to be publishedGMT 10:39 2017 Saturday ,22 July
Ivanka Trump publishes women’s self-help bookGMT 03:01 2017 Thursday ,11 May
Oman residents need more public librariesGMT 00:40 2017 Thursday ,11 May
A’Sharqiyah University with the World Book dayMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor