The Relationship of Energy to Sustainability (John Tjostem)

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The Relationship of Energy to Sustainability John Tjostem My perspective on the subject of sustainability has been influenced by my childhood experiences on a South Dakota farm and by farming with my dad in the 1950s. Graduate school majors in plant physiology and microbiology plus a teaching specialty in immunology have provided unique additional dimensions for developing my position on sustainability. This essay draws on an extensive review of the literature. Many supporting facts are included. Read the text carefully and bring your questions. I look forward to addressing them. Since this paper covers a range of topics, it is divided into sections as follows: 1. Peak Oil 2. Debates on Sustainability of Economic Growth 3. Advances in Modern Agriculture 4. Mineral Ores (unlike Fossil Fuels) are not used up 5. Prosperity Stabilizes Population 6. Electric Power Changes Lifestyle 7. Urbanization Causes Birth Rate to Drop 8. Sustainable Path replaces Fossil Fuels with Nuclear Fission 9. Short Term Petroleum Substitutes 10. Legislation for Energy R&D Funding 11. Small Breeder Reactors 12. Comprehending Energy Density of Fuels 13. Choices of Energy Sources Matter 14. Ionizing Radiation is Safer than People Realize 15 Summaries of Core Issues 16 Conclusions Peak Oil We visited a museum at Missouri Valley that houses 200,000 items from the steamship, Bertrand. The Bertrand sank in the Missouri River in 1865. Mud which was made anaerobic by bacteria soon covered over the vessel preserving its cargo from oxidation. The steamship’s location remained a mystery for 104 years. Rediscovery of the Bertrand’s occurred 1969. I was struck by a collection of ornate whale oil lamps and a shelf which contained several rows of delicate glass oil lamp chimneys. Whale oil lamps were used by rich folks. The common herd got along with dim light from tallow candles. Kerosene lamps came into use a few years after the Bertrand accident, sometime during the last quarter of the nineteenth century. The first oil well in our country was dug in 1859. Since there was little demand for petroleum, the first refinery was not built for many years and when it was built the main product was kerosene for lamps, gasoline was burned off. The advent of kerosene saved a lot of whales, since whale oil was the most sought after product of the whaling industry.

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The Relationship of Energy to Sustainability (John Tjostem) by John A. Shanahan - Issuu