If you mention ‘Peak Oil’ today in polite company—or even among serious economists—you are immediately filed away in the same cabinet as Y2K survivalists and Mayan Calendar enthusiasts.
It is viewed as a failed prophecy. The narrative goes like this: “Around 2005, a bunch of doomers said we were running out of oil. They predicted Mad Max by 2010. Instead, we got the shale revolution, the iPhone, and a stock market that only goes up. Technology saved us. Malthus was wrong. Again.”
This dismissal is the hallmark of the Strong Enlightenment worldview—the shared religion of both Neoclassical economists and Stalinist central planners. It is the belief that human ingenuity, capital formation, and political will are independent variables that can override the physical laws of the universe.
To maintain this belief, the mainstream constructed a ‘Peak Oil Straw Man’.
The reality is that the community was never homogeneous. While the media spotlighted the geological determinists predicting dry pumps and immediate societal collapse, a sophisticated cadre of systems thinkers was always focused on the financial and systemic consequences of flow constraints. They warned that the crisis would not look like an empty tank; it would look like a financial heart attack.
And they were right.
We didn’t run out of oil. We ran out of the cheap energy required to maintain the complexity of our civilisation without cannibalising ourselves.
We have hit the Resource Entropy Singularity (RES).
The Smoking Gun: 2005 and the Great Decoupling
Let’s correct the historical record.
Global production of conventional crude oil—the easy stuff, the stuff that bursts out of the ground under its own pressure with a massive Energy Returned on Energy Invested (ERoEI)—did exactly what the geologists predicted. It peaked and plateaued around 2005. This is not a theory; it is historical data.
The global economy, which is fundamentally a heat engine that metabolises energy to produce structure, immediately felt the fuel line choke. Energy prices spiked. The cost of doing business soared. The ‘Standard Run’ of the Limits to Growth model predicted exactly this: capital would have to be diverted from growth to extraction.
The system hit a wall. In a sane world governed by feedback loops, this would have triggered a simplification of society—a recognition of limits.
Instead, the system hallucinated.
The Global Financial Crisis (GFC) of 2008 was not merely a result of subprime mortgages or greedy bankers. It was a thermodynamic crisis masked as a financial crisis.
When the physical economy stopped growing due to the 2005 plateau, the financial economy decoupled from reality. The ‘Real Economy’ could no longer support the ‘Financial Claims’ on it. To bridge the gap between ‘expectations of exponential growth’ and ‘flatline physical reality’, central banks began printing claims on energy that did not exist.
Financialisation became the substitute for extraction. The systemic analysts within the Peak Oil community had predicted exactly this decoupling.
The Straw Man vs. The Boundary Condition
The reason the Peak Oil movement lost credibility is that the public was trained to expect the ‘Straw Man’ scenario: the pumps running dry. They expected a stock constraint.
What they got instead was a flow rate problem and a complexity trap.
The ‘Shale Revolution’ that supposedly saved us is the perfect illustration of the Resource Entropy Singularity. Yes, we found more oil. But we found it by smashing rocks thousands of feet underground, requiring massive inputs of capital, water, steel, and chemicals.
We replaced high-ERoEI oil (Conventional) with low-ERoEI oil (Unconventional).
We kept the gross volume up, but the Net Energy—the energy left over to power schools, hospitals, armies, and Substack servers—began to decline. We increased the complexity of the extraction system to maintain the flow, but the maintenance cost of that complexity began to eat the surplus.
This is the definition of the Resource Entropy Singularity: The point where the solution to resource depletion (more complexity/technology) consumes more energy than it liberates. It is the moment the maintenance cost of the system exceeds its metabolic intake.
Financialisation is the Heat Signature of Entropy
This is where the political economy emerges from the biophysics.
When a civilisation hits the RES, it cannot generate real wealth (surplus energy) fast enough to service its existing debts. It faces a choice:
- De-complexify (Collapse/Simplification): Accept a lower standard of living.
- Cannibalise: Use financial/political power to strip-mine the future or the periphery to feed the core.
The current ‘Everything Bubble’, the explosion of sovereign debt, and the decoupling of the stock market from GDP are not signs of health. They are the frantic movements of an organism metabolising its own muscle tissue to stay warm. We substituted cheap oil with cheap debt, pretending they have the same caloric content.
The Seneca Cliff and the Vacuum
We are now moving past the plateau and toward the Seneca Cliff—the principle that declines are far steeper than ascents due to the rapid breakdown of complex networks.
The ‘Strong Enlightenment’ thinkers believe we can tariff our way to prosperity or legislate our way to a Green Transition. They do not understand that we are operating under a new regime of physics.
Take the current trade war. In a growing energy system, trade is positive-sum. In a constrained system (post-RES), trade becomes a zero-sum fight for the remaining liquidity. A 10% universal tariff is not ‘protectionism’ in the 19th-century sense; it is a Eurodollar Vacuum. It is the US Empire—the largest metabolic engine on earth—sucking the remaining liquidity (energy tokens) out of the global periphery to maintain its internal temperature.
We are no longer managing growth. We are managing the distribution of entropy.
The sophisticated observers within the Peak Oil tradition knew this was coming. They knew the tank wouldn’t run dry; they knew the engine would start eating itself.
Welcome to the Singularity.
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