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The Oil is Running Out: Your Personal Survival Plan

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On Sunday, The Telegraph published an article about the death of the North Sea oil and gas and what it means for Britain – a disaster.

Last year alone more than 200 oil and gas wells were plugged, eight platforms were removed and another 180 of the UK’s 284 oil and gas fields will close down by the end of the decade.

Mass closures are not the result of eco-protests, nor because of a lack of demand, The Telegraph wrote and supply isn’t dwindling either. Instead, operators blame punitive taxes for the rapid pullback, with some facing levies of more than 100 per cent on their profits.

What does the future hold?  As well as the UK government losing out on £20bn of tax income, Chris Wheaton, an analyst with Stifel who specialises in the offshore industry, argued that energy security would also suffer.

“UK gas production would see an accelerated decline, forcing more gas to be imported … with impacts on energy costs for consumers. We estimate the UK would be importing 80pc of its gas demand as early as 2030,” he said.

As the Government’s current disastrous energy policies have such huge ramifications for all of us, in the public interest we have attached a copy of The Telegraph’s article below.

In a 2007 book, Dr. Vernon Coleman explored what happens when the oil runs out, although for different reasons to those explained by The Telegraph.  The following is an extract from his book which gives practical advice on how we can prepare ourselves for an oil shortage.


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By Dr. Vernon Coleman

The first question you will probably want to ask yourself is this: is it really true that the oil is running out? If, despite all the evidence I have quoted in my book, you doubt the truth about peak oil (and suspect that the politicians are right and the experts have got it wrong) then you must look at the odds.

Is there a 50% chance that the politicians could be right? Or do you think the chances that the politicians are telling the truth might be as high as 90%? Do you think someone might, after all, invent a perpetual motion machine and provide us all with everlasting supplies of free energy?

Now, change the problem.

If you knew that there was a 10% chance that your home would burn down in the next five years would you be alarmed? Would you take whatever action you could to prepare yourself and your loved ones?

The second question, which follows on from the first, is what are you going to do with the information you’ve acquired?

There will, of course, be many people who will choose to ignore the truths I’ve shared in my book ‘A Bigger Problem than Climate Change’ in the same way, I suppose, that many people deliberately ignore the truths about the relationship between smoking and cancer and eating meat and cancer. In a world where people buy cigarettes, light them and put them in their mouths when the packets in which the cigarettes are distributed contain large, clearly printed health warnings we should not, I suppose, be surprised by anything.

When faced with an unpleasant truth most people prefer to draw the curtains and turn on the television set, hoping that when they draw the curtains back the truth will have gone away.

But the truth isn’t going to go away.

And one day, when the energy runs out the people who don’t want to face the truth will be forced to draw back the curtains.

And then they will have a very nasty surprise.

You, I hope, will be prepared.

This part of the book is designed to help you prepare yourself for the unavoidable crisis that is heading our way.

If you are not prepared, you will not survive.

For the first time in a long time, life will be about the survival of the fittest.

There are two things of which we can be certain.

First, that the Government will make no real effort to prepare the country, or us, for the coming chaos.

Second, when the problem arrives they will make a mess of handling it, limiting themselves to filling the streets with policemen and soldiers to bludgeon those involved in the inevitable angry protests.

So, you must make your own preparations.

Here is what you must do:

1. Prepare yourself mentally for a different world. A world in which the rich ride horses, the middle classes use bicycles and the poor walk everywhere they want to go. Think carefully about your current lifestyle. And try to imagine how difficult (and different) things will be when there is no oil. (Solar energy and windmills are a joke and will never provide enough power to do more than to heat and light the billionaire’s homes.)

2. Energy prices are going to rise inexorably. Take time now to reduce the amount of energy you use. Cut out all non-essential energy usage. Within the home, the greatest expenditure is usually heating. See how low you can turn down your thermostat and still survive comfortably. Wear a sweater indoors and you may be able to cope with a lower temperature.

3. If possible, you should acquire alternative forms of heating and cooking. Do not rely on one energy source. If you have gas central heating then you should have one or two electric heaters available. If you have to replace your oven, consider purchasing one which will enable you to cook with either gas or electricity.

4. If you can become at least partly independent by installing an alternative personal energy source then now is the time to do it. Maybe a small windmill will supply at least part of your electricity needs. If you have a working but unused fireplace in your home then have the chimney swept and cleared so you can have log or coal fires to keep warm. Start laying down stocks of logs and coal. These things won’t rot and I don’t think there’s much chance that they are going to go down in price.

5. Look around your home and make a list of all the gadgetry and equipment upon which you are dependent. How will you cope without each item? Can you accumulate spares? Can you learn how to repair any of these items?

6. Prepare yourself for electricity blackouts by buying lamps and candles. Don’t forget that you will need candle holders and matches. (And make sure that everyone in the family knows how to use them safely.)

7. If you are considering changing your motor car you might consider choosing a car which uses less fuel. Look also for a vehicle which has a decent tank capacity so that you can continue to make small journeys when there are fuel shortages. Reconsider all your travel needs. How much do you need a car of your own? Would you be able to cope more economically (and with less hassle) if you simply relied on taxis and hire cars occasionally? How big a car do you really need? Must you buy a new car? An older car may need more maintenance but the maintenance will almost certainly be easier to manage than a car which is controlled by a series of complicated computers. If you don’t have a bicycle this would be a good time to purchase one. If you can’t ride one then now is the time to learn. Folding bicycles are easy to fit into a car and it should be possible to carry them onto public transport. Equip your bicycle with panniers and a basket so that you can carry shopping on it.

8. If you are choosing a new home consider your likely future needs. Houses within walking or cycling distance of a railway station will sell at a premium in the future. A home that has its own water supply will be particularly attractive as public water supplies come under threat. But look for a spring or gravity-fed supply rather than a borehole. In order to get water out of a borehole you will need an electric pump – and when the electricity goes off you will get no water.

9. If you have land consider establishing a vegetable garden where you can grow at least some of your own food. Try to grow as much food as you can. If you have little or no experience of gardening it will probably take you a year or two to learn some basic gardening skills. Acquire a small library of relevant gardening books. Try to manage your garden without using artificial fertilisers, pesticides, herbicides or other chemicals. Even if you don’t want to start your own vegetable garden straight away you should, perhaps, start thinking of living in a home where a vegetable patch would be possible. (And, ideally, you should have a vegetable patch which is not open to the world. Thieves of the future will not be stealing television sets and mobile phones. They will be stealing potatoes and runner beans. If you grow your own vegetables you will have to be prepared to protect them from thieves. You should prepare now by making your house formidable, impenetrable and uninviting. If you need to dig up your front lawn in order to grow more food, you will need to think about ways to protect your crops from thieves?)

10. Do not take on any additional debt. Try to pay off any existing debts as soon as you can. Credit card debts are particularly expensive and can be a huge drain on your personal resources. If interest rates soar your repayments could be crippling. Water and food are, like fuel, going to become extremely expensive. And the coming price rises in oil and food will be structural, not cyclical. Oil and food will never again be as plentiful or as cheap as they are now. Your savings could help you survive.

11. This could be a good time to examine your life. How many of the things you spend money on are essential to your health and happiness? How many of the things you buy turn out to be a burden rather than an asset? Every time you make a big purchase consider not just the cash price but also the time price. How many hours did you have to work to earn the money to pay for it? If you are contemplating buying an electrical item that costs £500 and you earn £5 an hour net of taxes then the item you’re thinking of buying will cost 100 hours of your life. Step off the consumer treadmill and you may feel physical and mental benefits.

12. Try to replace some of the more complex tools in your house with simpler tools that don’t need electricity. For example, a small hand drill may be slower and harder to use than an electric drill but you will still be able to use it when there is no electricity. Accumulate simple well-made hand tools to use around the house and garden.

13. This might be a time to start learning simple, practical skills so that you will be able to look after your home and your belongings without always being reliant on outside “experts.” Learning basic carpentry and basic plumbing will provide you with considerable freedom.

14. In recent years it has become increasingly difficult to obtain the services of a general practitioner out of hours. This is likely to continue (if not to get worse). Hospitals are likely to deteriorate still further as they struggle to cope with a top-heavy bureaucracy, an increasingly incompetent and unhappy workforce and an ongoing energy crisis. You should, therefore, make sure that you acquire some simple medical skills. Put together a simple first aid kit and a small library of easy-to-understand medical books.

15. Try to do as much shopping as you can at local stores and local markets. When buying food try to buy locally grown food. Big supermarkets may sometimes (but not always) be cheaper and it is certainly more convenient (if rather soul-destroying) to do all your shopping in one store but when oil becomes increasingly expensive the big stores will not survive. (Transporting food and other supplies to their stores will be costly and many of their customers will no longer have the transport available for them to visit out-of-town stores.) If you and your neighbours do not keep small shops and markets alive, where will you shop when the supermarkets close down?

16. Try to limit the amount of rubbish you accumulate. As oil becomes increasingly expensive, and local councils struggle to cope with their dramatically increasing pension obligations, so local services will deteriorate considerably. Rubbish collections, already threatened, will be non-existent. Try to free your home of as much rubbish as you can now. And be cautious about taking home new rubbish and clutter. You will need to find new ways to get rid of your rubbish in the future – either by burying it or burning it.

The above is extracted from Dr. Coleman’s book ‘A Bigger Problem than Climate Change’ which was first published in 2007 and which becomes more accurate each year.

About the Author

Vernon Coleman MB ChB DSc practised medicine for ten years. He has been a full-time professional author for over 30 years. He is a novelist and campaigning writer and has written many non-fiction books.  He has written over 100 books which have been translated into 22 languages. On his website, www.vernoncoleman.com,  there are hundreds of articles which are free to read.

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Frank
Frank
1 month ago

oil is running out ..bwahahahahaha

oleg
oleg
Reply to  Frank
1 month ago

ALL is running out! Read Richard Heinberg’s books!

SAbi3
SAbi3
Reply to  oleg
1 month ago

Oil is not from dinos, it is not running out, it is a manipulation again. Dig after it.

Giggedy
Giggedy
Reply to  Frank
1 month ago

it ain’t running out that’s for sure, But TPTB scum are gonna make sure it ‘runs’ out and the sheeple will fall for it, they’ll pay the Big Corps off with tax payer money to line the pockets of the CEO’s of Big Oil, they’ll make sure you take in their ‘rapefugees’ if you have a spare room (even if you don’t), they’ll sew discord at every opportunity while the likes of Rishi bathes in his taxpayer funded swimming pool

Anderson
Anderson
1 month ago

Doctor doom !

Mike
Mike
Reply to  Anderson
1 month ago

it’s amazing some people still cannot see the writing on the wall and the fraud that was the plandemic. for those of you reading this from the UK/Northern Europe, I’d seriously consider selling up your home now if you own one and leaving for a central American country in the countryside, outside of cities – the local farming communities are still living very well like 500 years ago and are generally welcoming of foreigners / immigrants from Europe and the US / Canada. no council tax, no energy bills, free water everywhere and cheap land on which to build a simple house with your own food production 12 months a year!! Dr Coleman is a tad wrong about solar – ten good panels, which admittedly are a few thousand in outlay will provide a large amount of electricity that is guaranteed with all the sun that is available in the tropics – even enough for a large fridge freezer and an electric hob and oven. There’s also a good chance that if you work from home on the internet somehow and it’s for an international company, you may not have to pay any tax or very little tax and you won’t have to earn much anyway as the cost of living is so much cheaper than compared to Northern Europe – if you already speak a bit of Spanish, all the better!

Karin Schroeder
Karin Schroeder
1 month ago

First of December 2022 we had our gas and electricity disconnected and capped. We survive with a log burner and camping gas stove. They refuse to disconnect our water but we collect rainwater and that’s what we drink. We bath in a plastic 90 litre dog bath. Water is boiled in winter in a 20 liter pot on the log burner. In summer it is boiled on a brick rocket stove outside. We dug up front and back gardens for vegetables. We have a portable solar panel that charges a 500 watt battery pack. It’s for charging the phones. Otherwise, I charge it at Wetherspoons or a local cafe. Life is very different. We waste little now as we can’t refrigerate anything. I’m 65 and managed for 5 weeks on my own when my husband has to go to South Africa due to a family bereavement. I don’t drive and walk everywhere carrying home what is essential for the day. Washing I wheel up to the laundrette and wheel back home again. The town community are fascinated that we survive quite well under the circumstances and follow our posts about it.

Dave Owen
Dave Owen
Reply to  Karin Schroeder
1 month ago

Hi
Karin Schroeder,
You are our hero’s now, we are all fascinated.
Keep us informed, you have done well.
This is why they are talking about banning log burners.
They want us to keep paying more and more.

Karin Schroeder
Karin Schroeder
Reply to  Dave Owen
1 month ago

Thank you. We did it because we refused to pay standing charges and the MP came back with a response from Ofgem that basically said “tough”. It was a fight to get disconnected but we stood firm and won. We also knew that we would start running out of money and somehow needed to exist without it. We still need to get rid of water and sewerage standing charges and also council tax. Our bills would be limited to mobile connection after that! It is one fight at a time though. Imagine no TV, no broadband and actual conversation at night. Soft candlelight or a paraffin lamp. Sometimes we forget any light and just sit talking or discussing ideas in the dark.

Dave Owenhttps://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/for
Dave Owenhttps://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/for
Reply to  Karin Schroeder
1 month ago

Hi
Karin Schroeder,
That was a quick reply.
Have you looked at getting a 240 volt inverter, to run a small fridge.
Years ago, we managed without a TV for 15 years.
We had a couple of children and did not want to get them getting false news off the TV.
They did complain, so I went out and bought all the VHS stock from two local car-boot stalls. Kept them amused for years.
If you just have soakaways and disconnect the drain pipework off your roof, this could reduce your water rates. Just pay for sewage charges.
Keep us informed.

Mike
Mike
Reply to  Karin Schroeder
1 month ago

I moved to a warm country in the tropics – solar works really well, water is hot by running it through black pipes on the roof, I’m working on building a solar oven using reflective materials and magnifying glasses to harness the sun – living in the UK is just not an option for us and I refuse to pay tax to an evil terrorist organisation that is called our government

Karin Schroeder
Karin Schroeder
Reply to  Mike
1 month ago

Wish we could but don’t have the money to do so. Well done on your set up. Absolutely brilliant to know that you are succeeding with it!!

Mania
Mania
1 month ago

The reason why they ‘cap’ the oil wells is because they replenish naturally over time. Ask any oil man, they know! Then the oil man goes back to the well and starts pumping again.

They are not fossil fuels, that is a trick.

Paul Watson
Paul Watson
1 month ago

Windfall taxes are to blame.
Why risk investing billions to give majority to a corrupted government full of liars and criminals.

Tony
Tony
1 month ago

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6VFJuIpHckY
EARTH SHATTERING new findings from Bob Greenyer of the Martin Fleischmann Memorial Project which were released over the last few weeks.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1PH_IMMxT4E&t=7s

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VnZRMtFWe3Q

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/23XXuIvAtts

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2VtB3LYVHo&t=513s

mcc
mcc
1 month ago

Oil is a finite resource and has peaked so some day somehow it may run out although maybe not for forseeable future. Who knows for sure. . But the global cabal are not reporting it as it is but dressing it up as “man made climate disaster” etc, so as to grab all the resources including oil for themselves. Thats how I understand it.
But a bigger threat to the oil supply and prices is the threat or possibility of an Iran-Israel conflict. That would drive oil prices stratospheric as I understand it.