Motion Graphics Awesomeness: Oil Wars

Post carbon
Arts • Views: 33,899

A beautifully polished example of motion graphics used as a tool to communicate important information, from the Post Carbon Institute.

I seriously designed and animated half of this piece at the seriously fun Monstro for the seriously serious Post Carbon Institute.

Producer: Dalton Crosthwait
Design & Animation: Alexander Perry, Michael Wilson
Sound: Ben Roider

The following is a message from Post Carbon Institute:

In recent months we’ve seen a spate of assertions that peak oil is a worry of the past thanks to so-called “new technologies” that can tap massive amounts of previously inaccessible stores of “unconventional” oil. “Don’t worry, drive on,” we’re told.

We can fall for the oil industry hype and keep ourselves chained to a resource that’s depleting and comes with ever increasing economic and environmental costs, or we can recognize that the days of cheap and abundant oil (not to mention coal and natural gas) are over.

Unfortunately, the mainstream media and politicians on both sides of the aisle are parroting the hype, claiming — in Obama’s case — that unconventional oil can play a key role in an “all of the above” energy strategy and — in Romney’s — that increased production of tight oil and tar sands can make North America energy independent by the end of his second term.

WE NEED YOUR HELP.

Please share this video and help bring a dose of reality to the energy conversation:

* Email the video to everyone you think needs to watch it
* Share it through your social networks
* Send it to your elected officials

The video script can be found here: http://postcarbon.org/blog-post/1083449-don-t-worry-there-s-plenty-of-oil

THANK YOU.

Animation: MONSTRO DESIGN http://monstrodesign.com
Facebook: http://facebook.com/postcarbon
Twitter: http://twitter.com/postcarbon

SO MUCH MORE at http://postcarbon.org

Jump to bottom

5 comments
1 Charles Johnson  Sat, Sep 1, 2012 7:40:35pm

I don’t really want to face this topic, either.

2 freetoken  Sat, Sep 1, 2012 7:55:17pm

Neat.

re: #1 Charles Johnson

I don’t really want to face this topic, either.

We hoomans are very good at selective memory and selective vision.

3 butterick  Sat, Sep 1, 2012 9:46:29pm

It’s pretty awful once all the pieces fall into place, isn’t it? I spent some time almost paralyzed with depression when I realized what was happening.

My advice would be, don’t immerse yourself in peaker culture, and don’t read Kunstler. His worst case scenarios are actually fantasies - he’s excited at the thought that peak oil could mean the end of the world as we know it if it gets rid of Wal-mart and garage centric suburban architecture.

The situation in 2012 is much better than I expected in 2005. I think we just might muddle through without descending into a Mad Max hellworld. ;-)

4 freetoken  Sat, Sep 1, 2012 9:49:44pm

re: #3 butterick

My advice would be, don’t immerse yourself in peaker culture, and don’t read Kunstler. His worst case scenarios are actually fantasies - he’s excited at the thought that peak oil could mean the end of the world as we know it if it gets rid of Wal-mart and garage centric suburban architecture.

He’s a creative writer - a word smith - that has decided to write material for the doomer crowd to buy. I guess it must be more interesting that writing romance novels.

5 lostlakehiker  Sun, Sep 2, 2012 2:33:25pm

As Germany demonstrated in WW2, it is also possible to start with coal and end up with a usable liquid motor fuel. While post-peak oil will indeed be more expensive, the price of fracking, getting oil from tar sands, or digging coal and then converting it is not prohibitive.

Not unless you count the cost to future decades and future generations of the resulting CO2. Blowing this off as mythical won’t make it actually go away. This year’s drought sat down on our corn belt and wouldn’t leave. Such a thing would have been technically possible without AGW, but the odds against it would have been long. We are already beginning to see the cost.

And this is just the beginning.


This article has been archived.
Comments are closed.

Jump to top

Create a PageThis is the LGF Pages posting bookmarklet. To use it, drag this button to your browser's bookmark bar, and title it 'LGF Pages' (or whatever you like). Then browse to a site you want to post, select some text on the page to use for a quote, click the bookmarklet, and the Pages posting window will appear with the title, text, and any embedded video or audio files already filled in, ready to go.
Or... you can just click this button to open the Pages posting window right away.
Last updated: 2023-04-04 11:11 am PDT
LGF User's Guide RSS Feeds

Help support Little Green Footballs!

Subscribe now for ad-free access!Register and sign in to a free LGF account before subscribing, and your ad-free access will be automatically enabled.

Donate with
PayPal
Cash.app
Recent PagesClick to refresh
The Pandemic Cost 7 Million Lives, but Talks to Prevent a Repeat Stall In late 2021, as the world reeled from the arrival of the highly contagious omicron variant of the coronavirus, representatives of almost 200 countries met - some online, some in-person in Geneva - hoping to forestall a future worldwide ...
Cheechako
3 days ago
Views: 118 • Comments: 0 • Rating: 1
Texas County at Center of Border Fight Is Overwhelmed by Migrant Deaths EAGLE PASS, Tex. - The undertaker lighted a cigarette and held it between his latex-gloved fingers as he stood over the bloated body bag lying in the bed of his battered pickup truck. The woman had been fished out ...
Cheechako
2 weeks ago
Views: 279 • Comments: 0 • Rating: 1