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October 26 2018
Recently got through 'When Trucks Stop Running: Energy and the
Future of Transportation'[1] by Alice Friedemann.  Friedemann was
a systems analyst for a large global shipping corporation and has
a thorough understanding of the inner working of the freight industry
and it's critical support for today's Just-in-Time economy.  She
also regularly writes about peak oil and related topics on her blog
Energy Skeptic[2].

Friedemann is not as gifted a writer as others in the world of peak
oil studies.  I found the tone of this book too conversational which
perhaps reflects the fact that she is mainly a blogger.  That aside,
the book is very informative and makes a strong case for why the
demise of inexpensive liquid hydrocarbon fuels will likely be
impossible to replace in the trucking industry at the volumes the
world currently uses.  Friedemann includes many industries under
the term 'trucking'; in addition to the usual 18 wheelers and local
delivery trucks, she also counts vehicles used in mining, agriculture,
and construction, pretty much anything that runs on diesel fuel.
The reason is that these vehicles do a lot of heavy lifting and are
thus very poor candidates for electrification. The same goes for the
airline and rail industries; the comparatively low energy density
and weight of batteries, and the line loss and infrastructure costs
of tethering is essentially a show-stopper in any plans for a switch
to electric power.  Even within the realm of fossil fuels there are
emerging supply constraints as much of the light oil coming out of
the shale plays has to be "upgraded" prior to refining in conventional
oil refineries and is harder to turn into diesel and jet fuel.  This
added cost coupled with the high cost of fracked oil in general yields
a EROI[3] of roughly 10:1 compared to conventional oil's 30:1.  Fuels
derived from tar sands and plants are even poorer investment.

So, despite the writing style, the book is well worth reading for
anyone still under the impression that the world can plausibly run
the current global web of freight on electricity once fossil fuels
become scarcer and much more costly in the coming years (not decades).

For those not keen on reading the book but still interested in this
issue there is a August 2016 Peak Prosperity interview[4] of Friedemann
which covers some of the book's topics.

--
[1] https://www.springer.com/us/book/9783319263731
[2] http://energyskeptic.com/
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_returned_on_energy_invested
[4] https://youtu.be/-EKmNgvUw3k