How much oil and coal are there?
In 1956, geologist M. King Hubbert predicted that the production of the United States would reach the peak between 1965 and 1970. It turned out to be right. Hubbert's theory is called "Hubbert Peak Theory" or simply "top oil". According to the theory, oil production increases until it reaches the peak, at this point there is about half of the original source. Since the initial theory of Hubbert, experts have discussed whether worldwide oil production will also reach its peak. Some of the same debates also concentrated around coal, with analysts wondering how long we could drive our energy civilization final fossil fuels. This would eventually lead to an irreversible increase in the price of oil, which would increase the price of virtually everything else, which could lead to economic collapse, global depression, and other desperate consequences, up to and in and inward to the dissolution of modern industrial civilization. They say we could run oil in almost a few decades or less.
According to optimists, maximum oil production will be achieved between 2020 and 2030. The impact will be improved by investing in alternative energy sources such as solar panels, solar, wind, tidal, geothermal and nuclear cleavage. Even space solar stations, synthetic microbes producing biofuel and nuclear fusion are often cited options. These optimists argue that the fears of top oil are unfounded and that more innovative extraction techniques will help bridge the gap. They believe that oil will probably not occur in less than 50 years and perhaps longer than a century.
Most experts agree that there is much more coal available than oil, and if oil runs out, we can switch to coal. Thanks to even more useful coal, chemical processes that can convert it to a liquid form are. In this way, coal could be used as a liquid fuel similar to today's oil. Most of the depthRynky agrees that there is no coal for at least several hundred years, perhaps more.