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  <title>Oil 301: The World After Cheap Energy | Frankly 137</title>
  <description>Today’s Frankly is the final installment in a three-part series on the role oil plays in modern civilization, prompted by the recent flow disruptions and geopolitical conflict surrounding the Strait of Hormuz. Nate frames the entire arc of this series through the concept of the carbon pulse: a one-time inheritance of ancient stored sunlight that humanity is burning through in a few hundred years. He highlights how modern economies, now roughly a thousand times larger than five centuries ago, are built on the assumption that the energy abundance at the top of this curve is permanent, when in reality it is not. Nate traces how money functions as a claim on physical work, not a substitute for it, and how the financial scaffolding that made shale oil viable depends on cheap capital that may not last. He connects this directly to what he calls energy blindness: the absence of biophysical reality from mainstream economic and political analysis. Nate also draws a direct line between the energy crisis and the ecological crisis, framing them as two faces of the same predicament. The carbon pulse created both the unfolding ecological damage from burning too many fossil fuels, and the depletion crisis from drawing them down too fast. He outlines how forests, wildlife, and food systems all face increasing risk from both climate disruption and human desperation, and how geopolitical alliances are fracturing along lines of energy access rather than ideology. The episode closes with Nate's framing of the Great Simplification not as collapse, but as a potential reorientation, as well as an invitation to consider what actually produces human wellbeing: connection, purpose, community, and service. These are satisfactions that predate the carbon pulse, and do not require a barrel of oil. What does it mean to build a civilization on a one-time energy inheritance, and then plan as though it will last? How might individuals and societies begin to reorient around what actually matters, before external circumstances force the issue? And as the carbon pulse peaks, who do we want to be on the way down? (Recorded March 31st, 2025) &amp;amp;nbsp;  Show Notes and More &amp;amp;nbsp; Watch this video episode on YouTube &amp;amp;nbsp; Want to learn the broad overview of The Great Simplification in 30 minutes? Watch our Animated Movie. &amp;amp;nbsp; --- &amp;amp;nbsp; Support The Institute for the Study of Energy and Our Future &amp;amp;nbsp; Join our Substack newsletter &amp;amp;nbsp;  Join our Hylo channel and connect with other listeners </description>
  <author_name>The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens</author_name>
  <author_url>http://thegreatsimplification.com</author_url>
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