> If we keep burning fossil fuels at our current rate, it is generally estimated that all our fossil fuels will be depleted by 2060. New reserves will probably be found before this point, extending the deadline somewhat, but its worth remembering that if we are to limit global warming to the 'relatively' safe level of 2C by 2050, 80% of coal, 50% of gas and 30% of oil reserves are "unburnable".
Then, may I present to you, Lawrence Livermore's Energy Consumption Resource Flow diagram: https://flowcharts.llnl.gov/content/assets/images/energy/us/...
summary (1 quad = 10^15 btu)
~32 quads of all energy input comes from natural gas
~9 quads of all energy input comes from coal
~32 quads of all energy input comes from petroleum
industrial sector is estimated at about 49% energy efficient, compared to residential + commercial sector's 65%, and transportation's measly 21%
62 quads (aka roughly 2/3rds!!!) of all energy output just dissipates into the environment, as 'rejected energy'
Yes folks, you read that last one right. Electrification + cleaner energy sources can't come soon enough.
Remember that depletion is asymptotic, so a possible answer is "never"; extraction just gets smaller and smaller. Individual wells work like this anyway, what comes out is an oil/water mixture at gradually reducing pressure. At some point it's uneconomic to pump and filter it, so it's capped off when not empty.
This other article has a graph that shows why 8 is critical threshold. Dropping below 8 means production rapidly starts to consume all of the energy produced. http://theoildrum.com/node/8625
EVs are a "fad" now but once prices go up a little more, people will switch. Energy companies charging more to match scarcity will just get switched. Right now it's not economical to do more solar or "microwave" power plants, but if prices go up, a lot of smart people will enter this sector.
Nuclear fission might be a more interesting question, because that's the main fallback. But it should last long enough until people figure out fusion.
We'll likely see gasoline phased out for transportation by 2030-2035. Kerosene is still going to be used for jets and rockets for the foreseeable future; there are no good substitutes. Coal is already on its way out for electricity generation, and disappeared from railroads and ships about 70 years ago. Plastics are also here with us for the foreseeable future; they don't use much oil, and they give a lot of product benefits that can't be replicated with other materials.
I think we will have a suitable replacement for oil long before it runs out. Likewise gas etc.
https://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/25/opinion/25lynch.html?_r=1...
(ducks)