Yes I missed that WM, the "mills and the pits" are a constant feature of the Midlands and the "beauty of the south" is rabidly protected.
The point about not using the time and the money to position us for what comes "after" is very well made. Nobody in politics will want to deny the country the "benefits" of the oil for something so nebulous as a sustainable energy infrastructure.
We are already in the position where successive governments have given away massive sums of money based on short term incomes such as oil. This can only make it worse. Basing benefits and social "give-aways" on finite resource revenues like oil is insanity. Something no politician will tell you until it is way too late.
There is no way they will leave it in the ground. Also there is no way they will do the right thing with it.
In some ways it would have been better had this been discovered 50 years from now, after we are forced to create the clean energy infrastructure due to lack of oil. Then it would have been used for benefit, not just to line some pockets as fast as possible.
What we can determine from this is the current scarcity of new reserves. Nobody would have paid for this kind of research if there were large finds of new oil to be had which can be drilled and simply pumped to the surface. Which means peak oil is rapidly approaching.
The next big signal will be viable mining of methane clathrates. Of which the reserves are far greater than all the oil and coal burned since Roman times. Yet another opportunity to completely trash our planet.
This year the global high point of CO2 in the atmosphere will go over
400ppm. By 2018 the global low point will be over 400 and the high point will be heading for 406. There is clear evidence that when the low point hits 450, then the climate starts to self reinforce with CO2 and the system starts to go out of control.
As a reality check for that one, the climate will hit 450ppm somewhere between 25 and 35 years from now because we are simply not reducing our emissions fast enough. In fact our emissions are increasing decade by decade, although the increase is slowing (maybe the 2010's are not over yet).
On average per year over the decade starting with the first figures in 1959
1960's 0.8ppm
1970's 1.2ppm
1980's 1.7ppm
1990's 1.5ppm (however there was Mt Pinatubo in 1991 which messed up the stratosphere for some time)
2000's 1.9ppm
2010's, so far, counting 2009 because I started from 1959 and I'm counting decades, 2.1ppm and that includes a low value for 2009.
So we are on a fast track to a non viable climate for human survival and the last thing we need is more large oil finds....
[update]
About time I re-posted
this, it's been updated to include 2014.