Great moments in failed predictions

Cover of "The Limits to growth: A report ...
Cover via Amazon

UPDATE: New table added below.

While searching for something else, I came across this entertaining collection of grand predictive failures related to resources and climate change, along with some of the biggest predictive failures of Paul Ehrlich. I thought it worth sharing.

Exhaustion of Resources

“Indeed it is certain, it is clear to see, that the earth itself is currently more cultivated and developed than in earlier times. Now all places are accessible, all are documented, all are full of business.  The most charming farms obliterate empty places, ploughed fields vanquish forests, herds drive out wild beasts, sandy places are planted with crops, stones are fixed, swamps drained, and there are such great cities where formerly hardly a hut… everywhere there is a dwelling, everywhere a multitude, everywhere a government, everywhere there is life. The greatest evidence of the large number of people: we are burdensome to the world, the resources are scarcely adequate to us; and our needs straiten us and complaints are everywhere while already nature does not sustain us.”

  • In 1865, Stanley Jevons (one of the most recognized 19th century economists) predicted that England would run out of coal by 1900, and that England’s factories would grind to a standstill.
  • In 1885, the US Geological Survey announced that there was “little or no chance” of oil being discovered in California.
  • In 1891, it said the same thing about Kansas and Texas. (See Osterfeld, David. Prosperity Versus Planning : How Government Stifles Economic Growth. New York : Oxford University Press, 1992.)
  • In 1939 the US Department of the Interior said that American oil supplies would last only another 13 years.
  • 1944 federal government review predicted that by now the US would have exhausted its reserves of 21 of 41 commodities it examined. Among them were tin, nickel, zinc, lead and manganese.
  • In 1949 the Secretary of the Interior announced that the end of US oil was in sight.

Claim: In 1952 the US President’s Materials Policy Commission concluded that by the mid-1970s copper production in the US could not exceed 800,000 tons and that lead production would be at most 300,000 tons per year.

Data: But copper production in 1973 was 1.6 million tons, and by 1974 lead production had reached 614,000 tons – 100% higher than predicted.

Claims: In 1968, Paul R. Ehrlich wrote The Population Bomb and declared that the battle to feed humanity had been lost and that there would be a major food shortage in the US. “In the 1970s … hundreds of millions are going to starve to death,” and by the 1980s most of the world’s important resources would be depleted. He forecast that 65 million Americans would die of starvation between 1980-1989 and that by 1999, the US population would decline to 22.6 million. The problems in the US would be relatively minor compared to those in the rest of the world. (Ehrlich, Paul R. The Population Bomb. New York, Ballantine Books, 1968.) New Scientist magazine underscored his speech in an editorial titled “In Praise of Prophets.”

Claim: “By the year 2000 the United Kingdom will be simply a small group of impoverished islands, inhabited by some 70 million hungry people … If I were a gambler, I would take even money that England will not exist in the year 2000.” Paul Ehrlich, Speech at British Institute For Biology, September 1971.

Claim: Ehrlich wrote in 1968, “I have yet to meet anyone familiar with the situation who thinks India will be self-sufficient in food by 1971, if ever.”

Data: Yet in a only few years India was exporting food and significantly changed its food production capacity. Ehrlich must have noted this because in the 1971 version of his book this comment is deleted (Julian Simon, The Ultimate Resource, Princeton: Princeton Univesity Press, 1981, p. 64).

The Limits to Growth (1972) – projected the world would run out of gold by 1981, mercury and silver by 1985, tin by 1987, zinc by 1990, petroleum by 1992, and copper, lead and natural gas by 1993. It also stated that the world had only 33-49 years of aluminum resources left, which means we should run out sometime between 2005-2021. (See Donella Meadows et al., The Limits to Growth: A Report for the Club of Rome’s Project on the Predicament of Mankind. New York: New American Library, 1972.

Claim: In 1974, the US Geological Survey announced “at 1974 technology and 1974 price” the US had only a 10-year supply of natural gas.

Data: The American Gas Association said that gas supplies were sufficient for the next 1,000-2,500 years. (Julian Simon, Population Matters. New Jersey: Transaction Publications, 1990): p. 90.

Population and Poverty

In the mid 1970s the US government sponsored a travelling exhibit for schoolchildren titled, “Population: The Problem is Us.” (Jacqueline Kasun, The War Against Population, San Francisco: CA, Ignatius, 1988, p. 21.)

In 1973, Supreme Court Justice Potter Stewart’s vote in Roe v. Wade was influenced by this idea, according to Bob Woodward and Scott Armstrong: “As Stewart saw it, abortion was becoming one reasonable solution to population control” (quoted in Newsweek of September 14, 1987, p. 33.).

In 1989, when the US Supreme Court was hearing the Webster case, Justice Sandra Day O’Connor brought the idea of overpopulation into a hypothetical question she asked of Charles Fried, former solicitor-general, “Do you think that the state has the right to, if in a future century we had a serious overpopulation problem, has a right to require women to have abortions after so many children?”

World Bank president Barber Conable calls for population control because “poverty and rapid population growth reinforce each other” (Washington Post, July 16, 1990, p. A13)

Prince Philip advises us that “It must be obvious by now that further population growth in any country is undesirable” (Washington Post, May 8, 1990, p. A26)

37 Senators wrote President Bush in support of funding for population control (Washington Post, April 1, 1990, p. H1)

The Trilateral Commission and the American Assembly call for reduction in population growth (U. S. News and World Report, May 7, 1990)

Newsweek‘s year-ending cover story concluded that “Foremost of the new realities is the world’s population problem” (December 25, 1990, p.44)

The president of NOW warns that continued population growth would be a “catastrophe” (Nat Hentoff in the Washington Post, July 29, 1989, p. A17)

Ted Turner (Atlanta Journal Constitution, Wed. Dec. 2, 1998) in an address to the Society of Environmental Journalists in Chattanooga – blamed Christianity for overpopulation and environmental degradation, and argued that the people who disagree with him are “dummies.” He stated in part, “The Judeo-Christian religion says man was given dominion over everything, and his salvation was that he was to go out and increase and multiply. Well, we have done that … to the point where in Calcutta, it’s a hellhole. So it’s not an environmentally friendly religion.”

Ellen Goodman laments “People Pollution” (Washington Post, March 3, 1990, p. A25)

Herblock cartoon shows that the U. S. neglecting the “world population explosion” (Washington Post, July 19, 1990, p. A22)

Hobart Rowen likens population growth to “the pond weed [which] grows in huge leaps” (Washington Post, April 1, 1990, p. H8).

A Newsweek “My Turn” suggests giving every teen-age girl a check for up to $1200 each year that she does not have a baby “in order to stop the relentless increase of humanity” (Noel Perrin. “A Nonbearing Account”, April 2, 1990, p. 9).

Climate Change

Claim Jan. 1970: “By 1985, air pollution will have reduced the amount of sunlight reaching earth by one half.” Life Magazine, January 1970. Life Magazine also noted that some people disagree, “but scientists have solid experimental and historical evidence to support each of the predictions.”

Data: Air quality has actually improved since 1970. Studies find that sunlight reaching the Earth fell by somewhere between 3 and 5 percent over the period in question.

Claim April 1970: “If present trends continue, the world will be … eleven degrees colder by the year 2000. This is about twice what it would take to put us in an ice age.” Kenneth E.F. Watt, in Earth Day, 1970.

Data: According to NASA, global temperature has increased by about 1 degree Fahrenheit since 1970.

Claim 1970: “In ten years all important animal life in the sea will be extinct. Large areas of coastline will have to be evacuated because of the stench of dead fish.” Paul Ehrlich, speech during Earth Day, 1970.

Claim 1972: “Artic specialist Bernt Balchen says a general warming trend over the North Pole is melting the polar ice cap and may produce an ice-free Arctic Ocean by the year 2000.” Christian Science Monitor, June 8, 1972.

Data: Ice coverage has fallen, though as of last month, the Arctic Ocean had 3.82 million square miles of ice cover — an area larger than the continental United States — according to The National Snow and Ice Data Center.

Claims 1974: “… when metereologists take an average of temperatures around the globe they find the atmosphere has been growing gradually cooler for the past three decades. The trend shows no indication of reversing. Climatological Cassandras are becoming increasingly apprehensive, for the weather aberrations they are studying may be the harbinger of another ice age. Telltale signs are everywhere–from the unexpected persistence and thickness of pack ice int eh waters around Iceland to the southward migration of a warmth-loving creature like the armadillo from the Midwest. When Climatologist George J. Kukla of Columbia University’s Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory and his wife Helena analyzed satellite weather data fro the Northern Hemisphere, they found that the area of ice and snow cover had suddenly increased by 12% in 1971 and the increase has persisted ever since. Areas of Baffin Island in the Canadia Arctic, for example, were once totally free of any snow in summer; now they are covered year round.”

Later in the article, “Whatever the cause of the cooling trend, its effects could be extremely serious, if not catastrophic. Scientists figure that only a 1% decrease in the amount of sunlight hitting the earth’s surface could tip teh climatic balance, and cool the planet enough to send it sliding down the road to another ice age within only a few hundred years.”

Source: “Another Ice Age,” Time Magazine, June 24, 1974.

Claim 1989: “Using computer models, researchers concluded that global warming would raise average annual temperatures nationwide two degrees by 2010.” Associated Press, May 15, 1989.

Data: According to NASA, global temperature has increased by about 0.7 degrees Fahrenheit since 1989. And U.S. temperature has increased even less over the same period.

Claims: “Britain’s winter ends tomorrow with further indications of a striking environmental change: snow is starting to disappear from our lives.”

“Sledges, snowmen, snowballs and … are all a rapidly diminishing part of Britain’s culture, as warmer winters–which scientists are attributing to global climate change–produce not only fewer white Christmases, but fewer white Januaries and Februaries.”

“London’s last substantial snowfall was in February 1991.” “Global warming, the heating of the atmosphere by increased amounts of industrial gases, is now accepted as a reality by the international community.”

According to Dr. David Viner, a senior research scientist at the climatic research unit (CRU) of the University of East Anglia, within a few years “children just aren’t going to know what snow is” and winter snowfall will be “a very rare and exciting event.” Interviewed by the UK Independent, March 20, 2000.

“David Parker, at the Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research in Berkshire, says ultimately, British children could have only virtual experience of snow.”

See “Snowfalls are now just a thing of the past.” The Independent. March 20, 2000.

Data: “Coldest December Since records began as temperatures plummet to minus 10 C bringing travel chaos across Britain.” Mailonline. Dec. 18, 2010.

Claim: “[By] 1995, the greenhouse effect would be desolating the heartlands of North America and Eurasia with horrific drought, causing crop failures and food riots … [By 1996] The Platte River of Nebraska would be dry, while a continent-wide black blizzard of prairie topsoil will stop traffic on interstates, strip paint from houses and shut down computers.” Michel Oppenheimer and Robert H. Boyle, Dead Heat, St. Martin’s Press, 1990. Oppenheimer is the Albert G. Milbank Professor of Geosciences and International Affairs in the Woodrow Wilson School and the Department of Geosciences at Princeton University. He is the Director of the Program in Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy at the Wilson School. He was formerly a senior scientist with the Environmental Defense Fund, the largest non-governmental organization in the U.S. that examines problems and solutions to greenhouse gases.

Data: When asked about these old predictions Oppenheimer stated, “On the whole I would stand by these predictions — not predictions, sorry, scenarios — as having at least in a general way actually come true,” he said. “There’s been extensive drought, devastating drought, in significant parts of the world. The fraction of the world that’s in drought has increased over that period.”

However, that claim is not obviously true. Data from NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center show that precipitation — rain and snow — has increased slightly over the century.

How could scientists have made such off-base claims? Dr. Paul Ehrlich, author of “The Population Bomb” and president of Stanford University’s Center for Conservation Biology, told FoxNews.com that ideas about climate science changed a great deal in the the ’70s and ’80s.

Ehrlich told FoxNews.com that the consequences of future warming could be dire.

=============================================================

Source: University of Georgia, Terry College of Business. Economics 2200, Economic Development of the US, David B. Mustard

http://www.terry.uga.edu/~mustard/courses/e2200/pop.htm

UPDATE: reader Dennis Wingo writes in with this table:

Great article.  I went into this myself in my book “Moonrush“,  I took all of the predictions for the depletion of resources from the book and marked in red the deadlines that had already passed.  All of the predictions failed.

limits_wingo

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January 19, 2013 3:59 am

Does anybody know of a collection of predictions that turned out right?

Ed Zuiderwijk
January 19, 2013 4:01 am

But I can a prediction that will come true, whatever:
“There will always be people who make predictions that will not come true.”
(Now even if I’m wrong, is my prediction really wrong? Ah, logic, who needs it?)

Jimbo
January 19, 2013 4:10 am

I think the reason why these prophets of doom fail time and again is because they think there will be no more technological / agricultural advances.

From Horse Power to Horsepower
IN 1898 , DELEGATES FROM ACROSS THE GLOBE gathered in New York City for the world’s first international urban planning conference. One topic dominated the discussion. It was not housing, land use, economic development, or infrastructure. The delegates were driven to desperation by horse manure…………….
The situation seemed dire. In 1894, the Times of London estimated that by 1950 every street in the city would be buried nine feet deep in horse manure. One New York prognosticator of the 1890s concluded that by 1930 the horse droppings would rise to Manhattan’s third-story windows. A public health and sanitation crisis of almost unimaginable dimensions loomed…………………….
In New York in 1900, 200 persons were killed by horses and horse-drawn vehicles. This contrasts with 344 auto-related fatalities in New York in 2003; given the modern city’s greater population, this means the fatality rate per capita in the horse era was roughly 75 percent higher than today.
http://www.uctc.net/access/30/Access%2030%20-%2002%20-%20Horse%20Power.pdf
———
http://bytesdaily.blogspot.com/2011/07/great-horse-manure-crisis-of-1894.html

Failed predictions / projections / scenarios of CAGW.
http://www.c3headlines.com/predictionsforecasts/
Fail!
http://nofrakkingconsensus.com/tag/predictions-that-failed/
On UK snow being a thing of the past there has within the last week been transport chaos and food panic buying.
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/uk-snow–supermarkets-left-with-empty-shelves-from-panic-buying-114529619.html

Keitho
Editor
January 19, 2013 4:12 am

Robbie says:
January 19, 2013 at 3:28 am (Edit)
Oh really Mr. Watts!
Are you trying to suggest to your audience with this piece that we (humans) can go on with business as usual for an unlimited amount of time on a planet that has a limited amount of space and resources?
————————————————————————————
Hi Robbie, you seem a bit fraught so you may wish to consider a couple of things . .
1. We use less farmland today than we did 10 years ago because of huge upgrades in our productivity. This trend is expected to continue even as we head towards a peak population of 9 billion in mid century whereafter there will be a decline in global population.
2. We have barely scratched a few insignificant holes into the Earth’s crust which is truly enormous varying in thickness of between 3-10km under the oceans and 30-50km thick on the continents. To all practical purposes the availability of resources is essentially unlimited given technology and need.
There are no practical limits on mankind presented by resources. That seems to be lost on the Ehrlichs of our time. It is also important to understand that as much as we use it never goes away. That is true of copper or water or hydrocarbons. All are ultimately re-usable by applying inventiveness, technology and need. What is truly astonishing is that, thanks to our use of energy, it takes progressively less and less human effort to achieve any given standard of living. The availability of energy has truly liberated mankind and that can easily be established by simply comparing societies which are low users with those that have developed to the extent that life expectancy rates are much higher thanks to cheap and ubiquitous energy being reliably available.
The awesome improvement in the human condition, starting in the late 1700’s, thanks to the rapidly expanding availability of energy that doesn’t rely on human and animal physical effort is what makes us more able to deal with whatever set backs are thrust upon us.

Tom in South Jersey
January 19, 2013 4:12 am

We occupy such a small percentage of the planet’s surface. Wait until we start mining the ocean floor. Deep water drilling for oil and gas is probably just the start.

cdc
January 19, 2013 4:19 am

BTW, Ted Turner has five children. Do as I say…

Gene Selkov
January 19, 2013 4:19 am

Interesting. Funny how hard it is to keep oneself from making predictions (especially about the future). But I checked Jevons’s, and it looks like he was not entirely off the mark:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Coal_Question#Global_developments_after_Jevons
I would expect that of him, because he used a form of self-restraint that we all seek for ourselves, or at least appreciate in others:
http://archive.org/stream/theprinciplesof00jevoiala#page/n7/mode/2up
(a worthwhile read, by the way)

January 19, 2013 4:22 am

Reblogged this on gottadobetterthanthis and commented:
Crazy we will have with us always.
From the snippets Anthony includes, we can see direct evidence of the culture war and the deadly claims of the radical environmentalists. This one is worth repeating: Claim from April 1970: “If present trends continue, the world will be … eleven degrees colder by the year 2000. This is about twice what it would take to put us in an ice age.” Kenneth E.F. Watt, in Earth Day, 1970.

January 19, 2013 4:23 am

“Oh really Mr. Watts!
Are you trying to suggest to your audience with this piece that we (humans) can go on with business as usual for an unlimited amount of time on a planet that has a limited amount of space and resources?”
Whale bone, mast timbers, paraffin, animal skins, guano…they’re running out! Not even the powers of the abacus and slide rule can save us.

tokyoboy
January 19, 2013 4:24 am
snotrocket
January 19, 2013 4:25 am

I vividly recall the impact of LTG in 1972 when it became the bible for the then new Ecology course being taught by the brand-new Open University – and I still have my copy(I keep it handy to remind me of man’s folly). The memory I have of that book is how everyone felt it was so important, rather in the same way that Gore’s Inconvenient Truth is to this generation – and they are both crocks of ‘merde’.

DirkH
January 19, 2013 4:36 am

Sam Norton (@Elizaphanian) says:
January 19, 2013 at 2:03 am
“I’m normally a fan, but knocking Limits to Growth for saying that it “projected the world would run out of gold by 1981, mercury and silver by 1985, tin by 1987, zinc by 1990, petroleum by 1992, and copper, lead and natural gas by 1993″ is simply false. For a hard-nosed look at what LTG actually said, I recommend the late Matt Simmons review here”
I’m not inclined to read that entire book. So I scanned for “Gold”. No hits. “Lead”. No hits.
The book you are linking to says nothing about the predicted running out of reserves by the Club Of Rome, it seems to me.
So why do you call it a hardnosed look at LTG? It’s nothing of the kind.

Jimbo
January 19, 2013 4:38 am

Prince Philip advises us that “It must be obvious by now that further population growth in any country is undesirable”

I want to remind her ladyship that he has 4 children. 🙂
Ted Turner
““The Judeo-Christian religion says man was given dominion over everything, and his salvation was that he was to go out and increase and multiply. Well, we have done that … to the point where in Calcutta, it’s a hellhole.”
May I remind this green hypocrite that he has at least 5 children. I understand that he is so concerned for the environment, overpopulation and the world’s resources. What’s he ever done about it?

“The “Mouth of the South” is no longer as he devotes his time (and $1 billion) to the U.N., jets between 28 homes and four girlfriends, misses Jane Fonda”
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/ted-turner-jane-fonda-cnn-time-warner-295773

January 19, 2013 4:39 am

Are you trying to suggest to your audience with this piece that we (humans) can go on with business as usual for an unlimited amount of time on a planet that has a limited amount of space and resources?
Unlimited… infinite… indefinitely… Oh, you’re right of course. In 30,000 years there might be problems but hat’s really none of our concern today. Next week’s problems are for next week. Our problems are dealing with today and tomorrow.
Within a couple of hundred it’s entirely possible that we’ve perfected fusion or pulling energy out of the quantum froth and have basically an infinite supply of energy. May also be able to engineer matter on a bulk scale, or at least be able to go and get it from elsewhere (moon, mars, asteroids, etc)
The problem with the Ted Turner’s of the world is that they have an inability to conceive of a world that evolves in a positive way. They draw a graph, extrapolate a line and tell the world that they’re doomed unless they choose to doom themselves first. That conditions can change and make their graph a laughing stock doesn’t even seem to be a possibility in their tiny minds.

DirkH
January 19, 2013 4:39 am

Robbie says:
January 19, 2013 at 3:28 am
“Oh really Mr. Watts!
Are you trying to suggest to your audience with this piece that we (humans) can go on with business as usual for an unlimited amount of time on a planet that has a limited amount of space and resources?”
The predictions have failed, Robbie. Now, will you be a nice believer and believe everything Hansen, Ehrlich or Lester Brown say?
Thought so. Attaboy.

January 19, 2013 4:40 am

Did you miss this latest from Ehrlich?
“Can a collapse of global civilization be avoided?”
http://rspb.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/280/1754/20122845
Mostly more of the same.
Of course, we do know that civilizations collapse, tipping points do occur, peaks happen. Knowing when or if, of course, is difficult.
Predictions are very hard, especially about the future. – Niels Bohr

garymount
January 19, 2013 4:44 am

It seems odd the prediction that so many would die from starvation yet with such a greatly reduced number of mouths to feed, starvation would continue. I doubt that farmers would be the first to starve to death.
A real world scenario of such a situation did take place in recent history:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/africa/7916312.stm
– –
If you every “fly” around the globe using Google Earth, you will find vast areas of the earth with no sign of human habitat.
It took 70 years to come across a crashed airplane:
http://www.cnn.com/2012/05/11/world/british-wwii-plane/index.html

j ferguson
January 19, 2013 4:46 am

Anthony, Is not the head quotation, Tertullian 300 CE +/- ? Wasn’t that fellow in the organized religion business and might not that be a guide to the real livelihoods of some of your other predictors?

DirkH
January 19, 2013 4:50 am

http://hauntingthelibrary.wordpress.com/2011/07/01/limits-to-growth-heres-what-you-never-hear-about-it-and-the-truth
About Alexander King, the Club Of Rome member that comissioned the LTG “study”, and his own words from his memoirs:
” King stresses that the study was not by the Club of Rome, but for the Club of Rome who commissioned it.
And what did they think of their own study?
[King]:
“When the Club had the opportunity to discuss Limits it was clear that many of the members were
unconvinced by its conclusions on matters that they had never before discussed.
Indeed, I felt that a majority did not accept it. Limits had a distinctly neo-Malthusian flavour
clearly unpalatable to those amongst us who were technological optimists and we all
regretted that the work had paid insufficient attention to the great human and social issues (p. 338).”
That’s right – even the Club that commissioned the study did not accept its findings,
in particular its gloomy, Malthusian tone. King happily agrees that “criticism concerning lack
of appreciation of technological change, the power of the market and the degree of aggregation
were, of course, valid” (p.339).”

Go Home
January 19, 2013 4:50 am

I think all these gloom and doom ‘scientists’ reports, books, and articles are dangerous. I think we should ban all that hold more than 6 claims of doom. Why would they ever need more than 6 clams? Oh, and if you want to write one, you need to have a psychiatric test and pass an extensive background check. That should make us all safer.

Doug Huffman
January 19, 2013 4:52 am

Ahh, a collection of retrocasts, thank you Anthony Watts.
And thank you Eric Worrall on the value of the USDollar. I apologize for misspelling your name the other day on Ixodes holocyclus.
It would be illuminating to return the dollar basis to a stable commodity like gold. If we observe little to no change in the value of the US, then inverting stock prices is as informative.

Jimbo
January 19, 2013 4:59 am

Oh noe! We are doomed! Or is this going to be another failed prediction?

The Economist – 29 October, 2009
Falling fertility
Astonishing falls in the fertility rate are bringing with them big benefits
Now, something similar is happening in developing countries. Fertility is falling and families are shrinking in places— such as Brazil, Indonesia, and even parts of India—that people think of as teeming with children. As our briefing shows, the fertility rate of half the world is now 2.1 or less—the magic number that is consistent with a stable population and is usually called “the replacement rate of fertility”. Sometime between 2020 and 2050 the world’s fertility rate will fall below the global replacement rate.
http://www.economist.com/node/14744915

The end is nigh!

“Apocalypse Not: Here’s Why You Shouldn’t Worry About End Times”
Matt Ridley
http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2012/08/ff_apocalypsenot
“Apocalypse maybe”
Matt Ridley
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/11/21/apocalypse-maybe/

January 19, 2013 5:00 am

Claim from April 1970: “If present trends continue, the world will be … eleven degrees colder by the year 2000. This is about twice what it would take to put us in an ice age.” Kenneth E.F. Watt, in Earth Day, 1970.

Let the record show that Kenneth E. F. Watt is no relation of mine.

George Lawson
January 19, 2013 5:00 am

http://www.wtrg.com/oil_graphs/NYMEX_Open_Interest.gif
omnologos says:
January 19, 2013 at 3:59 am
‘Does anybody know of a collection of predictions that turned out right?’
Yes, the prediction that all doomsday predictions would be wrong.

Jimbo
January 19, 2013 5:01 am

Correction typo?
Oh noes!