Question: What is the world’s biggest challenge in the coming decade?
Peter Thiel: There are all sorts of macro trends that are significant, but are people sort of aware of them? The question is always which ones are there that are very significant that people are perhaps not fully aware of. I continue to believe that one of the bigger ones is that we have a serious, ongoing energy problem that, for a whole slew of reasons, people are not aware of. People on the left think it’s good if the world runs out of oil because it causes all this pollution. People on the right think that it’s a problem you don’t need to worry about because if we run out of oil people will invent something else. I think it’s a little bit more complicated than that. It’s the sort of thing that if you don’t plan and do something in advance, you could set yourself up for a crisis that would be quite as big or bigger than what we saw in the 1970s. I see everything very much in place for that. The objective facts are demands are going up two percent a year; supply is not going up; prices relentlessly drifting higher; and then nobody is changing their behavior. People aren’t investing more in alternatives. They’re not investing more in drilling, in conservation, in anything. And we still have a no-energy policy. And the left blocks nuclear power, the right blocks conservation, and so we end up with nothing at all in the U.S. It's very, very often in that direction.
Recorded on: Sep 05, 2007
Discuss
Vasant Ramaswamy on January 28, 2008, 12:46 PM
Fascinating question! In my view it is Religion. It seems to be at the root of too much that is going on worldwide. My attempt is to be non-judgmental and merely observe. The advanced economies are showing signs of right wing inflexibility – the US is seeing resurgence of evangelical fervor. It demands a 'binary' state of views – pro life or pro choice, heterosexual or gay, Jeffersonian democracy or totalitarian – all somehow informed by Religion. The emerging economies mirror the same trends. India is showing clear signs of intolerance in Gujarat where persecution of moslems seems to go unheeded as in Orissa, Meghalaya with the burning of Christians and their churches. The bastion of secularism in that part of the world may be fast losing its claim to such a stance. As home to Hindus that form 14% of the world's population (Islam accounts for 16%), this a signal of a serious challenge. Elsewhere in Sudan, Ethopia, Iraq factions driven by religious divides are causing immense tensions. Issues like female circumcision based on religious beliefs, banned in several countries, still pervade Algeria, Iran, Kuwait, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. Religion could be that huge challenge.
Vasant Ramaswamy on January 28, 2008, 5:46 PM
Fascinating question! In my view it is Religion. It seems to be at the root of too much that is going on worldwide. My attempt is to be non-judgmental and merely observe. The advanced economies are showing signs of right wing inflexibility – the US is seeing resurgence of evangelical fervor. It demands a ‘binary’ state of views – pro life or pro choice, heterosexual or gay, Jeffersonian democracy or totalitarian – all somehow informed by Religion. The emerging economies mirror the same trends. India is showing clear signs of intolerance in Gujarat where persecution of moslems seems to go unheeded as in Orissa, Meghalaya with the burning of Christians and their churches. The bastion of secularism in that part of the world may be fast losing its claim to such a stance. As home to Hindus that form 14% of the world’s population (Islam accounts for 16%), this a signal of a serious challenge. Elsewhere in Sudan, Ethopia, Iraq factions driven by religious divides are causing immense tensions. Issues like female circumcision based on religious beliefs, banned in several countries, still pervade Algeria, Iran, Kuwait, Pakistan and Saudi Arabia. Religion could be that huge challenge.
Add a Comment
You must be logged in to comment. Log in or Register