Social Sciences, asked by 11387jatin, 6 hours ago


How will the vehicles run all the petrol is exchausted

Answers

Answered by gd2679495
2

Answer:

By electricity or solra energy :) Hope it helps uhh Mark it brainliest ♥️♥️

Answered by aryannanaware48
1

Answer:

PLZ mark as brainliest

Explanation:

The world’s oil wells don’t suddenly run out. We won’t wake up some day to find there is no oil. Assuming civilisation isn’t ended by some cataclysmic event, here is what will happen instead.

Eventually we’ll use up the oil that is easily obtained, and so we’ll start using oil that is harder to extract. In doing so, the cost of oil will increase. As oil costs increase, they will get to a point where alternatives become cost effective. As we use more alternatives, demand for mineral oils will taper off as well. Eventually the point will come where extraction of mineral oils will come to an end, not because there is none left, but because the extraction of mineral oil will be more expensive than the alternatives. At this point there will still be a lot of oil in the ground. There will still be wells that could pump oil, but don’t because no-one could be bothered going to the hassle.

The alternatives are already available. We don’t use them because they are more expensive than mineral oil.

So instead of the world’s economies and living standards suddenly shattering because one day there is no oil, the shift away from mineral oils will be a gradual thing, and will feel entirely natural for those to whom it happens. As for timescales, well the shift has already started with things like ethanol and bio-diesel just starting to become cost effective alternatives to oil-based petrol & diesel, but they still have a long way to go before they replace it. It will be a slow process. I will probably see another 40 years, and mineral oils will not just be dominant for the rest of my lifetime, but production will continue to grow. I would expect it to be a century or more before oil production plateaus and starts to decrease, and another century at least before oil production comes close to stopping.

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