Monday, May 4, 2026

An Integrative and Holistic Approach to Managing High Blood Pressure in the Elderly Advice for a Daughter Caring for Her 76-Year-Old Mother

 

 

Dear Doctor JB Lim

 

I read some of your articles on integrative medicine. Just two of them are quoted here among many.

 

https://scientificlogic.blogspot.com/search?q=integrative+medicine

 

https://scientificlogic.blogspot.com/2025/09/integrative-medical-education-in-china.html

 

They were very interesting to most people these days as more and more patients  are switching back to more holistic approaches and less and less  drug dependent modality to treat  their chronic health problems. I have a problem with my own mother, aged 76 who has high blood pressure. She has been taking her doctor’s medicine from a government clinic for over 20 years without any  cure in sight - to all those untold chemical  medicines she has been ingesting . Not that just alone, her other  problem is,  she has to wait for at least 2 to 3 hours before she can see the doctor for just the same medicine, and, I cannot accompany her and wait there for her just to see a doctor as I need to go to work. 

 

Do you think you can suggest another alternative or integrated approach to manage her high blood pressure at home without constantly going to the clinic or hospital which is very tiring for her for her age and for me too having to take care of her. I shall be very grateful for your medical expertise and health advice.   

I have also written my comments for your beautifully and highly professionally written articles. Check them out.


Thank you very much Doctor Lim 


Jessie Wong 

 ----------------------


An Integrative and Holistic Approach to Manage High Blood Pressure in the Elderly

 

Advice for a Daughter Caring for Her 76-Year-Old Mother

 

Dear Jessie,

 

Thank you for your thoughtful letter and for your interest in integrative medicine. Your concern for your mother reflects both love and responsibility, and many families today face the same dilemma, elderly parents with chronic illnesses such as high blood pressure, requiring long-term medication, repeated clinic visits, and the fatigue that comes with age.

Hypertension (high blood pressure, or HTN as we doctors commonly abbreviate it) is one of the most common chronic conditions in older adults. Many patients have been taking antihypertensive medication for decades, often without ever feeling “cured,” because high blood pressure is usually managed rather than permanently eliminated.

Your mother has been on treatment for more than 20 years, and understandably, both of you are wondering whether there is a more natural, less exhausting, and more holistic way to manage her condition.

The answer is yes, but with an important caution.

Lifestyle, dietary, and traditional supportive approaches can be extremely helpful, sometimes even as effective as a single medication in mild or early hypertension. However, prescribed medicines should never be stopped suddenly without proper medical supervision. The safest and wisest approach is not “alternative versus modern medicine,” but rather integrative medicine where both work together.


Understanding the Root of High Blood Pressure.


Blood pressure rises for many reasons: excess salt intake, obesity, stress, poor sleep, lack of exercise, smoking, alcohol, kidney disease, ageing arteries, and sometimes hereditary factors.

One major contributor is excessive sodium (salt) intake.

Salt, chemically known as sodium chloride, causes the body to retain water. More retained water means a larger circulating blood volume, which increases hydrostatic pressure inside the blood vessels, rather like increasing water pressure inside a garden hose.

This is why doctors often advise salt restriction and may prescribe medications such as:

1. Valsartan, an angiotensin II receptor blocker (ARB), which relaxes blood vessels


2. Thiazide diuretics, which help remove excess salt and water


Sometimes both are combined, such as in Co-Diovan, for patients whose blood pressure is not adequately controlled by one medicine alone.

Since I do not know what medication, your mother is currently taking, I cannot advise specifically on her drug treatment. However, I can certainly suggest non-pharmacological measures that are often highly beneficial.


1. Control Diet: Food as Medicine

We are, quite literally, what we eat.

One of the most effective approaches is adopting a diet rich in:

1.              Fruits

2.              Vegetables

3.              Whole grains

4.              Legumes

5.              Nuts

6.              Low-fat dairy products

This type of eating pattern can lower blood pressure by as much as 11 mmHg due to their low sodium and high potassium content which is comparable to some medications.

Salt Restriction

Salt intake should ideally be reduced to:

1,500–2,300 mg sodium per day

Even a small reduction of salt can lower blood pressure by 5–6 mmHg.

Avoid:

1.              Processed foods

2.              Canned foods

3.              Fast food

4.              Preserved meats

5.              Instant noodles

6.              Salty snacks

7.              Excessive soy sauce and table salt

These are often hidden sources of excessive sodium.

2. Increase Potassium Naturally

Potassium helps the body eliminate sodium and relaxes blood vessel walls.

Foods rich in potassium include:

1.              Bananas

2.              Avocados

3.              Potatoes

4.              Spinach

5.              Leafy greens

6.              Oranges

7.              Beans

A daily intake of about 3,500–5,000 mg from natural food sources is beneficial.

Sometimes potassium supplements such as Slow-K are prescribed, but food sources are generally safer and better tolerated.

3. Reduce Sugar and Refined Carbohydrates

Many people focus only on salt and forget sugar.

Excess refined sugar contributes significantly to obesity, diabetes, and cardiovascular disease.

Professor John Yudkin, the late Professor and Chair of Nutrition at Queen Elizabeth College, University of London, demonstrated as early as the 1960s that refined white sugar was strongly associated with coronary heart disease.

Reducing:

1.              White sugar

2.              Sweet drinks

3.              Cakes

4.              Biscuits

5.              White bread

6.              Refined carbohydrates

can improve both blood pressure and overall metabolic health.

4. Physical Activity—But Gently

Regular physical activity improves circulation, strengthens the heart, and lowers blood pressure by 5–8 mmHg.

General recommendations are:

1. 150 minutes of moderate exercise weekly
(such as brisk walking, swimming, cycling)

or

2.   75 minutes of vigorous exercise weekly

However, for a 76-year-old lady, caution is essential.

She should not overexert herself. Sudden strenuous exercise may trigger cardiac events in elderly individuals.

Read my article and explanation here:

https://scientificlogic.blogspot.com/search?q=risks+of+exercise

Simple daily walking is often sufficient and far safer.

Suitable gentle activities include:

1.              Walking

2.              Light stretching

3.              Mild resistance exercises

4.              Gardening

5.              Household movement

Consistency matters more than intensity.

5. Weight Management

Even a small amount of weight loss can significantly reduce blood pressure.

Losing just:

2.3–4.6 kg (5–10 pounds)

can produce meaningful improvement.

For older adults, a desirable Body Mass Index (BMI) is often slightly higher than in younger adults, generally around:

23–30 kg/m²

Waist circumference also matters.

Excess abdominal fat increases cardiovascular risk.

Approximate recommended waist circumference:

1.   Men: below 100–106 cm

2.   Women: below 99 cm

especially after age 70.

6. Lifestyle Habits Matter

Smoking

If your mother smokes which is less common but still possible, stopping is crucial.

Tobacco damages blood vessels and accelerates hardening of the arteries.

Alcohol

If she drinks alcohol:

Limit to:

One drink per day for women

Excess alcohol raises blood pressure significantly.

Sleep: 

Poor sleep, especially less than 7 hours regularly, can worsen hypertension.

Good sleep hygiene includes:

1.    Consistent sleeping hours

2.     Quiet environment

3.      Reduced late-night screen exposure

4.      Avoiding heavy meals before bedtime

Stress Management:

Chronic emotional stress contributes silently to hypertension.

Helpful techniques include:

1.    Deep breathing

2.    Mindfulness

3.    Prayer

4.    Meditation

5.    Yoga

6.     Quiet reflection

7.      Peaceful hobbies

A calm mind often protects the heart better than medicine alone.

7. Natural Remedies and Supplements:

Some natural remedies show scientific promise, though they should always be discussed with her doctor to avoid unwanted interactions.

Examples include:

1.   Aged Garlic Extract
Shown in several studies to help reduce blood pressure.

2.    Magnesium and Calcium
These minerals help relax blood vessels and improve vascular tone.

3.     Hibiscus Tea
Traditionally used and increasingly studied for its blood pressure-lowering effects.

These are supportive measures, not magical cures, and should be used wisely.

8. Never Stop Prescribed Medication Suddenly:

Please do not stop prescribed medication suddenly. This can be dangerous.

Lifestyle and natural approaches should be introduced gradually while continuing medical treatment.

As improvement occurs, a doctor may slowly reduce medication dosage a process called titration—until sometimes only one medicine (monotherapy), or in some cases none, may be needed.

This must be done safely.

9. Petrol Fire vs Charcoal Fire

I often explain treatment this way:

Modern drugs are like petrol.

They ignite quickly and act fast, but the effect is short-lived. Once the petrol is gone, the fire stops. That is why medicine often needs to be taken daily.

Lifestyle change and traditional healing are like charcoal.

They take longer to ignite, but once burning, they continue giving heat for a very long time.

The ideal approach is to use petrol to start the fire, and charcoal to keep it burning steadily.

That is the philosophy of true integrative medicine.

10. Home Blood Pressure Monitoring

Your mother should monitor her blood pressure at home:

Three times daily

1.    Early morning after waking

2.    Around noon after routine activities

3.     At night before sleep

Record every reading in a notebook for at least three months.

This helps reveal the trend and allows proper evaluation of whether lifestyle changes are truly helping. Don't take just one reading. This is not a scientific approach. 

Medicine should be adjusted based on patterns, not isolated readings.

11. Mercury vs Electronic Blood Pressure Monitors

If possible, I still prefer the traditional mercury sphygmomanometer over electronic monitors.

Why?

Because it remains the historical “gold standard.”

It uses the auscultatory method, where one listens to the actual blood flow sounds called Korotkoff sounds heard through a stethoscope.

How it Works

Step 1: Occlusion

The cuff is inflated above systolic pressure, completely stopping blood flow through the brachial artery.

No sound is heard.

Step 2: Slow Deflation

The cuff pressure is released gradually.

Step 3: First Sound = Systolic Pressure

As blood first begins to force through the compressed artery, rhythmic tapping sounds appear.

This first sound marks the:

Systolic Blood Pressure

Step 4: Sound Changes

The sounds become softer, then louder, then muffled.

Step 5: Silence = Diastolic Pressure

When the artery fully opens and blood flow becomes smooth again, the sounds disappear.

This point marks the:

Diastolic Blood Pressure

Electronic machines usually use the oscillometric method, which estimates pressure mathematically from cuff vibrations rather than directly listening to blood flow.

They are convenient, but readings may vary depending on:

1.   Device quality

2.   Arterial stiffness

3.   Age

4.   Cuff size

5.    User technique

Modern validated electronic monitors can be very good, but traditional mercury measurement remains the reference standard.

Just my final word to you Jessie 

More than 80% of the world’s population, including many doctors themselves - some my own former colleagues (doctors)  use some form of traditional or natural medicine, as recognised by WHO.

This does not mean rejecting modern medicine.

It means understanding that healing is broader than tablets alone.

Good food, movement, sleep, peace of mind, proper monitoring, and family support are often stronger medicine than many prescriptions.

Your mother does not merely need blood pressure control.

She needs care.

She needs peace.

She needs support.

And fortunately, she has a daughter like you who is willing to seek it for her.

That itself is already powerful medicine.  Hope this is useful. Thanks for writing and for your valuable comments. Hope your mother gets well soonest possible.

With warm regards,

 JB Lim

Friday, May 1, 2026

The Soul is Real. It Exist in All Living Creatures


My brother-in-law just wrote 15 minutes ago on Labour Day, 1st May, 2026 denying that humans, animals and all living creatures have souls.

 

He believes there is no soul, and when a body dies nothing is left, according to his  "quantum theory”  - I am unsure how his  "theory" works, which he did not explain. 

 

I thought I had written many times on this subject. Here's is just one of them. 

 

https://scientificlogic.blogspot.com/search?q=Soul

I shall write my thoughts further on this interesting subject - maybe within 3 days since today is Labour Day, and I need a rest from all my labours 





Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Beyond the Last Drop: Oil, Civilization, and the Future of Human Survival


Beyond the Last Drop: Oil, Civilization, and the Future of Human Survival


Thank you very much, Othman Nasir for explaining your difficulty in getting petrol for your car in 3 petrol stations to go to Malacca, and for your valuable and interesting comment under this article I wrote about the humble bicycle.


https://scientificlogic.blogspot.com/2026/04/when-wells-run-dry-energy-and-motion.html

  

Let me explain what is the daily global oil consumption compared to those in Malaysia, and what is our future going to be like with a few facts and figures about our oil usage, not just to move about, but also our need for substances that depended on petrochemicals.

Modern civilization is built upon oil. It moves our cars, powers our aircraft, drives global trade, supports agriculture, and quietly forms the chemical backbone of countless products we use every day—from plastics and pharmaceuticals to paints, fertilizers, and medical equipment. While many discussions about energy focus only on petrol and diesel, the true importance of fossil fuels extends far beyond transportation. Oil is not merely fuel; it is one of the structural foundations of modern human life.

Today, the world consumes approximately 100 million barrels of oil per day, equivalent to about 15.9 to 16.2 billion litres daily. Of this, the transportation sector alone accounts for more than 60%, consuming nearly 9.8 billion litres each day. Passenger cars remain the single largest consumer, followed by commercial trucks, aviation, buses, and two- and three-wheelers.

Malaysia, though small compared to global figures, reflects the same dependency. The country consumes approximately 934,000 barrels of oil per day, or roughly 148 million litres daily. Transport fuel, mainly petrol and diesel; dominates this demand.

Passenger cars form the largest share of Malaysia’s transport fuel usage. Nearly all private cars run on petrol, accounting for roughly 45% of national transport fuel demand. Commercial trucks, lorries, and goods vehicles consume a major share of diesel, representing approximately 31.8% of transport energy demand. Buses, despite making up a relatively small portion of total vehicles, consume disproportionately high amounts of diesel due to heavy engines and continuous operation. Aviation also contributes significantly, with jet fuel consumption estimated at more than four million litres daily.

Globally, electrification has already begun reducing oil demand, removing roughly one million barrels per day from consumption. However, electricity alone does not solve the deeper problem. 

Let me dig deeper into the facts and figures on global oil consumption compared to those in Malaysia.

 Once again, the world consumes approximately 16.17 billion litres of oil daily, with the transportation sector alone accounting for roughly 9.86 billion litres (more than 60%). In comparison,  Malaysia’s total daily oil consumption is about 148.55 million litres (934.38 thousand barrels/day), of which transport-related fuel, primarily petrol and diesel, dominates. 

 The following estimates reflect the breakdown of transport fuel consumption based on global and local data. 

Daily Fuel Consumption Comparison (in Million Litres):

Category  World Daily (Est.) Malaysia Daily (Est.) Primary Fuel Type Passenger Cars ~3,863.3 ~66.8 Petrol (Gasoline) Commercial Trucks/Lorries ~2,575.5 ~33.8 Diesel Air Transport ~1,232.5 ~4.4 Jet Fuel (ATF) Buses / Collective ~215.3 ~33.8^ Diesel / Natural Gas 2 & 3 Wheelers ~318.0 ~28.6 

Petrol global bus figures are often grouped with heavy-duty vehicles; this is a derived estimate based on energy shares. 

In Malaysia, "Buses" and "Goods Vehicles" are significant diesel consumers, with buses having a notably high share of total fuel demand relative to their vehicle count.  

1. Breakdown by Transport Mode Passenger Cars - Global: 

Passenger cars are the single largest oil consumers in transport, using roughly 3.86 billion litres daily (24.3 million barrels/day). 

In Malaysia, nearly 99.6% of passenger cars run on petrol. They account for approximately 45% of the country's total transport fuel demand. Trucks, lorries, and goods vehicles on a global scale consume about 2.58 billion litres daily. They primarily use diesel, which is preferred for its higher efficiency in heavy-duty engines. 

In Malaysia goods vehicles and lorries account for a combined 31.8% of the transport fuel demand. Most of these vehicles run on diesel, though efforts are increasing to use B10/B20 biodiesel blends. 

Buses and Collective Transport on a Global Scale: 

This sector accounts for roughly 5% or less of road transport energy in many regions. In Malaysia buses make up a small portion of the vehicle population (9%), but they contribute a disproportionately high 22.8% of total transport fuel demand due to high mileage and heavy diesel engines. 

Air Transport Globally: Aviation accounts for about 12.5% of total transport energy consumption, using roughly 1.23 billion litres of jet fuel daily.

In Malaysia, jet fuel consumption is approximately 4.43 million litres (27.85 thousand barrels) per day. 

Other fuels and natural gas is used by about 0.3% of cars and a tiny fraction of buses in Malaysia. Electricity is currently a negligible share of total transport energy in Malaysia but growing. Globally, electrification has already reduced oil demand by about 159 million litres (1 million barrels) daily.  

Let us think what will happen when the last drop of oil is used up? Would this lead to fatal political, social and economic repercussion, or what other effects? 

 The scenario of using up the "last drop of oil" is highly unlikely to happen as a sudden event. In reality, as oil becomes more difficult and expensive to extract, the global economy will gradually shift toward alternative energy sources long before the physical supply hits zero. However, if the world fails to transition smoothly the repercussions could be severe across several sectors:  

1. Economic Impacts Production Costs: Nearly every manufactured good, from plastics to pharmaceuticals, relies on petrochemicals. A total loss of oil would cause production costs for these items to skyrocket. 

Inflation & Recession: Unstable oil prices traditionally trigger global inflation. A complete depletion without a replacement would lead to a "global economic cardiac arrest". 

Supply Chain Collapse: 

Modern globalization is built on cheap, long-distance freight. Without oil-based fuels for ships and planes, supply chains would shrink, forcing production to move much closer to consumption.    

2. Social & Food Security Risks Agricultural Crisis: 

Industrial farming depends on oil for machinery, irrigation, and the production of fertilizers and pesticides. Depletion could lead to massive food shortages and price hikes, particularly in vulnerable regions. 

Human Health: Beyond transport, oil is essential for sterile medical plastics and the transportation of temperature-sensitive vaccines and medicines.

 3. Political & Geopolitical Repercussions Failed States: 

Countries heavily dependent on oil exports (petrostates) for their national budgets could face total fiscal collapse, leading to rising unemployment, loss of public services, and political instability. 

4. Resource Wars: 

Intense competition over the final remaining reserves could spark new geopolitical conflicts or exacerbate existing ones in regions like the Middle East. 

Shift in Global Power: 

Power would likely shift from oil-rich nations to those controlling the technology and raw materials (like lithium and rare earth minerals) needed for renewable energy.  

5. Other Significant Effects Peak Globalization:

 The end of the "oil age" would likely mark the end of globalization as we know it, favoring localized economies and more efficient, electrified transport like high-speed rail. 

6. Environmental Silver Lining: 

While the transition would be painful, a permanent end to oil use would drastically reduce carbon emissions and pollution, potentially slowing the pace of climate change.  Current projections suggest global oil demand may peak by 2030 as electric vehicle adoption and renewable energy investments (currently $2 trillion annually) continue to grow. The "last drop" is less of a literal deadline and more of an economic threshold that will be crossed when alternatives simply become cheaper and more reliable than drilling for what remains.

What about other sources of energy? 

Many people assume that solar power, hydroelectric dams, geothermal energy, tidal systems, and wind farms can simply replace oil.

I shall try to write an article later on the energy we can get from wind. I shall try as I need to search for information and data from various sources, besides complex calculations needed from raw data - but I shall try.  These technologies indeed provide clean energy, but they do not provide petrochemicals. They generate electricity and heat, but they do not supply the carbon atoms required to manufacture plastics, synthetic fibers, medicines, solvents, paints, detergents, packaging materials, and thousands of industrial compounds essential to modern life.

This is the often-overlooked challenge,  even if we replace fuel, how do we replace carbon?

Fossil fuels provide ancient carbon stored underground over millions of years. If we stop using them, humanity must find new sources of carbon for manufacturing. The solution lies in shifting from an extractive model; - digging old carbon from the earth to a circular model that uses living carbon or captured carbon already present in the environment.

One major approach is biomass-to-chemicals. Instead of crude oil, plants can serve as “biological oil” because they naturally pull carbon dioxide from the atmosphere through photosynthesis. Corn, sugarcane, starch, agricultural waste, and wood residues can be processed into bio-plastics, solvents, and industrial chemicals. Lactic acid can be used to produce PLA plastics, while bio-ethylene can produce bio-polyethylene that is chemically identical to petroleum-based plastic.

Modern biorefineries increasingly avoid food competition by using non-food biomass such as corn husks, rice husks, wood chips, municipal food waste, and palm oil residues rather than edible crops.

A second major solution is Carbon Capture and Utilization (CCU). Instead of treating carbon dioxide as waste, industries are learning to treat it as a valuable raw material. CO₂ captured from factory chimneys, or even directly from the atmosphere through Direct Air Capture (DAC), can be combined with green hydrogen produced by renewable-powered electrolysis. This allows the production of synthetic methanol, synthetic fuels, plastic feedstocks, and even construction materials such as carbon-cured concrete.

A third frontier is synthetic biology. Scientists are reprogramming microorganisms such as yeast and E. coli to act as microscopic chemical factories. These microbes can be engineered to consume sugars or even carbon dioxide and produce high-value products such as synthetic silk, fragrances, industrial chemicals like bio-BDO, and pharmaceutical compounds. Biology is increasingly being treated like software: organisms are “programmed” to manufacture molecules.

This creates a profound transformation. Traditional petrochemicals rely on underground fossil carbon and linear production—extract, use, pollute. Sustainable alternatives rely on atmospheric or biological carbon and circular production; capture, use, recycle.

Yet these solutions create another challenge: land, space, and scale.

As the human population grows, demand for food, materials, and energy rises simultaneously. If we replace oil with plant-based feedstocks alone, vast areas of land would be required, potentially competing with food production and natural ecosystems. This raises a deeper ecological and philosophical question, namely;  is humanity expanding beyond the carrying capacity of the planet? Could our own success become the cause of our downfall?

Some like myself often ask whether the eventual decline of humanity might allow simpler and “meeker” species to reclaim the earth.

Science suggests the answer is more complex. Humanity is not merely consuming horizontally across our human needs; it is increasingly moving toward vertical and microscopic solutions.

Instead of expanding farmland, industries are turning toward waste-to-materials systems. Food waste, agricultural leftovers, and industrial biomass are being converted into valuable chemicals. Direct Air Capture allows carbon to be pulled from the atmosphere using minimal land. Precision fermentation grows microbial factories inside industrial tanks rather than across vast farms.

At the same time, the concept of the circular economy offers perhaps the greatest hope. Today, less than 10% of global plastics are effectively recycled. If materials are continually reused rather than discarded, the need for “virgin” carbon, whether from oil or crops, can be drastically reduced. Chemical recycling can break old plastics back into molecular feedstocks, theoretically saving billions of barrels of oil annually.

The question of whether mankind will be replaced must also be viewed through ecology. Humans have accelerated extinction rates far beyond natural background levels. However, the removal of humans would not simply leave an empty throne for other animals to inherit.  Ecosystems are deeply interconnected. The sudden collapse of a dominant species often causes co-extinction across the network.

Moreover, we now live in the Anthropocene—the Age of Humans. Our climate, oceans, atmosphere, and chemistry have been permanently altered. Any species inheriting the earth after humanity would inherit a changed planet, not the original one.

Unlike other species, however, humans possess a unique ability: intentional adaptation. We can foresee danger, change behaviour, redesign technology, and alter systems before reaching irreversible tipping points.

This is where the technological frontier becomes important.

Many experts believe the future lies not in biological collapse but in a digital-biological convergence. Artificial intelligence, blockchain systems, and advanced biotechnology may allow every molecule of waste to be tracked, reused, and prevented from entering landfills. Entire industries are already shifting toward “land-free” manufacturing.

In fashion, companies such as Bolt Threads produce synthetic spider silk using yeast fermentation rather than silkworms. Mycelium leather grown from mushroom roots replaces animal leather using a fraction of the land and water.

In fragrances and specialty chemicals, companies like Givaudan and Amyris use engineered microbes to “brew” perfumes, sweeteners, and industrial chemicals without plantations or petroleum refining.

In food production, "Eat Just" has pioneered cultivated meat, while "Perfect Day" produces dairy proteins without cows. This could reduce land use for meat production by over 90%.

Construction industries are experimenting with bio-cement, where microorganisms “grow” building materials rather than using carbon-intensive kilns. Even electronics researchers are exploring biodegradable bio-polymers using bacterial cellulose and DNA-based materials.

What about in Malaysia?

Malaysia is also participating actively in this transformation.

Rather than remaining only a crude palm oil producer, Malaysia is increasingly shifting toward becoming a circular bio-economy hub. Under the National Biomass Action Plan and research led by the Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB), over 160 million tonnes of palm-based biomass—including empty fruit bunches, fronds, shells, and palm oil mill effluent, are being redirected from waste into wealth.

These materials are being converted into second-generation biofuels, bioethanol, biochemicals, eco-friendly packaging, furniture composites, animal feed, and renewable biogas. Palm-based transformer insulating oil is being explored by Tenaga Nasional Berhad as a replacement for mineral oils. Malaysia already contributes significantly to global oleochemical production, supplying plant-based alternatives for soaps, detergents, lubricants, and industrial chemicals.

Mandatory sustainability standards such as MSPO 2.0 and investment incentives from MIDA are pushing the industry toward higher-value, lower-carbon biorefineries rather than simple commodity production.

So what happens when the “last drop of oil” is used - the question I gave to the title of this article. 

In truth, the world will probably never experience a dramatic final drop. Long before physical depletion occurs, oil will become too expensive, too difficult, or too politically risky to remain dominant. The transition will be economic rather than geological.

But if humanity fails to prepare, the consequences could be severe: inflation, food insecurity, medical shortages, supply chain collapse, geopolitical conflict, and the destabilization of entire nations dependent on fossil fuel revenues.

Yet within this crisis lies opportunity.

The end of the oil age may also mark the beginning of a wiser civilization—one that no longer depends on extracting ancient carbon from the earth, but instead learns to live within a renewable, circular, and biologically intelligent system.

Perhaps the true question is not whether oil will run out, but whether human wisdom will arrive before it does - and I am unsure? 

That may determine not only the future of civilization, but the future of humanity itself.

This is my reply to Mr Othman Nasir’s comment unable to get petrol for his car to go to Malacca,  and I would like to dedicate this article to him.

 

 lim ju boo - lin ru wu (æž— 如 æ­¦)

 

 

References

 

1. International Energy Agency (IEA) – Global oil demand and transport energy reports


2. U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA) – World petroleum consumption data


3. Malaysian Palm Oil Board (MPOB) – Palm biomass and bioeconomy reports


4. Malaysian Investment Development Authority (MIDA) – Biomass and circular economy investment incentives


5.  United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) – Circular economy and plastic recycling studies


6. World Bank – Energy transition and petrostate economic risks

7. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) – Climate transition and fossil fuel phase-out reports



An Integrative and Holistic Approach to Managing High Blood Pressure in the Elderly Advice for a Daughter Caring for Her 76-Year-Old Mother

    Dear Doctor JB Lim   I read some of your articles on integrative medicine. Just two of them are quoted here among many.   http...