Regardless, do you want all of that stuff in city air? I mean really, it starts to smell after a while. Boston smells like deisel fumes all times of the day. You guys keep making these claims, but I want to see where you got your evidence. Don't tell me that the oil companies have a spotless record, either.
Nonetheless, I will try to convey to you what global warming is. Right now, we won't see the effects, but over the next fifty years or so, they will become readily apparent. Even if it isn't happening now, our rampant destruction of forests (sucks up CO2 like a sponge), will definetly change how our planet copes.
To refute the claim of abiogenic oil, I will cite Texas. If the claim is true, then why aren't we making the same amount of oil we always have had there, if not more? That's because the theory is flawed at a fundamental level. If you have unlimited oil, why should production ever drop, or in some cases cease?
It doesn't work, you need a more longer term method of movement and power! Who needs gears when you control exactly how much power the engine generates (electricity).
-Penguin