That is so... wrong on many levels.
Oil will not really run out in my lifetime, but it will get astronomically more expensive as demand outstrips a deminishing supply.
Most of the big, easily tapped sources are running out, leaving a lot of more marginal, quickly used up, oil fields.
Meaning that to maintain current levels of production, we have to spend more effort (i.e. energy) in the first place to make more wells in more hard to get to places.
Sure, they occasionally find a big, easy to tap/exploit field now and then, but those finds are happening at a rate far less than the big, easy to tap fields are becoming depleted.
Anybody who makes a straight-line assumption that the future of oil/gas/coal will be the same as the past does not fully comprehend that things are changing and the pace of that change will accelerate.
Personally, I would like to have some money spent now on research while energy is fairly cheap to get ahead of the curve a bit, than to really wait until gas is $5-$10 per gallon and get caught with our pants down.
We don't have to replace oil/gas/coal by next year, but putting some money into research will allow us to have some data and ready-made ideas so we don't have to scramble in what will be a crisis for things that might work.
I would rather lay the groundwork and do some practical experiments that provide us with some reasonable solutions for that time.