Page added on August 18, 2008
There has been a lot of talk in recent years about “peak oil” – defined as the point where the maximum amount of oil that can be recovered is being pumped. After that, oil becomes increasingly scarce and expensive.
If sticker shock at the gas pumps hasn’t convinced you, talk to Dr. Darrel Schmitz, head of the Department of Geosciences, Mississippi State University.
“World oil reserves have probably peaked yesterday, today or tomorrow – literally right about now,” Schmitz said. “Production worldwide will start declining relatively soon. We are right at that point.”
As an oil industry expert told Schmitz a few years ago, unless some other super giant oil fields are discovered, most everything else currently in production or planned isn’t enough and can’t be put online soon enough to prevent increasingly world demand from eclipsing supplies.
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