Page added on February 13, 2012
The debate over peak oil is stalked by zombie ideas that live on, no matter how many times they are stamped upon. The latest significant article warning of declining oil supplies manages to revive not just one but at least six of these false concepts.
An article by the oceanographer James Murray and the former UK chief scientific adviser David King appears in the prestigious journal Nature.
It argues that conventional oil production has been stagnant since 2005 and that “the oil market has tipped into a new state … production is now … unable to respond to rising demand”.
The idea that oil production has not risen above 74 million barrels per day (bpd) since 2005 relies on a very narrow definition of “crude oil”. In reality, oil demand is now met from a range of sources, including biofuels and petroleum extracted from natural gas.
To the motorist, the end product is indistinguishable. Figures from the US Energy Information Administrationsuggest that, for the first time, total production topped 90 million bpd at the end of last year.
Automatically ascribing a slowdown in production growth to physical resource constraints fails to consider the economic and policy context.
Opec has not increased production significantly since 2005, not because it cannot but because of its market management – in particular reducing output to avoid oversupply when demand fell during the economic crisis.
Opec reserves are often said to be overstated, without any firm evidence being given one way or the other. Opec countries do not help themselves with their lack of transparency on reserves.
Yet the most authoritative evaluation, by the consultancy IHS Energy in 2007, saw the overstatement as minor (about 7 per cent) and more than offset by under-estimates elsewhere. As Russia with 20 years of reserves at current output rates keeps increasing production, Opec with a reserves/output ratio of more than 80 years can also do so.
The advent of shale oil and gas production has reversed declining US production, is now spreading globally, and can be commercial at an oil price of just US$30 a barrel.
This breakthrough seems completely to have passed by peak-oil advocates. They claim the end of “easy oil”, without noting that technology continually makes unconventional oil into conventional.
And it seems remarkable to write a paper on oil production that does not mention either Opec or Iraq, which has unquestionably huge reserves of easy oil and ambitious, if challenging, plans to increase production sharply.
The Murray and King piece goes on to cast doubt on global coal and natural gas reserves. But this is simply irrelevant. Oil’s primary, hitherto irreplaceable use is as fuel for transport. Coal and gas are largely interchangeable, and can be substituted by nuclear, wind and solar power, and other renewable energies.
And with more than a century’s worth of resources of both coal and natural gas, it does not matter whether reserves are somewhat overstated. The production of coal, in particular, is constrained by economics and environmental concerns, not by physical availability.
The final piece in the peak-oil puzzle is the idea that declining oil production must bring a halt to economic growth. But Michael Levi from the US-based Council on Foreign Relations notes in a comprehensive demolition of the Nature article that the American economy has persistently grown much faster than its oil consumption.
The sad thing is that the solutions proposed to tackle the illusory danger of imminent peak oil – improved efficiency and alternative energy – are exactly those needed to tackle the real threat of climate change. But flawed and unscientific analysis risks crying wolf.
11 Comments on "Flawed views on peak oil rear their ugly heads again"
Bernz223 on Mon, 13th Feb 2012 11:37 pm
Here we go again this article will get flamed to hell and back.
Beery on Tue, 14th Feb 2012 12:07 am
What is it with all these PO deniers coming out of the woodwork in the last couple of weeks?
JBags on Tue, 14th Feb 2012 12:08 am
Well fair enough if it does too. This reads like the industry-standard template for peak oil denial.
cusano on Tue, 14th Feb 2012 1:00 am
Wow! Here’s what I learned. If I want to get factual reporting…don’t read the National
Rick on Tue, 14th Feb 2012 1:12 am
When you start to see more of these stupid, bogus articles, you know the Peak Oil folks are right. Peak Oil is real, and it’s here, and we are all starting to feel it.
BTW, it’s United States of Denial, and now the UK of Denial. Of course the UK is the 51st state anyway. Too bad they drank the Koolaid.
BillT on Tue, 14th Feb 2012 1:29 am
The author is: “Robin Mills is the head of consulting at Manaar Energy, and author of The Myth of the Oil Crisis and Capturing Carbon”
This is another fluff advertising piece disguised as ‘news’. He has a book to sell and a corporation to serve to get hos paycheck. Unfortunately, he will be quoted by the deniers and impede actual understanding of the concept of “Peak Oil”. BS such as ’80 years of production’ and ‘$30’ alternate oil is misleading to the uneducated or those not versed in current events.
Bernz223 on Tue, 14th Feb 2012 2:44 am
Well Berry I could say the samething of all the oil armchair “experts” out there like BillT but he’s been on here alot longer that a few weeks.
MrEnergyCzar on Tue, 14th Feb 2012 4:23 am
Each time gas prices rise another 1% of people will start seeing our oil reality…. Deniers just make it more interesting…
MrEnergyCzar
Norm on Tue, 14th Feb 2012 12:05 pm
Humorous, the part where they add in all the alternative sources of oil, to say we arent running out of oil. So what about that we have to dig up underground tar in Alberta, to offset that we are running out of oil… therefore we aren’t running out of oil. OK, mmm hmmm, I am convinced, excuse me I have to place a factory order for an Escalade.
BillT on Tue, 14th Feb 2012 3:53 pm
Hahahaha. Yes, Norm, they are suing every trick in the book to keep the sheeple, excuse me, ‘consumers’ consuming. Don’t forget the 4+ billion barrels of oil in the asphalt paving of the roads and parking lots in America. That could also be considered ‘oil’ under their definition.
Arthur on Wed, 15th Feb 2012 5:31 pm
I love the phrase “peak-oil advocates”. As if there are people who enjoy the prospect of decline.