Page added on February 2, 2012
In the latest issue of Nature, two scientists take peak oil head-on, analyzing crude oil production over the past several decades and conjecturing where it is headed. And the top line? Worldwide oil production is in decline, and commonly cited replacements — new oil sources, coal, natural gas, and tar sands — won’t be able to make up the difference.
The authors looked at oil production data from 1998 until today, and noted that, until 2005, supply was able to keep up with demand. But since then, production has plateaued at around 75 million barrels per day, and nonetheless oil price has increased around 15% each year, from $15 a barrel in 1998 to $111 today. This pattern treads dangerous ground:
Such major spikes in fuel price can cause economic crises, and contributed to the one the world is recovering from now. The future economy is unlikely to be able to bear what oil prices have in store. Only by moving away from fossil fuels can we both ensure a more robust economic outlook and address the challenges of climate change. This will be a decades-long transformation that needs to start immediately.
Part of the reason this idea is not taken as seriously as it should be is the way people talk about oil. Industry folk typically cite undiscovered or underutilized oil reserves to blow off the economic argument, the authors write. And there is certainly more oil on the planet that could be used — but it’s not as accessible as it’s made out to be.
The true volume of proven global reserves is clouded by secrecy; forecasts by state oil companies are not audited and seem to be exaggerated. More importantly, reserves often take 6–10 years to drill and develop before they become part of supply, by which time older fields have become depleted. It is far more sensible to look instead at actual production records, which are less encouraging. Even while reserves are apparently increasing, the percentage available for production is going down.
The authors then go on to deflate optimism in other forms of fossil-based energy sources. Coal? Estimates of coal abundance have decreased each year, so it’s not worth putting our faith in that. Natural gas? Production at a single site has been severely overestimated, with great decreases each year. Tar sands? Again, production is expected to reach less than 5 million barrels a day by 2035 — not enough to make up the difference. Alternative sources are our best bet, they add.
The analysis is robust, and the authors lament that the economic argument has been “lodged more firmly in the minds of policy-makers.” But I think another problem lies in the rhetoric behind ‘peak oil.’ For decades, environmentalists and economists have forewarned that we will one day reach peak oil, hitting a wall in production, and thus need to shift to other fuel sources. But it’s like the boy who cried wolf: every time we hear the phrase “peak oil” and the prediction goes unfulfilled, it becomes a little easier to shrug off.
The authors hope that the analysis will finally redirect the imperative to move away from fossil fuels. The debate over climate change and global warming has stagnated the urgency for the use and discovery of novel energy sources, the authors add, but “emphasizing the short-term economic imperative from oil prices must be enough to push governments into action now.”
Let’s hope that those governments have a full subscription to Nature so they can read the analysis.
By Hannah Waters
4 Comments on "Economics alone should drive countries away from crude oil"
Mike on Fri, 3rd Feb 2012 2:51 am
Huh? So….I suppose wind and solar are then ~uncommonly cited~ and viable? Good luck with that.
BillT on Fri, 3rd Feb 2012 2:59 am
What ‘alternative new undiscovered’ energy sources? All this is saying is what we already know. But then, perhaps they know that the answer is “There is no answer”. There is no new and undiscovered energy source out there. There is no energy source that does not, in some way, rely on oil to exist. None.
Name one source of energy, besides that generated by animal/human muscle that does not require oil. Direct solar to warm our bodies or water in sunlight is the only one I can think of. That will not power mining machines or smelting refineries or the machining of new parts to replace those produced by oil energy.
robert collins on Fri, 3rd Feb 2012 2:52 pm
This report says nothing new, and nothing that addresses the fundamental point raised by BillT. The fact is that the implications of the decline in cheap oil are too grave for our leaders to comtemplate let alone discuss.THey prefer to listen to the bull…t given to them by advocates of unconvebtional oil and “sustainable” snake-oil solutions.
For example; at the moment the Eurozone countries are bleating like lost sheep about the need to stimulate growth and thereby reduce the debts with which they are burdened. There will be no growth without cheap oil and there isn’t any more cheap oil. The ignorance of the ruling class is well illustrated by the fact that they have chosen at this critical time to place an embargo on Iranian oil. Are they mad? Who cares if the Israelis fear Iran. Israel is of no strategic importance to Europe. Anyway if Iran were mad enough to attack Israel or anywhere else for that matter it would be barbequed by the U.S. But if Iranian oil goes off the market the price will rise and the economy of the world will suffer. China will in any case buy all the oil Iran can produce.
The only solution to the fundamental truth about peak-oil is a radical change in the way we live. But we hear little from the great and the good to encourage us to think that they are aware of the problem let alone that they might have a strategy for dealing with it.
Kenz300 on Sat, 4th Feb 2012 2:53 pm
The oil and coal companies want to keep the gravy train rolling as long as they can. It is time to end the oil monopoly on transportation fuels. Bring on the electric, flex-fuel, hybrid, CNG, LNG and hydrogen fueled vehicles.