I think that the peak senario is more subtle; at the moment the most significant constraints in the supply chain are transport (VLCCs?) and refining capacity. I am aware of only one sizeable refinery being built (800K/day) and the maritime law outlawing single-hulled carriers is squeezing flow out of the ME (and providing a smokescreen!). This isn't a coincidence; the oil industry isn't going to invest in kit when they know that extraction is going to top out at (say) 87mbd. With everyone focused on NG and nuclear, the oil price might creep up to $60-65 without too much fuss and depressed demand will allow a drawn out decline of 84-83mbd over three or four years.
UK and US economies are beginning to stall now - it's already been 'as good as it gets'.
So for several years, extraction rates won't constrain the economy, production and delivery capacities might.
How severe a recession we get depends on many things but one thing that could be hugely influential is public attitude. If energy and its provision are seriously and widely debated, we could have an attitude change towards conservation.
This is a crucial idea for me and its why I believe we peakniks can ameliorate the impact of PO - by explaining resource constraints and population growth to people we know.
Electricity and NG supplies are getting more air-time than oil. We need to leverage this to get oil supply included.





