I was reading up on peak oil and I came across
this article in science magazine (Science 2004 304: 1114-1115), it's not free but I'll summarize important claims here. Bascially the article says that peak oil is balogna because:
1. Peak oil views fail to take into account the complex reality that will allow reliance on abundant supplies for years to come
2. Hubbert curve assumes that the geological structure of our planet is well known an thoroughly explored
3. The Hubbert curves do not delineate the complex and dynamic nature of oil production and reserves in the world because they are a product of a static model that puts unjustifiable faith in geology and does not consider technology and cost/price functions
4. The models success in the US reflects the peculiar nature of the US in that it is the most intensively explored and exploited in the world
5. Nearly all of the estimates of the world's oil "ultimate recoverable resources" do not take into account non-conventional oils such as the Canadian tar sands
6. Peak oilsters usually quote the fact that new oil discoveries are only replacing 1/4 of what the world consumes every year, but the real issue is that neither major producing countries or publicly traded companies have any desire to invest in oil exploration for fear that oil will dip below $10/bbl like it did in 1986
So, Science magazine isn't known for publishing crap, but I think that a lot of people in this forum would dismiss these claims as crap. The article also shows oil production in Egypt, which looks absolutely nothing like Hubberts curve, although the time scale was 40 years...is this a big enough time frame to look at?