by vtsnowedin » Sat 26 Nov 2011, 14:24:28
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('radon', 'T')hings that come to mind:
1. If Saudi Arabia's production is on the plateau stage and may not be increased, than its recoverable oil reserves should be comparable to Russia's, because Russia's production is also on the plateau stage at this very moment. Indeed, entering the plateau stage means being at the Hubbert's peak on the graph. The recoverable reserves is the area under the Hubbert's curve on the graph (or, maths-speaking, the integral of the Hubbert's function over time - S H(t)dt). SA's and Russia's coinciding Hubbert peaks means that their Hubbert curves are broadly equivalent, and this means that the areas under their Hubbert curves are broadly equal, and this means that their recoverable reserves are broadly of the same size. (Edit: of course, all this bearing in mind that SA's and Russia's current, "peak", oil production rates are broadly equal at around 10 mbd).
This in turn implies that SA's recoverable reserves are a third of what they have declared. Is this realistic?..
2. Their population is around 27 mln now, and was around 20 mln back at the time of the 1998 oil glut. Growing fast, requiring substantial social spending. It might happen that for purely economic reasons they cannot afford oil gluts/cheap oil any more.
3. SA may actually be taking a responsible stance, and seeks to ensure that capital intensive unconventional oil projects do not go bust due to the oil price falling below their break even point (like $80/bbl cost of production).
Maybe some combination of the above.
I'm not an oilfield geek so may be off the mark here but I doubt that you can conclude that Russia's reserves are equal to KSA's just due to current production matching. Russia's reserves are spread over a much larger area and production is limited by corruption and incompetency so current production may have little correlation to recoverable reserves. KSA on the other hand has a concentrated source where the best available technology has been applied for decades. I expect KSA to produce a steady flow for as long as physically possible and then a very steep decline where Russia will or may steadily increase recovery rates as reforms and new technologies are brought to bare.