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IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby SamInNebraska » Tue 05 Feb 2013, 19:23:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('meemoe_uk', '[')i]>How is a horizontal well today more efficient than the ones they drilled 50 years ago?
Ask RockDoc or RGR. Tech hasn't stood still for the last 50 years.


But you made the statement. Which means you either know the answer already, or made it without having a clue. And who might RockDoc or RGR be? Posters here, industry expert types?


If they are, why would you trust them anyway? I mean, industry types are the ones who got us into this mess, inventing new ways to get harder and harder to extract oil. We would have run out years ago if it wasn't for them, and because they don't talk to us normal folks, for all we know our grandkids will be arguing about this stuff, yes we've peaked! no we haven't! yes! no!
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby ralfy » Wed 06 Feb 2013, 10:51:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SamInNebraska', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('meemoe_uk', 'b')leh... same every year. That's enough rolling in the mud with the piggies for me for now.


Quick question before you go, if there is a new record high of production, doesn't that mean 2012 is the new peak oil? And if 2013 is higher yet, then it has the potential to be the next peak? When that happens, how long before we declare the old ones non-peaks and move on to reassigning all the side effects like price and whatnot to the new one?


According to the IEA, the peak for conventional production is around 2005. Non-conventional production was included in order to explain how demand was met by other sources:

http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailycha ... onsumption

For production per capita, the peak took place in 1979:

http://earlywarn.blogspot.com/2011/09/p ... apita.html
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby Stoffel » Wed 06 Feb 2013, 10:51:27

Hi there,

Please excuse my very first post on here being off-topic but the three preceding pages of this thread have convinced me to comment. Admins, please delete or move if inappropriate.

This is my first post on this forum despite me being a daily lurker on the Peak Oil website and message board since about 2004. As a result I'm quite familiar with most of the characters that post here. I've learned a vast amount about resource depletion from browsing this site regularly. In fact, I would go as far as to say that this site has had a more profound effect on my thoughts and behavior than anything else that I've yet encountered since joining the internet in 1996.

For one thing, I've spent the last 5 years since 2008 paying off all my debt, apart from my mortgage, which should take another 3 years - provided that the system doesn't crash before then, which it might, of course. My wife and I now drive two small, fuel efficient cars, hers being a 1982 vintage and mine a 1974 - both paid for in full, naturally. Significantly, we've got no plans at all to EVER replace these vehicles. I can pretty much keep them both going indefinitely or, for as long as fuel is available. I've completely stopped buying iTrash and other Chinese junk and instead spend my money on preps and on acquiring new skills.

Despite having read extensively on PO and peak everything else, I do not profess to know enough about resource depletion to have any sort of certainty in predicting when and how fast things will implode. Whilst I'm by instinct a fast crasher, I understand that things could take decades to peter out and that there is small chance that I might still be employed in two decades when time comes for me to retire. Despite my fast-crash leanings, I'm now a much happier person than I was a decade ago. Everything that I've done to prep for a PO crash has also simplified my life enormously. I'm now fitter, healthier and far less stressed than in 2004. So yes, this site (and other PO sites) has had a big impact on my life.

But so much for the long intro. The reason for this post is to ask an honest question to meemoe and the other cornies that are such active posters on here: What is your motive for expending such a large amount of energy in posting material that is counter to the very viewpoint that this forum was founded upon? In other words, what do you gain from it? Do you perhaps see this as some sort of religious crusade where you're trying to "save" some lost souls? Or do you just have this immense desire to be proven right and by doing so, prove your superiority to all the "uninformed" people here? What's more, how much success have you had thus far in converting people to your point of view? Have you succeeded in changing ONE person's mind thus far? If so, what do you stand to gain from that?

I'm asking this in all seriousness because I can't see the logic. I don't, for instance, spend hours per day posting all sorts of communist material on extreme right wing websites. Neither do I post irrefutable scientific evidence that the earth is round on some flat earth forum. I can mention countless more examples. There's a very big percentage of websites and forums out there where the prevailing opinion on a particular subject might be the complete opposite of what I believe in but yet I don't have the even slightest desire to spend my evenings posting away trying to change those people's minds despite some of them holding utterly ridiculous opinions. Let those people believe what they want.

Frankly, whilst I'll be the first to admit that freedom of speech should be respected and that everybody's got the right to voice their opinion, I find the fact that about half of the content that get's posted on here is cornie stuff to be distracting. It makes it far more difficult to find useful material that would otherwise have been the case because one needs to constantly sift the chaff from the corn, so to speak. Having said that, the fact that opposing viewpoints are so readily tolerated on po.com does say a lot for the integrity of the admin team.
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby ralfy » Wed 06 Feb 2013, 10:54:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SamInNebraska', '
')
Quick question before you go, if there is a new record high of production, doesn't that mean 2012 is the new peak oil? And if 2013 is higher yet, then it has the potential to be the next peak? When that happens, how long before we declare the old ones non-peaks and move on to reassigning all the side effects like price and whatnot to the new one?


According to the IEA, the peak for conventional production is around 2005. Non-conventional production was included in order to explain how demand was met by other sources:

http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailycha ... onsumption

For production per capita, the peak took place in 1979:

http://earlywarn.blogspot.com/2011/09/p ... apita.html
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby kublikhan » Wed 06 Feb 2013, 15:09:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Stoffel', 'H')i there,

Please excuse my very first post on here being off-topic but the three preceding pages of this thread have convinced me to comment. Admins, please delete or move if inappropriate.
...
The reason for this post is to ask an honest question to meemoe and the other cornies that are such active posters on here: What is your motive for expending such a large amount of energy in posting material that is counter to the very viewpoint that this forum was founded upon? In other words, what do you gain from it? Do you perhaps see this as some sort of religious crusade where you're trying to "save" some lost souls? Or do you just have this immense desire to be proven right and by doing so, prove your superiority to all the "uninformed" people here?
Welcome lurker! As to your question, if meemoe doesn't want to answer allow me to offer my opinion. Most people troll to get their jollies off. If their flamebait provokes outrage in their target audience, so much the better.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '&')quot;Online people feel anonymous and disinhibited," says Prof Mark Griffiths, director of the International Gaming Research Unit at Nottingham Trent University. "They lower their emotional guard and in the heat of the moment may troll either reactively or proactively."

It is usually carried out by young adult males for amusement, boredom and revenge, he adds. But it's not just young people. Scan any football, music or fan site and there are people of all ages taking part in the most vituperative attacks.

After researching "flaming" - the term for trolling in the early days of the internet - he rejects the idea that people "lose it" when online. If anything they become more attuned to social convention, albeit the specific conventions of the web. Provoking people appears to be the norm in some online communities, he says.

Most trolling is not criminal - it's about having a laugh, says Rob Manuel, co-founder of the website B3ta, which specialises in altering photographs for comic effect. "Trolling taps into people's desire to poke fun, make trouble and cause annoyance," he says.

He first became aware of the phenomenon in the 90s when a friend cross-posted on fan sites for Lord of the Rings and Star Wars, asking: "Who'd win in a fight - the Emperor or Gandalf?" Manuel says his friend sat back and laughed like some "mad scientist looking at insects in a jar" as hundreds of passionate posts followed.
Trolling: Who does it and why?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')laire Hardaker explores the psychological motivations of trolls in her Ph.D. thesis Trolling in Asynchronous Computer-Mediated Communication. She concludes that "trolls intention(s) is/are to cause disruption and/or to trigger or exacerbate conflict for the purposes of their own amusement."

Another way to consider trolling from is Dr. Phil's viewpoint: People only engage in repeated behavior if it pays off for them. What is the pay-off for trolling? Experts and online discussions cite:
Attention and recognition, even if negative
The emotional release of venting
Power (the power to disrupt)
Vandalism
The thrill of breaking social conventions
Sabotaging groups the troll dislikes
Immaturity

Intentional trolls brag that they do it for the lulz. Their braggadocio usually masks these reasons.
Why People Troll and How to Stop Them
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby SamInNebraska » Wed 06 Feb 2013, 15:19:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ralfy', '
')
According to the IEA, the peak for conventional production is around 2005. Non-conventional production was included in order to explain how demand was met by other sources:



Seems reasonable to ask then, when do we get the peak in other sources?
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby kublikhan » Wed 06 Feb 2013, 16:25:01

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SamInNebraska', 'S')eems reasonable to ask then, when do we get the peak in other sources?
In their latest report, The IEA shows oil(conventional + other) growing all the way to the end of their forecast period(2035). Total energy is projected to grow even faster as oil and coal are relied on less and natural gas and renewables are relied on more(percentage wise).

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')aking all new developments and policies into account, the world is still failing to put the global energy system onto a more sustainable path. Global energy demand grows by more than one-third over the period to 2035 in the New Policies Scenario (our central scenario), with China, India and the Middle East accounting for 60% of the increase. Energy demand barely rises in OECD countries, although there is a pronounced shift away from oil, coal (and, in some countries, nuclear) towards natural gas and renewables. Despite the growth in low carbon sources of energy, fossil fuels remain dominant in the global energy mix.

Oil demand reaches 99.7 mb/d in 2035, up from 87.4 mb/d in 2011. Non-OPEC oil output steps up over the current decade, but supply after 2020 depends increasingly on OPEC. A surge in unconventional supplies, mainly from light tight oil in the United States and oil sands in Canada, natural gas liquids, and a jump in deepwater production in Brazil, push non-OPEC production up after 2015 to a plateau above 53 mb/d,from under 49 mb/d in 2011. This is maintained until the mid-2020s, before falling back to 50 mb/d in 2035. Output from OPEC countries rises, particularly after 2020, bringing the OPEC share in global production from its current 42% up towards 50% by 2035. The net increase in global oil production is driven entirely by unconventional oil, including a contribution from light tight oil that exceeds 4 mb/d for much of the 2020s, and by natural gas liquids.

Much is riding on Iraq’s success. Iraq makes the largest contribution by far to global oil supply growth. Iraq’s ambition to expand output after decades of conflict and instability is not limited by the size of its resources or by the costs of producing them, but will require co-ordinated progress all along the energy supply chain, clarity on how Iraq plans to derive long-term value from its hydrocarbon wealth and successful consolidation of a domestic consensus on oil policy. In our projections, oil output in Iraq exceeds 6 mb/d in 2020 and rises to more than 8 mb/d in 2035. Iraq becomes a key supplier to fast-growing Asian markets, mainly China, and the second-largest global exporter by the 2030s, overtaking Russia. Without this supply growth from Iraq, oil markets would be set for difficult times
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby Quinny » Wed 06 Feb 2013, 16:33:07

Excellent post. What's it all about Alfie?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Stoffel', 'H')i there,

Please excuse my very first post on here being off-topic but the three preceding pages of this thread have convinced me to comment. Admins, please delete or move if inappropriate.

This is my first post on this forum despite me being a daily lurker on the Peak Oil website and message board since about 2004. As a result I'm quite familiar with most of the characters that post here. I've learned a vast amount about resource depletion from browsing this site regularly. In fact, I would go as far as to say that this site has had a more profound effect on my thoughts and behavior than anything else that I've yet encountered since joining the internet in 1996.

For one thing, I've spent the last 5 years since 2008 paying off all my debt, apart from my mortgage, which should take another 3 years - provided that the system doesn't crash before then, which it might, of course. My wife and I now drive two small, fuel efficient cars, hers being a 1982 vintage and mine a 1974 - both paid for in full, naturally. Significantly, we've got no plans at all to EVER replace these vehicles. I can pretty much keep them both going indefinitely or, for as long as fuel is available. I've completely stopped buying iTrash and other Chinese junk and instead spend my money on preps and on acquiring new skills.

Despite having read extensively on PO and peak everything else, I do not profess to know enough about resource depletion to have any sort of certainty in predicting when and how fast things will implode. Whilst I'm by instinct a fast crasher, I understand that things could take decades to peter out and that there is small chance that I might still be employed in two decades when time comes for me to retire. Despite my fast-crash leanings, I'm now a much happier person than I was a decade ago. Everything that I've done to prep for a PO crash has also simplified my life enormously. I'm now fitter, healthier and far less stressed than in 2004. So yes, this site (and other PO sites) has had a big impact on my life.

But so much for the long intro. The reason for this post is to ask an honest question to meemoe and the other cornies that are such active posters on here: What is your motive for expending such a large amount of energy in posting material that is counter to the very viewpoint that this forum was founded upon? In other words, what do you gain from it? Do you perhaps see this as some sort of religious crusade where you're trying to "save" some lost souls? Or do you just have this immense desire to be proven right and by doing so, prove your superiority to all the "uninformed" people here? What's more, how much success have you had thus far in converting people to your point of view? Have you succeeded in changing ONE person's mind thus far? If so, what do you stand to gain from that?

I'm asking this in all seriousness because I can't see the logic. I don't, for instance, spend hours per day posting all sorts of communist material on extreme right wing websites. Neither do I post irrefutable scientific evidence that the earth is round on some flat earth forum. I can mention countless more examples. There's a very big percentage of websites and forums out there where the prevailing opinion on a particular subject might be the complete opposite of what I believe in but yet I don't have the even slightest desire to spend my evenings posting away trying to change those people's minds despite some of them holding utterly ridiculous opinions. Let those people believe what they want.

Frankly, whilst I'll be the first to admit that freedom of speech should be respected and that everybody's got the right to voice their opinion, I find the fact that about half of the content that get's posted on here is cornie stuff to be distracting. It makes it far more difficult to find useful material that would otherwise have been the case because one needs to constantly sift the chaff from the corn, so to speak. Having said that, the fact that opposing viewpoints are so readily tolerated on po.com does say a lot for the integrity of the admin team.
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby ralfy » Wed 06 Feb 2013, 19:59:04

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SamInNebraska', '
')
Seems reasonable to ask then, when do we get the peak in other sources?


To add to what Kublikhan wrote, the increase is based on the assumption that conventional production won't follow historical flow rates and because of that flat line. Aleklett argues that it is impossible for that to take place:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v0ujDVRIzGM

The forecast for the decline varies given various sources, and you will find multiple reports on that here:

https://sites.google.com/site/peakoilreports/

For example,

http://www.businessinsider.com/oil-spar ... 013-2011-2

Given such, we should look at the ability of non-conventional production to meet a decrease in conventional production plus an increase in energy demand, not only overall but also per capita given a growing global middle class. With that, what we want to see is per capita production not only go back to the 1979 peak but even exceed it.

According to the IEA, in order to maintain global economic growth (which ensures meeting the needs of a growing global middle class) we will need the equivalent of one Saudi Arabia every seven years, or the equivalent of energy demand increasing by 1.4 to 2 pct per annum. If conventional production drops, then we we will need even more.
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby meemoe_uk » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 05:51:09

>What is your motive for expending such a large amount of energy in posting material that is counter to the very viewpoint that this forum was founded upon?
Because I'm interested in energy resources, and I got interested from the PO sites. I was a peaker\doomer from 2006 to 2008. I read all the doomer sites, in particular LATOC. I believed for a while that the PO community in 2006-7 was right that Dec 2005 was peak oil. There was stuff in the community that didn't make sense but I thought I'd understand if I read a bit more. Instead the more I read, the more I realized that both the POisNow and PO-doom stories were both myths. There is no peak oil now, and when peak oil hits, it won't matter, we've plenty of other energy reserves. As 2008-9-10-11 went by, the oil production kept rising. When I looked at history I saw peakers had always cried peak oil doom is now, regardless of what oil production was doing. They were just another form of the world ends tomorrow vagrants.
If nothing else my posts today on PO.com would just be an expression of my interest in energy resources. However, now that I'm outside consensus on this site, all the flak I get has slanted the tone and focus of my posts. And yes its amusing sometimes to read the reactions from the religious congregation when I point out truth to them, and the flaws in their rational.

Take this for example,
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')ccording to the IEA, the peak for conventional production is around 2005. Non-conventional production was included in order to explain how demand was met by other sources:

I've addressed the conventional vs non-con argument over a dozen times. Oil doesn't know whether its conventional or not. Your car doesn't know if the petrol and diesel you put in it is from conventional or non-con. At the atomic level, the finished products are the same from conventional or non-con. Oil is oil is oil. So why bring conventions into it? Conventions in the oil industry change constantly as new technology and different oil in different places are exploited. Who drew the line in the sand to say all oil extracted with year 19XX technology is conventional, but any oil after that is non-con? God? written on a stone tablet with a thunderbolt?
Nope.
2005 was cherry picked by the hype community purely because thats when the first wave of E-doomers had consolidated into an E-community and had consensus estimates of when peak oil was. 2005 was the consensus at the time, and it stuck. When the IEA said 2005 was peak oil convention, it wasn't due to any convention that oil engineers had told them was significant. Instead all the IEA had effectively done is gone on PO.com or some other doomer site and looked at which year the doomers wanted to be peak oil, and they saw 2005 was their favourite. They were just telling doomers what they wanted to hear i.e. their own hype echoed back to them.
There were many other year of peak oil estimates. When I was a peaker , there were still people trying to hype 1994,1995,1999, 2004 and 2006 as peak.
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby ralfy » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 06:15:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('meemoe_uk', '[')i]>What is your motive for expending such a large amount of energy in posting material that is counter to the very viewpoint that this forum was founded upon?
Because I'm interested in energy resources, and I got interested from the PO sites. I was a peaker\doomer from 2006 to 2008. I read all the doomer sites, in particular LATOC. I believed for a while that the PO community in 2006-7 was right that Dec 2005 was peak oil. There was stuff in the community that didn't make sense but I thought I'd understand if I read a bit more. Instead the more I read, the more I realized that both the POisNow and PO-doom stories were both myths. There is no peak oil now, and when peak oil hits, it won't matter, we've plenty of other energy reserves. As 2008-9-10-11 went by, the oil production kept rising. When I looked at history I saw peakers had always cried peak oil doom is now, regardless of what oil production was doing. They were just another form of the world ends tomorrow vagrants.
If nothing else my posts today on PO.com would just be an expression of my interest in energy resources. However, now that I'm outside consensus on this site, all the flak I get has slanted the tone and focus of my posts. And yes its amusing sometimes to read the reactions from the religious congregation when I point out truth to them, and the flaws in their rational.

Take this for example,
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')ccording to the IEA, the peak for conventional production is around 2005. Non-conventional production was included in order to explain how demand was met by other sources:

I've addressed the conventional vs non-con argument over a dozen times. Oil doesn't know whether its conventional or not. Your car doesn't know if the petrol and diesel you put in it is from conventional or non-con. At the atomic level, the finished products are the same from conventional or non-con. Oil is oil is oil. So why bring conventions into it? Conventions in the oil industry change constantly as new technology and different oil in different places are exploited. Who drew the line in the sand to say all oil extracted with year 19XX technology is conventional, but any oil after that is non-con? God? written on a stone tablet with a thunderbolt?
Nope.
2005 was cherry picked by the hype community purely because thats when the first wave of E-doomers had consolidated into an E-community and had consensus estimates of when peak oil was. 2005 was the consensus at the time, and it stuck. When the IEA said 2005 was peak oil convention, it wasn't due to any convention that oil engineers had told them was significant. Instead all the IEA had effectively done is gone on PO.com or some other doomer site and looked at which year the doomers wanted to be peak oil, and they saw 2005 was their favourite. They were just telling doomers what they wanted to hear i.e. their own hype echoed back to them.
There were many other year of peak oil estimates. When I was a peaker , there were still people trying to hype 1994,1995,1999, 2004 and 2006 as peak.


"Unconventional oil"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconventional_oil

"The Myth of 'Saudi America'"

http://www.slate.com/articles/health_an ... ingle.html
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby Buddy_J » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 09:33:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ralfy', '
')"Unconventional oil"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconventional_oil


Interesting.

Rather than the technique being the defining criteria, it appears to be related to the rock, and the technology is just a consequence of people wanting to get at this more difficult to extract from rock. This is cool stuff.

http://www.capp.ca/CANADAINDUSTRY/NATUR ... fault.aspx
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby SamInNebraska » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 09:50:49

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ralfy', '
')"Unconventional oil"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconventional_oil


Interesting.

Rather than the technique being the defining criteria, it appears to be related to the rock, and the technology is just a consequence of people wanting to get at this more difficult to extract from rock. This is cool stuff.

http://www.capp.ca/CANADAINDUSTRY/NATUR ... fault.aspx


Did you just get off the boat? Everyone around here knows that the technique has nothing to do with the type of rock being labelled "conventional" or "unconventional". The wiki is just another screwup by someone who knows nothing about geology and the definitions used by the geologic professionals, as opposed to those made up by people starstruck by the gee whiz technology.

http://pubs.usgs.gov/bul/b2168/b2168.pdf

http://pubs.usgs.gov/dds/dds-069/dds-06 ... ter_17.pdf

Back in 1993 Ben Law and Chuck Spencer effectively outlined the criteria for these unconventional accumulations, and certainly that type of rock hasn't changed since then, but what has changed is the application of two different, and relatively old, oil field technologies. You just can't trust wiki on topics like this, really.
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby ralfy » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 13:34:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Buddy_J', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ralfy', '
')"Unconventional oil"

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconventional_oil


Interesting.

Rather than the technique being the defining criteria, it appears to be related to the rock, and the technology is just a consequence of people wanting to get at this more difficult to extract from rock. This is cool stuff.

http://www.capp.ca/CANADAINDUSTRY/NATUR ... fault.aspx


The wiki refers to both.
Last edited by ralfy on Thu 07 Feb 2013, 13:55:02, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby ralfy » Thu 07 Feb 2013, 13:51:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('SamInNebraska', '
')
Did you just get off the boat? Everyone around here knows that the technique has nothing to do with the type of rock being labelled "conventional" or "unconventional". The wiki is just another screwup by someone who knows nothing about geology and the definitions used by the geologic professionals, as opposed to those made up by people starstruck by the gee whiz technology.

http://pubs.usgs.gov/bul/b2168/b2168.pdf

http://pubs.usgs.gov/dds/dds-069/dds-06 ... ter_17.pdf

Back in 1993 Ben Law and Chuck Spencer effectively outlined the criteria for these unconventional accumulations, and certainly that type of rock hasn't changed since then, but what has changed is the application of two different, and relatively old, oil field technologies. You just can't trust wiki on topics like this, really.


But the wiki contains references, and one of them is the IEA:

http://www.iea.org/aboutus/faqs/oil/

Thus, the definition may apply to the technique or the source.

There's also the EIA:

http://www.eia.gov/tools/glossary/index.cfm?id=C

and the USGS:

http://energy.cr.usgs.gov/oilgas/addoil ... ional.html
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby dorlomin » Fri 08 Feb 2013, 06:35:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kublikhan', '.')..
Good post but misses on essential element.

Dunning–Kruger effect
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Dunning–Kruger effect is a cognitive bias in which unskilled individuals suffer from illusory superiority, mistakenly rating their ability much higher than average. This bias is attributed to a metacognitive inability of the unskilled to recognize their mistakes.[1]
Actual competence may weaken self-confidence, as competent individuals may falsely assume that others have an equivalent understanding. David Dunning and Justin Kruger of Cornell University conclude, "the miscalibration of the incompetent stems from an error about the self, whereas the miscalibration of the highly competent stems from an error about others".[2]
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby dorlomin » Fri 08 Feb 2013, 06:50:23

The years around the peak of conventional oil are the years we will have the most energy available to our species in its history. Peak oil is not the point of scarcity but the moment of ultimate abundance. But those drowning in the cornucopian opulence of lakes of oil are also burning food to keep the SUVs running.

Record breaking historic amounts of oil and still we are paying exorbitant amounts to scrape the dregs from every unconventional resource we can find.
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby sparky » Fri 08 Feb 2013, 20:25:32

.
@ dorlomin , I would follows you on Peak Energy being the cinch
Conventional crude is the cheapest , easier to handle fuel and has the greatest mechanical power density ,IE more bang per buck , per pound .
the highest thermal power belong to coal , at least the good sort , but rubbish stuff is also used
the easiest carbon fuel to transport is gas, this thing is born to be put in pipes
one could speak of peak fossil carbon and be pretty close

My test for Peak Energy is when we will reach peak air transport
this form of transportation is totally dependent on high energy fuel
another measure is peak food .
Peak oil will not be seen in numbers , statistics or graphs it will be seen in consequences
and forget the fast crash scenario , that's not how civilization collapse ,they crumple

My own definition of conventional crude oil

an hydrocarbon mix , liquid at atmospheric pressure , which float on water and is extracted from
wells resting on solid footing .
That's what was in Marion Hubert mind when he gave his curve , and he was right
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Re: IEA 2012 : world record highest annual oil production

Unread postby Xyricolev » Sat 09 Feb 2013, 09:47:16

Whoa...I'm stunned that this place still exists...kudos to you guys, tho I have to ask...isn't this a waste of precious resources?

I've been lurking since 2005 (big wave of peak predictions then)...even bigger and more ardent than the ones in 1999, 1985, and in the 1970's (I've obviously skipped over a number of other peak oil predictions).

When I was last here (2008), the new game was to pretend that we were post peak, even tho oil production kept rising as more and more fields were found, so by that accounting, we're now PO + 5...no mass die-offs, substitutions taking place, new fields being found all the time, total production at an all time high....

It's kinda hard to see the doomalicious scenario in all of this, innit? (and the fact that we can still apparently spare the resources to keep the servers that power the 'net running).

Kudos though, for your resilience! Even in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, to stick with your beliefs...that takes some true, dogged determination!

-=Xyr=-

PS: as I did way back in the misty past of 2008, I'll say again...nobody sane would argue that a finite resource, if used at all, will eventually not be there...but that's not really what this site's about, is it? Unless things have undergone a seismic shift since 2008, this site is about that (a finite resource being, well...finite) + "teh end of dayz" hysterics that help define the mythology created by people who like to sell lots of books..
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