Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

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

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby Econ101 » Sun 19 May 2013, 13:02:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Econ101', 'W')hats your point? They dont want the liability of predicting where the money is.

LOL, I have no idea what that means, the EIAs job is predicting supply and demand and they predict a not insignificant amount of tight oil will be produced - they just don't predict the endless supply that you attempt to imply with your one little chart.

As Ralfy has pointed out to you over and over, Shale Won't Scale, it won't reach sufficient flow to have a large enough impact to move the overall peak dramatically, let alone doom Peak Oil entirely; the condition or the site.

But I will take the opportunity to say my overall point is your endless hyping of tight oil is misinformed at best and misleading at worst. As I pointed out to you in another thread the CEO of the EOG (one of the largest fraccers) said last year was the peak of shale growth, the EIA says all tight oil production peaks in '19. No doubt tight oil is having an impact on a few counties in ND & TX, some folks are making a killing, some others are making good wages, good for them. It's also had some impact on price but as anuone can tell from one glance at WTI, it ain't no panacea, nor will it ever be.

Fracking is a symptom, not a cure.

.


And what about the steam engine used to originally pound the bit? What about the rotating bit? What about seismic technology,diesel electric generators, hydraulics, etc. are they all symptoms of peak oil? 8)

Did ralfy look at the oil production chart for North Dakota. Shales you know, but still a straight up production chart for the past 5 yrs is powerful eveidence when you are arguing the shales dont scale, wouldnt you say? :lol:
Econ101
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 322
Joined: Sat 01 Sep 2012, 07:47:56

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby Pops » Sun 19 May 2013, 14:06:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Econ101', 'A')nd what about the steam engine used to originally pound the bit? What about the rotating bit? What about seismic technology,diesel electric generators, hydraulics, etc. are they all symptoms of peak oil? :-D


Steam engines were more profitable than drilling by hand. An improvement.
Fracking shale costs more and produces less. Not an improvement.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
User avatar
Pops
Elite
Elite
 
Posts: 19746
Joined: Sat 03 Apr 2004, 04:00:00
Location: QuikSac for a 6-Pac

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Sun 19 May 2013, 14:21:26

Pops - And then there's the obvious: "What about the rotating bit? What about seismic technology,diesel electric generators, hydraulics, etc. are they all symptoms of peak oil?". All of which, and much more, existed when oil was selling for $25/bbl in the late 90's as well as the knowledge that the Bakken and shales contained many billions of technically recoverable oil.

And yet we didn't see a drilling boom back then. Their production growth didn't kick in until oil prices rose high enough. And why did oil prices jump up? I'll leave it to you to teach that pig to roller skate. You're welcome. LOL.
User avatar
ROCKMAN
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 11397
Joined: Tue 27 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: TEXAS

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby Econ101 » Sun 19 May 2013, 15:58:08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ROCKMAN', 'P')ops - And then there's the obvious: "What about the rotating bit? What about seismic technology,diesel electric generators, hydraulics, etc. are they all symptoms of peak oil?". All of which, and much more, existed when oil was selling for $25/bbl in the late 90's as well as the knowledge that the Bakken and shales contained many billions of technically recoverable oil.

And yet we didn't see a drilling boom back then. Their production growth didn't kick in until oil prices rose high enough. And why did oil prices jump up? I'll leave it to you to teach that pig to roller skate. You're welcome. LOL.


I laugh too, :lol: , because you are capable of seeing only one thing: price. They didnt boom in the 90s because they didnt have the leases in place, the technology was in the development stage and the seismic work wasnt done. It didnt matter what the price was. They were drilling North Dakota at $20/barrel (1980-2000 m/l) but they werent getting the production because they didnt understand the shales.

Production in North Dakota may not have gone verticle so fast if we hadnt seen prices go up, but price and production in North Dakota are no longer coupled to the degree they might be on a failed wildcat horizontal bore. Production is now controlling price.

I laugh too, :lol: , because high oil prices are not actually high. They remain in step with other commodities going up in price because in a large part the dollar is losing purchasing power due to poor government monetary policy.

You lost money on your horizontal project? Why? Price or cost? 8)
Econ101
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 322
Joined: Sat 01 Sep 2012, 07:47:56

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby ralfy » Mon 20 May 2013, 00:55:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Econ101', '
')
And what about the steam engine used to originally pound the bit? What about the rotating bit? What about seismic technology,diesel electric generators, hydraulics, etc. are they all symptoms of peak oil? 8)

Did ralfy look at the oil production chart for North Dakota. Shales you know, but still a straight up production chart for the past 5 yrs is powerful eveidence when you are arguing the shales dont scale, wouldnt you say? :lol:


The problem isn't the production rate but the decline curve:

http://www.slate.com/articles/health_an ... dance.html
User avatar
ralfy
Light Sweet Crude
Light Sweet Crude
 
Posts: 5651
Joined: Sat 28 Mar 2009, 11:36:38
Location: The Wasteland
Top

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby Econ101 » Fri 24 May 2013, 18:43:53

I haven't posted in a few days, probably been 2 - 4 million brls produced in ND and 10-20 more producering wells on line. With each well predicted to produce between 600-700,000 barrels what is the decline curve? What is total expected production? What does it matter, take a look at this:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '(')Phys.org) —In the ongoing saga of Andrea Rossi's energy catalyzer (E-Cat) that promises clean, cheap power for the world, the latest events continue to bring as many questions as answers. Several scientists have performed supposedly independent tests of two E-Cat prototypes under controlled conditions and using high-precision instrumentation. In a paper posted at arXiv.org, the researchers write that, even by the most conservative of measurements, the E-Cat produces excess heat with a resulting energy density that is at least 1 order of magnitude—and possibly several—higher than any other conventional energy source, including gasoline.

http://phys.org/print288525504.html
Econ101
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 322
Joined: Sat 01 Sep 2012, 07:47:56
Top

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Fri 24 May 2013, 19:23:55

ECAT is believed in by about 1% of posters here, given breathing space due to their persistence. Most us here would happily wager on it being hokum.
SeaGypsy
Master Prognosticator
Master Prognosticator
 
Posts: 9285
Joined: Wed 04 Feb 2009, 04:00:00

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby Econ101 » Tue 28 May 2013, 20:56:56

The e-cat has more scientific credibility than climate change. Many here also believe in the notion of peak oil and have defined it many ways, depending on circumstances.

The issue of peak oil is of course dead except in the realm of the futurists like Alvin Toffler, who himself has now lived long enough to see how his early visions were nonesense and have required reinterpretation.

This will leave a void that could be filled with anger. Others could be driven to absurd leaps in logic. Cause and effect will have no meaning. Millions upon millions of barrels of oil will pour out of North Dakota. The Russian Arctic production will begin to flow down the Alaska Pipeline. Oil prices will accommodate prosperity as research science advances past the e-cat to solar or wind maybe?

Allow me to claify:

The thing about solar and wind is their expense. I believe, based on the huge output of the e-cat as reported on physics.org, the "hidden" input everyone seems to think is there, would, when netted against output make it cheaper and more efficient than solar or wind is now.

After having failed to define peak oil into existance, there may be, without a real breakthrough, a rush to the e-cat by peak oilers looking for a way, any way, to defeat oil.

The rest of us will laud the ingenuity of our petroleum engineers, the hardware, the software, the talent. Thousands of families will live in security and all of us will have the energy we need. The web site will celebrate that. 8)
Econ101
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 322
Joined: Sat 01 Sep 2012, 07:47:56

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby Econ101 » Wed 29 May 2013, 11:36:42

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Econ101', 'T')he e-cat has more scientific credibility than climate change. . .

The web site will celebrate that. 8)
Not as long you are willing to be humiliated.


:lol: The e-cat has more scientific credibility than climate change and is a more reliable and apparently cheaper technology than wind or solar. It is not subsidized by the US government and its competitors are not taxed and regulated to push their costs upward but if it did receive all of those benefits the apparent energy desity of the e-cat will crush even oil and gas. Seems more reasonable, if you dont want oil, than a windmill or solar panel that can only work with the full force and credit of the American taxpayer busy paying everyone to use them and forcing higher electric bills on everyone because they are being used.

That paragraph saw about 2,500 barrels of oil produced in North Dakota. Heres another 2,500:

The humiliation is reserved for those that ignore the facts. There are no facts supporting the notion of peak oil. It is a notion placed in peoples heads based on ignoring the facts. Straight up production graphs, exploding recoverable reserves world wide (North Dakotas reserves were just tripled) and expansion of production in the Middle East are some of the things telling us not to worry.

Heres another 2,500 barrels:

Anger and frustration, name calling and parading a sense of superiority justifying any type of distastful behavior will be the norm for many peak oiliers as their false paradigm collapses. The answer for the most radical among them will be the e-cat. Solar and wind are failing, we cant afford to pay everybody to use them. Oil is winning and will win. The e-cat will be the only way, besides calling people names and insulting them, peak oilers will have to get back at "big oil". [smilie=4robot.gif]

In the meantime the sensible, level headed folks will enjoy cheaper and more abundent enery. Petrolium engineers will be honored. EXXON will be recongnized and receive a Nobel Prize. The sites doom/gloom/angry-man attitude will mellow. It will be a celebration of the energy rich world we live in and the miracle of fracking.

The frackers have saved the world and this site will celebrate that fact. Peak oil will change the website but not doom it. Doom and gloom is always wrong. 8)

Ps.. There, almost another 10,000 barrels of fine North Dakota crude from the prolific shales pumped! [smilie=5bouncy.gif]
Econ101
Lignite
Lignite
 
Posts: 322
Joined: Sat 01 Sep 2012, 07:47:56
Top

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby AirlinePilot » Fri 31 May 2013, 03:39:44

Im all for optimism! My problem is that I cannot get by a few very large and telling facts.

Namely that Global net Exports are DOWN despite all the oil that you claim is going to save us. The trend is for that to continue.

Actual production of Crude oil is on a statistical plateau and has been for nearly 5 years. This despite a doubling in price TWICE in the last 9-10 years. Never before in the history of oil production has this particular set up occurred. It means something and it still looks to me like we need to see how this goes for another few years before we start the party.

I cannot yet join you in the optimism camp because to me, those two facts coupled with some other evidence do not support any argument other than one purely based on FAITH. I need to see the facts, and claiming that the Bakken Boom is "it" just doesn't cut it in the fact department.

Facts are one thing, FAITH is another. We should all hold ourselves to higher standards than faith here.
User avatar
AirlinePilot
Moderator
Moderator
 
Posts: 4378
Joined: Tue 05 Apr 2005, 03:00:00
Location: South of Atlanta

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Fri 31 May 2013, 09:06:21

AP – I’ve figured out what your problem is: you just can’t handle simplicity. We are producing more oil in the US today than in recent years. That's all that matters. It doesn’t matter how much oil the rest of the world is producing. it doesn't that matter that even with our increased production we still import a large % of our oil consumption. It doesn’t matter how much more oil the exporters are consuming internally every year. It doesn’t matter how much oil China is removing from the market place by either buying it in the ground or tying it up in refinery JV’s. It doesn’t matter if a lot of Canadian oil sands production is refined in BC with the products shipped to other countries. It doesn’t matter if the US spends another $trillion or two trying to stabilize the ME oil exporting region. And above all else it doesn’t matter what the price of oil may be and its effect on our economy.

Good grief, man…focus…FOCUS! All it requires is some simple faith.
User avatar
ROCKMAN
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 11397
Joined: Tue 27 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: TEXAS

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby AirlinePilot » Fri 31 May 2013, 14:04:05

Ahhh...I see what you did there. 8)
User avatar
AirlinePilot
Moderator
Moderator
 
Posts: 4378
Joined: Tue 05 Apr 2005, 03:00:00
Location: South of Atlanta

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Fri 31 May 2013, 22:54:44

AP - As even a blind man should be able to see the simplicity of my logic. But he probably won't, will he? LOL

Trying not to hurt my arm patting myself on the back, but once I started focusing on the big picture of the net results of the POD it became easier to weigh the significance of individual components. It's not that increased US oil production isn't a factor but just one of numerous elements of the POD. You can bake a cookie without sugar in it but it typically won't be very satifying. But you can't bake a good cookie with nothing but sugar in it. You get the blend right and you got something to brag about. What I see in the future is the increasing inability of the US economy to get the right blend.
User avatar
ROCKMAN
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 11397
Joined: Tue 27 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: TEXAS

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby sparky » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 08:11:07

.
As I understand the cornucopia argument ( maybe )
each depletion lead to a new level of price
allowing access to poorer or harder fields but of greater quantities
the ability to dig being cheaper than the exhaustion of resources would drive price

IE one can make a buck even with crap fossil carbon as long as the demand is there

True the world deposit of hard to get or hard to process black stuff are truly impressive
but to increase extraction it would require very substantial hardware expenses
pretty much as an ongoing rate of more gear deployed to get the same amount
User avatar
sparky
Intermediate Crude
Intermediate Crude
 
Posts: 3587
Joined: Mon 09 Apr 2007, 03:00:00
Location: Sydney , OZ

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby Pops » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 08:33:53

Sparky, that is the peaker argument too.

The only difference is the corny sees increasing price as inconsequential while the peaker sees it as very consequential.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
User avatar
Pops
Elite
Elite
 
Posts: 19746
Joined: Sat 03 Apr 2004, 04:00:00
Location: QuikSac for a 6-Pac

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 08:50:37

Pops – Exactly. I’ve just about lost all patience with the simplistic view that the US oil production rate is all there is to the PO story. They must ignore all the other aspects of the POD in order to sound credible. And IMHO that relegates them to white noise status. I’m willing to discuss/debate petroleum geology with any of them IF they are willing to at least acknowledge the POD. If not I see them as nothing more than static on the radio.
User avatar
ROCKMAN
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 11397
Joined: Tue 27 May 2008, 03:00:00
Location: TEXAS

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby John_A » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 13:27:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ROCKMAN', ' ')I’m willing to discuss/debate petroleum geology with any of them IF they are willing to at least acknowledge the POD. If not I see them as nothing more than static on the radio.


The downside to POD is that it works a century ago as well as it does today. Which tends to negate the petroleum geology of today and reduce it to what was only known at the time in question. And presto, that then walks right into a technology argument which the average economist (not Econ101) will beat you over the head with incessantly. And now we aren't talking about petroleum geology (the angle I feel has a much stronger basis) but economics.
45ACP: For when you want to send the very best.
John_A
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1193
Joined: Sat 25 Jun 2011, 21:16:36
Top

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby agramante » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 15:19:56

Yes and no, John. We have a much better understanding of oil itself and geology now than we did 100+ years ago. It would be foolish to assume that we know everything--learning more is, after all, why we continue to do science--and there have been some dead ends in research, since refuted by different results or better interpretations. But 100 years ago we didn't have a coherent understanding of the earth's crust. Wegener's hypothesis of continental drift was brand-new in 1912, and was rejected because it was poorly developed. It wasn't until the 50's and 60's that we gained enough data to assimilate Wegener's theory into the theory of plate tectonics as we know it. And that affected (or completely remade) almost all fields of geology. At this point, not too much of the planet hasn't been prospected, mostly except for those parts covered in ice. We certainly can't say that we know everything about earth--not even close--but our knowledge is a whole lot more mature now than it was 100 years ago. Along with that development in the whole field of geology has come development in petroleum exploration. I'm not as well-versed in this--I'm not an exploration geologist--but even while the old oilmen were pretty good at finding productive strata, our better tools and better knowledge of geological processes have made exploration into more difficult areas--mostly, ultra-deep water--feasible. So I think overall, we're in a much better position now than a century ago to make predictions on future oil production, particularly when the peak-and-decline phenomenon has been so well demonstrated in the US. But in the absence of reliable production and reserve data for most of the world, we can't compute accurate production curves so we're reduced to economic observations. But I think our physical understanding of the realities of peak oil are undeniably improved over one hundred years ago.
agramante
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 131
Joined: Fri 31 May 2013, 23:06:39

PreviousNext

Return to Peak Oil Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 70 guests