General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.
by John_A » Tue 02 Jul 2013, 11:52:07
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ROCKMAN', ' ')I just spudded a well in an oil trend in Texas that has produced 4.5 billion bbls or oil. It doesn't matter if oil goes to $300+/bbl no additional volume of any significance will ever be produced from this trend.
Then why did you just drill in a place where there is no significant volume? You didn't drill there to produce insignificant volumes did you? That would be irrational!
Let me guess...your insignificant volume is enough to make your IRR? That is the only explanation I can think of. So...how many insignificants does it take to add up to a significant?
Did I say that right?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Rockman', '
')My new well is an horizontal effort at EOR. If it's very successful and applied across the entire maybe we can add 3% or 4%...over many decades. This field has produced 28 million bbls of oil. There is zero possibility of a field of this size ever being discovered in the trend even if oil went to $1,000/bbl. There is not enough undrilled areas for such an accumulation to physically exist. Last year I drilled 3 exploratory wells for reservoirs in the same trend. My targets averaged about 50k bbls of oil each. Those were the largest undrilled areas we could find. And all 3 failed to find even one bbl of oil. Higher prices for oil can’t create oil where it doesn’t exist. But they do allow you to drill in riskier and more expensive areas. But that leverage doesn’t guarantee you’ll find a lot.
You do realize that you just implied that you are doing to change the recovery factor of this older, mature field? And if you do that...well..not only are you going to contribute to the increase in reserves the year after you do it, but I must ask, is there any reason as prices increase other experienced oil field folks won't be doing the same thing the world over? Or is this more of just a US thing?
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by Keith_McClary » Tue 02 Jul 2013, 12:58:10
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('John_A', 'Y')ou do realize that you just implied that you are doing to change the recovery factor of this older, mature field?
That's how I read it. The recent ~300% price increase makes it economic to squeeze out an additional "3% or 4%...over many decades" "If it's very successful" "maybe".
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by ralfy » Tue 02 Jul 2013, 23:07:12
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('John_A', '
')Economics doesn't work that way. Print money all you'd like, create it however you wish, and it doesn't cause anything to be cheap. This is how much money bread suddenly costs. Just imagine how much oil would be.

And yet oil consumption for the rest of the world doubled even as oil prices tripled.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')
Seen this one bandied about, wonderful graph. 9 trillion barrels total is the ballpark. We've used a little over 1. Where is the Heinberg equivalent?

"Resources" <> production rate.
You still don't get it.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')You keep saying it but obviously haven't calculated the economic growth between 1979 and 1994 and the oil consumption difference. Here is the growth. You should know already what the difference in oil consumption was between 1979 and 1994. Do you happen to notice any hitches in growth because of non-growth in oil consumption? Me neither.

Of course! As I told you, much of economics involves credit.
Also, per capita oil production might help:
http://earlywarn.blogspot.com/2011/09/p ... apita.html$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Explain how the consumer cares about what kind of refinery their gasoline comes from? Why YOU do? As long as the product comes in regular, midgrade and premium, refineries are as irrelevant as their feedstock.
As I explained to you earlier, consumers will not "care" because credit can be created easily. That's why oil consumption for the rest of the world doubled even as oil prices tripled. And yet the same credit creation also leads to financial risks and fallout. Hence, economic crisis in the U.S., EU, and Japan, and a dip in oil consumption:
http://ourfiniteworld.com/2013/04/11/pe ... e-problem/The bad news, then, is far from your "basic supply and demand," oil consumption went up even as oil prices went up, with the increase for the rest of the world negating the dip for the U.S., EU, and Japan. Meanwhile, banks are back to their old tricks and engaging in more financial speculation, similar to what led to the 2008 crash.
Meanwhile, how are we meeting increasing demand? With non-conventional production, which consumers will need even as higher costs:
http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailycha ... onsumptionBut it's the same non-conventional production driven by physical limitations:
http://www.slate.com/articles/health_an ... dance.htmlhttp://www.theoildrum.com/node/9506That is why I don't see estimates of world oil reserves declining in any way, as that's the only "good news" that can be given on this matter. Unfortunately, reserves <> production rate. Hence,
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YK730U0Q4NU$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')
The article has been contradicted both in terms of price (references already provided), inventory available (the point of this thread and references already provided), and certainly it is easy enough to show that peak "what consumers are demanding" has increased with an overall gain in price. Sorry but all three of these facts mean that your article is valueless. See that high in 2008? That was when TOD declared peak oil. Better luck next time?
by John_A » Wed 03 Jul 2013, 00:26:56
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ralfy', '
')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')
Yes..many ironies. But none of them have so far discounted either the resources available, or the ever growing ability to manufacture liquid fuels from them.
As I explained earlier, the first is a given, and the second not true.
Well, if you think that crude oil goes straight from the ground to your gas tank in the car, boat motor, lawnmower or weedwacker, then I think we are done here. A conversation requires at the very least the facts of the matter to not be in dispute, and anyone who doesn't think that a refinery manufacturing the products they need doesn't exist is living in a world other than mine.
Its been fun ralfy, let us know how that conventional crude works out for you the next time you put into your car, kay?
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by John_A » Thu 04 Jul 2013, 11:08:54
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ralfy', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('John_A', '
')
Well, if you think that crude oil goes straight from the ground to your gas tank in the car, boat motor, lawnmower or weedwacker, then I think we are done here. A conversation requires at the very least the facts of the matter to not be in dispute, and anyone who doesn't think that a refinery manufacturing the products they need doesn't exist is living in a world other than mine.
Its been fun ralfy, let us know how that conventional crude works out for you the next time you put into your car, kay?
It's the other way round: you were the one who kept thinking "that crude oil goes straight from the ground to...."
Sorry ralfy, but black isn't white.
You are the one making fake distinctions in order to then whip out, and then characterize, various blogs and whatnot as somehow supporting your position that those distinctions matter. They do not.
45ACP: For when you want to send the very best.
by Graeme » Tue 30 Jul 2013, 17:22:10
6 Key Oil & Gas Discoveries of 2013 – Who's Worth Owning
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he pace of oil and gas exploration is frightening, and discoveries are weekly, if not daily, with volumes investors would only have dreamt of a decade ago. With each new discovery, it becomes difficult to keep track of the playing field, and even more difficult to rank the potential. There are also a lot of juniors popping up on the scene now, exploring, finding and developing with the intent to lure the bigger players to buy them out. So we'll make it easy for you here, with our list of 6 key oil and gas discoveries so far this year, followed by a short list of the companies we think have the best potential—and they're not necessarily the ones who have made the biggest discoveries.
Last year, it was all about East and West Africa, with game-changing finds in Kenya, Mozambique, Angola, Ghana and Ivory Coast that have sent explorers on a feeding frenzy looking for analog plays in the region and finding plenty. This year, so far, we like the discovery revival in the Gulf of Mexico and handful of new sub-salt and pre-salt plays.
6 Key Discoveries of 2013
Shenandoah-2/Gulf of Mexico
scoop
Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe. H. G. Wells.
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