I also started working on this. Going to make a semi official paper with production figures from every country until 2020 probably. (with a few scenario's)
Here are my preliminary figures until 2010:
As you can see in the most optimistic scenario (i took the production increases from the EIA country analysis) we can have 1% worldwide growth every year until 2010). Confirming Pup55's analysis. Also interesting to note is that even if Saudi Arabia would peak (with 8% decline rate) in 2005 there is no sharp drop, just a sort of plateau until russian production starts to drop too.
Demand Gap in case of Business as usual
Difference between scenario's:
Business as usual -->
Saudi Arabia 1 million barrels increase between 2005-2010 and Russian production steady as she goes.
Saudi Peak 2005 scenario includes a peak in 2005 with a decline rate of 8%.
Russia peak scenario includes a Saudi peak in 2005 with a decline rate of 8% and a Russian peak in 2008 with a decline rate of 8%.
Overall Model:
Depletion for UK is given as 7% each year
Depletion for Norway is given as 2% each year (from 2004 onwards)
Iraq stays about the same with 2 million barrels of production in 2010
New Peaks 2005-2010:
China 2005 --> 1% decline
India 2008 --> 3% decline
Denmark 2008 --> 2% decline
Malaysia 2006 --> 4% decline
Mexico 2005 --> 1% decline
Mexico 2006 --> 4% decline
Mexico 2007+ --> 8% decline
Major Increases (rounded and total of period 2005-2010):
Nigeria 1 million barrels
Iran 300.000 barrels
UAE 300.000 barrels
Libya 300.000 barrels
Kuwait 400.000 barrels
Canada 800.000 barrels
Brazil 500.000 barrels
Algeria 500.000 barrels
Angola 1.4 million barrels
Kazakhstan 1.6 million barrels
Total increase in supply = 11.383 million barrels
Total decline in supply = 5.500 million barrels