by trespam » Fri 09 Sep 2005, 17:46:09
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')I saw that one, unfortunately those are only words which can be interpreted in many, many ways. No hard facts so not of really much use i would say, except that it is an indication for an early peak (between 2008 and 2015).
We've got some really capable people pouring over the numbers here, at OilDrum, and James Hamilton over at UCSD.. Personally, I'm not willing to spend my own time doing this. I highly commend those who do. I guess I’m just too lazy. But I will say this, stepping back a few feet from the details: I have a hard time believing that we won't be rolling over some form of peak or crest and a plateau by 2015. That’s a gut feel based on all the different numbers and estimates I’ve seen and based upon demand and demand growth.
Richard Duncan (author of Olduvai theory) has a paper in the Jul 19 2004 issue of Oil & Gas Journal: "Big jump in ultimate recovery would ease, not reverse, postpeak production decline." He puts the peak somewhere between 2007 and 2010 depending on the estimated ultimate recovery (EUR).
But I’ll throw my caveat again: World economic growth is currently borrowed from the future (all that debt). And this has nothing to do with peak oil. Financial imbalances will unwind. I believe that demand growth is going to take a hit soon. And that doesn’t mean the debt-based system is going to explode tomorrow (no matter what those coin flipping gold bugs are saying). Could. Very unlikely. But the dollar will likely decline. I found an energy-economics paper yesterday that looks at the historical correlation between the dollar and oil prices. It might say something. Our debt and trade imbalances tell us where the dollar is headed as well.
Another consideration that I'm just not sure has been looked at enough (in detail—though discussed quite a bit). I'm not trying to defend the cornucopians, but oil companies did not have a lot of incentive to invest in the last 20 years. They simply didn't. Why? When the Saudi's could come in at any time and blow them out of the water. Does this new investment mean we're going to be swimming in oil? No. But that's not the question. The question is how we manage the decline. That is the question. Or manage the plateau for a while before the decline starts. But because demand and supply are so close, shocks are likely to knock the steam out of the world economy sooner or later.
Everywhere I go now (I have a Prius and an Insight, and yes, I know, they won't solve our problems): people are walking up. They're talking. A woman this morning came up. “I need to sell my SUV. How do you like your Prius.” She's getting 12 mpg. I'm getting at least 40-50.
The pain has started.
So these new projects numbers are great. But they are all very noisy. And although the Saudis and others may be lying about EUR, we pretty much know how much they are shipping.
The demand will run into supply soon (if not already because of Katrina). Better sooner than later. And there is plenty of useless consumption. Daughters flying off to Aruba (or however it’s spelled), disappearing, only to show up on Fox news night after night. Since when do kids need to fly all over the place for absolutely no good reason. People flying to NYC for the weekend. Good riddance to that. The world is addicted to tourism, but it needs to go. And it will.