My appologies, you are all right - I mixed those numbers up. We consume 30 billion barrels of oil a year, 85 million a day.
So let's go with the new numbers. I used the chart found on this page for my numbers (I plotted it out year by year by found & produced):
http://www.lifeaftertheoilcrash.net/Sec ... #anchor_75
Here is what I came up with (The first running total of 41.1 assumes that because the past discoveries verses what we have used will need until 2040 gives us an extra 34 billion barrels of oil). The produced numbers assume that we peaked in 2004.
Year - Discover - Need - Procude - Running Total We Peak Oil
2005 - 8.0 - 30 - 29.1 - 41.1 (includes 34Gb)
2006 - 7.82 - 30.75 - 28.23 - 46.4
etc....
2010 - 7 .11 - 33.94 - 24.99 - 49.72
etc..
2013 - 6.58 - 36.55 - 22.81 - 33.54
etc...
2015 - 6.22 - 38.40 - 21.46 - 13.88
According to this - Peak Oil happens between 2016 and 2017.
This of course does not account for any offsets from conservation, other sources of power helping (solar, wind,etc), Biodiesel, Ethanal, Coal to Oil liquification, and anything else that may be developed in the future to help easy our dependance on fuel from the ground. Plus it does not take into account that new technologies will be developed to extract even more oil from the existing wells has been the case over the past 50 years.
So I will stick with my original suggestion that Peak Oil will not happen until 2037 at the earliest if not later.