by GreyZone » Sun 06 Nov 2005, 14:25:27
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')Now you may ask "if that is the case, then why aren't we using them now to bring the prices down? First, these companies don't want to get burned again by investing a lot of money in these other technologies because if the price of oil falls again below a point where they can make a profit, they are screwed again. Second, because we are still able to meet demand, we don't have too. Finally, it can't happen overnight - developing these technologies to be able to mass produce oil isn't that fast process in the world.
Once again, you misunderstand what is happening. In the short term, over the next 15 years, tar sands will not produce much more than a few million barrels per day tops and this happens only if natural gas remains cheap and plentiful because they combine natural gas with tar sand bitumen to create synthetic crude. No natural gas, no synthetic crude. The stuff in the tar sands is not usable as it is today.
You need to research joint development organizations like
Syncrude, Canada and see who the investors actually are. Note that Syncrude produced roughly 238,000 bpd in 2004 and that their goal is to raise production of tar sand oil from Canada to 350,000 bpd by 2006.
Note further that of the estimated 1.7 trillion barrels of oil equivalent estimated to exist in the Athabasca deposit, that they believe they can recover only 175 billion barrels. They further estimate that another 350 billion barrels are recoverable with advanced technologies. That's less than 15 years total for the world
with zero growth in demand if and only if the advanced technologies actually are developed and are successful. If the new technologies fail to appear, then that's less than 5 years of global demand at current rates of growth.
The problem that you, and so many others appear to ignore is demand growth and current depletion. You keep estimating that it will be relatively low or even flat. But what is happening is this - there are roughly 900 million people in the nations that consume the bulk of the planet's oil. But meanwhile there are about 2.6 billion between India and China that want our lifestyle and are reaching for it as we speak. That 2.6 billion more people would, at current lifestyle consumption rates in Europe, North America, Japan, and the industrialized nations of the Pacific Rim (South Korea, Taiwan, etc.) can more than double current total consumption rates.
Now let's take numbers drawn from the Oil and Gas Journal. (I cannot give you a URL because you must purchase your own copy at $50 per copy.) As of 2004, the world produced 83.100 mbpd per day. Of this total, 66.480 mbpd came from fields that are already in decline. The decline rate across all these fields
averages 6.9% annually. (It's actually higher in some fields like Norway's North Sea fields but let's apply the average for simplicity's sake for now.) By 2030, that 66.480 mbpd will become 10.361 mbpd. The remaining 16.620 mbpd is not expected to decline for well over a decade but the Oil and Gas Journal expects the same current 6.9% average depletion rate to apply to those beginning no later than 2014. Thus, that 16.620 mbpd becomes 4.929 mbpd by 2030.
Alongside that, we can take the
conservative growth forecast of 1.7% annually from ExxonMobil. (I think it will be higher in the short term at least but let's take the "low" number and see what happens, shall we?) From a demand level of 82.5 mbpd in 2004 with a 1.7% annual growth rate, by 2030 we are at 127.879 mbpd demand.
Now compare that number to what is available from known oil fields today and you see that we have roughly a 113 mbpd shortfall. This is almost 50% more oil than we ship today in total! Yet we have to find, develop, and then deliver that much new oil per day in 25 years. That's 40% more oil to find, develop, and produce than we have produced in the first 150 years of the oil age.
And backing up in years doesn't make the picture any prettier. Total production from all of today's existing fields by 2020 gives us 21.178 + 10.076 = 31.254 mbpd. Meanwhile demand in 2020 is 108.071 mbpd. Ugly, isn't it? In 15 years we have to produce as much new oil as we were producing total in 2002!
How about 2015 then? Current fields will produce 30.279 + 14.406 = 44.684 mbpd. Demand will be 99.308 mbpd. That's roughly a 54 mbpd shortfall. This is the stuff that wars are made of. This is Zimbabwe falling off the map and joining Somalia in their own private "mad max" world. Other poor nations will fall off the map too, just so you and others in the first world can continue the mantra of "I've got mine." Do you really expect them to sit back and just starve and die for you all peaceful and quiet like?
Peggy Noonan, former Reagan speechwriter, recently talked about "hard history coming" and not being sure why. Peak oil is why and there's not going to be any escaping it.
Sure, actual peak may be a few years out but it does not matter. Demand has now already outpaced supply and the world is dividing into militaristic camps to set claims and take military action to secure their own piece of an ever shrinking pie. Already, we have the
United States House Armed Services Committee discussing invading Saudi Arabia in the event of a coup to secure the oil fields for the west. (You can listen to the actual session at
http://hasc3.house.gov/10-26-05regpower.asf if you want to listen in yourself.)
Note: If you model this mess and get a 10 year long stagnation period with an actual growth rate under 0.5% annually, then we put off shortages til about 2012 or so and then the shortages appear anyway due to depletion of existing fields outstripping new fields coming online. The only way to offset this is a
permanent economic contraction lasting decades. That means continually lowering standards of living, or, billions of people dead and not using oil. Take your pick.
Is it possible to replace oil? Yes but it requires an entirely new global energy infrastructure based around whatever new energy source we choose. And right now no one is making those massive investments. It's just business as usual but we're almost standing on the edge of the cliff now. We should have been doing this when Jimmy Carter asked us back in the late 1970s. Instead, somebody, in fact lots of somebodies, will be dead due to our collective lack of action. It's already happening as places like Nicaragua shut down even hospitals because they can't get oil to power their diesel generators.
To borrow a phrase, we are "stuck on stupid" because we refuse to believe that what worked in the past cannot continue to automatically work forever into an exponentially growing future.