Imagine a time some years ago (I don't know how long it has been as I don't really care to research it) when people were sitting around saying "Oh My God, we are going to run out of gas - Peak Oil is coming." Then along comes this idea to pump water into the wells that have already given us the 22% of oil there typically gave you at the time before they were left for dead. With that great idea came another 13% of life into all wells around the world. Today, thanks to that technology increase, we get about 35% of the oil out of the well.
I have often posted, here and other places, how can anybody say what technology will bring in the future, that technological advances will allow us to get more and more out of wells. That technology will develop new types of transportation that is more efficient that we could ever imagine. And time and time again, all I hear is Peak oil is coming in the next 5 years - we are all screwed. Technology cannot save us.
So I am reading articles on Yahoo! News about Peak Oil today (like I do every day) and low and behold, I come across this article:
CO2 Injections
"An experimental project in Canada to inject carbon dioxide into oil fields has proven successful, removing 5 million tons of the heat-trapping "greenhouse" gas, while enhancing oil recovery, the Energy Department said Tuesday.....such a process can enhance oil recovery up to 60 percent, extend the life of aging oil fields by decades, and provide a permanent repository for the carbon dioxide in geologic formations, the DOE said....we would see billions of additional barrels of oil and a reduction of CO2 emissions equivalent to pulling more than 200 million cars off the road for a year."
So, let’s say that today’s proven reserves are 1.278 trillion barrels, at 35% of the total worldwide recourse. Let's say they can only get an average of 50% of the oil out rather than 60% as the article suggest with CO2 injections. That additional 15% extraction just increased our Proven Reserves by 548 billion barrels of oil.
Now add that to this that I posted a day or two ago in this thread…..
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ased on my calculations, I have figured we will need 730 billion barrels of oil between 2006-2025 based on EIA projections and forecast growth demand.
Next, let's assume we have peaked this year at 85 million barrels per day (mbpd). Let's also assume that we will decline at a rate of 4% (vs. the 2.5% average decline from existing countries in decline today) starting in 2006, so next year we will only produce 81.6, 78.3 the next year and so on.
Over the course of the next 20 years (I didn't figure any leap years, so this number will increase a tad bit), we will produce a total of 432.8 billion barrels of oil. So based on this, we are short 297.2 billion barrels - assuming again that decline will be 4% a year and Peak happened this year.
This also assume that fuel efficiency will not increase, conservation will not increase, Ethanol and BioDiesel levels will not increase with better EROEI that 1:1, The 89 billion barrels of new discoveries over the past 12 years will not come online, the 114 billion barrels of new discoveries that the chart found on the LATOC.net shows we have to discover will not be found or produced, the 50 fields in Iraq and Saudi Arabia that have not been tapped yet will not be tapped, etc.
(and then some). Again, this assumes we have peaked now. The mean