by pup55 » Wed 13 Oct 2004, 22:00:10
You might be right, of course, but I will stick to my estimate anyway. I will probably not be around to see if this is right or wrong. Maybe you will.
First of all, I am more thinking about the time period maybe 25 years post-peak. For a 2020 peak, maybe this will be 2045, during the "steep decline" part of the curve. In that situation, you can easily imagine a 7% economic decline year-over-year, and a 7% depletion rate, which would make the demand relative to the remaining reserves exactly the same, despite the economic contraction, hence the stable price. In fact, some of the more efficient countries, Italy maybe, might only experience a 3% economic contraction during the same period, and thus be "ahead" relative to the inefficient nations.
Also, you have to consider the behavior of the oil producers. Pre-peak, it is in the producers' interest to pump oil at the "optimum rate", fast enough so as to not cause an economic slowdown, but not so fast as to create a glut. The normal incentive for a producer would be to pump as much oil as they could, so as to maximize revenue, not "optimize" by showing restraint, hence the cartel OPEC was formed to provide the restraint. Post peak, however, the rules change completely. It's in the producer's interest to pump as little oil as possible, keep prices as high as possible for the current production, and leave as much in the ground as possible, because you know your customer will be around tomorrow anyway like the addict he is, especially if he needs oil to run his agriculture industry and keep his population from starving to death. Not only that, but you will need to extend your source of income as far into the future as possible.
Also, in the long term post-peak, past the plateau stage, the normal rules of economics that applied on the uphill do not apply either. The normal state is economic contraction. The only way to "win" and actually maintain stasis or get ahead would be to do everything you can to get more efficient with the limited amount of oil available. So maybe the "efficient" countries like Italy, who already have a head start, will get up to $3000 GDP per BOE and the $650 oil will be relatively cheap.
So maybe $650 is too low an estimate.