by ReserveGrowthRulz » Fri 24 Feb 2006, 03:41:57
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('WebHubbleTelescope', ' ')I find this whole topic of oil extraction incredibly easy to understand and reason about, much more intuitive than my fields of study statistical and quantum mechanics, even when that physics stuff never got mired by the arcana of lingo, messy data, and double-talk politics that oil production seems to thrive in.
Excellent! I can assume then that besides just quoting some basic assumptions behind most reserve growth work, you can understand why their data assembly ( R&A) would lead someone who HASN'T read the paper particularly well to assume that reserve growth is a self limiting function, when it fact its just an artifact of the limitations on the data they were using and their assembly of it? Go read it again if you missed it, they didn't even consider fields beyond a certain age, and they did alot of "lumping" of fields with discovery dates earlier than 1900. Their very methodology limited them to a 89-90-91 year time frame field lifespan, if I recall correctly.
Your entire "self limiting" routine doesn't come from their work, because their work was artificially limited because of methodology. Most of your graph is also functioning in a region ( >90 years ) that they never even tackled, you just saw something you liked and fit a line to it, remind me, who gets cranky when people use graphs to misrepresent data?
I don't understand the other graph at all, let alone the model overlays you try and use against what I assume is the R&A data. For example, how are you defining oil shock and why would graphing it against the cum curve from the R&A paper mean anything? The R&A data is simply a cumulative growth curve through time with about a 90 year timespan, I realize you made up the limiting part yourself because you thought it was neat, but the oil shock piece, what is that about? Modeling when the Iranians are going to turn off the taps or some other interesting tidbit?