by smiley » Sat 30 Oct 2004, 08:49:48
hi. I didn't visit this part of the forum for a while and I have to say that I'm impressed by the amount of efford you have put into this. Kudos.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f I have understood correctly. The technology being used to extract the lighter crudes should cause an eventual rapid decline here rather than a slower decline. When would this occur? Any ideas.
mexico appears to be declining already if you surf to "www.pemex.com" go to investor relations and "operations" you can get all the production data. However the production has a double peak which complicates things.
If you're looking to a high technology profile I think Norway is a good example (single peak). Here are the production data. The second column is the first derivative, (three point average smoothing).
I'm afraid that these countries are very hard to predict since the peak occurs very abrubt.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_code('', ' year production slope
1971 6
1972 33 13
1973 32 1
1974 35 78.5
1975 189 122
1976 279 49
1977 287 38.5
1978 356 60
1979 407 86
1980 528 52.5
1981 512 2
1982 532 74.5
1983 661 110
1984 752 81
1985 823 77.5
1986 907 115.5
1987 1054 144.5
1988 1196 257
1989 1568 260.5
1990 1717 193.5
1991 1955 250.5
1992 2218 211
1993 2377 237.5
1994 2693 263
1995 2903 270
1996 3233 188.5
1997 3280 -47
1998 3139 -70.5
1999 3139 102
2000 3343 138.5
2001 3416 -7
2002 3329 -78
2003 3260
')
I've been busy with modelling, but I gave it up from pure frustration. Now that I see that you're busy with I like to give it another try. I'll try to share some of my thoughts, maybe you have some ideas.
First of all I think that a good model should eliminate the need for accurate reserve data, since this is the main problem. Hubbert's curve requires either the position of the peak or a good reserve estimate.
Every time I get the same problem. If you have a model which describes the production of a country which has peaked and eliminate the peak from the data the model goes beserk. The models only seem to work when you have the data of the last 3 years before the peak, when the curve actually levels out.
If you look at the production graphs there appears to be a regime where the production rises almost linearly (In the case of Norway 1989-1995). In Congo that linear regime seems to span from 1978-1998, with the peak occurring shortly after.
The models that are available do not have such a linear regime. So if your data doesnt include the actual peak the model either peaks much too low or far too high. Depending on the type of curve or the fitting method that you use (least squares, Newton etc) the inflection point will end up at the start or end of this linear regime. Somehow we have to incorporate this linear part in the equations.