by joewp » Wed 07 Feb 2007, 16:11:40
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DantesPeak', 'H')ayward also said the start-up of Atlantis, another Gulf of Mexico project, is now due by the end of 2007. The company had previously said production was scheduled to start in the second half of the year. The platform's planned capacity is 200,000 barrels of oil and 180 million cubic feet of gas a day.
About Thunder Horse, Hayward said "it will happen." The project is now three years behind the original schedule. Thunder Horse is "something that hasn't been done before...We probably pushed the technology envelope a little bit too far," he added.
Hayward said the new guidance, more cautious than previously announced, was largely due to supply-chain issues, with the oil services sector now running at full tilt. "There was no new incident. It's just recognizing the reality of the industry today," he said.
So how much does this take off the expected production increases this year that were supposed to offset depletion in old fields? 450,000 barrels a day altogether? Now they won't be pumping until next year (or next decade, if the trend of delays continues).
Like many have said, all the cheap, easy oil is gone. It's probably a good bet we'll never see jackshit from Jack 2. But in their collective delusion, the mainstream economy keeps buying houses farther from work, buying new SUVs and generally tries to find new ways to waste energy.
When it hits the fan, it's going to hit hard, I think.