by MonteQuest » Fri 13 Apr 2007, 20:01:45
I had a pointed discussion with a friend recently about peak oil and the economic ramifications. In response, he sent his investment firm the following e-mail:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'h')ttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fo3sxhBylw
This link will take you to a short report from CNBC that was posted on YouTube - about Peak Oil. In addition to stating that is very near, the experts talk about the disasterous impact it will have on our economy.
So, it would be good to know what you all have in mind. When the oil shocks hit, it will be very bad. Obviously, we don't want to lose what we have earned. How will you protect our funds when there is essentially nowhere to hide?
J
This was their response:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'J'),
Thank you for your email. I have provided below some commentary from our Director of Research, (name edited out), regarding peak oil, which I think you will find insightful.
We do not have a great way to calibrate when the world will run out of oil, but we can take guidance by two simple notions. One is that the 20th century was marked by repeated periods of fear the world would run out of oil by a certain date, and later the estimates proved too dire because underestimating supply potential. The other is that markets are smart and should price the eventuality long in advance of the event. If oil supply does indeed have a finite endpoint, there will be a shift in energy sources the world is dependent on. This might involve a big run-up in the price of oil at the beginning of that transition, but the very fact the price would rise would be a cause for the transition to occur promptly. As soon as it becomes cheaper to use some alternative energy source, producers and consumers will adapt. Until such time, it makes sense to keep using oil products. Any time there are big transitions, winners and losers are created, and such periods may be marked by recessions and such, but we have no reason to believe any abnormal dire periods are coming any time soon related to this issue.
In addition, I have attached a research piece from one of the most prominent energy research firms that specifically addressed peak oil in a report to Congress. This should provide you with the other side of the argument. Here is their basic argument:
The peak oil debate continues to rage without any obvious progress. However, upon examination, the peak oil theory falls down because of serious flaws in logic and application. CERA's view, based on two decades of research, is highly unpopular in peakist circles. However, ours is not a view of unlimited resource. A plateau will occur-but not tomorrow, and supply will not "run dry" soon thereafter. We hold that aboveground factors will play the major role in dictating the end of the age of oil.
1. Based on a detailed bottom-up approach, CERA sees no evidence of a peak before 2030. Moreover, global production will eventually follow an undulating plateau for one or more decades before declining slowly. Global resources, including both conventional and unconventional oils, are adequate to support strong production growth and a period on an undulating plateau.
2. Despite his valuable contribution, M. King Hubbert's methodology falls down because it does not consider likely resource growth, application of new technology, basic commercial factors, or the impact of geopolitics on production. His approach does not work in all cases-including on the United States itself-and cannot reliably model a global production outlook. Put more simply, the case for the imminent peak is flawed. As it is, production in 2005 in the Lower 48 in the United States was 66 percent higher than Hubbert projected.
3.The debate should now move toward a better understanding of the key drivers of production, including the scale of global resources and the likely production outlook, which form the core of current disagreements and confusion.
Source: Cambridge Energy Research Associates
Please let me know if you have any additional questions or if you would like to discuss this information in more detail.
Best regards,
"Joe Blow"
Investment Counselor
"In-the-dark" Investments