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"Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Discussions related to the physiological and psychological effects of peak oil on our members and future generations.

Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby JohnDenver » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 02:14:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', 'S')o it's not that hard to add a Saudi Arabia's worth of oil. We did it 3 times in the last 4 years, by your own accounting.

‘‘That’s like a whole new Saudi Arabia every couple of years,’’ Husseini said. ‘‘It can’t be done indefinitely. It’s not sustainable.’’


"Indefinitely" being the operative word. Obviously we have been doing it lot lately though. According to Starvid's numbers, we got a whole new Saudi Arabia in the last 3 years just from old fields.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 02:18:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', 'A')nyway, I'm just pointing out that a 2% decline post peak (as assumed by Dyer in the original article) is reasonable, given what is known about decline rates.

We do not know what the decline rates will be going forward. What of they are higher by a factor of 2? Basing our response on what is known about previous examples of decline is not good risk management.

Based on what I've been reading a decline rate of 1% to get started, which is what we are currently witnessing, slipping abruptly to 4%, is entirely reasonable, once those producers who are still somewhat expanding cease being able to.

Of course I hope this is wrong.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 02:20:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_code('', '"Indefinitely" being the operative word. Obviously we have been doing it lot lately though. According to Starvid's numbers, we got a whole new Saudi Arabia in the last 3 years just from old fields.')
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 02:20:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'G')oing forward, I think we will see a negative decline rate, that is, growing production. And then a peak in 5-10 years at 90-95 mbpd.

a) We already have a negative decline rate.
b) Although possible it would require simultaneous and significant rises in production from both OPEC and NOPEC to inrease supply at this point.

a) It's so close to zero that the huge margin of error in measuring oil production that it doesn't matter. We're flat, and that's it.
b) OPEC would do. I'm quite pessimistic on non-OPEC production. It might very well have peaked.

Canada can increase, and Brazil, and maybe a handful more. But at the same time you have big, big declines in the North Sea and Mexico.

JD: I have no idea what postpeak decline rates will be when new projects are factored in. Could be 2 %, or something else.

What the decline rate will be will be extremely important. We have a clear risk-management problem here.
Last edited by Starvid on Mon 12 Nov 2007, 02:36:05, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby JohnDenver » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 02:35:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'J')D: I have no idea what postpeak decline rates will be when new projects are factored in. Could be 2 %, or something else.


Really? That's surprising. Just above you were claiming that the decline rate with no new projects is 3.7%. You don't actually believe that number? What's your rationale for it being "something else"?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hat the decline rate will be will be extremely important. We have a clear risk-management problem here.


No doubt. That's why I want to talk about it.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 02:42:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'b')) OPEC would do.

Who amongst them? OPEC is not sending the extra oil promised.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 02:52:18

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'a')) It's so close to zero that the huge margin of error in measuring oil production that it doesn't matter. We're flat, and that's it.

Image

Looks like a decline to me.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 02:58:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'J')D: I have no idea what postpeak decline rates will be when new projects are factored in. Could be 2 %, or something else.


Really? That's surprising. Just above you were claiming that the decline rate with no new projects is 3.7%. You don't actually believe that number? What's your rationale for it being "something else"?

That number is from the IEA. Who knows if they are right? The oil debate isn't really characterized by the high quality of the data.

And it should be far easier to look at historical declines than predicting future ones, don't you agree.

For example, if we use the IEA number, the decline rate with no new projects is 3,7 %. As we are flat, this means we have been adding about 3,2 mbpd of new projects in the last couple of years.

If we believe the aggregate post peak decline will be 2 %, this means we will be adding 3,7-2=1,7 %=1,4-1,5 mbpd of new projects every year post peak (and use 85mbpd as the peak production, something I don't believe, but anyway).

I have no idea of this is true. Maybe we will add 1,5 mbpd of new projects annualy, or 1 mbpd, or 2 mbpd, or maybe the decline rate will be quite dynamic.

Maybe EOR will get a huge boost due to the high oil prices, reducing declines in current fields, bringing new life to old abandoned stripper wells in the US. Maybe not.

My main argument is that we can't be sure what decline rates will be, and as the cost of preparing for the worst is so small compared to the cost of not preparing if the worst, or anything worse than the IEA's or anyone else's predictions, happens, the answer from risk management is clear: we should prepare for the worst and we should do it NOW.

To quote Mr Birol himself:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o, these two things put together, the short term security, medium term security of our oil markets, plus the climate change, consequences of this energy use, my message is that, if we don’t do anything very quickly, and in a bold manner, the wheels may fall off. Our energy system’s wheels may fall off. This is the message that we want to give.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]We want more action, instead of more targets and more meetings and more talks.

EC: And, we really need that action right away?

FB: Exactly, right away and in a bold manner.


And some things about decline rates:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')C: I think you quote a figure, is it a 3.7 per cent average global decline rate, is that right?

FB: May I just say something. This is very important for all your colleagues to understand. I mentioned this in the Oil and Money Conference [at the end of October]. People mix up two things. One, is the natural decline rate, and the other one is the observed decline rate. The nature of decline rate is that everything declines, and we are using an assumption for the global rate of 7 per cent, but if you inject money to a given field, you can slow down the nature of the decline, and you can make the decline less pronounced, and it comes to 3.7%.

EC: OK, I now understand that distinction. What I’m wondering is, are both the natural and observed decline rates going to be significantly higher in the non-Opec countries?

FB: Exactly.

EC: What are the numbers?

FB: For example, in the North Sea, it is close to 20 per cent, [the natural decline rate]. In the Gulf of Mexico, it is 11 to 15 per cent. Iin Opec countries, it is much lower, and of course, in the less mature areas, it is much, much lower.

EC: And, the observed rates in the North Sea are about 8 per cent?

FB: 8 per cent, on that level, yes

EC: And the same in the Gulf of Mexico, or is it a bit less there?

FB: Less.




http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/3c8940ca-8d46 ... fd2ac.html

I'll post the entire transcript here, who knows if FT will pull it eventually.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')ranscript: Interview with IEA chief economist

Published: November 7 2007 15:50 | Last updated: November 7 2007 18:36

Fatih Birol, chief economist of the International Energy Agency, interviewed by Ed Crooks and Javier Blas of the FT

ED CROOKS: There was a phrase in your report that leapt out at me: “Rising global energy demand poses a real and growing threat to the world’s energy security.” Is that your most important message today?

FATIH BIROL: There are two major messages I was getting from the book. The first one is exactly what you say. The energy security risks are so strong, and probably increasing, for an upward event in the markets, and the second is on the climate change, on the CO2 emissions, the levels are reaching a certain level that we are [getting to] an irreversible trend for our planet. For energy security, we may have supply disruptions, huge implications for economy, this and that, but at the end of the day, the world economy can again recover. We can have the prices come to a certain level that people adjust their lives. But in terms of climate change, in terms of the planet’s temperature, if it reaches a certain level, this, the implication on our planet and human beings, animals and the plants and everything, these implications are irreversible. So, these are two major issues coming from the book, and when you look at the climate change trends, and the CO2 emission trends, they are very, very worrying, especially in the fact that there are countries that are not doing much, and China and India, their CO2 emissions are exploding. So, these two things put together, the short term security, medium term security of our oil markets, plus the climate change, consequences of this energy use, my message is that, if we don’t do anything very quickly, and in a bold manner, the wheels may fall off. Our energy system’s wheels may fall off. This is the message that we want to give.

EC: That’s a very powerful phrase: “The wheels may fall off.” What do you mean by that?

FB: On the energy security, oil prices part, the numbers, one doesn’t need to be a big energy expert or anything: it’s just mathematics. I can tell you that we, in the next seven to eight years, need to bring about 37.5 million barrels per day of oil into the markets, for two reasons. One, the increase in the demand, about one third of it, and two thirds, there is a decline in the existing fields [and there is a need] to compensate for the decline. What we have done is that we have looked at all the projects in the Opec countries and the non-Opec countries, all the producing countries of the world, at the 230 oil projects, on a field by field basis, how much oil they will bring to the markets for the next five to seven years. And these are projects which are financially sanctioned projects. If they all see the light of the day in a timely manner, they will come up about 25 million barrels per day. So, 37.5 mlillion on the one hand, what is needed, and what we expect is 25 million barrels per day, and this is in the case of no slippages, no delays in the projects, and everything goes on time, which is very rare. So, there is a gap of 13.5 million barrels per day.

EC: The gap of that size emerges by when?

FB: Within the next seven years. So, if this gap cannot be closed – and there are two ways to close it, which I will tell you in a minute – if that gap cannot be closed, we may end up with a supply shock approaching an escalation of prices. This is what I meant, the wheels may fall off. And what are the two ways to fix that? On the one hand, what we can do is, in the OECD countries, in China and India, we can try to slow down the demand growth, so through more efficiency, more biofuels and other means. Of course, saying that is easy, but there are difficulties, but just to give you the dimensions, this is one line: slowing down the demand growth in OECD countries, China and India. The second one is that we need to see much more investment coming from the oil-producing countries. First of all, they should pursue the projects that they have on the books, but plus, we need even more investments from these countries. If this doesn’t work out, if this combination of this two doesn’t work out, then we may have special problems in the markets. This is what I meant, when I say, the wheels may fall off, we may end up with seeing prices very high, which has implications of course for the economy, and other parts of our system.

EC: When you say, very, very high, what does that mean? That means, a price that is high enough to choke off demand? What price would then bring supply and demand into balance?

FB: The problem is now that what we are experiencing with demand is the following. There are three major demand centres now, China, India and the Middle East. When you look at the numbers in the last seven quarters, about 70 per cent of the growth in global oil demand came from China and India, and this is followed by the Middle East, and in all of these three countries, for different reasons, oil prices do not have an immediate effect on demand. China and India, for two reasons. One, the economy is growing so strongly, that the price effect is completely unimportant, compared to the economic effect. Their economy is growing. Their pockets are getting bigger, and perhaps a bigger portion goes from their pocket to the oil expenditures, but since the economy is growing so strongly, it doesn’t have a big effect. The second reason is that, especially in China and India, there are significant subsidies on the oil product prices. According to our analysis, in these two countries, each year $15bn goes to oil product subsidies, which filters the effect on the consumers. Then come the Middle Eastern countries. Again, the high oil price in those countries does not have much effect, because the income effect is much higher, and plus, in those countries, also the oil prices are very heavily subsidised. So, since the growth of the demand is not coming anymore from the OECD countries, where the force of the markets works. Therefore it is very difficult to see, even with high prices like this, that we have a major impact on demand. So, demand will grow, and I think, if the governments of OECD, China and India, leave everything to the markets, in terms of slowing down the demand, they will make a historical mistake. In addition to the price related adjustments on demand, we need regulatory measures, such as efficiency improvements in the markets.

EC: So, what sort of price increase might we see?

FB: The prices we are experiencing now are very, very high in any case, and they are starting to hurt the economies of the developing nations which are not major oil producers, or which do not have strong economies, like China. And we see some slowdown, even in the OECD countries, such as the United States. As I told you already, this is fertile ground for prices to go beyond that, if we don’t make the actions on the consumer side and on the producer side, this will go beyond the levels that we are experiencing today. For example, we have a scenario which we call the high growth scenario, in which China and India grow stronger than what we have assumed in the reference scenario. But still in the high growth scenario, economic growth assumptions are lower than what China has today. China has today about 11 per cent [growth], and our high growth assumption for China is, for the next ten years, about 8 per cent. If they grow like this, an unchecked growth in China and India, this will bring our price expectations for oil prices even at the levels of today for the next ten years to come. This is a level which is at about $90, $87.

EC: So you’d expect prices to stay at about average $87 over the next ten years in your high growth scenario for China and India?

FB: In a high growth scenario, exactly at that level, yes.

EC: And then there will be fluctuations around that level?

FB: Exactly.

EC: Looking back. I think the all-time record is about $110 in today’s money

FB: $110, yes.

EC: And it’s certainly plausible we could get back above that level?

FB: Exactly, if we don’t do anything, is what I’m saying. I can tell you something, just information about prices. For example, we talk about $90 today, but this is one day in a couple of weeks of crisis. If you look at the average price for 2007, from the 1st January to 5th November, it is $68. So we should put it in context.

EC: When oil was at $110 real terms at the beginning of the 1980s, we had a very serious global recession. Is that a real risk again?

FB: Definitely a risk, and we are coming into that risk. The very reason why we are a bit away from that, is that the growth of the world economic system is now not only in OECD countries, where the economy and the demand is directly affected by the higher prices, but in addition to that, we have China, India and the Middle East, and the one thing which is very important to note is that China’s economic growth is perhaps, as many people think, is not so much coupled anymore to the US economic growth. There is a different effect, the interaction there. There are trade links, etc, but we see certain signs of decoupling and [the support for growth] is on the internal dynamics of China’s economy, and trade with the other developing Asian economies. Just to give you an example, we had the subprime crisis, when all the stock markets started to shake and so on, the Shanghai stock markets were still up, and the performance of the Shanghai stock market this year, it has doubled the value, compared to the beginning of the year, and the OECD, Dow Jones and others are more or less stable.

EC: Comparing the figures from last time, in terms of oil supply, just having a look at some of the numbers, there seem to be some quite big differences. You seem to be more negative about non-Opec production out to 2030, and quite a lot more positive about Opec production, is that right?

FB: The main issue here is that we think that, in the Opec countries, there are enough reserves. We are not sure if there is a political will to make something out of those reserves, but there are enough reserves as officially reported. However, as you rightly say, we are getting more pessimistic about non-Opec production.

EC: You’ve gone down about four million barrels a day by 2030?

FB: Close to four, yes. The main reason here is, this is very important to perhaps note, unlike the Opec countries, we think there are some geological problems in the non-Opec areas. This is not an investment issue, not a political issue, but it is more geology, because of a huge decline in the non-Opec countries.

EC: Which countries does that particularly effect?

FB: We are getting more pessimistic in terms of the North Sea, Gulf of Mexico, the United States, Mexico, these are the major countries we are thinking lots of decline coming there.

EC: I think you quote a figure, is it a 3.7 per cent average global decline rate, is that right?

FB: May I just say something. This is very important for all your colleagues to understand. I mentioned this in the Oil and Money Conference [at the end of October]. People mix up two things. One, is the natural decline rate, and the other one is the observed decline rate. The nature of decline rate is that everything declines, and we are using an assumption for the global rate of 7 per cent, but if you inject money to a given field, you can slow down the nature of the decline, and you can make the decline less pronounced, and it comes to 3.7%.

EC: OK, I now understand that distinction. What I’m wondering is, are both the natural and observed decline rates going to be significantly higher in the non-Opec countries?

FB: Exactly.

EC: What are the numbers?

FB: For example, in the North Sea, it is close to 20 per cent, [the natural decline rate]. In the Gulf of Mexico, it is 11 to 15 per cent. Iin Opec countries, it is much lower, and of course, in the less mature areas, it is much, much lower.

EC: And, the observed rates in the North Sea are about 8 per cent?

FB: 8 per cent, on that level, yes

EC: And the same in the Gulf of Mexico, or is it a bit less there?

FB: Less.

EC: What about unconventional oil supply?

FB: We are more optimistic because of the price effect and lots of projects are coming there, because we look at all on a project by project basis, and in unconventional oil, the Canadian tar sands, which is the most important one, will reach about three million [b/d] most probably in 2015, which is still only 3 per cent of the global oil production, which is still very small. So despite what some people think, I don’t think that unconventional oil will either replace the Middle East, or be a major way of addressing energy security. It makes some positive contribution, but it is very limited.

JAVIER BLAS: We have the Opec summit coming in Saudi Arabia, and they are going to shape Opec policy for the next ten years. What do you think that Opec’s main challenge is now?

FB: What Opec needs, for me the most important thing, is to be able to read the market in the right way. This is what they have to do, and I think the Opec countries should understand that the high oil prices will hit Opec, perhaps with a time lag, compared to OECD countries, but they will hit Opec and Opec’s economic interest as well. If we do not see enough oil in the markets, if Opec does not increase its production levels, the high prices will stay like this, and I can tell you that high oil prices only give an impetus for alternative policy decisions in the OECD countries. I think for Opec, the main challenge is to have a price level which brings good profits to them, good incentives for the investments, but at the same time, to prevent prices going to very high levels.

FB: For Opec, what they have always underlined is the security of demand. In order to reassure Opec, I can tell you the following. In an alternative policy scenario, which looks at the policies and measures in the OECD countries, China and India, all the policies under efficiency, biofuels, nuclear and all of these things, if they were to be implemented as of tomorrow – all these efficiency policies, renewable policies, everything – still Opec’s market share and Opec oil demand will go up. So, the call on Opec, whatever the policy the countries have, will increase. Therefore I do not see any problem from the security of demand point of view. The issue is today that Opec countries and the industrialised countries [must] work together, in order to make the oil markets much more stable, and have a price which is good for the producers and good for the consumers. If we continue to experience such high prices, I’m afraid it will be also not good news for the producers.

JB: Looking at the Opec call, at some point we need a solution on Iran and Iraq, to get more investment. So when do we need to resolve the situation in both countries, not to be too late for the energy security?

FB: I can talk from an energy point of view, that in both countries, it is very important that both countries see investments and the restoration of their fields as soon as possible. In terms of Iran, Iran is experiencing a very strong decline. You were talking about the North Sea, Mexico and others, but Iran is a very exceptional case in Opec, it is experiencing decline rates in some of their fields of up to 15 per cent per year, and Iran needs money and new technology to address this decline issue. Iran needs a lot of investment, but whether or not Iran will be able to raise this investment, in the political context they are in, is another issue. Iraq [has]huge potential, easy geology, but Iraq has also lots of political issues. If Iraq, as soon as possible comes to the markets as a major producer, and increases their current production levels, it will definitely help the markets, and ease the tensions in the markets, but looking at the current situation we are in, I think it will be very optimistic to think in one or two yeas, for Iraq to increase the production significantly, unfortunately.

EC: You’ve talked quite a lot about what you need to see from Opec. What about from the consuming countries, from the OECD, India and China, what do they need to do, on those two fronts, both on energy security, and climate change?

FB: The good thing is that there are some policies which are good for both energy security and climate change at the same time, and make economic sense. So, these policies, we have three major policy pillars. The first one is to improve energy efficiency. This is very important and in most cases, very cost effective. Let me give you one example from China, which is a key country here. In China, the richer the people become in China, one of the first thing they do is to buy appliances, which makes their life easier. For example, it is booming in China, the number of refrigerators and air conditioners, both are booming, but their efficiency is so low that they consume a lot of electricity. What we have said is that, if these efficiency standards in refrigerators and air conditioning in China would come to the level of the European standards, not a huge revolution, just European standards, in 2015, they would save electricity which is equivalent to the Three Gorges Dam, so instead of building the Three Gorges Dam, they just need to bring the standards to European levels. In 2030, they will save two Three Gorges Dams, so what I am trying to say is that there is a lot of efficiency improvement possibility there, in China, India and the OECD countries, which would make sense, in terms of cost effectiveness, in terms of energy security, and therefore, by using less energy, for the climate change. This is the first area, efficiency. The second is making more use of renewables definitely makes economic sense, especially wind and hydro power, and the third and most important one is the nuclear power, in the countries where there is no public opposition, when the government is determined, and when the public is in agreement, we see nuclear power being a major contributor to both energy security and climate change issues, so these are the three policy pillars, and we have given examples of that, and 1,500 policy measures, we have analysed and given in our book, to look at, for the OECD and China and India.

EC: And that might include measures such as tougher fuel economy standards on cars?

FB: Exactly, efficiency improvements in the cars. This is very important, both for US, Europe, especially and in Japan, because they are performing very well. It is the share of renewables, on the efficiency standards on the motors and the industry, for households. Let me give you an example about China as well, because this is very important. It is the locked in, our future is being locked in. In China, in the next eight years, the amount of power plants we are going to build is about close to 800 gigawatts, which is they are at what Europe has, and 90 per cent of it is coal, and when you build a power plant, it will last about 50, 60 years, because it is the last time, so it is very difficult to ask China or India to shut them down, because its economic lifetime is over. So, it is locked in and they will have CO2 emissions for 50 to 60 years. It is the reason why I said planning is very important, in the next ten years, or another efficiency issue, buildings. Today, every second square metre building built in the world is in China, one square metre, the rest of the world, one square metre in China, and what kind of insulation they use is very poor, and if we don’t have standards in those countries, we will have serious problems for the next 50 to 60 years. So, both for China and India, as well as the OECD countries, we need to act and we should not only put a lot of targets, goals, meetings and so on, but nothing is happening. We want more action, instead of more targets and more meetings and more talks.

EC: And, we really need that action right away?

FB: Exactly, right away and in a bold manner.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:02:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'b')) OPEC would do.

Who amongst them? OPEC is not sending the extra oil promised.

Saudi Arabia could increase production, maybe to 12 mbpd, maybe even 15, and keep it there for maybe 15-20 years. Other countries could also chip in.

But will they? I wouldn't, if I were them.
Last edited by Starvid on Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:04:35, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:03:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', 'L')ooks like a decline to me.

That's crude oil, not all liquids.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:06:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', 'L')ooks like a decline to me.

That's crude oil, not all liquids.

What else matters?
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:08:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', 'L')ooks like a decline to me.

That's crude oil, not all liquids.

What else matters?

Beside crude oil?

Natural gas plant liquids, condensates, tar sands, Orinoco heavy oil and some more stuff. Taken together they add up to a bit more than 10 mbpd.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:09:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'b')) OPEC would do.

Who amongst them? OPEC is not sending the extra oil promised.

Saudi Arabia could increase production, maybe to 12 mbpd, maybe even 15, and keep it there for maybe 15-20 years. Other countries could also chip in.

But will they? I wouldn't, if I were them.

Assuming they could, that's 2 years of decline taken care of. And then?
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:10:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', 'L')ooks like a decline to me.

That's crude oil, not all liquids.

What else matters?

Beside crude oil?

Natural gas plant liquids, condensates, tar sands, Orinoco heavy oil and some more stuff. Taken together they add up to a bit more than 10 mbpd.

They can't grow at the rate of conventional oil decline.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:16:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', 'L')ooks like a decline to me.

That's crude oil, not all liquids.

What else matters?

Beside crude oil?

Natural gas plant liquids, condensates, tar sands, Orinoco heavy oil and some more stuff. Taken together they add up to a bit more than 10 mbpd.

They can't grow at the rate of conventional oil decline.
They have been growing faster than conventional oil, which seems to have peaked and is declining. The relative share and absolute level of these kinds of things is increasing.
Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:16:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'b')) OPEC would do.

Who amongst them? OPEC is not sending the extra oil promised.

Saudi Arabia could increase production, maybe to 12 mbpd, maybe even 15, and keep it there for maybe 15-20 years. Other countries could also chip in.

But will they? I wouldn't, if I were them.

Assuming they could, that's 2 years of decline taken care of. And then?

When the new projects, worldwide, can't offset managed declines, we peak.

It will happen soon.
Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:24:57

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', 'L')ooks like a decline to me.

That's crude oil, not all liquids.

What else matters?

Beside crude oil?

Natural gas plant liquids, condensates, tar sands, Orinoco heavy oil and some more stuff. Taken together they add up to a bit more than 10 mbpd.

They can't grow at the rate of conventional oil decline.
They have been growing faster than conventional oil, which seems to have peaked and is declining. The relative share and absolute level of these kinds of things is increasing.
Yes, but there are limits to what can be achieved with things like tar sands production.
This other stuff that makes up "all-liquids" part of ledger will gain against crude, for a few more years, perhaps 10, it's true, but crude will fall faster in the meantime.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:26:00

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('peripato', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'b')) OPEC would do.

Who amongst them? OPEC is not sending the extra oil promised.

Saudi Arabia could increase production, maybe to 12 mbpd, maybe even 15, and keep it there for maybe 15-20 years. Other countries could also chip in.

But will they? I wouldn't, if I were them.

Assuming they could, that's 2 years of decline taken care of. And then?

When the new projects, worldwide, can't offset managed declines, we peak.

It will happen soon.
I'm liquidating assets. Better to be 5 years early, than 5 minutes too late as they say.
Last edited by peripato on Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:26:59, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby Starvid » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:26:29

Let me add a fantastic quote from Fatih Birol, where he is using a word that has been recurring lately when he has been interviewed.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hen we say in 2030 that the Saudi production will increase, Kuwait will increase, others will increase, this does not mean that we are saying in any case they will do it. We say they have the potential, when you look at their official reserves estimates, and if they put the money there, they have the potential to meet the gap between demand and non-OPEC production.


Someone is very carefully covering his ass. :lol:

http://www.davidstrahan.com/blog/?p=73#more-73

One more thing.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'L')ast week both Christophe de Margerie, CEO of Total, and Shokri Ghanem, head of Libya’s National Oil Company, said oil production would never top 100 mb/d, far below the IEA forecast, while Sadad al-Huseini, former head of E&P at Saudi Aramco, said oil production has already reached its ultimate plateau.


Nothing to see here, just move along...

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')onocoPhillips (COP) Chief Executive James Mulva (...) said he doesn't believe oil supply will ever exceed 100 million barrels a day. He didn't offer a price forecast.

"Demand will be going up, but it will be constrained by supply," Mulva said. " I don't think we are going to see the supply going over 100 million barrels a day and the reason is: Where is all that going to come from?"

(...)

[BP plc (BP) Chief Executive Tony] Hayward said "about half" the world's oil has been recovered, but he implied that significant improvement is possible on a broader scale. "The biggest source of new oil will come from increasing recovery," he said.

And we all know what "half gone" means...

http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/art ... RTUNE5.htm
Peak oil is not an energy crisis. It is a liquid fuel crisis.
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Re: "Oil outlook is grim, but panic worst response"

Unread postby peripato » Mon 12 Nov 2007, 03:34:09

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Starvid', 'L')et me add a fantastic quote from Fatih Birol, where he is using a word that has been recurring lately when he has been interviewed.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hen we say in 2030 that the Saudi production will increase, Kuwait will increase, others will increase, this does not mean that we are saying in any case they will do it. We say they have the potential, when you look at their official reserves estimates, and if they put the money there, they have the potential to meet the gap between demand and non-OPEC production.


Someone is very carefully covering his ass. :lol:

http://www.davidstrahan.com/blog/?p=73#more-73

SA could prove that the official reserve figures are real by stepping up production to 12 or 15 mbs p/d, but even if they could they won’t. As you said, why would they, if the oil in the ground is growing more valuable by the day? So we will face an early peak, completely with our pants down.
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