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BigOil vs. Big Nationals

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

BigOil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby Duende » Sat 17 Nov 2007, 22:39:02

Fairly recently I learned about the nationalizing of oil in many "oil-rich" countries, such as Venezuela. The United States doesn't have great relationships with many of these big nationally-owned oil operations. In short, the multi-national companies such as BP and Exxon may not have access to the last remaining oil supplies. Therefore, in many ways, the onset of peak oil may be more political than anything else.

Can someone more-precisely illustrate this situation, and explain how Pemex, for example, is qualitatively different from BP or Exxon?
"Where is the man who has so much as to be out of danger?" -Thomas Huxley
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby LoneSnark » Sun 18 Nov 2007, 02:57:41

Well, to put it bluntly, BP and Exxon are interested in only one thing: that is maximizing long-term profits for their shareholders. They do that by producing as much oil as possible as quickly as possible with as little cost as possible. This often means borrowing money from capital markets to expand production or investing in the latest technology from anywhere in the world in hopes of extracting more oil. If BP is incapable of raising the money or does not have access to the technology needed then it can sell the oil field to another company that does.

Nationals, like Pemex, do not care about profits, as they answer not to owners but to politicians which are only interested in staying in power. What this often means is taking investment capital away from the company to spend on their constituents instead of investing that money in upgrading or expanding oil production. Venezuela, for example, has forced its national oil company to borrow billions of dollars and spend the money on Chavez supporters. This is because politicians need to win re-election in only a few years, where-as it can take 10 years before an oil investment pays for itself, all of which goes to your rival if you lost the election for lack of pork barrel spending. But Nationals do not just starve their oil fields of investment, they also destroy them. This is because some behavior can dramatically increases oil production in the short term at the expense of damaging the oil field, rendering large reserves of oil unreachable. Such behavior would be rediculous for a business man but makes perfect sense to a politicians which only cares about funding current priorities, such as a war.

What this means is that Peak Oil is largely a political problem. If any large OPEC country openned its oil fields to private investment then oil prices would collapse to under $20 a barrel within a few years and stay there for decades. But I doubt that is going to happen.
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby seldom_seen » Sun 18 Nov 2007, 03:14:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Duende', 'I')n short, the multi-national companies such as BP and Exxon may not have access to the last remaining oil supplies.

They do, it's called the US military.

The US has two choices. Let the interstate highway system seize up from lack of fuel. Or bring democracy to countries that have oil.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Duende', 'T')herefore, in many ways, the onset of peak oil may be more [s]political[/s] military than anything else.

fixed that for ya.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', 'I')f any large OPEC country openned its oil fields to private investment then oil prices would collapse to under $20 a barrel within a few years and stay there for decades.

huh?
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby jupiters_release » Sun 18 Nov 2007, 07:56:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seldom_seen', '
')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', 'I')f any large OPEC country openned its oil fields to private investment then oil prices would collapse to under $20 a barrel within a few years and stay there for decades.

huh?


8O

:dumbfounded:

You rarely see newbies anymore with an answer to peak oil. This one is on the more creative side for sure. :-D
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby big_rc » Sun 18 Nov 2007, 09:35:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Duende', 'F')airly recently I learned about the nationalizing of oil in many "oil-rich" countries, such as Venezuela. The United States doesn't have great relationships with many of these big nationally-owned oil operations. In short, the multi-national companies such as BP and Exxon may not have access to the last remaining oil supplies. Therefore, in many ways, the onset of peak oil may be more political than anything else.

Can someone more-precisely illustrate this situation, and explain how Pemex, for example, is qualitatively different from BP or Exxon?


You have hit upon the biggest problem with Peak Oil and it is more political than gelogical. I work for Big Oil so I can tell you the difference between the Big Oil and the NOCs (National Oil Companies). Outside of Petrobras and Saudi Aramco, the other NOCs aren't worth two shits. Like the other poster pointed out, they answer to politicians who by their very nature are dumbasses only out to protect their hide. Therefore, these NOCs get robbed blind by their local government and cannot use that money to re-invest in technology. There is a HUGE technological gap between Big Oil and the NOCs. So it is difficult for the NOCs to reinvest in order to upgrade their production facilities.
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby Duende » Sun 18 Nov 2007, 11:25:01

seldom_seen wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Duende wrote:
Therefore, in many ways, the onset of peak oil may be more [s]political[/s] military than anything else.

fixed that for ya.


Yeah, I can buy that.

The problem then becomes more complex - and ultimately more determining of peak oil - than myopically focusing on the physical/geological problems. I mean, why endlessly debate the amount of oil in the grounds in total, when the conversation likely will boil down to how much we'll have access to? In other words, an artificial peak will pop up long before a physical one does.

So, is an artificial peak the primary issue, instead of the physical peak?
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby big_rc » Sun 18 Nov 2007, 11:39:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Duende', '
') I mean, why endlessly debate the amount of oil in the grounds in total, when the conversation likely will boil down to how much we'll have access to? In other words, an artificial peak will pop up long before a physical one does.

So, is an artificial peak the primary issue, instead of the physical peak?


Well the depletion that is being seen in the biggest fields like Cantarell in Mexico, the North Sea, Alaska North Slope, etc. is a physical fact so you can say that the physical peak of many of the biggest fields is helping to exacerbate the artifical peak. It's very hard to separate the two.

Also it is much, much easier to talk about how much oil there is in the ground than deal with the issues surrounding that oil. That's when you have to deal with issues like technology, geopolitics, economics, old animosities and a bunch of bullshit in general. That's very, very hard for most people to wrap their heads around. Its much easier to talk about reserves in general and disregard the other bullshit that surrounds those reserves.
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I don't think of all the misery, but of all the beauty that still remains.--Anne Frank
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby Twilight » Sun 18 Nov 2007, 15:32:51

A peak by any other name smells as shit.

The timing and severity are influenced by many things. Geology, to be sure. Technical competence. Political involvement. Economic imperatives. Consumer demand. Greed. The unfolding of history itself. How much is natural and how much is artificial doesn't matter much. It's a multivariable mix that is what it is, and it is difficult to influence. You can't really seperate one element, work on it in isolation and produce globally meaningful results. We are stuck going forward with the system we have built.
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby Duende » Sun 18 Nov 2007, 19:36:17

Twilight wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he timing and severity are influenced by many things. Geology, to be sure. Technical competence. Political involvement. Economic imperatives. Consumer demand. Greed. The unfolding of history itself. How much is natural and how much is artificial doesn't matter much. It's a multivariable mix that is what it is, and it is difficult to influence. You can't really seperate one element, work on it in isolation and produce globally meaningful results.


Agreed. The point I'm whiddling down to is that the geological aspect of peak oil seems to be a best case scenerio, and that the peak is likely to be triggered much sooner than a purely physically-driven result by any of a number of those other things you mention above such as politics and economics.

More specifically, is anyone familiar with any depletion models which take political instability into account? For instance, do any models estimate a peak if certain scenerios arise? How would the peak - if only artificially - be affected if Venezuela, or any of the nationally-minded producers started hoarding?
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby Twilight » Sun 18 Nov 2007, 20:15:37

Ironically, while political interruptions of supply create a great deal of short term pain, they do extend the bell curve. Geologically, the world oil production curve would have peaked by 2000 and declined at a rate that matched its rise, 7% or more. The supply shocks and recessions of the 1970s and 1980s chopped off the top of the curve and delayed peak by many years, and likely softened the eventual decline rate too.

Were oil exporting nations to cut back exports and produce at below maximum capacity to save oil for future domestic consumption, the effect would likely be similar - steep production decline to a much lower plateau, widespread economic damage, but over the long term, a lengthening and shallowing of the downslope.

It is difficult to model, as politics are a wildcard. You can take a standard model, pick any oil exporting country you want, remove their exports and see how it looks. The reason there are no well-known models is the possibilites are bounded only by your imagination. Unlike a projection with mostly geological constraints, it is difficult for anyone to agree on a standard.
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby LoneSnark » Mon 19 Nov 2007, 01:35:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')ronically, while political interruptions of supply create a great deal of short term pain, they do extend the bell curve

Not from my understanding. An oil field is not a gas tank; "how" you take the oil out not only determines the rate of extraction but also the amount you can ultimately get out. Private companies using the latest technology claim to be able to extract as much as 35% of the oil from a given reserve. But nationalized firms tend to use more destructive extraction methods which are cheaper and faster, but will ultimately cause the oil field to stop producing after 20% or less has been extracted.

So, it is not just the chopping off of peaks but also oil destruction due to perverse incentives and mis-management.
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby cube » Mon 19 Nov 2007, 02:26:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', '.')..
What this means is that Peak Oil is largely a political problem. If any large OPEC country openned its oil fields to private investment then oil prices would collapse to under $20 a barrel within a few years and stay there for decades. But I doubt that is going to happen.
*smacks forehead and shakes head in disbelief*

No amount of investment money, technology, efficient management, etc... can prevent PO from happening. There is a finite amount of oil in the ground (and nothing can change that) so therefore it is not a question of "if" but "when" PO will happen.
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby LoneSnark » Mon 19 Nov 2007, 14:30:12

*turns head sideways in puzzlement*
Did I suggest that anything would prevent PO? Are you purposefully being daft for some nefarious purpose? Maybe you enjoy twisting the words of others?

I said investment money, technology, and efficient management would dramatically increase production for decades, not forever. It would dramatically increase the amount of oil produced both today and in the long run.

Now, go sit in the corner. :P
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby Duende » Mon 19 Nov 2007, 15:10:10

LoneSnark wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')I said investment money, technology, and efficient management would dramatically increase production for decades, not forever. It would dramatically increase the amount of oil produced both today and in the long run.


I agree with this, at least in part. This is another way of saying what Twilight did earlier:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ere oil exporting nations to cut back exports and produce at below maximum capacity to save oil for future domestic consumption, the effect would likely be similar - steep production decline to a much lower plateau, widespread economic damage, but over the long term, a lengthening and shallowing of the downslope.


I think that LoneSnark is going the extra mile in further saying that your average BP or Exxon is better at getting the "tough stuff" than your average Pemex.
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby cube » Mon 19 Nov 2007, 16:46:10

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', '*')turns head sideways in puzzlement*
Did I suggest that anything would prevent PO? Are you purposefully being daft for some nefarious purpose? Maybe you enjoy twisting the words of others?

I said investment money, technology, and efficient management would dramatically increase production for decades, not forever. It would dramatically increase the amount of oil produced both today and in the long run.

Now, go sit in the corner. :P
EXCELLENT! (sits in the corner and asks professor LoneSnark a difficult question while the rest of the students sit on the edges of their chairs in anticipation for an answer)

Now that we BOTH have an agreement that PO cannot be stopped, here's my question:

Why are you such a proponent of private oil companies getting into oil reserves? Do you actually think the "increased efficiency" is going to make a difference in the grand scheme of things? Relative to the entire scope of human history for the past 12,000 years since the last ice age what's so important about PO getting delayed by several decades because of advances in technology or investments.

Aside from personal self interest, because if PO were to happen tomorrow morning my life would start to go downhill.....however getting serious now. Why the fascination with trying to delay PO for several decades? --> why the fascination with trying to delay the inevitable! :wink:
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby LoneSnark » Mon 19 Nov 2007, 18:19:37

*again with a puzzled face, as if he had been asked to explain why water is wet*

First, there is always self interest, I really like my current SUV.

But more to the point, there is an aspect of forever to be found here. There are dozens of OPEC countries. If each one allowed private investment then the decades each one allowed would quickly add up to over a century.

In that time, technological advancement in other sectors will advance mightily, enabling us to drill ever deeper wells, squeezing ever more oil out of old wells, postponing the peak for several more decades.

With enough postponement of the peak we quickly find ourselves in the far off years of 2100+, of whose technology we will know nothing about. Perhaps they have perfected fusion technology, perhaps they have found a way to tap the sun directly. For all we know, oil will seem as antiquated to them as whale oil seems to us.

There is a real question as to the living standards that can be sustained given today's technological prowess without oil. We are on the virge of genetically engineering plants that excrete gasoline, but it is clearly not ready yet. However, 100 years from now I have no question that they will not need oil. How they will do it I do not know, I have only an idea of how we would attempt to do it today. The problems I see in an oil-free world today are fixable, all they take is time.
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Re: Big Oil vs. Big Nationals

Unread postby cube » Tue 20 Nov 2007, 02:44:44

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('LoneSnark', '*')again with a puzzled face, as if he had been asked to explain why water is wet*

First, there is always self interest, I really like my current SUV.

But more to the point, there is an aspect of forever to be found here. There are dozens of OPEC countries. If each one allowed private investment then the decades each one allowed would quickly add up to over a century.

In that time, technological advancement in other sectors will advance mightily, enabling us to drill ever deeper wells, squeezing ever more oil out of old wells, postponing the peak for several more decades.

With enough postponement of the peak we quickly find ourselves in the far off years of 2100+, of whose technology we will know nothing about. Perhaps they have perfected fusion technology, perhaps they have found a way to tap the sun directly. For all we know, oil will seem as antiquated to them as whale oil seems to us.

There is a real question as to the living standards that can be sustained given today's technological prowess without oil. We are on the virge of genetically engineering plants that excrete gasoline, but it is clearly not ready yet. However, 100 years from now I have no question that they will not need oil. How they will do it I do not know, I have only an idea of how we would attempt to do it today. The problems I see in an oil-free world today are fixable, all they take is time.
*scratches beard like a 200 year old wizard who must of heard this argument a dirty dozen times already from other newbies*

techno-optimist vision == increase efficiency --> gives us more time --> more time leads to new technology that will solve our current problems....use technology to solve a problem created by technology!

That argument has already been debunked so many times on this board. Well anyways I'll let this thread die. There are plenty of threads on this board and not everything has to be answered in 1 day. 8)
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