by allenwrench » Mon 28 Apr 2008, 15:20:53
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('PeakingAroundtheCorner', 'A') simple question with not so simple answers.
I'm in a debate on another board where the consensus in that Big Oil is dry-f@#%king us and the US dollar is in the crapper, causing the price to rise.
The discussion forum I refer to has thousands of active participants and though there are a few there who are obviously very PO aware, the vast majority think PO is a Big Oil hoax to create artificial scarcity to drive up prices.
We get bits and pieces of the reasons oil prices are high here and there so I thought it would be good to create a thread which lists and discusses the different factors that are contributing to the run-up on oil and gas prices. Links and excerpts from credible sources are welcomed and encouraged.
Personally, I am not happy about PO, but I accept it as our future. I would much rather like to keep sucking down the crude, running my jet ski, dirt bikes, RV and not have to worry about gas rationing and fuel costs to go skiing, kayaking and mountain biking.
The top 3 users of crude are the US, China and Japan.
They consume almost 12 billion barrels of crude a year ( 11,987,330,000 barrels) .
Collectively the world uses 30 billion barrels of oil a year (31,015,410,000)
http://www.nationmaster.com/graph/ene_o ... onsumption
If the PO skeptics think the supply of fossil fuel is limitless and we can keep on burning billions upon billions of barrels a year of crude forever, then they are sadly mistaken.
The fact that 'we have to estimate' reserves or useful life of anything says that the item in question does not have an infinite supply or life span.
No doubt some of the increase in crude is due to greed, speculation and hype. And, it may all be true that what we have been told about peak oil is in fact a hoax.
Same as the skeptics that claim global warming is a hoax.
It may all be a conspiracy, just a cruel trick on the consumer to line the pockets of industry with more money...only time will settle this debate
http://www.prisonplanet.com/archives/peak_oil/index.htm
http://www.conspiracyplanet.com/channel ... entid=2097
http://aftermathnews.wordpress.com/2007 ... -peak-oil/
http://www.energybulletin.net/4466.html
But I always tell the proponents saying peak oil is a conspiracy and think that we have an unlimited amount of oil, natural gas, coal, uranium...actions speak louder than words.
We can look at Hubbert's prediction of the USA's peak.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peak_oil
He was exactly right.
We can look at global oil production and see what the general trend is.
Look at the UK and other countries like the US that had been energy exporters in their heyday. Now they are all energy importers.
See:
http://www.oilcrashmovie.com/
We can look at the trend in drilling to see how deep we have to go to find oil. How many big finds are being made?
We can look at the quality of crude being produced.
Is it light sweet crude or high sulfur, heavy, hard to refine crude?
The light sweet is just that 'light' and is on the surface of the oil pool. Whereas the less desirable heavy sulfated crude is on the bottom of the pool. Does the phrase hitting the bottom the barrel mean anything to you?
Lately we have been putting much of our hope in the tar sands of Canada.
When we have to get the oil out of the sand and shale it sounds like we are hitting the bottom of the barrel again. Even talk about getting our gas from refining bitumen coal.
Now, some people say we are saving the light sweet crude for national defense and using the foreign oil and tar sands first. I don't know, I have no inside information about that claim.
We get about 15% of our natural gas from Canada. That 15% amounts to 50% of the natural gas Canada produces. The US sucks down more energy than any other country...no one can come close to us.
Our demands for natural gas are on the rise, just as our demands are for all fossil fuels. Once demand outstrips production we are headed over Hubert's peak in any number of areas besides crude. We can see peak production issues in natural gas, uranium, food or water, just as we will see with crude oil.
It is an easy task to see how much oil is produced in the world. But finding the 'exact peak date' for world oil production is hard to pinpoint. (see peak oil section)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crude_oil
For one thing, some countries production are erratic and they are not transparent with their real production and discovery data.
Also oil production is not an exact science and still requires a little luck. We may find a lucky hit down the road that brings in a gusher to distort some of the figures.
No one knows the exact peak date for world oil production, but we do know that time will come in the not so distant future. But finding the peak is not hard problem once we can look back on it by a few years....but we need some time to do it...again, only time will settle this debate.
"If the public does think briefly about future oil supplies, the question usually asked is, "How long will oil last?" This is the wrong question. Oil will be extracted in some insignificant quantity perhaps 200 years from now. The critical question is: When does the peak of world oil production occur?" ~ Richard C. Duncan
Check out:
Twilight in the Desert: the coming Saudi oil shock and the world economy
by Simmons, Matthew R.
It is a well written book examining 12 of the key Saudi oil fields and the exaggerated claims of remaining crude reserves of Saudi Arabia.
Also see:
http://www.worldoil.com/INFOCENTER/STAT ... production
http://hubbert.mines.edu/
http://www.mnforsustain.org/duncan_and_ ... The%20Peak