by Graeme » Sun 15 Jun 2008, 00:46:00
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AlCzervik', 'G')raeme, do you believe this horseshit when North Sea is already in decline?
As a professional earth scientist working outside the oil industry, I do believe what the chief executive of the Royal Society of Chemistry says, i.e. there is likely to be twice as much oil than previously thought still be extracted not only from the North Sea but also worldwide (see the New Scientist article). I don't think he said that oil will last 100 years.
In any case, what we have now is a problem of demand exceeding supply which the oil industry will exploit to obtain maximum profit in order to extend their exploration activities and give returns to their shareholders. If they are not careful, they will shoot themselves in the foot because there may well be a permanent global move away from oil to alternative fuels, which is possibly what Saudi Arabia and other producers now fear. Hence their recent announcement to increase supply in the hope that this will reduce prices, and to have meetings with all producers and consumers.
Fatih Birol has already stated that the world will have an increasingly difficult task of keeping supply up with demand from China, India and Middle Eastern counties. He told us to increase supply, use more alternative fuels, and increase efficiency (use economical transport) - see also his motto below.
I agree with thylacine that the decline in North Sea oil will be less steep than expected.
Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe. H. G. Wells.
Fatih Birol's motto: leave oil before it leaves us.