by KaiserJeep » Tue 08 Sep 2015, 20:36:09
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ROCKMAN', 'K')J - I do appreciate how your electronic tech world had blossomed over the last 40 to 50 years. I have also seen a similar change in the dynamics in my world of fossil fuel extraction. But going in the opposite direction from an opportunity standpoint. Of course the oil patch has had great tech improvements during that same time. But those were driven by the increasing difficulty in finding significant oil/NG reserves. Which isn't to say they haven't been found: N Slope, DW GOM, DW Brazil, N Sea, etc. But the key part of that sentence: "been found". The exploration tech is magnitudes better today than when I started 40 years ago. Great success rate but that's not the problem. THE problem is find new trends to develop. There are no new big conventional trends that have been discovered for many years. The unconventional trends HAD big potential thanks to higher oil prices. And now much of that potential has evaporated.
There are virtually no new areas to explore excepting the Arctic and some other DW area. Exploration and production tech will continue to advance in the oil patch. But that won't create big new trends because there’s almost no place left for them to exist. Not a new idea: how many times has someone posted the graphic showing the decreasing volume of new conventional discoveries? The shales weren't even new unconventional trends that were suddenly discovered: we've known about the Bakken and Eagle Ford Shale for more than half a century. It just took high enough oil prices to launch them...prices that have no disappeared to a fair extent.
Folks can be as optimistic as they wish about various tech improvements. But I’ve studied petroleum provinces for 40 years just as thousands of my cohorts have. And we all have the same understanding: there is no meaningful potential for the development of a significant volume of conventional reserves. And even unconventional reserves have their limit regardless of the price of oil/NG. It won’t happen next year or even ten years from now. But we are on a path which we cannot escape.
Rockman, I totally agree. The lack of affordable FF energy is gonna kill a lot of people. But over a year ago I decided that the "slow crash" scenario was the most likely by far. There are lots of producing fields, and recovery techniques such as fracking have yet to be applied to a lot of fields.
Basically Hubbert's peak occurs at the 50% level, when we have consumed half the available supply. The first half was consumed over 150 years or so. The second half will never be completely consumed, but it will IMHO be at least 50 years (pessimistic) or 100 years (most probable) or another 150 years (optimistic) before we are really done with FF's.
Meanwhile the world will have already gone to he!! because of the rising cost of transport fuels. Everything we consume will cost more. It's not gonna be any fun but it's also not any kind of urgent emergency - I no longer expect at my age to actually see anything dramatic, just a further decline in the standard of living, a trend that has already existed for decades.