by ki11ercane » Sat 13 Dec 2008, 21:21:52
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('seahorse', 'S')immons brings up another interesting problem, which illustrates just how this credit crisis is leading us to the IEA worse case scenario, and that is the problem of rust, which never sleeps.
The IEA says without investment, decline rates will be about 9% per year. Okay, seems most everyone in the world is mothbolling new projects, rigs are being freed up etc. Profits are down. All this expensive equipment has to be maintained, bc rust never sleeps. Will we have or commit the money to maintain all this idled equipment? Its just an example of how one problem, lack of money, leads to other problems, and they start compounding on each other.
9% is the extreme, and they have estimated between 5-9%. Since I am not an economist, I cannot begin to use the skills of an economist to include figures like demand destruction, price changes, war, etc. in what it most likely will be. With current production estimated at 86.18 million barrels a day, a full 9% in decline is 33.42 days annually. That's STAGGERING on it's own if you look at it as one chunk of time. It's over a month of lost production in a year. However this isn't how the world works and we're not going to get to November 28/2009 and turn off the taps. If we use an average of 7% decline over one year, we come up to less of a decline. OilFinder2 has extrapolated a 200,000 barrel per day drop in demand for 2009, or a mere 2.88 minutes based on what is currently going on in the world overall. If we assume the above variables and include demand drop, it's a safer bet the average rather than the extreme will prevail.
After seeing the price of oil being 368% more this summer when production and consumption met or came close than it ever did before, (ie. a small change in production and consumption) it's safe to say that a decrease in production encompassing economic strain in the world is going to equalize things for the time being and we'll continue to see a price drop. If production TRULY slips below or comes near consumption taking into considertation the world situation again, you will see a repeat of 2008, however not as severe. A depressed global economy will simply not be able to afford it, and you won't see such an extreme price. However I think in the long term, with less money being made over production, this will affect the ability for more investment in more production, even standard production. When the world economy heals, and when we come out of the other side, we may be in a situation where no amount of money or value of oil will save us. It is truly possible that this year will decide that fact once and for all. It may come down to the fact that the economy will not be able to recover enough to tolerate a high enough price of oil for investment in production to ever meet demand, and we sprial down forever.
Again, for the economists here, if you can chime in, I'd be grateful.