Lloyd’s List has not one but two articles today about Peak Oil. First, it says we have past peak in light sweet crude (something I have been saying for two years). Second, it says “oil supply shortages are looming as global oil production is pushed to peak levels”, barring some new discovery in the Beaufort Sea.
Well, why we are waiting for those Artic discoveries to come in, let’s see what they had to say:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'L')LOYDS LIST
July 17, 2007
Decline in light oil forces rethink
LIGHT oil production is already in decline, except in the reserve-rich Middle East, forcing consumer nations to utilise unconventional resources such as heavy oil, sour crudes and natural gas liquids.
Geological constraints, although not the only reason, seem to have affected production levels in most of the main basins outside Opec, providing little comfort to those who hope a supply crunch can be averted.
Analysts at Barclays believe that mature basins outside Opec will be the biggest cause of a supply crunch:
'One of the key dynamics of non-Opec supply in recent years has been its ability to massively disappoint,' Barclays says.
'We believe that the main culprit is the dynamics of mature production, and this year it has been most evident in Mexico and Norway.'
Mexico remains a strong oil producer, thanks to its giant Cantarell complex and the new Ku-Maloob-Zaap project, but its own growing domestic demand means exports are shrinking.
In Europe, output is declining, with the North Sea already over its peak. There may be success stories in the UK and Norwegian sectors that could improve production rates for short periods of time, but in general output levels will never reach plateau rates again.
The Russian Arctic is at a similar level of exploration and development, but the industry generally feels most of the hydrocarbon resources will be gaseous. Of the former Soviet Union nations, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan have the most potential to build production levels.
So we are back in the Middle East for any significant gains in oil supplies. Saudi Arabia is currently the only nation with any proper spare capacity, and this is in the heavy, sour grades of crude that refineries do not want to handle.
Saudi Aramco is investing heavily in its existing onshore and offshore fields, but has not found large new fields for several decades, so even the world's key oil exporter will, one day, be unable to raise its production.



