by Peleg » Fri 11 Jul 2008, 00:47:51
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('zeke', 'h')ey, thanks for the great answers...
...much as I suspected and theorized myself: there's "plenty" at the moment for those who can pay.
in trying to sound the alert about PO with friends — and mind you, NOT trying to "win" any arguments, either — it's hard to make the case for the reality of PO when gas can still be had at ever-higher prices...
the spiking prices make people grab one or both of the following:
oil companies are gouging us (no news flash there) and speculators are artificially forcing the price up.
I am no finance whiz, either, and I'm having a hard time refuting the speculation angle; to me, it seems the speculators ARE forcing the price up faster than if there were no speculation.
But perhaps that, too is a symptom of the peak oil peak or plateau.
zeke
I think the supply and demand curves which you can get a nie graphic of over at the theoildrum.com are pretty good right now.
http://www.theoildrum.com/tag/world_production
That is the supply graph, you can get the data from the IEA or the EIA and make a nice plot in Excel that shos both supply and demand on one graphic.
Almost everyone understands that when demand outstrips supply you have upward price movements, this is not something you want to try to mess around with unless you need to avoid a catastrophe since capping prices is sure to bring on shortages eventually. So, Look at that graph, notice how after May 07 there is a widening gap between expected demand and expected supply. Price is mostly responding now to that expectation and reality. So if we do see 2010 looking anything like that prediction $200 and $7 are not far fetched at all. I have a suspicion that declines are boing to come on much quicker than people think, and therefore we could see $200 much sooner than 2010. But that is speculation. As for the price of oil, at best you have $30 speculation in that price. So that leaves you with what $100. But look $100 is still almost 50% rise in one year, that is an exponential price pressure all by itself compared to the last ten years. So we go from $10 per barrel in '99 to $100 (excluding the so called speculative bubble) and we have 900% increase in just under ten years, and a wonderfully formed exponential curve. You see this all started back when the real oil supply curve came near to an inflection point so that supply growth (the first derivative of supply) started to decline. Now we are into the phase where supply growth is approaching zero. Once it goes negative and stays (and it will eventually) 'peak oil' will be on the lips of every living human being. That realization could happen as soon as 2010, or as late as 2017 by most good estimates. I'm only in my late 30's. By the time my kids are old enough to want a car, car's could be the last thing a parent buys a kid for their 16th birthday. The issue is that serious, and profound, it is beyond all precedent in human history save perhaps the bottleneck 100,000 years ago (if you believe such things.) Peak Oil is something that every lawmaker should understand very well, all aspects of it and the possible mitigating steps, it should as much a pre-req as how the Senate operates. Peak Oil is THE issue of the 21st century, only climate change will rival it for scale, and only the Return of Christ could be bigger.