by AirlinePilot » Fri 21 Nov 2008, 03:01:28
At first I thought that the crash in the price of oil would mask Peak Oil. Maybe for a short while. But If you really understand PO and the underlying issue of EROEI, then it may just be the worst case scenario.
The more I think it through, the more it looks like we just may see production slow at a greater rate than demand. The scarier thought I am having right now is this may be artificially enabled. If the price gets below some ugly point, the folks who export oil are going to become desperate. They will use the necessary and available tools to stabilize price, whether we like it or not.
One thing that a lot of folks are not grasping, or are refusing to see, is that this particular price collapse is not commensurate with the demand picture.
It just isn't, not in any way shape or form. Yes the US (and some of the OECD nations) have reduced demand due to high prices. I do not dispute that. The issue at hand is why have prices collapsed over 60% in just months?
The answer lies in what is going on globally. A large and probably long term collapse of our economic system. While things are deflating everyone everywhere is de-leveraging. They are selling EVERYTHING THEY HAVE. It is contributing more to the price collapse of crude than normal fundamentals can manage. If you believe that price is collapsing due to the future demand picture, than you better start thinking about Mad Max, because that's where we are headed. This price collapse has overshot just like the spike did. There is no doubt in my mind.
This will not continue forever and the dollar will likely not remain in prominence once everyone sees we cannot pay them back for the money we borrowed through T-bill auctions. Its going to happen, its only a matter of time. My guess is sometime next year this goes down, but with things as volatile as they are it could happen tomorrow!
Once the dollar begins its fall, oil will get very pricey again for the US. I see this as a second plausible scenario along with large scale production decline due to loss of capital investment. But the IEA has just handed us a nasty reminder that in order to basically remain on a plateau we are going to require trillions in investment to keep our heads above water.
Guess what? That money isn't going to be there. Anyone who believes it will be over the next 5-8 years is smoking some really good sh1t and I want some of it. The IEA magically assumes also that reserve growth will be larger than it ever has been, and astronomical production from CTL and Tar Sands will step in to fill the gap of decline! And Oh, by the way, we also need to find a crap load of new oil really soon!!!
When you take all this into account, I don't see how folks can possibly believe oil will continue its price decline barring a large meteorite strike or a global nuclear exchange.
My thoughts are that one of these events is going to take place, and any one of them can drive price back up.
-Collapsing Dollar.
- Lack of large scale capital investment in oil production over a
long time period
- Panic in export nations due to prices being far too low.
If any one of them comes to pass it's bad. Here's hoping we don't get a few of them all rolled up together!
I will be going long oil in a gigantic way any moment now and will discipline myself to hold it. I see little probability that over the longer term price remains depressed.
In answer to the OP, no it doesn't change the story at all, just how we are going to get screwed by it.