Peak Oil, when it occurs, will be in the middle of many years of relative flat production before it begins declining. I don’t see the flat period, how can we be in the middle of it?
The recent increases in oil price are probably the result of increasing world-wide demand, rather than post-peak declines in production. For many years, continuously increasing production was more than enough to satisfy increasing demand. However, as oil production approaches peak, the increase slows and its corrective affect on increasing demand is eliminated. Small increases in production are no longer sufficient to satisfy the world’s desire for more and more oil, resulting in price competition for existing oil production.
According to the
US Census Bureau, world population increased from 3.7 billion in 1970 to 5.3 billion in 1990, an increase of 43% in 20 years. During this period, according to the US Dept of Energy, oil production rose by 36%.
Since much of the world’s population increase occurred in under-developed countries, population increase alone doesn’t explain increased demand for oil. Here are a couple of items that might help:
1. According to Jay Stein’s article, referenced in the
Number of Cars webpage, the world population of automobiles increased from 200 million in 1970 to 500 million in 1990, a 150% increase in 20 years.
2. According to this
air traffic webpage, world airline traffic (passengers, baggage, freight, and mail) increased from 39 million ton-miles in 1970 to 161 million ton-miles in 1990, more than a 300% increase during the same period.
The good news: World oil production is not decreasing at this time.
The bad news: World oil production is not increasing enough at this time.
The good news will go away; the bad news is here to stay.
Our main concern about Peak Oil is rising prices and runaway inflation. I think the time of world peak oil is a trailing indicator for the expected problems. Rising prices and inflation will lead the peak by many years because they’re caused by increased demand rather than declining production. We may not be ‘way beyond Peak Oil’, but it sure feels like it. The consequences are here now.