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Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby AirlinePilot » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 16:55:46

agramante,

Excellent point. I would add a very important addition and hopefully the Petro guys here can back me up. As we learn more about BOTH the Earth's crust AND finding oil we also better understand where we will find oil AND WHERE WE WILL NOT. I am fairly sure there are a few siesmologically, or volcanically active places which almost rule out finding oil there. I would also assume that places like the Atlantic ridge would pretty much be devoid of oil due to its geologic nature.
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Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby agramante » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 18:03:47

Yup, exactly. You'll go broke (or get fired) quickly these days just drilling in any old place--on the Canadian shield, for example, or the Mid-Atlantic Ridge as you suggested. Back in the really early days, I suppose, wildcatters could just set up shop close enough to an existing well and, free of any knowledge, tap by chance into the same formation, but that's not how it works any more, especially when you've got a mile of water and another mile or two of rock to get through. This is the area Rockman knows intimately, and I only hazily. And the POD (to borrow RM's phrase) is exactly the situation which the Limits to Growth described: you don't need to give specific dates and rates of change to have an overall view of system dynamics. It's most likely we'll recognize peak production for what it is only when we're unmistakably on the downward side. Possibly the economics are giving us a better real-time indication than production and reserves data are, but it's hard to say for sure. As I type, four drilling rigs, one drillship, and two production platforms are visible from the bridge of this vessel, but GoM production peaked in 2001. Some industry estimates have us passing that peak again in the next few years, and if we don't, it won't be for lack of trying.
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Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 18:31:47

AP – Actually on a mega picture scale we have a pretty good handle on where we might find oil. And we have a very clear picture where we won’t. For decades it’s been proven that the vast majority of the oceans have no commercial oil potential. While pelagic sediments anywhere in the oceans have the potential for hydrocarbon generation the system there is a lack of reservoir quality rocks and burial history.

While it may seem like we’ve gone far out exploring for oil we really haven’t. Consider the GOM as example. It’s one of the greatest hydrocarbon generating ovens on the planet. But the key was actually the Mississippi River. It has delivered trillions of tons of sediment into the basin which deposited the reservoir quality rocks we’re producing today. That huge sediment dump has also depressed the basin to a very deep geosyncline that allowed a thermal history to generate hydrocarbons.

The DW oil deposits were the last big surprise in N American oil exploration. There had been no expectation of a sediment transport system that would deliver reservoir quality sediments that far away from the coast line. But during the 50’s surface geology studies in Italy gave began offering hints of a possibility. Search “turbidite” if interested. But despite some folks thinking the DW GOM (as well as all other DW plays) are a new geologic development they aren’t. In 1975 I was working with GOM seismic data indicating this potential. Part of the reason I had the assignment was my master’s work at Texas A&M on turbidite fields in CA. Others long before that time saw the potential. This was the stimulus to develop the engineer tech to explore way out there. And that began over almost 40 years ago when the first DW GOM field was developed in 1976. Since then over 160 DW fields have been developed. IOW it ain’t a “new” discovery.

During this period DW plays around the world were evaluated. BTW the North Sea is not considered a DW play. Offshore west Africa still has a lot of potential on an individual field basis but again, on a regional scale, it’s potential been known for decades. The last big unknown regional oil potential is the Arctic. But not completely unknown as far as failures go. Many $billion have been spent over the decades proving where there isn’t potential. Shell’s efforts, as well as those off Greenland, are just the most recent failures. But there’s still potential so as long as oil prices stay high companies and companies will keep poking holes.

We’ve already discussed the fact that the Bakken, Eagle Ford, etc. are not newly discovered trends but plays that have also become commercial targets tanks to long established tech and current high oil prices.
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Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby John_A » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 20:21:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'H')ow could the Peak Oil Dynamic have "worked" so many decades before the oil age matured? The Spindletop field wouldn't peak for another 14 years. Saudi Arabia didn't even exist in 1913, much less pump oil.


Because once upon a time people thought there wasn't going to be any more found, or we were running out, or the estimates of how much were left were wrong. And they got scared and made all sorts of interesting claims and drove the price of oil up with that knowledge.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '')Before long there will be a smash. An economic crisis is approaching. American demand for
metals, cotton, and oil is so insatiable that a world-wide shortage in these commodities is
inevitable. One hundred and fifteen million people are feverishly tearing from the Earth its
irreplaceable wealth, using it to maintain a rate of growth unprecedented in all human history..”

Sir Edward Mckay Edgar, 1922


A decade before Colin Campbell was born. Makes you wonder if he was plagiarizing. Worldwide shortages and the growth was unprecedented!

The fear was real. Looks as ridiculous now as the claims in The Population Bomb, I understand that, even you understand that, but when it was happening, it was quite real.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '
')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('John_A', 'A')nd now we aren't talking about petroleum geology (the angle I feel has a much stronger basis) but economics.
Given your faulty assumption (above) it is not surprising the rest is gibberish. John, ideas attract attention, not grandstanding.


I wasn't making assumptions above. Feel free to read up on the topic.
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Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby John_A » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 20:24:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('agramante', ' ') But I think our physical understanding of the realities of peak oil are undeniably improved over one hundred years ago.


I agree. And 100 years from now, they will be better still. Us humans do have a knack for learning stuff.
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Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby agramante » Sat 01 Jun 2013, 20:47:15

In 100 years they'll be looking back at a long-past peak in oil production. What other conditions will obtain then I wouldn't venture to say with much certainty, other than there will most likely be fewer people on the planet than now.
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Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby John_A » Sun 02 Jun 2013, 10:37:06

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'W')ho is Sir Edward? Is he another Creationist whipping boy?"


A peak oiler. Peak metals. Peak population guy. In 1922.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', ' ') Yes the Ehrlichs were a bit premature, in geologic terms. But that is not too important, does not negate the finite earth.


You are correct, Ehrlich isn't important, and he didn't couch his claims in geologic time, but human time. In geologic time, sustainability, population concerns, peak oil, are all just a bad joke. The finite earth is doomed, and all that really remains to humans is to live, love, and appreciate what they have, as little, or as much, as that might be.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', '
') More relevant is EIA's awful 2003 projection. The agency predicted 105 mbpd for 2013. At least its optimism was almost reasonable, given that peak oil had not yet occurred. Now its rosy figures are downright laughable. :lol:


Projections are projections. Hubbert's 1956 world one was awful as well, 12 billion barrels a year? How blind is that? Colin Campbell predicted about 35 billion a day in 2013, how ignorant! You could argue that the EIA has done a better job because they recognize that the number was more likely to stay high, rather than the decrease projected by Hubbert and Campbell. But as Rockman has put forth, POD probably matters more than projections, fake dates put forward by fake prophets going up, down or sideways, because it encompasses the kind of price sensitivities that Colin and Hubbert didn't mention during their particularly bad projections.

I think POD has more potential for future discussion and invigorated website conversations than the endless distractions of who shot John when it comes time which date, by who, how awful, is ammo and gold more valuable than stored food when the zombies arrive, etc etc.
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Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby AirlinePilot » Sun 02 Jun 2013, 11:23:51

Dont know if folks have seen this thread I started here a while back but I believe it is appropo.....specifically the charts showing the gigantic fails based on no less than the EIA data. There is a reason they do this, but at least they are attempting to change their tune in the last few years.

http://peakoil.com/forums/the-fallacy-of-predicting-production-t64335.html
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Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby AirlinePilot » Sun 02 Jun 2013, 11:33:15

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('John_A', 'I') think POD has more potential for future discussion and invigorated website conversations than the endless distractions of who shot John when it comes time which date, by who, how awful, is ammo and gold more valuable than stored food when the zombies arrive, etc etc.


I agree with you here, but I also think that paying close attention to Global Net Exports and when actual global decline of oil (and shortly thereafter total liquids) is a noble exercise. I believe that the GNE picture is the direct effect of POD and it has more meaning than some arbitrary date at which we reach the peak. For me the Peak does not matter, its the geopolitical ramifications of how the markets are affected by declining exports. I think that will be the more immediate source of our problems going forward.
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Re: Will Peak Oil doom the peakoil.com website?

Unread postby ROCKMAN » Sun 02 Jun 2013, 13:21:29

AP – “I believe that the GNE picture is the direct effect of POD”. Actually in my inclusive definition of the POD the GNE is a critical component of the POD. And now I see the future GNE being affected even more by those refinery JV’s. But the date of PO whenever it was or will be is also part of the POD . The bottom line is that each factor has a level of impact. It seems that the collective is beginning to put the PO date as well as recent increases in US oil production in the proper perspective. Those are components of the POD but not the defining elements IMHO. System dynamics might have been a better tag than Peak Oil Dynamic bit I feel “POD” is much sexier than “SD”. LOL
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