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Peak Oil is You


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Page added on December 10, 2011

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Long-term energy boom beginning

General Ideas

In 1956, M. King Hubbert established the first scientific model behind peak oil to accurately predict the height of U.S. oil production.

Hubbert, a well-known geologist, theorized that oil production would peak between 1965 and 1970.

In 1971, oil production did indeed peak. And, for the last fifty years, Hubbert’s theory has held true as global oil production has been in gradual decline since that time. However, new discoveries in the Gulf and the rise of unconventional resource plays across the nation are drilling a metaphorical hole in the peak oil argument. America’s newfound resources are not only challenging peak oil, they are also building the case for U.S. energy independence.

According to data from the U.S. Energy Information Agency (EIA), U.S. oil production peaked at 9.6 million barrels, and despite shortterm reversals, has been in constant decline to 4.95 million barrels per day by 2008. But, today we see oil production on the rise.

U.S. oil production has seen a gradual increase to approximately 5.5 million barrels per day. A large portion of this increase has come from oil shale plays like the Bakken in North Dakota and the Eagleford in south Texas. On top of that, we are producing more natural gas than ever in history. In this year alone, we will have produced nearly 30 trillion cubic feet of natural gas from offshore and onshore resources.

Without question, the use of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing has unleashed these vast reserves and led to the inevitable lowering of US dependence on imported oil by a quarter from 60 percent of overall oil consumption a few years ago to about 46 percent currently.
On December 6th, the Institute for Energy Research released a groundbreaking report claiming that the amount of oil that is technically recoverable in the U.S. is more than 1.4 trillion barrels, with the largest deposits located offshore, in portions of Alaska, and in shale deposits throughout the country. The report estimates that when combined with resources from Canada and Mexico, total recoverable oil in North America exceeds nearly 1.7 trillion barrels.

To put this into perspective, the largest producer in the world, Saudi Arabia, has about 260 billion barrels of oil in proved reserves. It’s suggested that the technically recoverable oil in North America could fuel the U.S. with seven billion barrels per year for almost 250 years.

So, what does this mean for our energy future? For starters, it could mean the end of our reliance on imported oil from unfriendly nations.

In April 2006, Saudi Aramco admitted that it’s facing a national composite oil production decline of 2 percent per year, and its mature fields are declining at a rate of 8 percent per year. Additionally, OPEC has estimated that the world’s production of nonconventional oil will reach 8.4 million barrels a day by 2035. By then, they estimate that 6.6 million (or nearly 80 percent) of that will be produced in North America.

The global energy balance is shifting and the U.S. could soon find itself at the top of list of the world’s oil and gas producing countries.

While primary global sources of energy are in decline, the U.S. is experiencing a renaissance in fossil fuel production.

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4 Comments on "Long-term energy boom beginning"

  1. SilentRunning on Sun, 11th Dec 2011 12:47 am 

    “vast resources” – how can we EVER run out of “VAST”?

    Mere hype to buoy an industry that is in decline, and is clutching at ever lower quality and EROI sources – and to lull the public into sleep.

  2. BillT on Sun, 11th Dec 2011 3:07 am 

    I really get tired of these outright lies sold as “news”. There is no boom. There is a real decline in total energy available, every day, and that includes ALL forms.

    Total produced does NOT show how much of it was used to get that total. How many barrels of oil was used to get that increase in ‘renewables’ or how many barrels was used to get those barrels. The net is a loss, and it is getting bigger and bigger every day.

    If we ‘produce’ the energy equivalent of 10 million barrels per day, but use 2 million of those barrels to get that 10 million, that is not an ‘increase’ in energy available. It is a decrease. And next year it takes 3 million barrels to get those 10 million. And the next year…

  3. JR. Kiet on Sun, 11th Dec 2011 4:50 am 

    This article is sex, lies and videotape, but without the sex and the videotape.

  4. Harquebus on Mon, 12th Dec 2011 5:10 am 

    Who wrote this rubbish?

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