Register

Peak Oil is You


Donate Bitcoins ;-) or Paypal :-)


Page added on December 22, 2014

Bookmark and Share

Broken Energy Markets and the Downside of Hubbert’s Peak

Broken Energy Markets and the Downside of Hubbert’s Peak thumbnail

A few commenters have mentioned peak oil recently. I am cautious about making forecasts and predictions and prefer instead to observe and document the data as the peak oil story unfolds. I have in fact published a couple of charts recently illustrating aspects of peak oil, one showing a possible peak in the rest of the world that excludes N America and OPEC (Figure 1). The other showing the undulating plateau in conventional crude + condensate that has persisted since 2005 (Figure 2). In my last post on oil price scenarios two of those showed global oil production capacity 1 to 2 Mbpd lower in 2016 than 2014. If that comes to fruition, will we have passed peak oil but does it matter?

Figure 1 Global oil production has been split into three geo-political categories: 1) USA and Canada, 2) OPEC and 3) the Rest of the World (RoW). RoW production bears the hallmarks of having peaked in the period 2005 to 2010 and this has consequences for oil prices, demand and prosperity in parts of the world, especially the OECD. Most of the growth in oil supply has been in the USA and Canada where the market has been flooded with expensive oil. Data are crude oil + condensate + natural gas liquids (C+C+NGL) and exclude biofuels and refinery gains that are included by the IEA in their total liquids number.

The current “low oil price crisis” is providing a clear and new perspective on the nature of the peak oil problem. If low price does indeed destroy high cost production capacity then this will raise the question if the high cost sources can ever be brought back? IF low price kills the shale industry can it come back from the dead?

Figure 2 Conventional crude oil + condensate production has been on an undulating plateau just over 73 million barrels per day (Mbpd) since May 2005, that is for almost 10 years and despite record high oil prices!  Note that chart is not zero scaled in order to amplify details. Click chart for large version.

The response of the oil price to scarcity in the period 2002 to 2008 was for it to shoot up. And the response of the energy industries to scarcity and high price was to develop high cost sources of energy – shale oil and gas and renewables. The longevity and permanence of these new initiatives has always been dependent upon our ability and willingness to pay. Of course, most of us who have cars continued to use them but have perhaps subliminally modified our behaviour through driving less or buying more fuel efficient vehicles. OECD oil consumption has at any rate been in decline and robust economic growth has been elusive. Is this due to the peak oil story unfolding?

The global finance and energy system is unfortunately rather more complex than that. The creation and expansion of debt is of course central to creating demand for oil and other energy sources. Without QE the global economy may have died in 2009 and demand for oil with it. Gail Tverberg produced an interesting chart that may illustrate this point (Figure 3). However, back in 2008 / 09 OPEC trimmed 4 Mbpd from their production and this equally explains why the price rebounded so strongly then. The end of QE3 may have contributed to the recent fall in demand, but the price has fallen so precipitously because OPEC has not compensated by reducing production.

Figure 3 QE appears to have impacted demand for oil and may have created the lines of credit enabling energy companies to produce high cost gas and oil at a loss. But the oil price has been equally controlled by OPEC controlling supply. Chart by Gail Tverberg.

The big picture is made even more complex by climate concern and a growing raft of energy policies in Europe and the USA designed to reduce CO2 emissions while singularly failing to do so meaningfully. And so at a time when clear engineering thinking was required on how to tackle the potential impacts on society of energy scarcity in the global economy we got instead ‘Green Thinking’.  Future generations will look back on this era with bewilderment.

Against this backdrop, I will now  move on to the main topic of this post which is the concept of broken markets and Hubbert’s peak. For those who do not know, Hubbert’s peak is peak oil by another name and while wise guys may want to invent a multitude of definitions I will stick to the simple definition of the month or year when global oil production reached a maximum volume or mass and thereafter went into inexorable decline. The impact of this on Mankind is normally expected to be negative since oil is the lifeblood of the global economy. The reason for this happening could be because we discovered something better than oil that substituted oil out of existence (that wouldn’t be bad) or because of scarcity oil became too expensive to produce (perhaps where we are now) or because Greens in government like Ed Davey and Barack Obama set out to undermine the fossil fuel industries which just a few years ago I would have found impossible to believe. We live in interesting times.

The world economy as we know it runs on fossil fuels and in particular a relatively small number of truly gigantic fossil fuel reserves such as the Ghawar oil field in Saudi Arabia, the Black Thunder coal field in Wyoming and the Groningen gas field in The Netherlands. Both Ghawar and Groningen are showing signs of age, along with the hundreds of other super giant fossil fuel deposits. The stored energy in these deposits flows out at enormous rate and at little financial or energy cost. It is these vast energy supplies and surpluses that provide the global economy with economic surplus. It is indeed the lifeblood. But the world has run out of these super giant deposits to exploit and we are finding it increasingly difficult to find large enough numbers of their smaller cousins to keep the wheels of the global economy well oiled ;-)

The focus has thus turned to low grade resource plays. The resource plays offer near infinite amounts of energy but require large amounts of effort to gather that energy. The ERoEI is lower than what went before, perhaps much lower, but for so long as the energy return is positive, we have indeed learned that Man’s inventiveness and commitment can exploit these resources. One of the main questions I want to pose here is, is it possible for these resource plays to participate in the global economic system as it has existed for many decades that has become known to us as capitalism?

The first example of broken energy markets I want to look at is wind  power. Both onshore and in particular offshore wind are expensive forms of intermittent electricity. Wind advocates will argue that the intermittency does not matter and will point gleefully to the low electricity prices achieved when the wind blows strongly across Europe resulting in over-supply that dumps the price.  Wait a minute though, high cost and low price is a toxic mix that does not jive with capitalism. The more wind resource installed on the system the greater the size the unusable surplus and economic penalty becomes.

Why have the wind producers not gone out of business? It’s because the markets are rigged such the wind producers are given priority to market and receive a guaranteed price. This is a monopoly! The consumers don’t benefit because they have to pay the guaranteed price to the wind monopoly. The losses end up in the hands of the traditional generators who see their prices dumped and need to chew on the losses whilst providing the invaluable balancing services for free.

Providing back up services for when the wind doesn’t blow is another problem newly addressed in the UK with the new “capacity market”. The government is calling this a ‘market’ while it is in fact a component part of the wind monopoly. Companies are being paid to maintain generating capacity on stand by to cover periods when the wind doesn’t blow. Again the consumer has to foot the bill. One day quite soon, UK and other European governments are going to have to explain to their electorates why they have distorted the electricity market so badly, delivering a monopoly to wind producers, destroying the traditional market participants with the bill being met by the consumer who receives zero benefits. This can only be explained if it is underlain by rampant corruption or sheer stupidity.

The second example of a broken energy market I want to explore is the US shale industry.  This shares certain characteristics with the wind industry in that it is a high cost but potentially very large resource. But the mechanism for integration of this resource into the market is rather different. The problem with shale gas is that over-supply has resulted in the US gas price being dumped below the level where many shale operators can make a profit. Consumers in this case benefit through getting both secure and low priced gas. But the shale operators have reportedly racked up large losses that have been covered by expanding debt. These losses may yet come home to roost with the consumer if debt defaults result in a new credit crunch where the debts are socialised via government bailouts of the banking sector.

If it were possible to produce shale gas at $1 / million btus then everyone would be happy. Consumers would be getting secure and cheap energy and producers would be making handsome profits to distribute to shareholders. That is how capitalism is supposed to work. The system as it has operated seems broken.

US Light tight oil (LTO) production appears now to have created the same problem for the liquids plays where the entrance of expensive liquids in the market have contributed to the crash in the oil price. This has created risks for the LTO operators. It remains to be seen if the LTO sector sees mass insolvencies and default on loans that may socialise these losses. The introduction of high cost LTO has also undermined the whole of the higher cost component of the conventional oil sector. If LTO could be produced in large quantities for $20 / bbl then there would be no problem since this source would  go on to substitute for the higher cost conventional sources of supply. But with costs closer to $60-$80 this is not going to happen. The conundrum for capitalism is the introduction of large quantities of higher cost energy to the system.

At this point I have to admit that nuclear power may be subject to similar limitations. It is difficult to view the Hinkley Point new nuclear build in the UK as a triumph for the consumer or the country. A better way to manage such enormous capital expenditure on vital infrastructure is via the state. The costs may eventually be socialised to the tax payer, but at least the energy is reliable and amongst the safest forms of power generation ever developed and the taxation system distributes costs in an equitable way.

A form of society could undoubtedly exist powered by nuclear, wind and shale gas. But it would be a society supported by the state with far larger numbers working in the energy industries than now, producing lower surpluses, the energy production part perhaps running at a perennial loss. Those losses have to be covered by either higher price or via the taxation system. Either way, the brave new world that awaits us will be characterised as the time of less that will be in stark contrast to the time of plenty many of us enjoyed during the 20th Century.

Energy Matters by Euan Mearns



12 Comments on "Broken Energy Markets and the Downside of Hubbert’s Peak"

  1. Paulo on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 8:53 am 

    I thought this was an excellent article with Euan able to outline the situation of Society coming to grips with high cost plays distorting the energy marketplace. In this case, easy to obtain debt and financing for expensive LTO/Shale seems to play the same role of Govt mandate of renewables with instructions for conventional energy production to standby and augment the production shortfalls. The fact that these costs are passed on to the consumer matters not one wit. It is the same as taxation.

    Where I live in BC Canada this was done by the Liberal Govt., (which is really a right wing coalition), granting multi-nationals (with local presence and influence) access to run-of-the river electricity generation of large and small river systems. They then signed long-term contracts with these same ‘private’ companies to supply electricity to BC Hydro who then is forced to supply distribution. The only problem is that the current electricity rate is 7.5 cents per kw/hr for BC Hydro customers yet they are required to buy from the runner producers at up to 48 cents per kw/hr. There is now a general rate increase for all customers to blend the losses with profit/breakeven as well as to provide funding sources for new generation and infrastructure repair.

    Of course the ‘runners’ run away with their guaranteed revenues and once project construction is done there are very few jobs required to keep the bloodsucking projects operating.

    We have neither a ‘state’ operated system or a private system, but instead take the best of the state and funnel guaranteed profits to private investors. If this continues, BC Hydro, (which was once the jewel in our Provincial crown), will suffer from parasitic Govt. influence to the detriment of all.

    As Euan so eloquently states: “Those losses have to be covered by either higher price or via the taxation system. Either way, the brave new world that awaits us will be characterised as the time of less that will be in stark contrast to the time of plenty many of us enjoyed during the 20th Century.”

    Amen.

    regards….Paulo

  2. Jerry McManus on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 10:49 am 

    Trying to sustain the unsustainable, no matter what the cost, is like lifting a boulder over your head.

    The harder you push and the higher it goes the more it will hurt when gravity finally wins.

  3. Kenz300 on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 12:13 pm 

    Depletion of the worlds biggest and oldest plays continues…….

  4. Nony on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 2:09 pm 

    Shale gas was not government subsidized. And if you considered it a bubble, we are WELL past the price crash. What you have now is sustained volume with very low rig counts. Some of this is associated gas from liquids. But the major thing has been the Marcellus. Basically Berman, Rogers, et al. screwed up with their analogy of the Haynesville to the Marcellus. It really IS MIGHTY. Gas prices are LOW and volume is CLIMBING. That is a SUPPLY story. No way you can spin that as low demand.

  5. JuanP on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 4:06 pm 

    Good stuff! 😉 The graphs are great.
    This article covers the basics of what is going on at this point with oil production and markets in a way that is easy to understand.

  6. OFT on Tue, 23rd Dec 2014 8:33 am 

    Euan, while I agree that the UK market is fixed to ensure wind and nuclear energy gets a guaranteed share of market, I don’t agree that that is necessarily a sign of a ‘broken’ market. Governments and their societies hope to deliver benefits to the widest community and that may include higher taxation, to deliver long-term goals.

    In energy terms, one long term goal is to secure more energy from fossil fuel free sources; a second goal is to secure energy full stop – and not depend in bulk on a few suppliers (Russian gas, ME oil) where abrupt political events could easily break the supply chain.

    I understand that this can be a sensitive point in the US, but sometimes societies can benefit from higher taxation – most UK citizens would agree that a ‘free’ national healthcare system is a good and fair system; similarly long-term commitment to public transport enables us to travel widely across our country without the help of a (personal) 4 cylinder engine!

  7. Dragon Oil on Tue, 23rd Dec 2014 11:49 am 

    A rat cornered by a lion will fight for a way out of its dilema way above its fighting weight. Welcome to the energy industry! The lack of reliable energy in quantities that can support an expanding population at stable prices is that lion. The escaple hole the rat is looking for (I believe) is diesel fuel from methane hydrates (mobility)and the fixed energy escape hole is thorium reactors. Bothe are safe, long lasting, relatively cheap, and plentiful. We need a “can-do” attitude to accomplish these things. Who do we see about that?

    R. Spoley for Dragon

  8. Kenz300 on Wed, 24th Dec 2014 11:27 am 

    Diversify…diversify….diversify…….

    The solution for high oil prices is to move away from oil, gas and diesel……. far fewer diesel generators are being used……

    “Chile has been astute in taking advantage of these cost trends to build its renewables sector. It is ensuring that costs come down through competition by staging a series of auctions for renewable power licenses — the latest just this past week, coinciding with the Chile-Australia Business Forum. No fewer than 17 projects were solicited, with costs coming down to US$80 per megawatt hour (a bid by Santiago Solar). In contrast new coal-fired power plants are estimated by the U.S. Energy Information Administration to cost on average US$95.”

    ——————–

    Chile’s Mines Set Hot Pace for Renewables — Australia Take Note

    http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2014/12/chiles-mines-set-hot-pace-on-renewables-australia-take-note

  9. peakyeast on Sat, 27th Dec 2014 8:28 am 

    I am wondering if the shale-plays are being or will be kept alive during this price-war – by the government.

    Remember that Obama signed an executive order giving the government complete control over all resources, companies and people with skills.

    It would be fairly easy for the government to order the creditors to be lenient with the payback on the loans.

    Also the shale industry could easily be revived using similar tactics.

    All for the sake of national security – which it is !

  10. Nony on Sat, 27th Dec 2014 9:11 am 

    Obama has had lots of opportunities to give the industry a break (KXL, GOM, VACAPES, other pipeline right of ways being blocked by localities) and instead has lazily poked a finger in the eye. He’s not completely against the industry (wants to take credit for a success he had nothing to do with), but it’s not like he went to bat for the industry. Anyhow the real win is lower prices, so who cares if some Texans and North Dakotans get laid off (they don’t vote Donk anyways).

    The “exec order” sounds like tin foil nutter crap. You people should really step back and think about what normal people would think of your conspiracy theory stuff. How the heck should I trust your resource ANALYSIS if you always explain away any failed predictions with black helicopters. It’s non-falsifiable. It’s religion, not science.

  11. Kenz300 on Sat, 27th Dec 2014 10:34 am 

    “Executive Order” giving government complete control over resources”

    OMG — More made up Faux Noise and right wing radio “reporting” of nonsense presented as “facts”.

    The right wing propaganda machine spews out its half truths, lies and misinformation and some people mistakenly take it as “facts” rather than “opinion”.

    Always consider the sources of information and beware of their bias and agenda.

    The Murdoch empire and right wing radio are a spokesman for the RepubliCON party and the top 1%……

  12. peakyeast on Sat, 27th Dec 2014 3:29 pm 

    I have this strange little link from an obviously conspiracy website:

    http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2012/03/16/executive-order-national-defense-resources-preparedness

    Perhaps you should try to read it and understand what kind of powers and authority that are being delegates instead of stupidly shouting: conspiracy and tin foil hat..

    You know – those people shouting “conspiracy” and “tin foil hat” have had a real bad track record and looks most like dumbed down sheeple. – Or perhaps you dont remember all the snowden evidence that vindicated a vast number of “conspiracy theorists” about surveillance.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *