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Page added on October 16, 2012

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Global Oil Production Set to Skyrocket

Production

Climate change or no climate change, crude production is going up spectacularly

If you are at all concerned about the effect of the consumption of fossil fuels on climate change, brace yourself. It is inevitably going to grow dramatically, and soon. By 2020 – just eight years, according to a little-noticed research paper for the UK-based energy company BP by Harvard University’s Leonardo Maugeri, the world will be producing 49 million more barrels per day of crude and natural gas liquids than it is today.

Peak oil, that point when the world reaches its maximum rate of extraction and production begins terminal decline, apparently is nowhere on the horizon, according to the 86-page paper, produced for Harvard’s Belford Center for Science and International Affairs and titled Oil: The next Revolution.

The global implications of Maugeri’s research are frightening. Will Hickey, a Fulbright professor of energy and human resources and associate professor of management at Solbridge International School of Business in Daejeon, South Korea, pointed out in a YaleGlobal article carried in Asia Sentinel on Oct. 12 that arctic ice is melting and altering global weather, with seas rising and wildfires increasing, governments are simply ignoring the signs. A progressive tax on carbon emissions is absolutely essential, but no governments are willing to dare the political fallout from instituting one anywhere.

The American environmentalist and journalist Bill McKibben, writing this month in Rolling Stone Magazine, pointed out that May was the 327th consecutive month in which the temperature of the entire globe exceeded the 20th-century average, the odds of which occurring by simple chance were 3.7 x 1099, “a number considerably larger than the number of stars in the universe.”

Maugeri is hardly blind to the implications. Indeed, he writes, “A revolution in environmental and emission-curbing technologies is required to sustain the development of most unconventional oils – along with strong enforcement of existing rules. Without such a revolution, a continuous clash between the industry and environmental groups will force the governments to delay or constrain the development of new projects.” There seems to be no impetus for any such revolution, however, as both McKibben and Hickey argue. Instead, there is a wholesale campaign on the part of every country on the planet to find more fossil fuel resources and burn them. And they seem to be exceeding far beyond expectations. Fears at the turn of the century that fossil fuel production would be in terminal decline appear to be unfounded.

Maugeri acknowledges that his analysis could be subject to a significant margin of error, brought on by a possible new worldwide recession, a drastic retraction of the Chinese economy, a sudden resolution of the major political tensions affecting a big oil producer, or a collapse of the price of oil to below US$70 per barrel for benchmark Brent crude, the price at which most new technologies, like shale oil recovery, are viable.

Nonetheless, he writes: “This oil revival is spurred by an unparalleled investment cycle that started in 2003 and has reached its climax from 2010 on, with three-year investments in oil and gas exploration and production of more than US$1.5 trillion.” Fossil fuel production, he argues, is in for an unprecedented upsurge, with capacity of 110.6 million barrels of production per day, up from 93 million bpd in 2011.

But production is changing. Hydrological fracturing, horizontal drilling and oil shale exploitation are taking over from traditional deep well drilling. The shale/tight oil boom is not a temporary bubble but rather the most important revolution in the oil sector in decades, Maugeri writes.

While Saudi Arabia will continue to lead the world in both reserves and production, production is shifting back to the west, with interesting political implications. “This is a novelty, because three out of four of these countries are part of the western hemisphere, and one only – Iraq – belongs to the traditional center of gravity of the oil world, the Persian Gulf.”

That raises the possibility that the Western hemisphere could return to its pre-World War II status of theoretical oil self-sufficiency, and the United States could dramatically reduce its oil import needs. Over the next decades, the growing role of these so-called unconventional oils will make the Western hemisphere the new center of gravity of oil exploration and production.

The US in fact has the world’s second highest reserves after Saudi Arabia, followed by Russia. After Iraq, which is fourth, Canada and Brazil are fifth and sixth, with China seventh. All will have more capacity by 2020 than they have today. The four countries showing the highest potential in terms of effective production capacity growth are, in order, Iraq, the United States, Canada, and Brazil.

Only four of the current big oil suppliers – those with more than a million barrels per day of production capacity – face a net reduction of their production capacity by 2020, Maugeri writes. They are Norway, the United Kingdom, Mexico and Iran. For the latter two, the loss of production is primarily due to political factors. All other producers are capable of increasing or preserving their production capacity. In fact, by balancing depletion rates and reserve growth on a country-by-country basis, decline profiles of already producing oilfields appear less pronounced than assessed by most experts, being no higher than 2 to 3 percent on a yearly basis.

“The most surprising factor of the global picture, however, is the explosion of the US oil output,” the report notes. “Thanks to the technological revolution brought about by the combined use of horizontal drilling and hydraulic fracturing, the US is now exploiting its huge and virtually untouched shale and tight oil fields, whose production – although still in its infancy – is already skyrocketing in North Dakota and Texas.”

The Bakken/Three Forks tight oil formation in North Dakota and Montana, could become as big as big as one of the Persian Gulf producers. There are more than 20 big shale oil formations, especially the Eagle Ford Shale, where the recent boom is revealing a hydrocarbon endowment comparable to that of the Bakken Shale. Most of that shale oil is profitable prices ranging from US$50 to $65 per bbl, well below current prices.

Obstacles remain that could significantly reduce the US shale output, among them the inadequate US oil transport system, its refining structure, the amount of associated natural gas produced with shale oil, and environmental doubts about hydraulic fracturing, which is coming under increasing fire from environmentalists for groundwater pollution and other problems.

However, the analysis notes, after considering the risk factors and the depletion of currently producing oilfields, the US could produce 11.6 million barrels per day of crude and natural gas liquids by 2020, making the country the second largest oil producer in the world after Saudi Arabia. Biofuels could push up overall capacity to more than 13 million barrels per day, representing about 65 percent of current US consumption.

“Oil is not in short supply,” he concludes. “From a purely physical point of view, there are huge volumes of conventional and unconventional oils still to be developed, with no “peak-oil” in sight. The real problems concerning future oil production are above the surface, not beneath it, and relate to political decisions and geopolitical instability.”

asiasentinel.com



12 Comments on "Global Oil Production Set to Skyrocket"

  1. TIKIMAN on Tue, 16th Oct 2012 5:22 pm 

    49,000,000 MORE barrels?

    WTF is this guy smoking.

  2. Nuclear on Tue, 16th Oct 2012 6:20 pm 

    This guys must have got lot of money from OPEC.

    First of all, 2011 Oil production is only 88 million b/d according to BP stats and that too including Bio fuels. Its full of cooked up numbers.

  3. Nuclear on Tue, 16th Oct 2012 6:38 pm 

    Read this article guys
    http://www.argusmedia.com/News/Article?id=818367

    “At $90-95/bl oil and $10-11mn wells, “some of those wells aren’t economic to drill. ”

    So shale oil at Bakken costs $90-$95 and not $50 as some people say.

    So how can crude oil go below $70 as this guy “Maugeri” writes.

  4. Johny K. on Tue, 16th Oct 2012 6:49 pm 

    Daniel Yergin wrote the same bull$hit years ago

    oil production will increase by 40%

    money talks, bull$hit walks

  5. Beery on Tue, 16th Oct 2012 7:08 pm 

    “Peak oil, that point when the world reaches its maximum rate of extraction and production begins terminal decline, apparently is nowhere on the horizon…”

    He’s right there, because we passed it 7 years ago.

  6. GregT on Tue, 16th Oct 2012 8:22 pm 

    Well, he at least got one thing right. The US will not be energy independent.

  7. DC on Tue, 16th Oct 2012 9:31 pm 

    Maugeri is not a credible source. His bogus claims have been roundly refuted. Think of him as just another Daniel Yergin and can be safely ignored.

  8. cottager on Tue, 16th Oct 2012 9:44 pm 

    Thats it! Huge, even enormous ammounts of fuel. Wait. Is it cheap?

  9. James A. Hellams on Tue, 16th Oct 2012 10:48 pm 

    At 110.6 million barrels per day oil production, IF this can be achieved; this is more than 40 BILLION barrels of oil produced per year.

    With the total estimated oil left to be produced of 1.5 trillion barrels (estimated by USGS), the global oil production would be exhausted in 37.5 years!

    People who deny the reality of peak oil, will only serve to worsen the the anger and rage of the people; when the people discover that they have been horribly led into a false sense of security.

    Nowhere in this article, does the author state how many barrels of oil can be recovered: and nowhere does this individual render any account of the EROEI (energy return on energy investment) factor. In fact, he denies any geological constraints; by saying that the problems of supply are NOT based on what is under ground, but what is above ground.

    The fact IS that peak oil is a REALITY. Refusing to admit this, only serves to delay IMMEDIATE actions we are LONG OVERDUE in taking to prepare for the RAPIDLY APPROACHING end of the oil age.

    The world, as we know it today, is going to be radically changed. If we are not prepared or it, the suffering of humanity will be horrible beyond all imagination by any one.

  10. GregT on Wed, 17th Oct 2012 12:27 am 

    Most of us will not have the luxury of being able to afford oil far before 37 years is up. If I were a betting man, I would put my money on less than 15.

    I find it very surprising that so many cannot grasp what is occurring on a global scale right now.

    This was all taught as main stream curriculum in high school back in the seventies. Overpopulation, the greenhouse effect, food shortages, and oil as a finite resource, nothing new here.

    The scientists back then already had it mostly figured out. We have been warned for over 40 years. We didn’t listen then, and we are still not listening now.

  11. Tom on Wed, 17th Oct 2012 4:25 pm 

    One of the problems with “Peak Oil” is that we tend to think of it in terms of the bell shaped curve. If we had a keg of beer and a crew of hardy beer drinkers, and everyone knew that once the beer was gone there would be no more, do you think the consumption of that beer plotted over time on a chart would resemble a bell curve? More likely that the beer drinkers would consume the beer entirely without pausing or conserving the beer to make it last; and then only when finished, lament that there is no more beer. Such a curve would look like a cliff. Oil suppliers are likewise interested in having their money now as opposed to saving the oil for a better price in the future.

  12. Peakaustria on Wed, 17th Oct 2012 5:57 pm 

    @tom u r right it is like a Party! Drinking and consuming until nothing is left. 40 years knowledge didn’t change anything…

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