Friday, December 30, 2005

PEAK OIL ADVOCATES WRONG, EXPERT SAYS

Free Market News Network

Wednesday, December 28, 2005 - FreeMarketNews.comby staff reportsDr Vaclav Smil, a Distinguished Professor at the University of Manitoba at Winnipeg, who is also an award-winning researcher and the acclaimed author of a number of books on the subjects of energy, the biosphere and the civilization writes an article titled "Peak Oil: A Catastrophist Cult and Complex Realities," and can be viewed in PDF form here at the U. of Manitoba site. In the words of the author, the purpose of the article is to "dismantle the foundations of the new catastrophist cult" -- the conclusions by "peak oil advocates" (Colin Campbell, Kenneth Deffeys, et al.). These conclusions, in Dr Smil's view "are based on interpretations that lack any nuanced understanding of the human quest for energy, disregard the role of prices, ignore any historical perspectives, and presuppose the end of human inventiveness and adaptability." The author slams the "peak-oil groupies" with the accusation of spreading "the culture of doom," and raises the following key points to rebut their arguments, on which (the points) he then elaborates in the article.

[E] - The Outlook on Oil : Some Experts Worry That Production Will Soon Peak. Others Warn That It Already Has. (by Jim Motavalli)

[E] - The Outlook on Oil : Some Experts Worry That Production Will Soon Peak. Others Warn That It Already Has. (by Jim Motavalli)

In 1938, oil was discovered at Dhahran, near the Persian Gulf, and a small oasis became a modern city, complete with the sleek headquarters of the Saudi Aramco national oil company. If you’re an American or British oil worker, life is good in the Dhahran Hills, where homes in the suburban enclaves are made of brick or fieldstone, and despite the desert heat the gardens blossom with large shade trees, flowering bougainvillea and oleander. There are bike paths, a 27-hole golf course, a rugby field and horse stables.
Once life was like this for oil workers in Texas, where roadside oil wells were symbols of a new American prosperity. Oil drillers struck a geyser of black gold at Spindletop, near Beaumont, in 1901, and landowners were soon selling $100 tracts for $20,000 and more. Instant millionaires were created, leading to the cliché of the hick in cowboy boots who paid cash for his Cadillac. But today, after yielding 153 million barrels of oil, old Spindletop is mostly a museum site. Texas still has 129 billion barrels of oil, by some estimates, but it is located deep beneath the earth, making economic recovery difficult. The average well in Texas today produces nine barrels of oil a day, compared to 6,000 barrels in oil-rich Saudi Arabia.
But this situation, too, may be fluid. Despite the reliance on it evident in nearly all strategic energy planning, Saudi oil is also a finite resource, and some fear that the desert kingdom may be the next mega-producer to lose momentum.
Is the world running out of oil? Ask that question and the geologists and strategic planners will say you’re missing the point: We’ll no more “run out of oil” than we will run out of water in the ocean. About half of the world’s known reserves are still in the ground. The real issue, they say, is when will the planet reach the peak of oil production, after which a slow decline will inevitably clash with demand that grows at two percent per year. Finally, they add, we’ll stop producing oil altogether because it will become uneconomic or because technology will have moved on, not because we’ve pumped out the last drop.
The Great Debate
We’ve reached a dramatic crossroads, with highly credentialed experts coming to diametrically opposite conclusions about the future of the world’s oil supply. With consumers paying $2.50 or more for a gallon of gasoline at the same time ExxonMobil and other oil producers are raking in the largest corporate profits in history, we’re at least finally paying attention. So are we being manipulated by greedy oil companies, or is the shortage very real, demanding an abrupt about-face after more than 100 years of heavy reliance on a constant supply of relatively inexpensive oil?
Unfortunately, the more you talk to experts and immerse yourself in technical data about R/P ratios and constant decline rates, the more confused you become. Unlike the debate over climate change, which the skeptics lost long ago, the war of words over peak oil is still very much raging, with solid science on both sides.
But one conclusion is irrefutable: The age of cheap oil is definitely over, and even as our appetite for it seems insatiable (with world demand likely to grow 50 percent by 2025), petroleum itself will end up downsizing. And it’s unlikely that the high oil prices of 2005 will be a bubble, as was the 1970s fallout from the Arab oil embargo. Today, not only is oil getting harder to find in economically exploitable form, but the use of what remains is contra-indicated by the hard reality of global warming. Even if we had ample oil, in the long run we’d need to switch to renewables, anyway.
When will oil peak? A growing body of oil company geologists, oil executives, and investment bankers, including the influential American geologist L.F. Ivanhoe, see it happening by 2010. The Department of Energy (DOE) has given various estimates, ranging from 2016 to 2037. But many oil companies are skeptical it will ever happen, putting faith in higher prices and new technology (including horizontal drilling and 4-D exploration) spurring ever more productive exploration. Exploration will have to be very productive indeed to keep up with world demand, which the Defense Department’s Energy Information Administration (EIA) believes will grow from 78 million barrels per day in 2002 to 118 million barrels in 2025.
Are we on track to meet that growing demand? No, says a report by L.B. Magoon for the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). “Technology is great,” he wrote, “but it can’t find what’s not there. In the last five years, we consumed 27 billion barrels of oil a year, but the oil industry discovered only three billion barrels a year. So only one barrel was replaced for every nine we used!” Annual oil discoveries have been declining since 1965.
Might oil peak have already been reached? So said Iranian petroleum geologist Ali Samsam Bakhtiari last October: “In my humble opinion,” he said, “we should now have reached peak oil. So it is high time to close this critical chapter in the history of international oil industry and bid the mighty peak farewell.” And concurring is highly respected Irish geologist Colin Campbell, who said, also in October, “The maximum peak of production as far as the normal so-called oil has come [in 2005], after which there will be a long decline.”
The Trickle or the Geyser?
There’s no lack of firm conviction when it comes to oil. Robert Hirsch’s resumé includes stints at both Exxon and ARCO, and he’s now senior energy program advisor at the Science Applications International Corporation. “The ‘depletion’ folks by and large are not exaggerating the problem, particularly when you add in the risk dimension,” he said in an interview. “The oil reserves are very uncertain. Middle East politics and egos are in play, and the rest of the world is at great risk because there will be no quick fixes when depletion starts.”
In a report for the Atlantic Council of the U.S., Hirsch wrote that “the age of plentiful, low-cost petroleum is approaching an end,” and that “unless mitigation is orchestrated on a timely basis, the economic damage to the world economy will be dire and long lasting.” What’s more, Hirsch says, we won’t have much warning when oil peak is finally reached. Studying the examples of the U.S. (which reached peak oil production in 1970) and Great Britain (peak in 1999), Hirsch concludes that “it was not obvious that production was about to peak a year ahead of the event. In most cases, the peaks were sharp.”
So it’s business as usual, with the politicians in denial, until we finally see the oil peak in the rear-view mirror. The huge challenge is that, as a 2005 Department of Energy (DOE) analysis indicated, we risk a 20-year “severe liquid fuels problem” if we delay our planning for a post-petroleum energy economy until peak is actually reached. Even if we began a crash program 10 years before peak, the DOE report says we’ll still have a decade of hardship.
Peak oil may be closer than we think. The chief Cassandra today is probably oil analyst Matthew Simmons, whose views are not easily discredited because of his stellar credentials. Simmons, a sometime confidant of President Bush on oil matters, is chairperson and chief executive of the energy-oriented Simmons & Company International investment bank in Houston, and is a member of the National Petroleum Council and the Council on Foreign Relations. He writes in his book Twilight in the Desert, based on considerable research, that “Saudi Arabian oil production is at or very near its peak sustainable volume (if it did not, in fact peak almost 25 years ago), and is likely to go into decline in the very foreseeable future [emphasis in the original]. There is only a small probability that Saudi Arabia will ever deliver the quantities of petroleum that are assigned to it in all the major forecasts of world oil production and consumption.”
Simmons says that a few “super giant” oil fields in Saudi Arabia (including the massive Ghawar field, the world’s largest, discovered in 1953) account for 92 percent of the country’s crude oil output, and that these fields are aging and suffering from rising “water cut.” (Water is injected into mature oil fields to keep the oil flowing; it’s a sign they’re declining.)
Simmons told E, “In fact, the real risk is not the question of proven reserves, which is a very fuzzy area. The real story is that there are basically just five old, mature fields that account for 90 percent of all Saudi production, and a remarkably small number of wellheads that produce the oil from these fields. It leaves the Saudis with no diversification if any one of the fields suffer a production collapse.”
The implications of this are huge, since Saudi Arabia has the planet’s largest proven reserves and is the world’s largest oil exporter, from which the U.S. buys 1.5 million barrels a day (15 percent of our total consumption in 2004). Some 60 percent of the 20 million barrels of oil the U.S. consumes every day (enough to cover a football field with a column of oil 2,500 feet tall) is imported, and replacing the supply from Saudi Arabia would be no simple task.
DOE’s “International Energy Outlook 2005” projects that Saudi Arabia could be producing 20.4 million barrels of oil per day by 2025, twice its current production. The Saudis, some of them at least, are in synch with this scenario. Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi said at an oil conference in South Africa last September that it would “soon” add 200 billion barrels to its current reserve estimate of 264 billion barrels. He added that his country could easily produce more than the current 9.5 million barrels daily, but that limited refining capacity restrained the system’s ability to absorb more oil. “Give us the customers and we will pump more oil,” he said.
In a report for the Ross Smith Energy Group, petroleum engineer Jim Jarrell takes on Twilight in the Desert and other skeptical Saudi onlookers. He cites a 2000 USGS report that ranked Saudi Arabia number one worldwide in terms of undiscovered oil resource potential. Jarrell praises the Saudis for using conservative methods for assigning oil reserves, and for managing the resources carefully to allow only an “extremely flat” decline.
In an interview, Jarrell says, “Our report says we could find no evidence to support a concern that current Saudi production levels are near imminent and irreconcilable decline. In fact the evidence tells us that the Saudis are well informed and are operating their wells prudently.” But can the Saudis ramp up to 20 million barrels of oil a day, as confidently proclaimed by many? “I have no idea,” says Jarrell.
But neither Simmons nor Jarrell is on the ground in Saudi Arabia. Jarrell admits that determining actual reserve levels “would require a detailed reservoir-by-reservoir evaluation.” As Muhammed-Ali Zainy of London’s Centre for Global Energy Studies points out, we’ll just have to take Saudi Arabia’s word for its reserves and pumping capacity, since the nature of its closed society makes any oversight impossible.
Some of the most trenchant criticism of Saudi Arabian oil capacity comes from inside the Kingdom itself. Dr. Sadad al Husseini, the newly retired head of oil exploration and production for Saudi Arabia, told Britain’s Channel 4 in October that “it’s unrealistic for the world to be expecting such high numbers from all of the producers, including Saudi Arabia.” The hope that his country would be producing more than 20 million barrels of oil per day in the next two decades was “unrealistic,” he said, and “a dangerous basis for policy.” Al Husseini also said that he believed that world oil would peak at 95 million barrels per day in 2015.
“We don’t see us as the ones making sure the oil is there for the rest of the world,” an unnamed senior Saudi Aramco official told the New York Times in 2004. He further cautioned that even the attempt to get up to 12 million barrels a day would “wreak havoc within a decade,” by damaging the oil fields.
Simmons, who believes that major producers Iran, Iraq (yes, Iraq), Kuwait, Venezuela and Indonesia are “highly likely” to have passed peak, claims that it’s more likely that he’ll be living on the moon in 2025 than for Saudi Arabia to be producing 22 million barrels of oil per day. His views are echoed by another unimpeachable source, Edward O. Price, Jr., the former head of exploration for the national oil company Saudi Aramco. Price questions the existence of vast untapped oil reserves in Saudi Arabia, and points to a 20-year-old study by four American oil companies, then working with Aramco, that found, according to the New York Times, “little in the way of undiscovered oil reserves.”
A Gusher of Profit
As consumers suffer at the pumps, the oil companies themselves are floating on an ocean of record profits. The third quarter of 2005 showed $9.92 billion in earnings for ExxonMobil, $9.03 billion for Royal Dutch Shell and $6.53 billion for British Petroleum. In an attempt to deflect the blame, the oil giants are spending heavily on ad campaigns, such as an American Petroleum Institute (API) spot that urges consumers to turn down their thermostats, clean their furnace filters and weatherstrip their windows.
Further, the message is: “You’d better trust us, because we’re in trouble if you don’t.” Chevron says, “It took us 125 years to use the first trillion barrels of oil. We’ll use the next trillion in 30.” ExxonMobil’s ads note that “as the world grows, it will require about 50 percent more energy in 2030 than today.” But the latter company’s message that it has “consistently led the industry in research and technology” was somewhat undercut by its bland assertion, in USA Today, that it had no plans to invest its unprecedented earnings in renewable or alternative energy. “We’d rather re-invest in what we know,” said ExxonMobil spokesperson Dave Gardner.
In full-page newspaper ads, API claims that there is 131 billion barrels of oil just waiting to be discovered in the U.S. through offshore and Mountain West drilling, if only the “federal restrictions and permitting delays” were removed. The implication seems to be that the radically pro-Big Oil Bush administration and the appeasement-minded Congress aren’t doing enough.
API comes out swinging when angry politicians such as Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) call for a $20 billion per year clean energy fund paid for with a windfall tax on oil profits. “They seem to think our companies are owned by space aliens,” fumes John Felmy, API’s chief economist. “This is an attack on their own constituents who are invested in pension funds and 401k plans.” Asked where the public should direct its anger, Felmy points at “decades of government policy that has hindered the oil industry in its search for more oil.”
The only reason we’re not discovering any new oil, say Peter Huber and Mark Mills in a Wall Street Journal piece, is that “the cost of oil remains so low.” In other words, we keep buying oil from the Middle East because it’s cheaper than developing new sources, such as the 3.5 trillion barrels sunk in Venezuelan clay in the Orinoco basin and the Athabasca tar sands of Canada. Respected oil analyst Daniel Yergin, chairperson of Cambridge Energy Research Associates and author of The Prize, says that unconventional oil sources (tar sands, ultra-deep-water developments, natural gas liquids) will account for 30 percent of total capacity by 2010, up from 10 percent today.
There are huge technological (and environmental) hurtles to overcome before even a fraction of unconventional resources can be tapped. Some analysts doubt that much of this potential oil will ever be recovered. But others are bullish. Paul Kuklinski, an energy analyst with Boston Energy Research, says unconventional sources will increasingly come on line after 2020, when emerging technologies such as horizontal wells “will allow us to recover oil from wells that were considered unrecoverable, with much less impact on the environment.”
The oil industry makes forecasts of its own, and not surprisingly they show us dependent on petroleum for the foreseeable future. ExxonMobil President Rex Tillerson said in September that as much as three billion barrels of conventional oil are waiting to be recovered, and another seven trillion barrels may be lurking in the aforementioned unconventional sources, including tar sands and oil shale (see sidebar). The company’s “Outlook for Energy: A 2030 View,” published in 2004, forecasts 2.8 percent annual world economic growth in that period, accompanied by 1.5 percent growth in annual oil demand. Oil and gas, the report said, will account for 60 percent of new energy demand in the period under study. Wind and solar will grow 10 percent, it said, but still account for less than one percent of total energy use.
But even in the oil industry’s own “Outlook” report it’s possible to find some caveats. Although the report notes the aforementioned seven trillion barrels of unconventional oil, it doesn’t seem all that optimistic about exploiting them. A Bulletin of Atomic Scientists’ analysis of the report points out that ExxonMobil sees no significant contribution from oil shale even by 2030, and only a modest 3.3 percent contribution from Canadian oil sands (development of which may be hampered by a natural gas shortfall as described by Julian Darley of the Post Carbon Institute in his new book High Noon for Natural Gas: The New Energy Crisis).
Nevertheless, ExxonMobil’s assessment (echoed by a Bush administration heavily stacked with former oil executives) is consistently steady-as-she-goes, based on the assumption that all that oil is out there, and that neither renewable energy nor global warming will be a factor. ExxonMobil, in particular, is contemptuous of the former, and outright dismissive about the latter. “At ExxonMobil Corporation’s laboratories [in Annandale, New Jersey], there isn’t a solar panel or windmill in sight,” wrote the Wall Street Journal. “About the closest Exxon’s scientists get to ‘renewable’ energy is perfecting an oil that Exxon could sell to companies operating wind turbines.”
API’s Felmy dismisses renewables, and sees a future only for natural gas hidden in frozen methane hydrates (there are reportedly vast deposits in the U.S.) and cellulose ethanol, a fuel made from agricultural waste championed by former CIA chief James Woolsey, among others. But, as Earth Island Journal reports, methane hydrates are a potentially devastating global warming enhancer, and initial attempts to find and exploit deposits commercially have been disappointing. “To think about vast deposits that will be commercially exploitable, it’s my opinion it just won’t happen,” says Dr. Keith Kvenvolden, emeritus organic geochemist at USGS.
Counterattack
The peak oil chicken littles have resources of their own. There’s a growing mountain of books with titles like Power Down, The End of Oil, The Party’s Over, Crude Awakenings and The End of Fossil Energy. Websites include Oilcrisis.com, Peakoil.net, Peakoil.org, Lifeaftertheoilcrash.net, Hubbertpeak.com, Survivingpeakoil.com, and many more. They’re supported by groups like the Association for the Study of Peak Oil (ASPO). Their messages are similar: We’re heading for a major energy crash, with peak likely to be reached between 2006 (this year!) and 2016. According to Richard Heinberg’s Power Down, 24 of the 44 significant oil-producing nations are “clearly past their peak of production.” ASPO believes that all petroleum liquids will peak around 2007.
Most peak oil analysts point to a mysterious force known as the Hubbert Peak, which some believe to be infallible. In 1956, when American oil production was riding high, a leading oil geologist named Dr. Marion King Hubbert was widely ridiculed for publishing a paper claiming that the lower 48 states (excluding Alaska, which had yet to feel a drill bit) would reach a production peak between 1965 and 1970. It arrived right on schedule, in 1970, when U.S. oil topped out at 9.4 million barrels of oil per day. An extension of Hubbert’s Peak to world oil production would put us right at the very top of an upturned finger, in sharp contrast to the continuing upward climb predicted by the federal EIA. By 2080, the curve sees world oil slowed to a relative trickle.
Hubbert died in 1989, but not before he had predicted that global oil peak would occur between 1990 and 2000. Was he wrong? We may not know for some time, since oil peaks only become clear in rear-view mirrors.
Hubbert and his followers have their critics. One of the most combative and pugilistic of the debunkers is Michael C. Lynch, a research affiliate at MIT’s Center for International Studies and president of Strategic Energy and Economic Research Inc. “I scoff at poor analysis and unwarranted alarmism,” he told E. “I think the current market is driven by speculation, and that we will see relief in the next few months.”
Lynch derides Simmons’ Twilight in the Desert as “embarrassingly bad. He includes minimal data, but the data actually refutes his arguments.” He considers it “illogical” that Saudi Arabia would be pumping its oil reserves dry. “You never have a basin with a few giant fields and nothing else,” he says.
And, in a 2003 article for Oil & Gas Journal, Lynch also took on the Hubbert Peak itself. Using arguments Richard Heinberg in Power Down describes as “well worn,” Lynch outlines a “major theoretical flaw” in the “very simplistic” curve. He says that the oil pessimists rely too heavily on geology, when in fact “demand determines production, not geology.”
Lynch says the Hubbert Peak only appears to have validity, since mature oil production grows very slowly, with new fields representing no more than a small proportion of existing fields. Peak oil gurus like Campbell and petroleum consultant Jean H. Laherrere “have apparently rediscovered the Hubbert curve, but without understanding it,” Lynch writes. He denies that oil production necessarily follows a Hubbert-like bell curve, pointing to Campbell’s work that shows production for 51 non-OPEC nations “and only eight of them could be said to resemble a Hubbert curve even approximately.” The Hubbert curve, Lynch argues, “originally held as scientific and inviolable, is of no particular value.”
At the end of the day, Lynch is one of the last bears on oil prices. Oil crises are short-term affairs, he says, and the general price trend is downward. “The possibility of a price drop so rapid that OPEC can’t stabilize the market at the level they want is real,” he said last May. In this, Lynch directly challenges such respected oil observers as Goldman Sachs, which last March floated the idea of oil prices reaching $105 a barrel by 2007. “We believe oil markets may have entered the early stages of what we have referred to as a ‘super spike’ period—a multi-year trading band of oil prices high enough to meaningfully reduce energy consumption and recreate a spare capacity cushion only after which will lower energy prices return,” said company analysts.
Another prominent voice, Jeffrey Rubin, chief economist for Canada’s Imperial Bank of Commerce, believes prices will reach $100 a barrel by late 2007 (translating into $4 a gallon at the pumps). Again, the problem is too little oil chasing too much demand. “The gap between supply and demand grows as much as three million barrels a day by 2008,” Rubin said. “Global oil needs are almost 84 million barrels a day now.”
It’s impossible to escape the conclusion that we’re steaming full speed into a train wreck of monumental proportions. Obviously, the world made do without oil for millennia (indeed, a graph of oil in the context of human history makes petroleum appear to be a very brief episode). But we’re incredibly dependent on it now, and not just for transportation and home heating.
Consider the fact that the average piece of food travels 1,500 miles before it reaches your plate. Geologist Dale Allen Pfeiffer has pointed out that it takes 10 calories of fossil fuel to produce one calorie of food eaten in the U.S. Pesticides are made from oil, and commercial fertilizers from natural gas. Farming machinery, increasingly complex in recent years, runs on oil and was built using it.
Building a desktop computer consumes 10 times it weight in fossil fuels. A single 32-megabyte DRAM chip requires 3.5 pounds of fossil fuels to make. The average car consumes 27 to 54 barrels of oil…not on the road, but in the factory.
Because our way of life is so intimately connected to cheap oil, critics like James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency, see a profound realignment of society ahead. “We are going to have to live a lot more locally and a lot more intensively on that local level,” Kunstler said in a 2005 speech in Hudson, New York. “Industrial agriculture, as represented by the Archer Daniels Midland/soda pop and Cheez Doodle model of doing things, will not survive the end of the cheap oil economy. The implication of this is enormous. Successful human ecologies in the near future will have to be supported by intensively farmed agricultural hinterlands. Places that can’t do this will fail….What goes for the scale of places will be equally true for the scale of social organization. All large-scale enterprises, including many types of corporations and governments will function very poorly in the post-cheap oil world.”
Kunstler may be understating the human ingenuity factor, and he quickly dismisses the potential for alternative energy, from wind power to solar and biofuels (see sidebar). It’s hard to imagine, as he does, big cities and suburbs emptying out because we simply won’t have access to cheap oil (and can’t keep the air conditioning running). But it’s far more likely a scenario than the cheerful Energy Information Administration charts showing ever-rising oil reserves in the Middle East, with production meeting demand simply because, well, it has to.
Jared Diamond discusses one of the critical stops on the road map to societal failure in his book Collapse: “It turns out that societies often fail even to attempt to solve a problem once it has been perceived.” What happens, he writes, it that “some people may reason correctly that they can advance their own interests by behavior harmful to other people…The perpetrators know they will often get away with their bad behavior, especially if there is no law against it or the law isn’t effectively enforced. They feel safe because the perpetrators are typically concentrated (few in number) and highly motivated by the prospect of reaping big, certain and immediate profits, while the losses are spread over large numbers of individuals.”
Diamond isn’t specifically talking about oil companies and their mega-profits, but his scenario offers a precise explanation for the West’s failure to act in the face of clear and present energy danger. With the oil companies and their supporters in Congress and the White House not only controlling the debate but assuring the public that a steady hand is at the tiller, we may very well drift toward the kind of abrupt collapse Diamond documents as having taken down the Vikings, the Mayans and the mysterious tribe that inhabited Easter Island. Instead of cryptic stone statues, we may leave behind rusting oil derricks and highways that lead nowhere. Research assistance by Mike LaTronica, Jayasudha Joseph and Daniel Scollan.

[E] - The Outlook on Oil : Some Experts Worry That Production Will Soon Peak. Others Warn That It Already Has. (by Jim Motavalli)

[E] - The Outlook on Oil : Some Experts Worry That Production Will Soon Peak. Others Warn That It Already Has. (by Jim Motavalli)

In 1938, oil was discovered at Dhahran, near the Persian Gulf, and a small oasis became a modern city, complete with the sleek headquarters of the Saudi Aramco national oil company. If you’re an American or British oil worker, life is good in the Dhahran Hills, where homes in the suburban enclaves are made of brick or fieldstone, and despite the desert heat the gardens blossom with large shade trees, flowering bougainvillea and oleander. There are bike paths, a 27-hole golf course, a rugby field and horse stables.
Once life was like this for oil workers in Texas, where roadside oil wells were symbols of a new American prosperity. Oil drillers struck a geyser of black gold at Spindletop, near Beaumont, in 1901, and landowners were soon selling $100 tracts for $20,000 and more. Instant millionaires were created, leading to the cliché of the hick in cowboy boots who paid cash for his Cadillac. But today, after yielding 153 million barrels of oil, old Spindletop is mostly a museum site. Texas still has 129 billion barrels of oil, by some estimates, but it is located deep beneath the earth, making economic recovery difficult. The average well in Texas today produces nine barrels of oil a day, compared to 6,000 barrels in oil-rich Saudi Arabia.
But this situation, too, may be fluid. Despite the reliance on it evident in nearly all strategic energy planning, Saudi oil is also a finite resource, and some fear that the desert kingdom may be the next mega-producer to lose momentum.
Is the world running out of oil? Ask that question and the geologists and strategic planners will say you’re missing the point: We’ll no more “run out of oil” than we will run out of water in the ocean. About half of the world’s known reserves are still in the ground. The real issue, they say, is when will the planet reach the peak of oil production, after which a slow decline will inevitably clash with demand that grows at two percent per year. Finally, they add, we’ll stop producing oil altogether because it will become uneconomic or because technology will have moved on, not because we’ve pumped out the last drop.
The Great Debate
We’ve reached a dramatic crossroads, with highly credentialed experts coming to diametrically opposite conclusions about the future of the world’s oil supply. With consumers paying $2.50 or more for a gallon of gasoline at the same time ExxonMobil and other oil producers are raking in the largest corporate profits in history, we’re at least finally paying attention. So are we being manipulated by greedy oil companies, or is the shortage very real, demanding an abrupt about-face after more than 100 years of heavy reliance on a constant supply of relatively inexpensive oil?
Unfortunately, the more you talk to experts and immerse yourself in technical data about R/P ratios and constant decline rates, the more confused you become. Unlike the debate over climate change, which the skeptics lost long ago, the war of words over peak oil is still very much raging, with solid science on both sides.
But one conclusion is irrefutable: The age of cheap oil is definitely over, and even as our appetite for it seems insatiable (with world demand likely to grow 50 percent by 2025), petroleum itself will end up downsizing. And it’s unlikely that the high oil prices of 2005 will be a bubble, as was the 1970s fallout from the Arab oil embargo. Today, not only is oil getting harder to find in economically exploitable form, but the use of what remains is contra-indicated by the hard reality of global warming. Even if we had ample oil, in the long run we’d need to switch to renewables, anyway.
When will oil peak? A growing body of oil company geologists, oil executives, and investment bankers, including the influential American geologist L.F. Ivanhoe, see it happening by 2010. The Department of Energy (DOE) has given various estimates, ranging from 2016 to 2037. But many oil companies are skeptical it will ever happen, putting faith in higher prices and new technology (including horizontal drilling and 4-D exploration) spurring ever more productive exploration. Exploration will have to be very productive indeed to keep up with world demand, which the Defense Department’s Energy Information Administration (EIA) believes will grow from 78 million barrels per day in 2002 to 118 million barrels in 2025.
Are we on track to meet that growing demand? No, says a report by L.B. Magoon for the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS). “Technology is great,” he wrote, “but it can’t find what’s not there. In the last five years, we consumed 27 billion barrels of oil a year, but the oil industry discovered only three billion barrels a year. So only one barrel was replaced for every nine we used!” Annual oil discoveries have been declining since 1965.
Might oil peak have already been reached? So said Iranian petroleum geologist Ali Samsam Bakhtiari last October: “In my humble opinion,” he said, “we should now have reached peak oil. So it is high time to close this critical chapter in the history of international oil industry and bid the mighty peak farewell.” And concurring is highly respected Irish geologist Colin Campbell, who said, also in October, “The maximum peak of production as far as the normal so-called oil has come [in 2005], after which there will be a long decline.”
The Trickle or the Geyser?
There’s no lack of firm conviction when it comes to oil. Robert Hirsch’s resumé includes stints at both Exxon and ARCO, and he’s now senior energy program advisor at the Science Applications International Corporation. “The ‘depletion’ folks by and large are not exaggerating the problem, particularly when you add in the risk dimension,” he said in an interview. “The oil reserves are very uncertain. Middle East politics and egos are in play, and the rest of the world is at great risk because there will be no quick fixes when depletion starts.”
In a report for the Atlantic Council of the U.S., Hirsch wrote that “the age of plentiful, low-cost petroleum is approaching an end,” and that “unless mitigation is orchestrated on a timely basis, the economic damage to the world economy will be dire and long lasting.” What’s more, Hirsch says, we won’t have much warning when oil peak is finally reached. Studying the examples of the U.S. (which reached peak oil production in 1970) and Great Britain (peak in 1999), Hirsch concludes that “it was not obvious that production was about to peak a year ahead of the event. In most cases, the peaks were sharp.”
So it’s business as usual, with the politicians in denial, until we finally see the oil peak in the rear-view mirror. The huge challenge is that, as a 2005 Department of Energy (DOE) analysis indicated, we risk a 20-year “severe liquid fuels problem” if we delay our planning for a post-petroleum energy economy until peak is actually reached. Even if we began a crash program 10 years before peak, the DOE report says we’ll still have a decade of hardship.
Peak oil may be closer than we think. The chief Cassandra today is probably oil analyst Matthew Simmons, whose views are not easily discredited because of his stellar credentials. Simmons, a sometime confidant of President Bush on oil matters, is chairperson and chief executive of the energy-oriented Simmons & Company International investment bank in Houston, and is a member of the National Petroleum Council and the Council on Foreign Relations. He writes in his book Twilight in the Desert, based on considerable research, that “Saudi Arabian oil production is at or very near its peak sustainable volume (if it did not, in fact peak almost 25 years ago), and is likely to go into decline in the very foreseeable future [emphasis in the original]. There is only a small probability that Saudi Arabia will ever deliver the quantities of petroleum that are assigned to it in all the major forecasts of world oil production and consumption.”
Simmons says that a few “super giant” oil fields in Saudi Arabia (including the massive Ghawar field, the world’s largest, discovered in 1953) account for 92 percent of the country’s crude oil output, and that these fields are aging and suffering from rising “water cut.” (Water is injected into mature oil fields to keep the oil flowing; it’s a sign they’re declining.)
Simmons told E, “In fact, the real risk is not the question of proven reserves, which is a very fuzzy area. The real story is that there are basically just five old, mature fields that account for 90 percent of all Saudi production, and a remarkably small number of wellheads that produce the oil from these fields. It leaves the Saudis with no diversification if any one of the fields suffer a production collapse.”
The implications of this are huge, since Saudi Arabia has the planet’s largest proven reserves and is the world’s largest oil exporter, from which the U.S. buys 1.5 million barrels a day (15 percent of our total consumption in 2004). Some 60 percent of the 20 million barrels of oil the U.S. consumes every day (enough to cover a football field with a column of oil 2,500 feet tall) is imported, and replacing the supply from Saudi Arabia would be no simple task.
DOE’s “International Energy Outlook 2005” projects that Saudi Arabia could be producing 20.4 million barrels of oil per day by 2025, twice its current production. The Saudis, some of them at least, are in synch with this scenario. Saudi oil minister Ali al-Naimi said at an oil conference in South Africa last September that it would “soon” add 200 billion barrels to its current reserve estimate of 264 billion barrels. He added that his country could easily produce more than the current 9.5 million barrels daily, but that limited refining capacity restrained the system’s ability to absorb more oil. “Give us the customers and we will pump more oil,” he said.
In a report for the Ross Smith Energy Group, petroleum engineer Jim Jarrell takes on Twilight in the Desert and other skeptical Saudi onlookers. He cites a 2000 USGS report that ranked Saudi Arabia number one worldwide in terms of undiscovered oil resource potential. Jarrell praises the Saudis for using conservative methods for assigning oil reserves, and for managing the resources carefully to allow only an “extremely flat” decline.
In an interview, Jarrell says, “Our report says we could find no evidence to support a concern that current Saudi production levels are near imminent and irreconcilable decline. In fact the evidence tells us that the Saudis are well informed and are operating their wells prudently.” But can the Saudis ramp up to 20 million barrels of oil a day, as confidently proclaimed by many? “I have no idea,” says Jarrell.
But neither Simmons nor Jarrell is on the ground in Saudi Arabia. Jarrell admits that determining actual reserve levels “would require a detailed reservoir-by-reservoir evaluation.” As Muhammed-Ali Zainy of London’s Centre for Global Energy Studies points out, we’ll just have to take Saudi Arabia’s word for its reserves and pumping capacity, since the nature of its closed society makes any oversight impossible.
Some of the most trenchant criticism of Saudi Arabian oil capacity comes from inside the Kingdom itself. Dr. Sadad al Husseini, the newly retired head of oil exploration and production for Saudi Arabia, told Britain’s Channel 4 in October that “it’s unrealistic for the world to be expecting such high numbers from all of the producers, including Saudi Arabia.” The hope that his country would be producing more than 20 million barrels of oil per day in the next two decades was “unrealistic,” he said, and “a dangerous basis for policy.” Al Husseini also said that he believed that world oil would peak at 95 million barrels per day in 2015.
“We don’t see us as the ones making sure the oil is there for the rest of the world,” an unnamed senior Saudi Aramco official told the New York Times in 2004. He further cautioned that even the attempt to get up to 12 million barrels a day would “wreak havoc within a decade,” by damaging the oil fields.
Simmons, who believes that major producers Iran, Iraq (yes, Iraq), Kuwait, Venezuela and Indonesia are “highly likely” to have passed peak, claims that it’s more likely that he’ll be living on the moon in 2025 than for Saudi Arabia to be producing 22 million barrels of oil per day. His views are echoed by another unimpeachable source, Edward O. Price, Jr., the former head of exploration for the national oil company Saudi Aramco. Price questions the existence of vast untapped oil reserves in Saudi Arabia, and points to a 20-year-old study by four American oil companies, then working with Aramco, that found, according to the New York Times, “little in the way of undiscovered oil reserves.”
A Gusher of Profit
As consumers suffer at the pumps, the oil companies themselves are floating on an ocean of record profits. The third quarter of 2005 showed $9.92 billion in earnings for ExxonMobil, $9.03 billion for Royal Dutch Shell and $6.53 billion for British Petroleum. In an attempt to deflect the blame, the oil giants are spending heavily on ad campaigns, such as an American Petroleum Institute (API) spot that urges consumers to turn down their thermostats, clean their furnace filters and weatherstrip their windows.
Further, the message is: “You’d better trust us, because we’re in trouble if you don’t.” Chevron says, “It took us 125 years to use the first trillion barrels of oil. We’ll use the next trillion in 30.” ExxonMobil’s ads note that “as the world grows, it will require about 50 percent more energy in 2030 than today.” But the latter company’s message that it has “consistently led the industry in research and technology” was somewhat undercut by its bland assertion, in USA Today, that it had no plans to invest its unprecedented earnings in renewable or alternative energy. “We’d rather re-invest in what we know,” said ExxonMobil spokesperson Dave Gardner.
In full-page newspaper ads, API claims that there is 131 billion barrels of oil just waiting to be discovered in the U.S. through offshore and Mountain West drilling, if only the “federal restrictions and permitting delays” were removed. The implication seems to be that the radically pro-Big Oil Bush administration and the appeasement-minded Congress aren’t doing enough.
API comes out swinging when angry politicians such as Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-NY) call for a $20 billion per year clean energy fund paid for with a windfall tax on oil profits. “They seem to think our companies are owned by space aliens,” fumes John Felmy, API’s chief economist. “This is an attack on their own constituents who are invested in pension funds and 401k plans.” Asked where the public should direct its anger, Felmy points at “decades of government policy that has hindered the oil industry in its search for more oil.”
The only reason we’re not discovering any new oil, say Peter Huber and Mark Mills in a Wall Street Journal piece, is that “the cost of oil remains so low.” In other words, we keep buying oil from the Middle East because it’s cheaper than developing new sources, such as the 3.5 trillion barrels sunk in Venezuelan clay in the Orinoco basin and the Athabasca tar sands of Canada. Respected oil analyst Daniel Yergin, chairperson of Cambridge Energy Research Associates and author of The Prize, says that unconventional oil sources (tar sands, ultra-deep-water developments, natural gas liquids) will account for 30 percent of total capacity by 2010, up from 10 percent today.
There are huge technological (and environmental) hurtles to overcome before even a fraction of unconventional resources can be tapped. Some analysts doubt that much of this potential oil will ever be recovered. But others are bullish. Paul Kuklinski, an energy analyst with Boston Energy Research, says unconventional sources will increasingly come on line after 2020, when emerging technologies such as horizontal wells “will allow us to recover oil from wells that were considered unrecoverable, with much less impact on the environment.”
The oil industry makes forecasts of its own, and not surprisingly they show us dependent on petroleum for the foreseeable future. ExxonMobil President Rex Tillerson said in September that as much as three billion barrels of conventional oil are waiting to be recovered, and another seven trillion barrels may be lurking in the aforementioned unconventional sources, including tar sands and oil shale (see sidebar). The company’s “Outlook for Energy: A 2030 View,” published in 2004, forecasts 2.8 percent annual world economic growth in that period, accompanied by 1.5 percent growth in annual oil demand. Oil and gas, the report said, will account for 60 percent of new energy demand in the period under study. Wind and solar will grow 10 percent, it said, but still account for less than one percent of total energy use.
But even in the oil industry’s own “Outlook” report it’s possible to find some caveats. Although the report notes the aforementioned seven trillion barrels of unconventional oil, it doesn’t seem all that optimistic about exploiting them. A Bulletin of Atomic Scientists’ analysis of the report points out that ExxonMobil sees no significant contribution from oil shale even by 2030, and only a modest 3.3 percent contribution from Canadian oil sands (development of which may be hampered by a natural gas shortfall as described by Julian Darley of the Post Carbon Institute in his new book High Noon for Natural Gas: The New Energy Crisis).
Nevertheless, ExxonMobil’s assessment (echoed by a Bush administration heavily stacked with former oil executives) is consistently steady-as-she-goes, based on the assumption that all that oil is out there, and that neither renewable energy nor global warming will be a factor. ExxonMobil, in particular, is contemptuous of the former, and outright dismissive about the latter. “At ExxonMobil Corporation’s laboratories [in Annandale, New Jersey], there isn’t a solar panel or windmill in sight,” wrote the Wall Street Journal. “About the closest Exxon’s scientists get to ‘renewable’ energy is perfecting an oil that Exxon could sell to companies operating wind turbines.”
API’s Felmy dismisses renewables, and sees a future only for natural gas hidden in frozen methane hydrates (there are reportedly vast deposits in the U.S.) and cellulose ethanol, a fuel made from agricultural waste championed by former CIA chief James Woolsey, among others. But, as Earth Island Journal reports, methane hydrates are a potentially devastating global warming enhancer, and initial attempts to find and exploit deposits commercially have been disappointing. “To think about vast deposits that will be commercially exploitable, it’s my opinion it just won’t happen,” says Dr. Keith Kvenvolden, emeritus organic geochemist at USGS.
Counterattack
The peak oil chicken littles have resources of their own. There’s a growing mountain of books with titles like Power Down, The End of Oil, The Party’s Over, Crude Awakenings and The End of Fossil Energy. Websites include Oilcrisis.com, Peakoil.net, Peakoil.org, Lifeaftertheoilcrash.net, Hubbertpeak.com, Survivingpeakoil.com, and many more. They’re supported by groups like the Association for the Study of Peak Oil (ASPO). Their messages are similar: We’re heading for a major energy crash, with peak likely to be reached between 2006 (this year!) and 2016. According to Richard Heinberg’s Power Down, 24 of the 44 significant oil-producing nations are “clearly past their peak of production.” ASPO believes that all petroleum liquids will peak around 2007.
Most peak oil analysts point to a mysterious force known as the Hubbert Peak, which some believe to be infallible. In 1956, when American oil production was riding high, a leading oil geologist named Dr. Marion King Hubbert was widely ridiculed for publishing a paper claiming that the lower 48 states (excluding Alaska, which had yet to feel a drill bit) would reach a production peak between 1965 and 1970. It arrived right on schedule, in 1970, when U.S. oil topped out at 9.4 million barrels of oil per day. An extension of Hubbert’s Peak to world oil production would put us right at the very top of an upturned finger, in sharp contrast to the continuing upward climb predicted by the federal EIA. By 2080, the curve sees world oil slowed to a relative trickle.
Hubbert died in 1989, but not before he had predicted that global oil peak would occur between 1990 and 2000. Was he wrong? We may not know for some time, since oil peaks only become clear in rear-view mirrors.
Hubbert and his followers have their critics. One of the most combative and pugilistic of the debunkers is Michael C. Lynch, a research affiliate at MIT’s Center for International Studies and president of Strategic Energy and Economic Research Inc. “I scoff at poor analysis and unwarranted alarmism,” he told E. “I think the current market is driven by speculation, and that we will see relief in the next few months.”
Lynch derides Simmons’ Twilight in the Desert as “embarrassingly bad. He includes minimal data, but the data actually refutes his arguments.” He considers it “illogical” that Saudi Arabia would be pumping its oil reserves dry. “You never have a basin with a few giant fields and nothing else,” he says.
And, in a 2003 article for Oil & Gas Journal, Lynch also took on the Hubbert Peak itself. Using arguments Richard Heinberg in Power Down describes as “well worn,” Lynch outlines a “major theoretical flaw” in the “very simplistic” curve. He says that the oil pessimists rely too heavily on geology, when in fact “demand determines production, not geology.”
Lynch says the Hubbert Peak only appears to have validity, since mature oil production grows very slowly, with new fields representing no more than a small proportion of existing fields. Peak oil gurus like Campbell and petroleum consultant Jean H. Laherrere “have apparently rediscovered the Hubbert curve, but without understanding it,” Lynch writes. He denies that oil production necessarily follows a Hubbert-like bell curve, pointing to Campbell’s work that shows production for 51 non-OPEC nations “and only eight of them could be said to resemble a Hubbert curve even approximately.” The Hubbert curve, Lynch argues, “originally held as scientific and inviolable, is of no particular value.”
At the end of the day, Lynch is one of the last bears on oil prices. Oil crises are short-term affairs, he says, and the general price trend is downward. “The possibility of a price drop so rapid that OPEC can’t stabilize the market at the level they want is real,” he said last May. In this, Lynch directly challenges such respected oil observers as Goldman Sachs, which last March floated the idea of oil prices reaching $105 a barrel by 2007. “We believe oil markets may have entered the early stages of what we have referred to as a ‘super spike’ period—a multi-year trading band of oil prices high enough to meaningfully reduce energy consumption and recreate a spare capacity cushion only after which will lower energy prices return,” said company analysts.
Another prominent voice, Jeffrey Rubin, chief economist for Canada’s Imperial Bank of Commerce, believes prices will reach $100 a barrel by late 2007 (translating into $4 a gallon at the pumps). Again, the problem is too little oil chasing too much demand. “The gap between supply and demand grows as much as three million barrels a day by 2008,” Rubin said. “Global oil needs are almost 84 million barrels a day now.”
It’s impossible to escape the conclusion that we’re steaming full speed into a train wreck of monumental proportions. Obviously, the world made do without oil for millennia (indeed, a graph of oil in the context of human history makes petroleum appear to be a very brief episode). But we’re incredibly dependent on it now, and not just for transportation and home heating.
Consider the fact that the average piece of food travels 1,500 miles before it reaches your plate. Geologist Dale Allen Pfeiffer has pointed out that it takes 10 calories of fossil fuel to produce one calorie of food eaten in the U.S. Pesticides are made from oil, and commercial fertilizers from natural gas. Farming machinery, increasingly complex in recent years, runs on oil and was built using it.
Building a desktop computer consumes 10 times it weight in fossil fuels. A single 32-megabyte DRAM chip requires 3.5 pounds of fossil fuels to make. The average car consumes 27 to 54 barrels of oil…not on the road, but in the factory.
Because our way of life is so intimately connected to cheap oil, critics like James Howard Kunstler, author of The Long Emergency, see a profound realignment of society ahead. “We are going to have to live a lot more locally and a lot more intensively on that local level,” Kunstler said in a 2005 speech in Hudson, New York. “Industrial agriculture, as represented by the Archer Daniels Midland/soda pop and Cheez Doodle model of doing things, will not survive the end of the cheap oil economy. The implication of this is enormous. Successful human ecologies in the near future will have to be supported by intensively farmed agricultural hinterlands. Places that can’t do this will fail….What goes for the scale of places will be equally true for the scale of social organization. All large-scale enterprises, including many types of corporations and governments will function very poorly in the post-cheap oil world.”
Kunstler may be understating the human ingenuity factor, and he quickly dismisses the potential for alternative energy, from wind power to solar and biofuels (see sidebar). It’s hard to imagine, as he does, big cities and suburbs emptying out because we simply won’t have access to cheap oil (and can’t keep the air conditioning running). But it’s far more likely a scenario than the cheerful Energy Information Administration charts showing ever-rising oil reserves in the Middle East, with production meeting demand simply because, well, it has to.
Jared Diamond discusses one of the critical stops on the road map to societal failure in his book Collapse: “It turns out that societies often fail even to attempt to solve a problem once it has been perceived.” What happens, he writes, it that “some people may reason correctly that they can advance their own interests by behavior harmful to other people…The perpetrators know they will often get away with their bad behavior, especially if there is no law against it or the law isn’t effectively enforced. They feel safe because the perpetrators are typically concentrated (few in number) and highly motivated by the prospect of reaping big, certain and immediate profits, while the losses are spread over large numbers of individuals.”
Diamond isn’t specifically talking about oil companies and their mega-profits, but his scenario offers a precise explanation for the West’s failure to act in the face of clear and present energy danger. With the oil companies and their supporters in Congress and the White House not only controlling the debate but assuring the public that a steady hand is at the tiller, we may very well drift toward the kind of abrupt collapse Diamond documents as having taken down the Vikings, the Mayans and the mysterious tribe that inhabited Easter Island. Instead of cryptic stone statues, we may leave behind rusting oil derricks and highways that lead nowhere. Research assistance by Mike LaTronica, Jayasudha Joseph and Daniel Scollan.

Goldman's Murti Says `Peak Oil' Risks Sending Prices Above $105

Bloomberg.com: Germany

Dec. 19 (Bloomberg) -- Goldman Sachs Group Inc. analyst Arjun Murti, who roiled oil markets in March by saying crude may reach $105 a barrel, now says that may be conservative if the ``peak oil'' theory is right and world supplies are running out.
The belief that the world's oil supply is close to an irreversible drop is no longer ``on the fringes'' of the market, said a research report by New York-based Murti, who forecasts oil of $50 to $105 a barrel until 2009. UBS AG analyst James Hubbard, a former oil engineer at Schlumberger Ltd., said an inevitable decline in supply will start sooner and be worse than expected unless investment increases for many years.
A jump above $105 a barrel ``is possible if we don't invest the right amount of money,'' Hubbard said in an interview in London. ``There will be a peak in production earlier than expected, and that post-peak decline will be more dramatic than currently assumed unless there is a sustained increase in investment in oil and gas production, greater consumer efficiency and alternative energy sources.''
While Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi and Exxon Mobil Corp. President Rex Tillerson say oil supplies will last for decades, energy traders are increasingly debating the amount of available crude. Oil's two-year jump to about $60 a barrel came as rising demand from China surprised suppliers, who had failed to spend on new pipelines, rigs and refineries.
Investors who back the peak oil theory, such as Boone Pickens, a Dallas hedge fund manager and former oil executive, have fueled the price rally of the past two years, during which oil almost doubled, to reach a record $70.85 in August. Prices ended last week at $58.06 in New York.
`Easy Oil'
The peak oil theory is based partly on the work of M. King Hubbert, a former Royal Dutch Shell Plc geophysicist who accurately predicted in 1949 that U.S. domestic onshore oil production would plateau by about 1970.
Chevron Corp., the second-largest U.S.-based oil company, in its advertising declares, ``One thing is clear: The era of easy oil is over.'' Estimates vary on how much oil remains to be produced and when supplies will peak.
Tillerson in September told the World Petroleum Congress in Johannesburg that a U.S. Geological Survey estimate of 2 trillion barrels of conventional oil reserves still to be recovered is conservative, with the range of possibility as high as 7 trillion barrels. Less than 1 trillion have been pumped already.
Goldman's Murti in March skirted the peak oil debate. In a report last week, the analyst said it's something to monitor.
``It is possible that the peak oil theorists are correct,'' he wrote. ``If so, we think that the duration and magnitude of energy commodity price increases would be likely to far exceed what we are contemplating.'' He couldn't be reached for comment.
More Oil Coming
Without a peak in production, Murti expects the price of New York oil to fall to about $35 a barrel in New York between 2010 and 2014. That matches forecasts from Schroders Plc for $35.50 by 2010 and is lower than Merrill Lynch & Co. predictions for $40 to $45 by the end of the decade.
The debate and high prices are contributing to an increase in investment in new technologies that will help keep oil flowing, said UBS's Hubbard, who wrote in October that some 3 trillion barrels probably remain to be pumped.
Murti ranked third last year among researchers who cover oil and gas companies, according to Institutional Investor magazine.
Goldman, the second-biggest U.S. securities firm, estimates about $50 billion is invested in its commodity index, where crude oil has largest weighting. The bank's view is that oil will average $68 a barrel in New York next year. Prices may stay close to $60 for ``three to five years'' before falling to ``$45 at the most'' by 2010, Jeffrey Currie, the bank's head for commodities research in London, said in August.
Longer Plateau
The International Energy Agency, an adviser to 26 industrialized nations, said in a 150-page book in September that technological improvements will help increase world oil supplies, dismissing the peak oil theory. The IEA expects $3 trillion of investment for each the oil and gas industries through 2030.
``Most commentators, putting aside the depletion argument, do take the view that at least over that period through 2010 supplies will be made available,'' said John Waterlow, an analyst at Wood Mackenzie Consultants Ltd. in Edinburgh.
Oil-producing nations are seeking to extend the life of their reserves. Norway, which ranks behind Saudi Arabia and Russia in world oil exports, forecasts its production will peak in 2008. Oil and Energy Minister Odd Roger Enoksen in a Dec. 8 interview said he thinks it will come later.
``We had thought we would very quickly see a strong drop in oil production, but now we expect to keep it at a plateau for longer,'' he said.
The biggest questions center around Saudi Arabia, the world's largest oil exporter. The most vocal skeptic of Saudi Arabia is Matthew Simmons, chairman of energy investment bank Simmons & Co. He's author of ``Twilight in the Desert: The Coming Saudi Oil Shock and the World Economy,'' in which he argues that fields are about to decline because water injection has damaged reservoirs.
The nation doesn't open its industry to scrutiny. Of known oil reserves, Saudi Arabia holds about a fourth. Minister Al-Naimi in Johannesburg said its holdings may be 200 billion barrels more than a current estimate of 264 billion.

The Peaks and Valleys Of Oil Dependence: Worldwatch Institute News

The Peaks and Valleys Of Oil Dependence: Worldwatch Institute News

December 15, 2005
The Peaks and Valleys Of Oil Dependence
Plus the Precautionary Principle Demystified, Cost-Saving Energy Tips and More in the January/February 2006 issue of World Watch
Washington, DC—Although no one knows for sure when oil production will "peak," nearly everyone in the January/February issue of World Watch magazine's Peak Oil Forum agrees that the age of oil will end—and the time to start transitioning to alternatives is now. While industry representatives such as Red Cavaney of the American Petroleum Institute argue that failure to develop "the potentially vast oil and natural gas resources that remain in the world" will have a high economic cost, others, such as Worldwatch Institute's Christopher Flavin, argue that "the current path—continually expanding our use of oil on the assumption that the Earth will yield whatever quantity we need—is irresponsible and reckless."
A lack of transparency in the world oil market makes assessing oil reserves a guessing game, with figures in official oil reports often based as much on politics as geology: nearly three-quarters of the world's oil is controlled by state-owned companies, whose reserve figures are never audited. "We know that oil production will peak within our lifetime, we are pretty sure that market prices will not anticipate this peak, and we know that not having alternatives in place at the time of the peak will have tremendous economic and social consequences," says Robert K. Kaufmann, an energy economist at Boston University. "Doing too little now in the name of economic efficiency will appear in hindsight as rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic."
While some proponents of "peak oil" like to proffer doomsday scenarios, the Peak Oil Forum participants highlight the opportunity to engage human ingenuity as one resource that won't peak. "Unless we believe, preposterously, that human inventiveness and adaptability will cease the year the world reaches the peak annual output of conventional crude oil, we should see that milestone…as a challenging opportunity rather than as a reason for cult-like worries," says Vaclav Smil, a professor at the University of Manitoba.
While we will never wake up to the headline, "World Runs Out of Oil," says Kaufmann, before production declines to very low levels, the peak will mark a point of no return that will affect every aspect of modern life. "As oil becomes dearer," writes Smil, "we will use it more selectively and more efficiently, and we will intensify a shift that has already begun." Says Flavin: "Roughly $30 billion was invested in advanced biofuels, giant wind farms, solar manufacturing plants, and other technologies in 2004, attracting companies such as General Electric and Shell to the fasting growing segment of the global energy business."
Kjell Aleklett, president of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas, recognizes the development quandary posed by peak oil, noting that it may be necessary to double global GDP to "achieve any kind of decent life" in poor countries. But the examples of Sweden and China in the 20th century suggest that doubling GDP will require doubling global oil production—which is unlikely given growing consumer demands and shrinking supplies. "Can this be done?" writes Aleklett. "And can the planet tolerate the increase in CO2 emissions?"
PRECAUTIONARY PRINCIPLE
The precautionary principle is implicit in everyday life, writes Gary Gardner, Worldwatch Institute's Director of Research, in "First, Do No Harm." But no such caution surrounds economic interventions, probably because our planet and its societies have long been viewed as robust enough to absorb the complications of our scientific and business activities. "Because the precautionary principle challenges so many assumptions about how societies ought to advance, it is the target of strong critiques," writes Gardner. Some critics charge that it is anti-science, because it values the views of a non-specialist public that may be influenced more by fears than facts. Other critics ask how it is possible to prevent harmful outcomes which by definition are not known. Still others assert that adherence to the principle will stifle innovation, because it sets such a high bar for safety.
But proponents approach the issue of safety from a different perspective and with a different set of questions, notes Gardner. "If safe alternatives to a product or substance exist, why accept even a small, highly uncertain risk?" Other advocates of precaution note that current regulations are not protecting the public, while still others warn about the consequences of releasing potentially lethal new products or processes into an increasingly crowded and integrated world.
WHAT THE CLIMATE NEEDS: POLITICS
In "Climate Change: What the World Needs Now is…Politics," Eban Goodstein charges that the old solutions to climate change—focus on individual morals and changing attitudes—need to give way to politics. Where environmentalists have focused on lifestyle changes, combined with public education and lobbying—strategies that evolved in the 1970s and 1980s as a response to the gains made in the civil rights struggle—a virulent anti-government ideology in Washington has rendered traditional grassroots pressure tactics ineffective. "We do need to talk about values, but our focus needs to be on right and wrong policies, not right and wrong people," writes Goodstein. "Government—our collective voice—has consistently made the morally wrong choices, subsidizing big fossil fuel producers and failing to support clean energy technologies." Goodstein explains that experiences in his home state of Oregon show how such new approaches are garnering positive outcomes.
CUTTING ENERGY COSTS THIS WINTER
In this month's "Green Guidance," Mindy Pennybacker cites several ways to cut costs this winter, with weather-spiked fuel shortages and rising energy prices giving our wallets the chills this season. Installing energy-efficient compact fluorescent light bulbs, laundering your clothes in cold water, and using power strips for home electronics and office machines are just some of the many ways to give your pocketbook a respite. Pennybacker also notes that laptops, which use as little as one-fifth of the energy of a desktop computer, are smart choices for home electronics.
ENVIRONMENTAL INTELLIGENCE: FEATURED TOPICS
Denmark Most "Development-Friendly" Donor Country; Japan Lags
New Imaging Techniques Reveal Greater Amazon Logging
Government Studies Show Health Benefits of Workplace Smoking Bans in Ireland and Norway
IPCC on Carbon Storage: Two Cheers
Nepal Brings Clean Bio-energy to Rural Communities
Nitrogen: Too Much of a Good Thing?
MATTERS OF SCALE
Sun, Oil
World energy production from oil, 2003…….……………………….148 quadrillion Btu*
Energy production from “new” renewable sources (excludes large hydroelectric power plants)…….…………………………6 quadrillion Btu
Energy production from all renewables (includes large hydro), ………………………………………………..….33 quadrillion Btu
* * *
World annual average growth in wind generating capacity, 2000–2004………+28 percent
Annual average growth in solar photovoltaic generating capacity.……………+32 percent
Annual average growth in biofuels (ethanol, biodiesel) production..………….+18 percent
Annual average growth in oil production……………………………………..+1.6 percent
Total increase in oil production, 1970–2003…………………………………..+52 percent
Total increase in renewable energy production (excluding large hydro)…….+269 percent
* * *
Annual government subsidies for renewables
(European Union and United States)………………………………...≈ $10 billion
Annual subsidies for fossil energy (global)……..…………………..….. $150–250 billion
* * *
Estimated number of jobs in new renewable manufacturing, operations,
and maintenance, 2004…………………………………………………1.7 million
Jobs in oil and natural gas extraction (United States only), 2002.……………..…123,000
* British thermal units

Peak Oil Scenario Planning - Raise the Hammer (ISSN: 1715-1554)

Peak Oil Scenario Planning - Raise the Hammer (ISSN: 1715-1554)

By Lakis PolycarpouDec. 14, 2005
As we creep ever further into the new millennium, it is becoming increasingly clear (the highly doubtful claims of "cornucopians" notwithstanding) that the age of oil will soon be ending.
Oil is a finite resource. Its production will, at some point, peak and begin to decline, and there are numerous indications that we are at or past that point.
The picture for natural gas is slightly more complex, but potentially more dire in the short-term, as gas supplies in North America and the U.K. are in decline, and gas is not easily shipped overseas.
What will become of suburbia, where most North Americans now live and depend on oil and natural gas for transportation, home heating, and a large percentage of electricity generation?
Peak oil experts and commentators paint visions of the future that range from mildly pessimistic to apocalyptic. But the truth is that no one knows exactly how much energy will be available at any given point in the depletion era, or how different regions and populations will respond.
Rather than engage in pointless debates about precisely what will happen, it makes far more sense-especially at the regional and local levels-to begin serious planning based on differing scenarios, with the awareness that changes could come in phases and that any model must adjust to reality as it unfolds.
As an example, one could project three hypothetical scenarios for a typical, middle-class suburb:
Best-Case Scenario
In the best-case scenario, the rapid adoption of efficiency measures, renewable energies and synthetic fuels (including biofuel, if it can be produced with a significant net energy gain) gives society a long lead-time to adjust to depletion, gradually reducing its energy consumption to a sustainable level.
A series of recessions causes serious economic hardship for many, but also reduces energy demand. Energy substitutions in the developing world (from heating oil to natural gas and coal, for example) keep transportation fuel affordable, if expensive, in the short- to middle-term. Enlightened national leadership combined with market forces reverses the trend toward sprawl.
Strategies
In this case, successful localities execute a long-term plan to stop sprawl and develop downtowns and main streets where they exist (or build them where they do not), and gradually shift toward a more sustainable (and sane) living arrangement, centered around relatively dense, walkable towns and neighborhoods connected by public transit with goods supplied by electric rail.
Policies to encourage local agriculture and the rebuilding of regional economies reverse globalization, saving energy. Some people notice a decline in perceived standard of living, but are compensated by the elimination of many economic distortions caused by the current globalization regime.
Middle Case Scenario
In the middle case, personal transportation in suburbia rapidly becomes unaffordable, and high oil prices spark either massive inflation or trigger a series of severe recessions.
Assuming policy makers use both the financial and legislative means available to avoid mass bankruptcies, suburbanites keep their houses, but find living in them increasingly difficult. Long commutes that cannot be accomplished through public transportation end.
Residents cut back drastically on consumption, bankrupting many chain merchants. Food is available, but very expensive, and there are regular spot shortages, leading to epidemics of hunger and malnutrition.
Home heating in cold climates becomes a serious problem; many families take periodic refuge in shelters. Work does not disappear, but jobs become increasingly scarce.
Strategies
In this case, suburbanites survive with an ad hoc combination of car share co-ops, efficient vehicle purchases, biking, telecommuting and local gardening. Whenever possible, people install wood or even coal-burning stoves for heating, along with solar panels.
Towns and cities do better if they focus on facilitating organic changes (by building or designating bike paths and rewriting zoning rules to provide maximum flexibility, for example) rather than resisting them.
In this scenario, the importance of electricity becomes paramount. The grid still works to an extent, but electricity prices escalate rapidly, and there are sporadic blackouts which make ordinary business difficult. Places where small-scale solar, wind or mini-hydroelectric power is available do much better.
Worst-Case Scenario
In the worst case, an economic crash causes mass bankruptcies. Collapse is not confined to one sector; everyone is affected. Global trade breaks down; nothing is available that's not produced locally.
National authorities take action, but are overwhelmed by the scale of the crisis; attempts to increase efficiency and develop alternatives come too late and accomplish too little. Gas rationing takes effect.
The food production chain also breaks down. In some areas, food supplies are so scarce that large numbers of people starve, while more successful regions soon find themselves overwhelmed by oil crash refugees.
Work as we know it vanishes, though trade and barter still exist.
Strategies
At the local or neighborhood level, communities do better by developing a collective mindset, setting up co-ops or other legal structures to keep loan defaulters afloat and living in their own homes.
This is in the interest of everyone; the alternative is either a rapid depopulation of neighborhoods-a neither safe nor economically sustainable outcome for those who remain-or an epidemic of illegal squatting, with former owners staying on in homes they have defaulted on but have not been evicted from.
In the final scenario, energy intensive technology disappears, but the importance of knowledge remains. Skills for growing food, making clothes, insulating buildings, and fixing household items become vital.
Preparation for the final scenario includes the establishment of seed-banks and knowledge centers to disseminate information on how to most efficiently grow food on available land, using Permaculture, Grow Biointensive, or similar organic methods.
For a small investment, local governments could also sponsor classes on wood and metal working and other forgotten skills. After the crash, residents in successful suburbs could be encouraged to set up "cottage" industries, perhaps through a system of microloans.
Conclusion
In all cases, a mindset of using existing infrastructure is less important than one of refusing to allow blight to take hold.
Abandoned strip malls, for example, should not be allowed to fester for years as decaying buildings; rather, they should be torn down and either returned to farmland or converted to higher-density, mixed-use neighborhoods.
Even with oil supplies in decline, it seems at least plausible that a great portion of the resources now spent building sprawl could be diverted to retrofitting and revitalizing suburbia.
If, instead of building more spread out, single use neighborhoods and strip-malls, we used our current building energy for infill development (using principles of density, walkability and mixed use currently associated with "New Urbanism" but known since Jane Jacobs wrote The Death and Life of Great American Cities in 1961), we could begin generating an ever-more efficient economy, and perhaps stretch out the tail of oil depletion.
The highest priority, then, should be to stop current and future sprawl development.
Scenario planning is not a new concept, but for some reason the idea of local governments preparing for peak oil - despite the fact that no one disputes that oil is a finite resource - has not taken hold.
But if local governments are able to develop response plans for the relatively unlikely event of a terrorist attack, then is it too much to ask that they consider how to respond to the eventual certainty of oil and gas depletion?
~
Lakis Polycarpou writes about energy depletion and society on his blog at http://www.nea-polis.net. He lives in New York City with his wife and two children.

Tuesday, December 27, 2005

El coste modera el consumo de carburantes

CincoDias.com -

Cinco D�as / MADRID (27-12-2005)


La demanda global de productos petrol�feros en Espa�a durante los diez primeros meses del a�o ascendi� a 62,26 millones de toneladas, cifra que supone un incremento del 2,5% respecto a igual periodo de 2004, informa el Ministerio de Industria. Sin embargo, en el mes de octubre registr� un descenso del 4,4%, en buena parte empujado por la subida de los precios.

Durante los diez primeros meses, el consumo de gases licuados de petr�leo (GLP) disminuy� el 1% y gasolinas el 5,6%, hasta 1,8 y 6,1 millones de toneladas respectivamente, seg�n datos del Bolet�n Estad�stico de Hidrocarburos.

Los gas�leos, el combustible m�s demandado, crecieron el 4,5%, hasta alcanzar una cifra de 28,2 millones de toneladas, y los querosenos se situaron en 4,3 millones de toneladas, el 7,2% m�s.

La demanda de fuel se situ� en 11,4 millones de toneladas, el 6,6% m�s que en los diez primeros meses de 2004, mientras que el cap�tulo de otros productos retrocedi� el 2,8% (10,2 millones de toneladas).

En octubre el consumo de productos petrol�feros disminuy� el 4,4% frente al mismo periodo del a�o pasado, hasta 5,58 millones de toneladas, gracias a la ca�da de la demanda de todos los derivados menos del petr�leo menos los querosenos.

Los fuel�leos en octubre cayeron el 17,1%, hasta 976.000 toneladas, seguido de las gasolinas, que con 590.000 toneladas disminuyeron el 5,9%. El consumo de GLP en ese mes descendi� el 2,4% y el de gas�leos el 0,9%, hasta un total de 2,7 millones de toneladas, mientras que el de querosenos creci� el 3,2%, hasta 437.000 toneladas.

En cuanto al gas natural, el consumo de esta materia prima en los diez primeros meses del a�o creci� el 19,1% respecto a igual periodo del a�o anterior, hasta alcanzar un total de 305.744 gigavatios a la hora (GWh), de los que 257.155 GWh correspondi� al mercado liberalizado, el 84,1% del total, y el resto al mercado a tarifa. El sector el�ctrico absorbi� 90.747 GWh, el 29,6% del total.

En octubre la demanda de gas natural ascendi� a 28.541 GWh, el 7,3% m�s, y se registr� un incremento del mercado liberalizado, que creci� el 11,1% respecto al mismo mes de 2004 y una disminuci�n del consumo en el mercado a tarifa, que cay� el 16,5%.

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

Russia to Cut Off Gas Supplies to Ukraine

Russia to Cut Off Gas Supplies to Ukraine - Yahoo! News

MOSCOW - Russia will cut off natural-gas supplies to Ukraine if no compromise is reached by Jan. 1 in a dispute over prices, officials with Russia's state-run gas monopoly said Tuesday, markedly raising the stakes in the increasingly acrimonious dispute.

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Gas giant Gazprom also gave a tough rebuttal to Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko's proposal that price hikes for Russian gas supplies be gradually implemented. Moscow has proposed tripling its gas prices immediately.

In an interview with the Kremlin-backed satellite TV channel Russia Today, Gazprom Chief Executive Officer Alexei Miller said time was running out for reaching a new contract with Ukraine.

"If no compromise over Russian gas supplies to Ukraine is found before the New Year, the supplies will be stopped," Miller said, according to Russia Today.

About 80 percent of the natural gas Russia exports to Europe passes through Ukraine, which gets almost half of its gas imports from Russia.

"If we don't have a contract (with Ukraine) then all the gas in the pipe goes to European consumers," Gazprom spokesman Sergei Kuprianov said in comments on Ekho Moskvy radio.

"We want to avoid this situation, but we are preparing for a negative development," Kuprianov said.

Ukraine's state-run gas company Naftogaz Ukraina refused to comment. Ukraine's Fuel and Energy Minister Eduard Zanyuk was traveling in the gas-rich Central Asian nation of Turkmenistan and could not be located for comment.

Russia has proposed more than tripling the price it charges Ukraine for gas from the current $50 per 1,000 cubic meters. Ukraine has rejected the proposal, saying it would undermine the nation's industry.

A drastic spike in gas prices would also hit homeowners hard, since most apartments and residences in the poor former Soviet nation rely on gas for heating and cooking.

On Monday, Yushchenko promised that his country would guarantee Russian natural gas deliveries to Europe, and proposed an agreement whereby Ukraine would shift gradually to paying market prices for Russian gas.

Kuprianov said, however, in comments on state-run television that the proposal was "absolutely unacceptable." Such an arrangement could stretch the process over several years, he said. Negotiations that stretched late into the night Monday ended unsuccessfully, he said: "The talks ended with nothing."

Russian President Vladimir Putin struck a hard line last week, saying Ukraine's economy had seen fast growth this year and the government in Kiev had received substantial privatization revenues and Western loans.

Against the backdrop of its disagreements with Kiev, Russia has also pushed for alternate pipeline routes to supply gas to Europe.

Last week, Russian and German dignitaries marked the symbolic beginning for a pipeline that is to stretch along the Baltic seabed to Germany, allowing Russia to bypass the Ukrainian pipeline routes, as well as another that goes through Poland and Belarus.

Shell Lacks Oil Sources, Merrill Says, Telegraaf Reports

Bloomberg.com: U.K.

Dec. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Royal Dutch Shell Plc isn't succeeding in finding enough new sources of oil, according to Robin Batchelor, a fund manager at Merrill Lynch & Co., De Telegraaf newspaper reported.

Batchelor, who heads the $3.7 billion World Energy Fund, sold all of his shares in Shell last year after the company overstated its oil reserves, the newspaper said.

Batchelor said he isn't planning on buying Shell stock ``anytime soon,'' the paper reported. Calls to Batchelor at his office today weren't immediately returned.

``State geological surveys, academia and industry have identified that globally there are still hundreds of billions of barrels of conventional oil and gas to be found,'' Bernadette Cunnane, a spokeswoman for Shell in London, said today. Exploration ``remains a cost effective and worthwhile ways of adding resource volumes,'' she said.

Shell spending to rise as costs soar

Market News and Investment Information | Reuters.co.uk

By Tom Bergin

LONDON (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell will increase planned investments 27 percent to around $19 billion (11 billion pounds) next year as costs soar and the group tries to turn round its industry-lagging record for finding new oil.

The Anglo-Dutch group (RDSa.L: Quote, Profile, Research)(RDSb.L: Quote, Profile, Research), the world's third-largest listed oil firm by market capitalisation, said on Tuesday its capital investment budget for 2006 would be $19 billion, up from earlier estimates of around $15 billion.

Chief Financial Officer Peter Voser told reporters on a conference call that beyond 2006, the firm was likely to invest "at least" $19 billion annually.

Investors fear the higher spending plans will reduce the amount of cash available to distribute to them in dividends and share buybacks.

Analysts had expected Shell to raise its budget to between $17 billion and $20 billion per year but some hoped for the news to be counterbalanced by a more optimistic outlook.

"Despite the increase there is nothing to suggest that the group will be able to increase its growth prospects, which should depress returns," Peter Hitchens, oil analyst at Teather & Greenwood, said.

It was unclear to what extent the rise in spending plans was due to higher-than-expected costs and what portion was due to the accelerated development of new and existing projects.

At 1:30 p.m. Shell's shares were up 0.84 percent at 1,805 pence, underperforming a 1.2 percent rise in the DJ Stoxx European oil and gas sector index.

Shell is grappling with massive cost overruns on a number of large projects including the Sakhalin-2 project off Russia's east coast, where costs have doubled to $20 billion, and the Bonga oil field offshore Nigeria, where some analysts believe the initial $2.7 billion budget will also double.

The company has blamed the cost overruns on rises in the price of commodities such as steel, oil field services inflation, which some industry executives put at 10 percent per year, and overly ambitious targets set by previous management.

STICKS TO TARGETS

Voser said the company was still "reasonably confident" of reaching its 100 percent reserve replacement target -- the level at which it replaces every barrel it pumps with new finds -- over the 2004-2008 period.

Shell repeated it expects to produce 3.5-3.8 million barrels of oil equivalent per day (boepd) in 2005 and 2006.

The Hague-based firm aims to raise production to 3.8-4.0 million boepd by 2009 and 4.5-5.0 million boepd by 2014, compared with current production of around 3.5 million boepd, Voser said.

Some analysts are concerned that much of this growth will come from sources such as gas-to-liquids and tar sands projects, which have traditionally not offered as high returns as finding and pumping oil.

Shell will continue its share buyback programme into 2006, Voser said, although he would not give details of the level.

Buybacks have helped propel oil stocks such as Shell and rival BP (BP.L: Quote, Profile, Research) in the past year but analysts said Shell's higher capital expenditure will reduce the cash available to it to spend on shares.

"On our forecasts of $50 per barrel, we believe that the group will have circa $2 billion of free cash that can be returned to shareholders. This is significantly lower than the amount that will be returned by BP," Hitchens added.

Shell said $15 billion would be invested in upstream oil and gas exploration and project development in 2006. Exploration spending will rise to $2 billion from the $1.5 billion envisaged at the beginning of this year.

Spending on downstream activities such as refining, where margins have soared due to tightness in capacity, will be over $4 billion compared with earlier plans of around $3 billion.

Western politicians and oil producers have blamed a shortage of refining capacity for oil hitting record highs above $70 a barrel earlier this year.

High oil prices have enabled Shell to overcome costs woes to post record earnings in recent quarters. However, the firm still faces problems replenishing its dwindling reserve base.

Last year it replaced only half the oil and gas it pumped with new finds, the worst record among the "Supermajors", as the premier league of listed oil firms are known.

Gas-guzzling firms ask for cut-off compensation

Guardian Unlimited Politics | Special Reports | Gas-guzzling firms ask for cut-off compensation

Oliver Morgan
Sunday December 18, 2005
The Observer


Major industrial gas users will write to the Prime Minister and the trade and industry secretary, Alan Johnson, this week demanding compensation if their gas supplies are cut off this winter.
The Energy Intensive Users Group (EIUG), representing industries such as chemical, steel, paper and glass producers which use high levels of gas in manufacturing processes, will argue that companies having supplies cut in emergency circumstances should be compensated for loss of earnings.


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The EIUG argues that industrial users who have their supplies halted are, in effect, providing a socially beneficial service in helping maintain supply to domestic customers, and for this they should be remunerated.
The prospect of cuts has risen this year due to supply bottlenecks and the forecast of a cold winter, which will drive up demand. Prices rose to record levels during the cold snap at the end of last month, and have fallen back since then. They remain, however, at twice last year's levels.

The EIUG is limiting its claims to companies which have non-interruptible contracts. Some, such as chemicals producers Ineos Chlor and Terra Nitrogen, have interruptible contracts under which they pay lower rates for gas in return for risking a supply cut when gas is scarce. These companies have already experienced cuts to supply during the cold snap.

Jeremy Nicholson of the EIUG said: 'There is a cross-subsidy where large users are providing a level of security for the domestic sector which is not compensated for under current agreements. We would like to see compensation for interruption or the risk of interruption.'

He said the means of compensation could come through supply charges on energy bills, but that details had yet to be finalised.

North Sea gas drying up faster than hoped

Scotsman.com Business - Energy & Utilities - North Sea gas drying up faster than hoped

JAMES KIRKUP
WESTMINSTER EDITOR
NORTH Sea gas reserves are being used up faster than anticipated, MPs said yesterday, warning that energy shortages will be impossible to avert in the event of the predicted harsh winter.

Taking evidence from government ministers and energy industry experts, the House of Commons trade and industry committee heard that Britain's gas is being depleted well ahead of schedule.


That will make the country more dependent on imported gas, and sharpen the problems caused by Britain's lack of storage capacity.

The natural gas reserves in the UK "Continental Shelf" area are about 600 billion cubic metres, and production is declining from its peak in 2000.

According to current official estimates, the UK is expected to be 50 per cent dependent on imported gas by 2010, and 80 per cent dependent by 2020.

But during their inquiry, the MPs heard that "supplies of gas from the UK Continental Shelf had continued to decline at a faster rate than anticipated, leaving a larger shortfall to be made up from imports".

More imports will necessitate more investment in pipelines and storage capacity, but the MPs also heard that current construction plans were not accelerating at the same pace as gas depletion.

With forecasters estimating that there is a two-in-three chance of an unusually cold winter, the prospect of gas shortages has been the subject of intense political argument.

Ministers have accused business leaders of scaremongering over the situation by warning of industrial shut-downs, but admit that some large companies could indeed experience shortages and supply interruptions.

The MPs confirmed that bleak outlook in their report.

"Although it is extremely unlikely that domestic customers and the majority of businesses will suffer any interruptions to their gas and electricity supply, it is very likely that the largest industrial and commercial customers will, if they have the relevant contracts, suffer interruptions," they warned.

And because Britain does not have sufficient storage capacity, they found, "it is, unfortunately impossible to do anything to change the situation now". Energy analysts say that colder weather is just one reason the price of gas is soaring. Other causes are market nerves and the apparent refusal of some European countries to sell as much gas as Britain wants to import.

While householders are unlikely to experience interruptions of supply this winter, they will be hit by rising prices.

The MPs calculated that for every 10 per cent increase in fuel prices, an extra 400,000-500,000 households in England and 60,000 in Scotland fall into "fuel poverty", spending more than 10 per cent of their income on energy.

Despite government attempts to downplay talk of a gas crisis this winter, Scottish MPs of all parties yesterday insisted there could be severe problems ahead.

In the Commons, Brian Donohoe, the Labour MP for Central Ayrshire, said that three of the five biggest users of gas in Scotland had warned him that they would have "immense difficulties" sustaining business over the winter.

About 2,000 jobs in Ayrshire could be affected, he said.

Michael Connarty, the Labour MP for Linlithgow and East Falkirk, accused gas suppliers of operating an "invidious monopoly", declaring: "We are being manipulated by the owners."

David Mundell, the new Conservative shadow Scottish secretary, also raised concerns.

"Given that we have more severe weather in Scotland, it is even more important that the government get it right on ensuring major businesses are not driven out by high rises in gas prices and that more vulnerable people are not driven into fuel poverty," he said.

Responding for the government, Alistair Darling, the Scottish Secretary, said ministers were aware of concerns and were negotiating with the European Commission to put pressure on EU suppliers to make more gas available to Britain.

Energy Information Administration Forecast

Vital Trivia ? Blog Archive ? Energy Information Administration Forecast

Have we, the hydrocarbon depletion aware folk of this world got it wrong? Is it reasonable to think that this small band of retired geologists, academics, amateurs and energy enthusiasts have a clearer idea of what?s going on in the world than the prestigious governments and energy agencies? Someone once suggested to me that the very fact governments and energy agencies didn?t appear to recognise an imminent peak in oil extraction rates as evidence that there wouldn?t be such a peak, at least not soon enough to really worry about. The implied point being that they have a far greater understanding and more resources than then people like us.

Let?s have a look at how this great understanding and their resources have served them in the recent past by looking back at the 2001 International Energy Outlook from the US DOE/EIA IEO2001 (1.3mb pdf).

What is US DOE/IEA? This is what it says on the Energy Information Administration (EIA) website:

The Energy Information Administration (EIA), created by Congress in 1977, is a statistical agency of the U.S. Department of Energy. We provide policy-independent data, forecasts, and analyses to promote sound policy making, efficient markets, and public understanding regarding energy and its interaction with the economy and the environment.

So they should know what they are talking about, right?

This analysis by Ron Patterson is inspired by the original work of Roger D. Blanchard who questioned the future predictions back in 2001 in his paper Analysis of the IEO2001 Non-OPEC Supply Projections , Patterson has followed up these predictions in an article here where he highlights how the EIA got it very wrong.

North Sea
Vital Trivia has written a lot about the decline in the North Sea, this is what the IEO2001 had to say about the North Sea:

In the IEO2001 forecast, North Sea production reaches a peak in 2006, at almost 6.6 million barrels/day (mb.d). Production from Norway, Western Europe?s largest producer, is expected to peak at about 3.7 mb/d in 2004 and then gradually decline to about 3.1 mb/d by the end of the forecast period with the maturing of some of its large and older fields. The United Kingdom is expected to produce about 3.1 mb/d by the middle of this decade, followed by a decline to 2.7 mb/d by 2020.

The report was published in March 2001 and talks of a peak in 2006. The facts of the matter are that the North Sea had already peaked back in 1999 at 5.947 mb/d! Today we are more than 1mb/d below that 1999 peak.

For Norway they forecasted a peak of 3.7 mb/d in 2004 declining to 3.1mb/d by 2020. In fact Norway had peaked the year earlier (2000) but the real absurdity was the forecasted rate of decline post peak of 1.1% per year. Show me any province, let alone a modern offshore one with a post peak decline rate as slow as that!

The UK forecast of a 3.1mb/d peak in 2005 compares with a reality of a 2.684 mb/d peak in 1999, a full two years before this report was published. The report goes on to forecast a decline to 2.7 mb/d by 2020, an annual fall of less than 1%, when in reality the UK has seen average annual falls of over 7% from 1999.

These forecasted decline rates are most concerning, either the EIA are incredibly ignorant or they are purposefully releasing misleading information.

Mexico
I reported on Mexico?s difficulties just last week. Here is what the IEO2001 said:

Mexico is expected to adopt energy policies that encourage the efficient development of its vast resource base. Expected production volumes in Mexico exceed 4 million barrels/day by the end of the decade and show little decline out to 2020.

It would appear Mexico has already peaked with a peak month of December 2003 at 3.455 mb/d and a peak 12-month moving average in June 2004 of 3.408 mb/d, more than half a million barrels down and more than half a decade earlier than predicted. As for showing little decline out to 2020, Pemex themselves are saying that Cantrell is some 68% depleted with flow rate likely to crash at between 10 and 20% per year.

Closing remarks
The Energy Information Administration claim to provide policy-independent data, forecasts, and analyses to promote sound policy making, efficient markets, and public understanding regarding energy and its interaction with the economy and the environment.

On the evidence of recent performance one can only assume that any policies influenced by the EIA are unsound, any markets inefficient and the public are left ignorant. I think there is far more truth in that statement than those from the EIA.

So remember, next time you hear an official sounding energy forecast from a government agency it could already be significantly wrong and rapidly deviating from reality.