PDA

View Full Version : U.S. Energy Department study concludes crude oil production will peak by 2020



Petr
12-11-06, 06:05
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/editorial/4208727.html


Sept. 23, 2006, 8:23PM

Oil crunch

U.S. Energy Department study concludes crude production will peak, requiring other energy forms


Last September, a Chronicle editorial warned that global oil production would peak in this decade or the next, and then inexorably decline. Given that likelihood, the United States would have to embark on a crash program to develop alternative energy sources or endure crippling increases in the price of energy.

Last week, a study performed for the U.S. Department of Energy concurred with the editorial's conclusions.

The study, led by Robert Hirsch, warned that the world should be spending $1 trillion per year developing alternative energy sources — including tar sands, oil shale and gas liquefaction — to avoid having its economy crippled by oil shortages and the resulting chaos. The study recommends a 20-year lead time, so it might already be too late to prevent a crunch.

The report said the timing was uncertain. Hirsch predicted peak oil production could come in five years, almost certainly by 2020.

Actually, the world would not have to arrive at peak production in order to experience severe shortfalls in oil supplies. The aftermath of Hurricane Katrina showed what even a minor constriction in supply can do to drive prices skyward. Apart from natural disasters, wars, political unrest, government intervention, deteriorating equipment, accidents or any combination could interrupt the supply of oil.

Demand for gasoline in the United States is dropping with the end of the summer vacation season. Consequently, prices also are dropping. But this trend is extremely temporary.

Demand for oil in China, in India and throughout the developing world will continue to grow. Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson predicts that world demand for crude will increase 50 percent in a decade.

Bloomburg News reported that the Energy Department study found that conventional oil production reached "soft and sudden" peaks in Texas in 1972, North America in 1985, Great Britain in 1999 and Norway in 2001. These dates were predicted by formulas used by proponents of the peak oil theory to predict the crest of global oil production.

Perhaps the report's most serious conclusion is that the free market and private industry alone will not prevent economic catastrophe from energy shortages. Government must have a policy for managing the transition from conventional crude oil to other energy forms.

Hirsch, a consultant and former government official overseeing research into solar and other renewable energy forms, said the conversion from oil could be compared to the race for the moon or the mobilization for World War II. Consumers, he said, could not rely on oil companies to get the huge job done.

If oil company managers disagree, they need to demonstrate where all the oil is going to come from to meet rising demand, or propose their own plans for developing alternative sources.

Petr
12-11-06, 06:08
Hirsch predicted peak oil production could come in five years, almost certainly by 2020.
And in other recent news - a mainstream optimistic estimate is that by 2030, "shale oil" will still be playing a very negligible role:

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601082&sid=agBZ87o5myWU&refer=canada


"U.S. Energy Department estimates show that oil shale will add relatively little in coming years to global oil supply, now about 85 million barrels a day.

Oil shale production is expected to rise to 100,000 barrels a day worldwide by 2030, from none now, Guy Caruso, the head of the department's Energy Information Administration, said earlier this month at conferences in Vienna and London. Oil sands supply may reach 3.6 million barrels a day by 2030, up from 1 million barrels a day last year, according to Caruso."


We will be living in some "interesting times" no later than 2020s...


Petr

Sertorius
04-11-07, 11:23
Not to worry, Petr. At the rate Bush is going we'll all be dead long before this potentially comes along.

Gregz
04-11-07, 13:20
Oil doesn't have a future and neither does US, largely due to it's grossly inadequate investment in it's public transport infrastructure.

Why do you think that the French are building trains that can travel at 357 mph and 80% of Frances power comes from Nuclear Energy?

The US globalist establishment are living in the frigging clouds. So much so that they are even talking about mining Helium-3 on the moon (I kid you not) to use as a fuel source in fusion reactors. Which shows you the extent that compete fools are being allowed to influence, your counties strategic energy policy.

The Gulf has pasted peak oil production and natural gas is in decline in Qatar. The North Sea which is a strategically important source of light sweet crude is rapidly being depleted and only the Norwegian fields have any major oil reserves left.

In many other regions of the world, oil is becoming increasingly inaccessible or not cost/energy effective to extract. Mexico's Cantarell field is declining faster than even the government's pessimistic scenarios and only Iraq, Iran, Russia and Central Asia have sizable untapped energy reserves left.