Oil 1 Peak Oil 21



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Peak Oil Coming-2007



Demand will outpace supply by 2007.

Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, ‘4

(Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World, p. 30) [Bozman]
According to an analysis of existing and planned major oilrecovery projects published in the February, 2004 edition of Petroleum Review, global oil supplies may have difficulty meeting growing demand after 2007. While production from many new offshore wells will hit the market over the next three years, the Oil Field Mega Projects 2004 report notes, the volumes produced are likely to fall off quickly thereafter. ?There are not enough largescale projects in the development pipeline right now to offset declining production in mature areas and meet global demand growth beyond 2007,? says Chris Skrebowski, author of the report and editor of Petroleum Review. ?Ever-growing demand for oil means there is a ready market for additional supplies so substantial new discoveries tend to go into development in a very limited time,? Skrebowski notes. ?But between a quarter and a third of the world?s oil production is already in decline and it appears that giant new discoveries to replace lost capacity are becoming very scarce.? 14

Peak Oil Coming-2010



Peak oil is coming soon-our evidence cites a consensus.

Ming Li, Professor of Economics at the University of Utah, Salt Lake City, November, ‘07

(Peak Oil, the Rise of China and India, and the Global Energy Crisis, Journal of Contemporary Asia, Vol. 37, No. 4) [Bozman]
According to Campbell (2005a; 2005b), global oil discovery peaked back in the mid-1960s. Since 1980, new discovery has been less than depletion for every year and the gap has tended to grow. Global production of all oil liquids (including conventional oil as well as heavy oil, deep-water oil, polar oil, gas liquids, etc.) is expected to peak around 2010. By 2050, the total oil! production is expected to fall by about 70% from the peak level .** Trainer (2006a) counted a total of 61 estimates of the world's total conventional oil resources and concluded that there is a considerable agreement on a figure under two trillion barrels. As the world's total oil production so far has been about one trillion barrels and the peak production is likely to occur when about half of the total oil resource has been depleted, these estimates suggest that the world oil production peak is likely to occur in a few years.^
Peak oil will come by 2010-even the most optimistic accounts indicate peak oil will come before 2020.

Colin Cambell, PhD in Geology from Oxford, former Geologist at Amoco and Texaco and Jean Laherrere, former Surveyor for Total

(French Oil Company), March, ‘98

(The End of Cheap Oil, Scientific American, Volume 278, Issue 3, p. Ebsco) [Bozman]


Predicting when oil production will stop rising is relatively straightforward once one has a good estimate of how much oil there is left to produce. We simply apply a refinement of a technique first published in 1956 by M. King Hubbert. Hubbert observed that in any large region, unrestrained extraction of a finite resource rises along a bell-shaped curve that peaks when about half the resource is gone. To demonstrate his theory, Hubbert fitted a bell curve to production statistics and projected that crude oil production in the lower 48 U.S. states would rise for 13 more years, then crest in 1969, give or take a year. He was right: production peaked in 1970 and has continued to follow Hubbert curves with only minor deviations. The flow of oil from several other regions, such as the former Soviet Union and the collection of all oil producers outside the Middle East, also follows Hubbert curves quite faithfully. The global picture is more complicated, because the Middle East members of OPEC deliberately reined back their oil exports in the 1970s, while other nations continued producing at full capacity. Our analysis reveals that a number of the largest producers, including Norway and the U.K., will reach their peaks around the turn of the millennium unless they sharply curtail production. By 2002 or so the world will rely on Middle East nations, particularly five near the Persian Gulf (Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates), to fill in the gap between dwindling supply and growing demand. But once approximately 900 Gbo have been consumed, production must soon begin to fall. Barring a global recession, it seems most likely that world production of conventional oil will peak during the first decade of the 21st century. Perhaps surprisingly, that prediction does not shift much even if our estimates are a few hundred billion barrels high or low. Craig Bond Hatfield of the University of Toledo, for example, has conducted his own analysis based on a 1991 estimate by the U.S. Geological Survey of 1,550 Gbo remaining--55 percent higher than our figure. Yet he similarly concludes that the world will hit maximum oil production within the next 15 years. John D. Edwards of the University of Colorado published last August one of the most optimistic recent estimates of oil remaining: 2,036 Gbo. (Edwards concedes that the industry has only a 5 percent chance of attaining that very high goal.) Even so, his calculations suggest that conventional oil will top out in 2020.
The peak will come by 2010.

Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, ‘5

(The Party's Over : Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies, p. 106) [Bozman]
In 1997, in a paper entitled ?King Hubbert ? Updated,? Ivanhoe presented the following scenario: Hubbert wrote virtually nothing about details of the ?decline side? of his Hubbert Curve, except to mention that the ultimate shape of the decline side would depend upon the facts and not on any assumptions or formulae. The decline side does not have to be symmetrical to the ascending side of the curve ? it is just easier to draw it as such, but no rules apply. The ascending curve depends on the skill/ luck of the explorationists while the descending side may fall off more rapidly due to the public?s acquired taste for petroleum products ? or more slowly due to government controls to reduce consumption .... 20 In his summary at the end of that paper, Ivanhoe concluded that the critical date ... when global oil demand will exceed the world?s production will fall somewhere between 2000? 2010, and may occur very suddenly due to unpredictable political events ?. This foreseeable energy crisis will affect everyone on earth.

Peak Oil Coming-2010



The peak will come by 2010-variety of statistics prove.

Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, ‘5



(The Party's Over : Oil, War and the Fate of Industrial Societies, p. 101-104) [Bozman]
The Scientific American article?s most arresting features were its sobering title and its conclusion: From an economic perspective, when the world runs completely out of oil is ... not directly relevant: what matters is when production begins to taper off. Beyond that point, prices will rise unless demand declines commensurately. Using several different techniques to estimate the current reserves of conventional oil and the amount still left to be discovered, we conclude that the decline will begin before 2010.17 From the standpoint of the article?s contribution to advancing the discussion beyond Hubbert?s initial projections, its explanation of the methods and problems of estimating the world URR deserves treatment here. Many oil analysts have discounted warnings from Hubbert and his followers because official figures suggest that world oil reserves have grown substantially over the past 20 years. Campbell and Laherrère point out that such figures contain systematic errors arising from the fact that OPEC countries are often motivated to inflate reserve figures because the higher their reserves, the more oil they are allowed to export. ?There is thus good reason to suspect that when, during the late 1980s, six of the 11 OPEC nations increased their reserve figures by colossal amounts, ranging from 42 to 197 percent, they did so only to boost their export quotas,? according to Campbell and Laherrère, who call such reserve growth ?an illusion.? They note that: about 80 percent of the oil produced today flows from fields that were found before 1973, and the great majority of them are declining. In the 1990s oil companies have discovered an average of seven Gbo [billion barrels of oil]; last year they drained three times that much. Yet official figures indicated that proved reserves did not fall by 16 Gbo, as one would expect; rather, they expanded by 11 Gbo. One reason is that several dozen governments opted not to report declines in their reserves, perhaps to enhance their political cachet and their ability to obtain loans. A more important cause of the expansion lies in revisions: oil companies replaced earlier estimates of the reserves left in many fields with higher numbers. For most purposes, such amendments are harmless, but they seriously distort forecasts extrapolated from published reports. Campbell and Laherrère suggest that one way to avoid such distortions is to backdate every revision to the year in which the field in question was first discovered. When this is done, it becomes apparent that global oil discovery peaked in the early 1960s and has been falling ever since. If that trend in discovery is extrapolated, it is possible to make a good guess at how much oil will ultimately be found. Even if this guess is off by two or three hundred billion barrels, the error will not affect the timing of the production peak by more than a few years.
High probability that peak will come before 2010.

Richard Heinberg, Senior Fellow at the Post Carbon Institute, ‘4

(Powerdown: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World, p. 26) [Bozman]
An important paper by Werner Zittel and Jörg Schindler (who have served as scientific advisers to the German parliament) titled ?Future World Oil Supply? appeared first in July 2002, but came under increasing discussion in the English-speaking world during 2003. Toward the end of their paper, Zittel and Schindler summarized their main facts, theses, and conclusions as follows:  The peak of oil discoveries was reached in the 1960s. . . .  This peak in discoveries has to be followed by a peak in production, since we can only produce what has been found before.  The production peak of individual fields is a historical fact, [and] almost all large oil fields have already passed their production maximum and are in decline.  The aggregation of the production profiles of individual fields (with their individual peaks) sums up to a production peak of individual oil regions. Historically, peak production was reached in Austria in 1955, in Germany in 1968, in the USA in 1971, in Indonesia in 1977. Recent regions joining the club of countries with declining production rates are Gabon (1997), UK (1999), Australia (2000), Oman (2000), and Norway (2001).  The aggregate decline of mature regions is getting steeper with every new ?member of the club.? In order to keep overall production just flat, ever fewer regions have to increase their production.  This pattern [has been observed for] more than thirty years. . . . It is very likely that the peak of world oil production will be reached [before] 2010 at the latest. 5



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