Oil 1 Peak Oil 21


Tech is irrelevant-their simply aren’t that many more oil resiviors



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Tech is irrelevant-their simply aren’t that many more oil resiviors.

Robert L. Hirsch, Senior Energy Advisor at Management Information Solutions, February, ‘5

(Peaking of World Oil Production: Impacts, Mitigation, and Risk Management, p. Google) [Bozman]
Some economists expect higher oil prices and improved technologies to continue to provide ever-increasing oil production for the foreseeable future. Most geologists disagree because they do not believe that there are many huge new oil reservoirs left to be found. Accordingly, geologists and other observers believe that supply will eventually fall short of growing world demand – and result in the peaking of world conventional oil production.



AT: Tech Solves Peak



Technology wont yield higher oil production-empirics prove.

Robert L. Hirsch, Senior Energy Advisor at Management Information Solutions, October, ‘5

(The Inevitable Peaking of World Oil Production, the Atlantic Council Bulletin) [Bozman]
Some economists expect improved technologies and higher oil prices will provide ever-increasing oil production for the foreseeable future. To gain some insight into the effects of higher oil prices and improved technology on oil production, consider the history of the U.S. Lower 48 states. This region was one of the world’s richest, most geologically varied, and most productive up until 1970, when production peaked and started into decline. Figure 2 shows Lower 48 historical oil production with oil prices and technology trends superimposed. In constant dollars, oil prices increased by roughly a factor of three in 1973- 74 and another factor of two in 1979- 80. In addition to these huge oil price increases, the 1980s and 1990s were a golden age of oil field technology development, including practical 3-D seismic, economic horizontal drilling, dramatically improved geological understanding, etc. Nevertheless, as Figure 2 shows, Lower 48 oil production still trended downward, showing no pronounced response to either price or technology. In light of this experience, there is no reason to expect that the worldwide situation will be different: Higher prices and improved technology are unlikely to yield dramatically higher conventional oil production.

New tech can’t overcome the fact that the vast majority of oil has been discovered already.

Paul Roberts, Journalist, Finalist for the National Magazine Award, ‘4



(The End of Oil, p. 63-64) [Bozman]





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