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cruise4
20-01-2008, 11:54 AM
World not running out of oil, say experts

Carl Mortished
London Times
Saturday January 19, 2008

Doom-laden forecasts that world oil supplies are poised to fall off the edge of a cliff are wide of the mark, according to leading oil industry experts who gave warning that human factors, not geology, will drive the oil market.

A landmark study of more than 800 oilfields by Cambridge Energy Research Associates (Cera) has concluded that rates of decline are only 4.5 per cent a year, almost half the rate previously believed, leading the consultancy to conclude that oil output will continue to rise over the next decade.

Peter Jackson, the report's author, said: “We will be able to grow supply to well over 100million barrels per day by 2017.” Current world oil output is in the region of 85million barrels a day.

The optimistic view of the world's oil resource was also given support by BP's chief economist, Peter Davies, who dismissed theories of “Peak Oil” as fallacious. Instead, he gave warning that world oil production would peak as demand weakened, because of political constraints, including taxation and government efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Speaking to the All Party Parliamentary Group on Peak Oil, Mr Davies said that peaks in world production had been wrongly predicted throughout history but he agreed that oil might peak within a generation “as a result of a peaking of demand rather than supply”.

He said it was inconceivable that oil consumption would be unaffected by government policies to reduce carbon emissions. “There is a distinct possibilty that global oil consumption could peak as a result of such climate policies,” Mr Davies said.

The BP economist's remarks were echoed yesterday by Mr Jackson. “It is the above-ground risks that will influence the rate [of oil output],” he said.

Cera analysed the output of 811 oilfields, which produce 19 billion barrels a year, out of total world output of 32 billion. These included many of the giants, including Saudi Arabia's Ghawar, the largest known oilfield, which has been at the centre of the debate between peak oil analysts and their detractors.

In his book Twilight in the Desert, Matthew Simmons of Simmons & Co, the consultancy, said the big Saudi fields reached their peak output in 1981 but Cera yesterday said that Ghawar was not failing. “There is no technical evidence that Ghawar is about to decline,” said Mr Jackson.

Cera reckons that oil output, including unconventional oil, such as tar sands, could allow oil to peak at much higher levels of as much as 112 million barrels per day, with average rates of more than 100million bpd.

http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/natural_resources/article3207311.ece

cruise4
20-01-2008, 11:59 AM
Strange Bedfellows is a reference to the odd alliances springing up. For example the real christians are on the same side as the non-religious, who both are on the same side as the Muslims. Then we have scientologists such as Tom Cruise shaming the media as liars. Or the Oil barons when associated with Global warming or Peak Oil lies. Democrats alliances with Republicans... Its all very strange!

john white
20-01-2008, 02:31 PM
Strange Bedfellows is a reference to the odd alliances springing up. For example the real christians are on the same side as the non-religious, who both are on the same side as the Muslims. Then we have scientologists such as Tom Cruise shaming the media as liars. Or the Oil barons when associated with Global warming or Peak Oil lies. Democrats alliances with Republicans... Its all very strange!

Is it strange? Or is it exactly what we should expect?

After all there has to be chaos to chose "order" out of and this is the time of change

How often has it been said, all through the precesion of the ages?

"Know Thyself!"

Becuase we wont know by looking in the mirror now its become a kaleidoscope

Meanwhile:

Peter Jackson, the report's author, said: “We will be able to grow supply to well over 100million barrels per day by 2017.” Current world oil output is in the region of 85million barrels a day.

The optimistic view of the world's oil resource was also given support by BP's chief economist, Peter Davies, who dismissed theories of “Peak Oil” as fallacious. Instead, he gave warning that world oil production would peak as demand weakened, because of political constraints, including taxation and government efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.


This really doesnt mean anything if its not accompanied be a detailed examination of the actual report and a thorough investigastion and corroboration of everyone of the reports findings. This is propoganda: whether its propoganda based on facts that are true or facts that are untrue is in itself, secondary

However, I would say that based on the last 18 months I've been looking into peak Oil, I'm currently f*cked if I know where they are getting that conclusion becuase I havnt been able to draw any firm ones yet, all estimates of Oil Reserves are urinating in the dark based on simply made up assumptions, but actual production rates do point to diminishing supply and seriously unsustainable consumption rates. The next 10 to 20 years will certainly tell