Peak oil - Sept 19
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
So it appears that Peak Oil theory is beginning to gain some traction. And apparently, the Peak Oil concept is gaining credibility among policymakers in both the U.S. and abroad. This could lead to policy incentives that discourage future reliance upon oil, and further lead to policy incentives that encourage the development and use of alternative forms of energy. And thus some key players in the oil business are becoming more focused in their efforts to "debunk" the Peak Oil concept. Peak Oil is no longer a fringe concept being discussed by a handful of small-time, granola-eating, tree-hugging players at the margins of intellectual respectability. Peak Oil is becoming part of the mainstream in science, economics, politics, and policy. This may just be because the evidence of the rocks is starting to make sense. This is what happens when you follow the facts. Good News From the Front Lines I think that this latest news from the front lines of policy debate is actually quite good. Peak Oil has developed a credible scientific basis, and the evidence from the oil fields of the world has begun to withstand the initial rounds of cavalier dismissal, if not pathological denial. And the ominous implications of Peak Oil are of such high risk and severity of outcome that the concept has popped up on the radar screens of the highest-level political and economic decision-makers in the world. When it comes to Peak Oil, you simply cannot afford to bet against it. That is, if you lose the bet, you lose it all. And that is a lot to lose. Peak Oil has moved out of the farm-club competition and is now in the major leagues. The question is can Peak Oil and its theorists and proponents hit that big-league pitching? Can Peak Oil stand up to "debunking" by the likes of Exxon and Saudi Aramco? Let me put it another way: Can the likes of Exxon and Saudi Aramco stand up to the hard evidence of Peak Oil?
Even months of data can seductively point to a conclusion that doesn't stand the test of time. It's that old adage of not seeing the forest for the trees. Consider oil. The flavour of the month is to dump on the peak oil thesis -- that world oil production has maxed out and is condemned to fall. As the price of crude climbed ever higher last year, peak oil was all the rage. The conventional thinking then was that we were condemned to paying high prices because the world isn't finding adequate new supplies of oil and gas to meet burgeoning demand -- in Asia, North America and elsewhere. In the past few weeks, as the price of oil has plunged more than 20 per cent from July's record high of more than $78 (U.S.) a barrel, economists have begun to second-guess and even joke about what last year was considered sound analysis. ...it is the horizon that we should all stay focused on. The world's big oil fields are fewer and far between, and much more costly to locate and exploit. Many of the key producing regions remain geopolitical danger zones -- Iraq, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Nigeria, Russia and Venezuela. On the demand side, the rise of China and India as huge consumers is not a passing phenomenon. Likewise, the move to greater energy efficiency and alternative fuels won't happen overnight, even in the developed world. So if you look carefully through the undergrowth, the peak is still there. Oil will be an increasingly scarce, and expensive, commodity.
...Let's look briefly at the forest, not the trees. There's plenty of bad news. ...As you read about all of the shorter term "good news", remember that the perilous longer term supply-side trend reported here at The Oil Drum remains the same. The current enthusiasm for dismissing peak oil concerns misses much of the big picture.
FINAL HOUR has been invited to participate in the 2006 annual meeting of the Clinton Global Initiative. The Clinton Global Initiative is a non-partisan catalyst for action, bringing together a community of global leaders to devise and implement innovative solutions to some of the world's most pressing challenges.
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