Coverage of the GAO peak oil report
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage Now that things have quieted down for today, it's time for a round-up of the coverage and reaction to the GAO's report on peak oil. The GAO site has online PDFs for:Full report (1.1 MB, 82 pages) / Abstract / Highlights Alternate sites for the full report: EV World and here Energy Bulletin published an HTML version of the highlights of the GAO report, with about a dozen pages of important quotes and graph. Simmons on CNBC
The report from the U.S. Government Accountability Office concluded that the U.S. has no plans in place to address "peak oil," the future point in history of maximum oil production, which would be followed by irreversible declines in oil fields around the world. ...An expert told CNBC on Thursday that peak oil is the "the single biggest issue to threaten sustainable society" in the United States.
I think this report is real progress. It's an even-handed summary of the debate, recognizes that the issue is potentially very important, and says the US govt should be doing a lot more to reduce the uncertainties and respond despite the uncertainties. I think this is a huge improvement from the EIA AEO's and the like, which essentially have a "no worry" message. The message here is "Worry!" I also like that the various demand-side alternatives discussed are all ones worth discussing (no "rebuild the railroads"), and that the challenges to rapid implementation of any alternative are discussed in a reasonably balanced manner. I also liked the pervasive discussion of the fact that these things need to be thought of light of the global warming implications (they even used "global warming" instead of "climate change"!) I thought the arbitrage between food prices and gas prices implied by ethanol should have gotten more play, however. (29 March 2007) Report: Gov't needs plan for oil peak Though experts disagree about when daily oil output will reach its maximum level -- or whether they have done so already -- the Government Accountability Office said in a report that most studies have found oil production will reach a peak sometime between now and 2040. The report warns that, as the world's largest oil consumer, the U.S. is vulnerable to significant economic troubles, brought about by rising prices, if a peak arrives and no technology exists to replace petroleum-based transportation fuels.
[Writing about ANOTHER peak report which is due out soon, Whipple says:] The second and what on the surface sounds the most in-depth study of world energy resources ever undertaken is being done under the auspices of the National Petroleum Council (NPC). This council, a federally chartered and privately funded advisory committee to the Secretary of Energy, was established by President Truman in 1946. Its purpose is to represent the views of the oil and natural gas industries with respect to any matter relating to oil and natural gas. Note the words "the views of the oil and natural gas industries" as they just may come back to haunt us after the two studies are released. ...The scope and work plan for the study are truly impressive. Task groups are to work on supply, demand, technology, and geopolitics. The task groups are to be overseen by a coordinating sub-committee that in turn reports to a Global Committee and finally to the NPC leadership itself. These task groups are supported by 25 "cross-cutting" subgroups, which are to examine smaller topics such as biomass, nuclear power, and "non-proprietary data." At last word some 200 people were involved in the NPC effort. The study also is reaching out to nearly everyone who can spell "oil" -- academia, laboratories, professional societies, consultants, governments, industry and you-name-it. From reading the work plan for the study, one can't help but be impressed by how thorough and comprehensive the study will be. Of particular interest is the opportunity to use and assess proprietary information about the world's oil reserves and prospects for production held by participating oil companies. ...If one were cynical, you could believe that the NPC study, which by definition is to provide the oil and gas industry's position, was commissioned to provide a counterweight to the independent GAO study should it conclude that peak oil is for real and imminent. The timing of the two studies' release will of course give the NPC plenty of time to incorporate or attempt to refute whatever evidence or logic the GAO cites in reaching its conclusions. No matter what the studies conclude, the possibility that our oil supplies will decline in the near future is one of the most, if not the most important issue facing the world.
The report, initiated at the request of Maryland Representative Roscoe Bartlett who has been the leading voice in Congress on the peak oil question, acknowledges that a decline in oil production, both conventional and unconventional, will occur within essentially one generation, likely sometime between now and 2040. The disparity in dates is attributed to the wide variance in the data and methodology used by various research entities from individuals like Dr. Colin Campbell and Professor Kenneth Deffeyes who see peak happening in the next few years to the USGS and Cambridge Research Associates who see a longer, but still historically brief window.
The report, released Thursday by the investigative arm of Congress, cites estimates as saying oil production will likely peak sometime between now and 2040, depending on a variety of factors including the demand for oil.
Though there is a great deal of uncertainty about the timing of peak oil, in part because OPEC members don’t open up their crude reserves for independent audit, the U.S. would be one of the hardest hit by a such a peak due to the nation’s dependency on oil for transportation, according to the GAO. Compared with past price spikes, “the consequences of a peak and permanent decline in oil production could be even more prolonged and severe than those of past oil supply shocks,” the GAO said. One reason is that the decline “would be neither temporary nor reversible,” said the report, which cited a “worldwide recession” as a possible outcome. Though some leading analysts today view peak oil as a major worry, some leading energy companies such as Exxon Mobil and consultants such as Cambridge Energy Research Associates, see petroleum supplies as being more abundant. Although the timing is uncertain, the GAO firmly endorses the concept that oil production will peak at some point.
While there was a great deal of uncertainty over the timing of peak oil because members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries don't open up their crude reserves for audit, the U.S. would be one of the hardest hit by a such a peak due to the nation's dependency on oil for transportation, according to a report issued by the Government Accountability Office. The study was requested by members of the House Committee on Science and Technology.
“Only the president can rally the country to take the urgent steps necessary” Bartlett said. “Potential alternatives to oil are extremely limited. Technology won’t save us without time and money to develop and scale them up.” Some academics and geologists have been suggesting for years that the world is on the brink of a decline in production. The theory has repeatedly been dismissed, however, by mainstream industry experts who suggest that peak oil theorists have failed to grasp the role that economics and technology will play as conventional reserves decline. Higher prices driven by scarcity of resource will naturally reduce demand, they say, while at the same time making unconventional sources and alternatives more economical. A November report by Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA), an energy consulting firm, suggests that a peak in oil production won’t arrive until at least 2030, and even then the world won’t be hit by a precipitous drop in oil supplies. Rather, production will follow “an undulating plateau” for one or two more decades before starting a gradual decline. |
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