Peak Oil - July 6
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
Those risks include "political hurdles, infrastructure requirements and availability of trained work force," according to the study by the U.S. National Petroleum Council, conducted at the behest of U.S. Energy Secretary Sam Bodman. The NPC, whose members include executives of big oil companies like ExxonMobil (XOM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Chevron Corp. (CVX.N: Quote, Profile, Research), will present the study at its July 18 meeting, according to a memo sent to NPC members this week which was also obtained by Reuters. When Bodman called for the study in October 2005, he asked the council to study the concept of "peak oil," whether the globe was running out of hydrocarbons. Some preliminary documents are on the NPC website: These draft report sections are being made available in response to public interest in the study process and content of the final report, approval of which is planned for mid-July. Upon approval, the full report will be posted on this website for viewing and downloading and printed copies will be available for purchase in August. -BA UPDATE July 7: More text from an updated version of the article: Matt Simmons, founder of Houston-based Simmons and Co. International, who has argued that world oil production is declining irreversibly, criticized the report's findings.
The company has disputed views that a pinnacle may be in sight and contends strong supply growth will prevail in the short term. Barring unexpected disruptions to production, Wood Mackenzie expects total global capacity to grow steadily from 86.3 million barrels per day (bpd) in 2006 to 96.7 million bpd in 2010. ...But, says Kate Dourian, Platts' Middle East editor, it is just a matter of time before non-OPEC oil declines because production is not being replaced fast enough to meet consumption. Dourian also stressed oil production is not as cut and dry as some analysts make out. "Some sources say half the world's oil has already been produced, whereas Saudi Aramco is saying there is still another trillion barrels out there," she said. This means exploration success is critical to the long-term oil production outlook of non-OPEC countries, said Broughton, who expects ‘yet-to-find' oil production in the Asia Pacific region to account for 28% of its output by 2025. "No-one knows what technology will be available in future to aid production," added Dourian. "In Oman, saline water injection experiments are currently being undertaken. There are also enormous resources of oil sands in Canada.
The Round-Up is also convering the Canadian energy scene, as well as environmental and international news, in that order. Oil companies leaving Venezuela and aiming for the oil sands are finding that all is not clear sailing, while China is entering the oil sands for the first time. Nunavut seeks control over future oil and gas revenues, Newfoundland and Labrador wants to bypass Quebec in selling electricity to the US, and the slow down in natural gas drilling is hurting frontier communities in Alberta and BC.
How long it would last, no one seemed to know. You see, everyone was smart enough to get that as time went on and they did nothing but sit around and drink stale beer and eat who-knows-what, that they'd run out of money. In other words, the rest of the world would just abandon them. You see times had gotten tough. There was always lightning in the air and eventually it would come down on the Orchard. It was just a matter of when. In the rest of the country, the way things were could change from block to block, but places like the Orchard were stagnant through and through. The government had its priorities and its scribes knew the time had come for one of history's many storms. Those in power had a choice. They knew that some in the land had virtue and that some did not. Into the ear of the leaders, words of warning were uttered, namely pointing out that in times of trouble past, the trouble makers were well known and did not disappoint with their actions. Once a troublemaker, always a troublemaker I suppose. It came to be that the government had a choice to make: who to save and who to leave to the wilds. This was left up to men simply called "Watchmen." The watchmen were informed of the gravity of the situation facing America and knew what it would take to make a country survive Peak Oil. |
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