Peak Oil - Dec 4
by Staff
Click on the headline (link) for the full text. Many more articles are available through the Energy Bulletin homepage
Despite forecasting an oil supply crunch and soaring prices, industry watchdogs are sticking to the line that production can go on rising You can imagine the internal contortions when an old friend was once memorably described as a 60s liberal with Catholic guilt. I got the same impression of grinding gears while reading the International Energy Agency's latest long-term forecast, the World Energy Outlook 2008, published last month. In many respects, the IEA's analysis of threats to the oil supply is bloodcurdling, and yet the agency maintains that global production can keep rising for at least two decades. The rich nations' energy watchdog is clearly alarmed, but seems afraid of its own bark. The IEA's annual forecast has become steadily darker in recent years, but this time the deterioration in its outlook is dramatic. Only a year ago, the agency was predicting that global oil production in 2030 would reach 116m barrels per day, up from around 84mb/d, but now it has slashed that to 106mb/d. At the same time, the agency has also doubled its oil price forecast. Last year, it said the cost of crude would fall in the long term, It concludes that the era of cheap oil is over and that the recent extreme price volatility will continue. ... The question remains as to why the IEA persists in its view. Perhaps it is just the innate conservatism of an international bureaucracy funded by western governments, or maybe the agency fears a diplomatic rift with Opec, or possibly it wants to avoid panic. Or maybe it hopes policymakers will read between the lines. • David Strahan is the author of The Last Oil Shock: A Survival Guide to the Imminent Extinction of Petroleum Man. Details at lastoilshock.com
This trend held in the section on renewable energy. The optimist noted that renewable energy is expected to "expand rapidly." The I guess the good news then is that there is something in there that will appeal to everyone, regardless of your outlook. The bad news? The claims that are directly opposed to your views will have you questioning the credibility of the report. And if you are like me--and note that between last year's report and this year's report they dropped their 2030 oil demand forecast by 10 million bpd--you are left wondering whether there is any credibility at all in forecasts that far out. But for what's worth, here's what the IEA had to say about renewable energy. ... Conclusions The renewable energy portion was a tale of two technologies: Renewable electricity and renewable biofuels. Renewable electricity is Renewable biofuels, by contrast, are forecast to still make a very small contribution to overall road transport fuel by 2030. Cellulosic ethanol will be slow to be commercialized, and the contribution to fuel supplies by 2030 is expected to be small. Concerns about negative externalities will grow, and the impact of biofuel production on water supplies will be hotly debated.
Low energy prices squeeze investment in the oil industry, reducing future supplies. They discourage energy saving and they destabilize
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