Major reports point to oil supply turmoil and price volatility
by Matthew Wild
Major energy reports published this year are pointing to a significant rise in the price of oil due to supply constraints sometime over the next three years – the only disagreement is how soon. So far 2010 has seen three international reports considering the future of oil production, demand and prices. These were published by high profile groups that command widespread respect – in turn, a collection of UK industrialists, the US military and a joint effort between Europe’s most recognized insurance company and a politically connected think-tank. Largely ignored by the media, and considered separately online as they came out, it is interesting to do a compare-and-contrast between documents produced for widely different audiences on each side of the Atlantic.
The report begins with a clear definition of peak oil, before suggesting that “global supply rates are currently at, or near, their peak and cannot rise significantly above 92 million barrels per day.” Or, in more detail:
It makes some interesting observations about demand destruction arguments that suggest prices above $120 per barrel kills the market and brings oil down again. Nowadays world economic development is “systematically different from the past,” it suggests, with the growth coming from developing countries whose “economic systems are currently evolving in a climate of higher oil prices and therefore might be relatively immune to it.”
It points to a chronically unstable world. Massive population growth across the Middle East and Sub-Saharan Africa may lead to significant potential for “revolution or war, including civil war,” alongside rising tensions over dwindling resources as basic as water and food both between nations and different groups within individual countries. The authors may have an interest in saying this, but it will involve a great deal of work for the US military – the report considers its role in combat, policing and aid delivery. But the Joint Operating Environment is also clear that the burgeoning US debt suggests military spending cuts may be coming: “Interest payments, when combined with the growth of Social Security and healthcare, will crowd out spending for everything else the government does, including national defense.” The point is that the military will most likely have to do more with less. Although stating that global energy production would have to rise by 1.3 per cent each year to maintain the economic growth required to hold things together, the Joint Operating Environment contains the term peak oil precisely once. (It appears as a heading, over an item that discusses likely coming energy shortages, but not from a peak oil perspective.) The report clearly states the main concern is underinvestment in the oil industry at a time of increasing global demand. Its view is:
It sugars the pill with a consideration of opportunities to proactive leaders who are first to “transition to a low carbon economy,” but also states that “failure to do so could be catastrophic.” Underlying this is the stark message that “the bad times have not yet hit.” The world faces “dramatic changes” as it has “entered a period of deep uncertainty in how we will source energy for power, heat and mobility, and how much we will pay for it.” Once again the term peak oil is largely absent, occurring three times in a densely written 44 page document. Although it gets a fair hearing, with a study quoted that suggests “there is a significant risk of a peak before 2020,” the report suggests the world faces more immediate concerns relating to oilfield investment not keeping pace with rising demand:
While the report itself does not enter into speculation about exactly when all this could come about, it does present the following quote – you aren’t meant to miss it as it’s in a vivid purple colour a couple of point sizes larger than surrounding text – from Professor Paul Stevens, senior research fellow for Chatham House: “A supply crunch appears likely around 2013…given recent price experience, a spike in excess of $200 per barrel is not infeasible.” Sustainable Energy Security provides an overview of the world’s declining hydrocarbon and nuclear “extractive energy sources.” It presents an overview of the whole energy debate: growing domestic oil use producing nations, increasing demand from the developing world, geopolitical considerations, questions over the availability of coal and gas for transition fuels, and the inherent problems associated with output from deepwater, oil sands and shale gas sources. (More here.) Findings include:
So, three quite different reports, independently written for different audiences on either side of the Atlantic – and all with very similar views of energy supply over the next few years. The Oil Crunch is a more typical peak oil report, calling for political action to mitigate a coming plateau in global oil production; The Joint Operating Environment, written by the military for its own leaders, states a “severe energy crunch is inevitable” because of oil industry underinvestment even though the world has large reserves; Sustainable Energy Security also states projected demand for oil is greater than our ability to bring it to market. Only the first of these is a peak oil report – the others do not outright dispute the peak concept, but suggest a variety of issues are more urgent, from supply disruption due to warfare to a technical inability to get sufficient oil to consumers. Terms such as “energy crunch” or “supply crunch” may at first appear to be a conscious decision to gain political acceptance through the use of more neutral language, but this less specific terminology allows a more wide-ranging view of energy supply. Anyway, the terminology is of less interest than the suggested timelines for resource disruption: The Oil Crunch: The world will experience peak oil at 91-92 million barrels per day “by end 2010/early 2011. Global capacity will then remain in the 91-92Mb/d range until 2015 from which time depletion will more than offset capacity growth. . .” The Joint Operating Environment: “By 2012, surplus oil production capacity could entirely disappear, and as early as 2015, the shortfall in output could reach nearly 10 MBD.” Sustainable Energy Security: “A supply crunch appears likely around 2013…given recent price experience, a spike in excess of $200 per barrel is not infeasible.” Taken together, then, these reports suggest the world will be entering into a period of turmoil due to oil supply issues as early as the beginning of 2011 or as late as 2013. This will be marked by a time of rising oil prices, simply due to demand. By 2015 oil output will be in decline and the world will collectively have to make structural changes, or else face outright economic decline, because less oil will be coming to the market at any price. (For comparison, the IEA’s latest Oil Market Report, published August 11, predicts global demand reaching 86.6 million barrels per day in 2010, and then 87.9 million barrels per day in 2011, assuming a continuing global economic recovery. As I’ve written previously, this will overtake the all-time high of 86.9 million barrels per day established in 2008 before the global economic downturn. I’ve also looked at the views of economists writing online recently, suggesting “we are in a lot of trouble in energy in the United States and around the world by about 2012-2015.”) Original article available here |
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