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Oil: Caveat empty
Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists ^ | May 25, 2005 | Alfred J. Cavallo

Posted on 05/26/2005 10:09:46 AM PDT by liberallarry

Oil: Caveat empty

Without any press conferences, grand announcements, or hyperbolic advertising campaigns, the Exxon Mobil Corporation, one of the world's largest publicly owned petroleum companies, has quietly joined the ranks of those who are predicting an impending plateau in non-OPEC oil production. Their report, The Outlook for Energy: A 2030 View, forecasts a peak in just five years.

In the past, many who expressed such concerns were dismissed as eager catastrophists, peddling the latest Malthusian prophecy of the impending collapse of fossil-fueled civilization. Their reliance on private oil-reserve data that is unverifiable by other analysts, and their use of models that ignore political and economic factors, have led to frequent erroneous pronouncements. They were countered by the extreme optimists, who believed that we would never need to think about such problems and that the markets would take care of everything. Up to now, those who worried about limited petroleum supplies have been at best ignored, and at worst openly ridiculed.

Meanwhile, average consumers have taken their cue from the market, where rising prices have always been followed by falling prices, leading to the assumption that this pattern will continue forever. In truth, the market price of crude oil is completely decoupled from and independent of production costs, which average about $6 per barrel for non-OPEC producers and $1.50 per barrel for OPEC producers. This situation has nothing to do with a free market, and everything to do with what OPEC believes will be accepted or tolerated by the United States. The completely affordable market price--what consumers pay at the gasoline pump--provides magisterial profits to the owners of the resource and gives no warning of impending shortages

All the more reason that the public should heed the silent alarm sounded by the ExxonMobil report, which is more credible than other predictions for several reasons. First and foremost is that the source is ExxonMobil. No oil company, much less one with so much managerial, scientific, and engineering talent, has ever discussed peak oil production before. Given the profound implications of this forecast, it must have been published only after a thorough review.

Second, the majority of non-OPEC producers such as the United States, Britain, Norway, and Mexico, who satisfy 60 percent of world oil demand, are already in a production plateau or decline. (All of ExxonMobil's crude oil production comes from non-OPEC fields.) Third, the production peak cited by the report is quite close at hand. If it were twenty-five years instead of five years in the future, one might be more skeptical, since new technologies or new discoveries could change the outlook during that longer period. But five years is too short a time frame for any new developments to have an impact on this result. 

Also noteworthy is the manner in which the Outlook addresses so-called frontier resources, such as extra-heavy oil, "oil sands," and "oil shale." The report cites the existence of more than 4 trillion barrels of extra heavy oil and "oil sands"--producing potentially 800 billion barrels of oil, assuming a 20-25 percent extraction efficiency. The Outlook also cites an estimate of 3 trillion barrels of "oil shale." These numbers have figured prominently in advertisements that ExxonMobil and other petroleum companies have placed in newspapers and magazines, clearly in an attempt to reassure consumers (and perhaps stockholders) that there is no need to worry about resource constraints for many decades.

However, as with all advertisements, it's best to read the fine print. ExxonMobil's world oil production forecast shows no contribution from "oil shale" even by 2030. Only about 4 million barrels of oil per day from Canadian "oil sands" are projected by 2030, accounting for a mere 3.3 percent of the predicted total world demand of 120 million barrels per day. What explains this striking disconnection between the magnitude of the frontier resources and the minimal amount of projected oil production from them? Canadian "oil sands" are actually deposits of bitumen (tar), which are the result of conventional oil degradation by water and air. Tar sands are of a completely different character than conventional oil deposits; making tar sands usable is a capital-intensive venture that requires special procedures such as heating to separate the tar from the sand, mixing the tar with a diluting agent for pipeline transport, and constructing specially equipped refineries for processing.

The most serious constraint, though, is natural gas supplies. Production of oil from tar sands requires between 400 and 1,000 cubic feet of natural gas per barrel of oil produced, depending on the extraction method used. Natural gas production, despite a near doubling of drilling activity, is flat or decreasing both in Canada and in the United States--which has prompted prices to triple over the past few years. Given these high gas prices, it almost makes more sense just to sell the natural gas directly rather than use it to produce oil from tar sands.

Extracting oil from the 3 trillion barrels of oil shale cited in the Outlook presents its own challenges. The term "oil shale" is also quite misleading, since there is no oil in this mineral, but rather an organic material called kerogen, which is a precursor of petroleum. To extract oil, the shale (typically between 5 and 25 percent kerogen) must first be mined, then transported to a plant where it is crushed, then heated to 500 degrees Celsius, which pyrolyzes, or decomposes, the kerogen to form oil. After processing, most of the shale remains on the surface in the form of coarse sand, so large-scale mining operations will produce immense amounts of waste material. An estimated 1-4 barrels of water are required for each barrel of oil produced, both for cooling the products and stabilizing the sand waste. To satisfy these water requirements, petroleum companies once contemplated diverting the Columbia River--a feat that can be excluded today on political and environmental grounds.

With non-OPEC oil production reaching a plateau and frontier resources not viable, ExxonMobil proposes that increased demand be met in two ways. The first is greater fuel efficiency. (That alone should convey the seriousness of this report: When have you ever heard a petroleum company make a plea for vehicles that use less gas?) New cars in the United States are expected to go 38 miles on a gallon of gas in 2030, instead of the current value of 21 miles per gallon. This goal is actually quite modest, as new cars sold in Europe since 2003 already achieve 35 miles per gallon.

The other way ExxonMobil believes demand will be satisfied is from vastly and rapidly increased OPEC production: "After 2010, the call on OPEC increases quickly, requiring OPEC to add more than 1 MBD [million barrels per day] of capacity every year," notes the Outlook. "OPEC's resources are large enough to achieve this rate of expansion, and we expect that investments will be made in a timely manner."

This assessment is somewhat ominous. OPEC has not expanded production capacity much at all recently. Moreover, such production increases are only possible from Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and the United Arab Emirates. For these countries, and indeed for most OPEC members, petroleum and petroleum products are their only significant export. As such, they have a vested interest in obtaining the best possible price for their non-renewable resources. OPEC nations would be quite unlikely to increase production as rapidly as needed unless compelled to do so. To put this shortfall in perspective, in 2003 Algeria produced 1.1 million barrels per day; a new Algeria would need to be brought on line in the Persian Gulf each and every year beyond 2010 just to keep up with the projected increase in demand. Consequently, once non-OPEC production reaches a peak, conventional world oil production could peak shortly thereafter, and prices (never explicitly mentioned in the Outlook) would rise in accordance with the laws of supply and demand.

What all this means is that the petroleum industry is approaching a turning point. Conventional petroleum production will soon--perhaps in five years, ten at best--no longer be able to satisfy demand. For their part, American consumers would do well to take a cue from their Western European counterparts, who enjoy a comfortable lifestyle despite a per capita use of petroleum that is half of that in the United States. The sooner the United States begins this transition away from oil, the easier it will be. That's a far more attractive option than trying to squeeze oil from stone.

Alfred J. Cavallo is an energy consultant based in Princeton, New Jersey. His article "Oil: Illusion of Plenty," appeared in the January/February 2004 Bulletin.

May/June 2005 pp. 16-18 (vol. 61, no. 03) © 2005 Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists



TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: depolymerization; energy; peakoil
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To: steveegg
The authors of the report are people...intelligent people, credible people, experienced people. Why do you think it's ok to attack them with insults while remaining immune yourself?

Further what you say is not strictly true. When someone posts an article - which they believe in and support - you attack them, their credibility, their intelligence, their character, when you attack the article.

Finally, you haven't even done your most basic homework. I've been posting to this site for 4 years. I've never posted to DU. I belong here.

41 posted on 05/26/2005 12:33:49 PM PDT by liberallarry
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To: All

Anybody seen that commercial for that movie "Oil Storm" thats coming on FX next month? Looks like this years "Day After Tommorrow".


42 posted on 05/26/2005 12:35:54 PM PDT by Sybeck1 (chance is the “magic wand to make not only rabbits but entire universes appear out of nothing.”)
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To: liberallarry; All
Conventional petroleum production will soon--perhaps in five years, ten at best--no longer be able to satisfy demand.

I read earlier this week that a BP pipeline from the Caspian Basin through Azerbaijan and Turkey just came on line this week. The article stated that experts estimated the fields to be the 3rd largest in the world.

Any thoughts on how this may affect the world oil supply?

43 posted on 05/26/2005 12:39:22 PM PDT by Freebird Forever
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To: liberallarry
Conservation, conservation, conservation...or, less controversially; efficiency, efficiency, efficiency.

The answer is: Take an economics class, then return and pick up the discussion again. The market price of a commodity has very little to do with production costs. Supply and demand are supreme here. OPEC et al control market prices by adjusting production. More production => lower prices.

The real answer is: more production!

I heard one report that found that about 50% of the oil refineries in the USA had been shut down due to excessive environmental regulation and its associated costs. They simply couldn't afford to keep the refineries running when it costs millions of dollars a year to hold the greenies at bay. When you lose 50% of the supply capability in a market, the price will reflect that!

44 posted on 05/26/2005 12:41:17 PM PDT by TChris (Liberals: All death, all the time.)
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To: neutrino
All very nice, but this (at best) merely buys us a few years. Cheap energy for transportation (not merely energy - cheap energy) lies at the very core of our civilization. The transition to expensive energy is likely to have profound consequences

Very, very sad and very, very true. That's why those few years are so important.

Even though alternatives are important, and saving oil for transportation is fine - it simply isn't enough

True again (Paul Roberts examines the alternatives in detail). That's why this is so scary.

only liberals and dems believe this

The liberals and Dems - some of them anyway - have been right about conservation. But their basic idea about human nature - egalitarianism - is wrong and they'll never be able to get past it (as a group, individuals will, of course). Besides we all know they're best a spending the money of others. When it comes to personal sacrifice they aren't to be heard from. In fact, hardly anyone volunteers to go to the head of that line.

45 posted on 05/26/2005 12:42:12 PM PDT by liberallarry
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To: ConsentofGoverned

ANWR would not "supply us for 30 years". Current ANWR estimates are 4.3 to 11.8 billion barrels. USGS estimated 3.2 billion was recoverable at $20/barrel. At current prices, lets say that there's 6 billion barrels recoverable.

Now, what does this mean? We consume over 20 million barrels per day. 6 billion divided by 20 million is 300 days of oil - not even a year's worth.

Don't get me wrong - we can, and should drill there. But it's not some "miracle field". The sad fact is that despite our immense mineral resources here in America, oil is not one of the ones that we dominate on. The real answer is "drill everywhere we can, push forward new tech (methane hydrates/tar sands/etc, and use nuclear power instead of fossil fuels to save fossil fuels for the roads"


46 posted on 05/26/2005 12:44:54 PM PDT by OldGuard1
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To: TChris
The real answer is: more production!

Sure. The fly in the buttermilk is...from whence cometh this production?

47 posted on 05/26/2005 12:49:08 PM PDT by neutrino (Globalization “is the economic treason that dare not speak its name.” (173))
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To: TChris
The market price of a commodity has very little to do with production costs. Supply and demand are supreme here. OPEC et al control market prices by adjusting production. More production => lower prices.

That's right. The authors or the article - not the report - were wrong here. I put that section in boldface because I wanted to emphasize that the oil market was not a free market and the monopoly, or oligopoly, profits accruing to producers. I did not mean to imply that supply and demand weren't relevant. In fact, I'm not sure why you chose that interpretation since the point of the report is to show the coming imbalance between supply and demand...and the consequences.

The real answer is: more production!

Here you should see a psychiatrist before returning to this thread. The point of the article is that increasingly the major players and researchers - the Administration, the Wall St. investors, the producers - are all coming to the same conclusion; More production is impossible.

Yet you ignore all that, preferring to believe unsourced and only partially relevant information.

48 posted on 05/26/2005 12:53:25 PM PDT by liberallarry
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To: neutrino
Sure. The fly in the buttermilk is...from whence cometh this production?

Well, as long as we have to deal with the current cadre of enviro-wackos and their scare mongering, it will be difficult to get it. There is a lot of available oil right here in the US of A. Everybody has been so trained by the greenies that drilling is eeeeeeevil that it's extremely costly and difficult to clear all the hurdles in the way of exploration. There's a really good boom of activity going on right now here in Wyoming, and our state mineral tax revenues have benefited mightily from it too.

49 posted on 05/26/2005 12:54:08 PM PDT by TChris (Liberals: All death, all the time.)
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To: jackbenimble
It involves pumping very hot water down the...

I believe the method you're referring to is for tar sands, not shale

50 posted on 05/26/2005 1:00:08 PM PDT by AlBondigas
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To: Freebird Forever
Any thoughts on how this may affect the world oil supply?

First, there are the usual questions about the accuracy of the estimates...for the usual reasons. Most recently, there have been a number of dry test holes in the region.

Second, the experts - like ExxonMobil - are aware of these estimates and have factored them into their calculations.

Third. The experts - all of them - could be wrong and anything and everything. They have been before. It's very, very hard to predict the future. But I'd rather place my bets on their opinions than on those of ostriches, astrologers, necromancers, stock touts, and assorted lunatics and charlatans.

51 posted on 05/26/2005 1:01:14 PM PDT by liberallarry
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To: liberallarry

Get those boys back to work on cold fusion.


52 posted on 05/26/2005 1:02:05 PM PDT by dennisw (He writes everything's been returned which was owed...)
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To: dennisw

http://www.dieoff.org

DIE OFF
"If a path to the better there be, it begins with a full look at the worst."
-- Thomas Hardy
Petroleum geologists have known for 50 years that global oil production would "peak" and begin its inevitable decline within a decade of the year 2000. Moreover, no renewable energy systems have the potential to generate more than a fraction of the power now being generated by fossil fuels.


In short, the transition to declining energy availability signals a transition in civilization as we know it.

Read the entire synopsis now!


53 posted on 05/26/2005 1:03:44 PM PDT by dennisw (He writes everything's been returned which was owed...)
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To: liberallarry

Three words - drill Gull Island.


54 posted on 05/26/2005 1:04:17 PM PDT by lodwick (Integrity has no need of rules. Albert Camus)
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To: liberallarry
Yet you ignore all that, preferring to believe unsourced and only partially relevant information.

Please forgive the unsourced summary posted in my haste. Here is one article that mentions this issue. An excerpt:

But the solution — boosting refining capacity to allow a greater margin for error — isn’t easy. There hasn’t been a new refinery built in the U.S. since 1976, the result of extremely tight environmental restrictions, not-in-my-back-yard community opposition, and the high cost of new construction. Used refineries currently sell for about 30 to 50 percent of the cost of building a new one, so it’s cheaper to buy an old refinery and upgrade it. Or squeeze a little more gasoline out of the refineries you already own.

(Emphasis added)

Even an unlimited supply of crude would be useless with refining capacity being strangled by runaway environmental costs!

The true goal of the environmental mob has little to do with public health, etc.. It is thinly-veiled contempt for capitalism and an all-consuming desire to harm businesses in every way possible. Rabid environmentalism is simply a sub-species of communism.

55 posted on 05/26/2005 1:04:37 PM PDT by TChris (Liberals: All death, all the time.)
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To: TChris
There's a really good boom of activity going on right now here in Wyoming, and our state mineral tax revenues have benefited mightily from it too.

I'm quite involved in the Powder River Basin coalbed methane gas play. It is a huge boom for my area and they are making lots of gas. But by traditional energy development standards it is fairly marginal. Each well only makes a tiny amount of gas compared to traditional gas wells so they have to drill them by the hundreds. Fortunately they are shallow and therefore relatively cheap.

The low hanging fruit for domestic energy production has already been picked. There is lots of oil and gas left but all or most of the big resevoirs have been tapped. They are now being forced to go after ever more marginal wells.

56 posted on 05/26/2005 1:10:29 PM PDT by jackbenimble (Import the third world, become the third world)
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To: jackbenimble
The low hanging fruit for domestic energy production has already been picked.

Welcome to Free Republic! ...a few months after the fact. :-)

I agree with your statement, but I think "low-hangingness" of the fruit is affected by more than just geology. Just look at all the whining about proposed ANWR drilling!

57 posted on 05/26/2005 1:13:55 PM PDT by TChris (Liberals: All death, all the time.)
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To: Rodney King
So, in order to avoid have to make a sudden jump to 5 or 6 bucks per gallon of gas, we should have the governmen't add a tax so that we make a sudden jump to five or 6 bucks per gallon of gas

Cheap gas encouraged profligacy and discouraged research into alternatives.

58 posted on 05/26/2005 1:23:07 PM PDT by liberallarry
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To: TChris

It's true that there's a refinery bottleneck...but it's also true that the oil peak is very likely very near. The motives and shortcomings or assorted environmentalists do not change that very basic fact.


59 posted on 05/26/2005 1:26:23 PM PDT by liberallarry
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To: TChris
There is a lot of available oil right here in the US of A

That's counter to the consensus of a great many people in the oil industry, and also counter to my understanding. Keep in mind that the U.S uses 20 million barrels per day. Furthermore, U.S. production has been in decline since it peaked in 1970. Your premise suggests that sufficient reserves remain to reverse a trend in place for 35 years.

60 posted on 05/26/2005 1:27:21 PM PDT by neutrino (Globalization “is the economic treason that dare not speak its name.” (173))
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