Posted on 02/09/2012 8:43:05 AM PST by Mikey_1962
The latest report from the Calgary (Alberta, Canada) Herald was nothing but good news: The steadily declining production of light oil from 2002 to late 2010 has reversed itself completely and is now not only proving the power and principles of a free market but will change the way we think about oil, with many weighty consequences says blogger Peter Tertzakian. The graph he provided here shows Albertas production declining by about 16,000 barrels per day (B/d) every year since 2002, dropping to just over 300,000 B/d in late 2010. Now, thanks to new capital, new technology, and new enthusiasm, production is close to 400,000 B/d. It also could heighten the blood pressure of a few peak oil theorists, said Tertzakian.
He refers to the theory first offered by M. King Hubbert in 1956 that claimed that oil production in the United States would reach its peak between 1965 and 1970 and begin to decline thereafter. It was based upon the assumption that the amount of oil reserves is fixed and that it is analogous, according to peak theory supporter Colin Campbell, to a glass of beer: The glass starts full and ends empty, and the faster you drink it, the quicker its gone.
From that theory, Hubbert then claimed that this would drastically alter life in the United States, predicting chaos, war, starvation, economic decline and possibly even the extinction of mankind.
As Daniel Yergin (Pulitzer Prize-winner for his book The Prize: The Epic Quest for Oil, Money and Power) noted in the Wall Street Journal, this prediction of the end of the world as we know it was one of many such predictions, each one of which never came true. Hubberts Peak moved from the 1970s to 2005 and then to 2011, and is now expected sometime before the year 2020. But its all based on one primary faulty assumption: that the quantity of oil is fixed. Because of continued improvements in technology, the quantity of oil is far from fixed, as the news from Alberta shows. In fact, according to Yergin, in the years 2007 to 2009, for every barrel of oil produced in the world, 1.6 barrels of new reserves were added in 2010 U.S. oil production was 3½ times higher than Hubbert had estimated: 5.5 million barrels per day versus Hubberts 1971 estimate of no more than 1.5 million barrels per day.
Hubberts boss at the U.S. Geological Survey was Peter Rose, who said that Hubbert had no concept of technological change, economics, or how new resource plays evolve. [His] was a very static view of the world. As economic professor Mark Perry put it, Hubbert assumed that there could be an accurate estimate of ultimately recoverable resources, when in fact it is a constantly moving target.
Yergin agrees. Proved reserves isnt just a physical concept but an economic one as well: how much is available at prevailing prices. And its also a technological concept: With improved technologies, reserves once of out of reach become available and viable. Added Yergin:
The world has produced about one trillion barrels of oil since the start of the industry in the 19th century. Currently, it is thought that there are at least five trillion barrels of petroleum resources [still] in the ground, of which 1.4 trillion are deemed technically and economically accessible
With the development of the Bakken fields in North Dakota, new discoveries in Texas and Pennsylvania, the presalt deposits off the coast of Brazil, and the new discoveries in Ghana, the estimate of oil reserves continues to climb. As noted here, North America is producing so much oil that the oil map of the world is changing. Notes Yergin: Things dont stand still in the energy industry. With the passage of time, unconventional sources of oil, in all their variety, become a familiar part of the worlds petroleum supply Hubberts Peak is still not in sight.
When it is allowed to operate, the free market will always confound its critics as human action and the invisible hand inevitably result in better living standards and greater prosperity for everyone. Nowhere is this clearer than in Alberta, Canada.
This is exactly why Paul Ehrlich lost the commodities bet to Julian Simon. Simon knew the principle of substitution and the dynamic influence of technology with respect to commodity prices. Ehrich did not.
Ping.
Michael Porter’s “Five Forces of Industry” also plays a role here.
Too late for Hubbert. He reached room temperature in 1989.
The numbers quoted for bbls of oil are way off. Way too low.
The amount of oil known to be in the ground is stunning.
The numbers quoted for bbls of oil are way off. Way too low.
The amount of oil known to be in the ground is stunning.
As the article states:
Because of continued improvements in technology, the quantity of oil is far from fixed
The numbers permitted in published proved reserves are not total barrels in place, they are economically and technically recoverable today. Technologies like horzontal steerable drilling, SAGD, hydraulic fracturing allow previously known quantities of petroleum to become viable and able to add to the proved reserve numbers without doing any new exploration.
You are absolutely correct. Someone, however, needs to talk about how much oil is in the ground that will eventually be able to be raised to the surface assuming, and this is a very good assumption, that the technology is developed to get at that oil at a reasonable cost. The bbls available are astonishing.
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