Showing posts with label peak oil. Show all posts

Oil at Ninety





An important item is covered here that lets us catch up on the present oilmarket.  Oil has recovered slowly backthrough to the $90 dollar mark as the global economy continues to recover backto pre 2008 levels of activity.  Duringthis recovery, OPEC has been able to ship a million barrels per day over theirso called quotas.  This all means thatthey are restraining supply to allow this price level to be reached whilecovering any shortfalls.

I suspect they have the capacity to keep the price in this particularrange.  This is important.  Any higher and contraction begins to imposeitself in the developed markets which is not desirable to anyone.

More important the investment to replace declining reserves is now in fullswing because the industry must replace cheap declining reserves with newexpensive reserves in the face of an expanding global economy.  Unsurprisingly the oil industry is spendingeverywhere they can.

Locking the price at $90 assures us that the development of North Americanshale oil reserves and restoration of depleted conventional reserves using thenew petro fracking method is profitable and will turn into a massive land rushthat will actually make North Americacompletely independent of global oil.

Major alternatives are also emerging and I have no doubt that we will seethe complete and rather abrupt end of the oil age quite soon.  Up until that is actually happening we haveto keep the economy turning over and oil does just that.  You will be amazed over how fast the finaltransition will actually be.

All things indicate that peak conventional oil has passed and the presentscramble should plausibly replace contracting reserves.

But keep in mind, this contraction is fast and happening across thespectrum of all our present production where any and all new production isexpensive.  That is why oil is at $90 andwhy the alternative options are now holding up economically.


OPEC Caught Lying...

By Nick Hodge | Tuesday,December 28th, 2010



Now that the Peak has passed, all sorts of interesting tidbits are emerging.
Take the December 13th BusinessWeek article thatdeclared OPEC is cheating the most since 2004...
Apparently, the oil cartel pumped 26.78 millionbarrels per day (mmbd) this year. Yet they have a production limit of only24.845 mmbd, set at the end of 2008 in response to the recession.
So your friendly neighborhood fuel gang has beenbreaking its output limit by 1.934 million barrels — everyday, all year long.
With crude at its highest price in two years,overproduction allows OPEC members to boost profits without formallychanging output targets.
An extra 1.934 mmbd at $80 works out to a nice “informal”$56.47 billion boost.
OPEC's been lying... That's nothing new.
What's important here is to note the willingnessto extract as much as they can as prices rise.
Analysts,start your engines
If the price of oil creeps high enough, OPEC willofficially raise its target to cash in.
$100 seems to be the obvious trigger to make thathappen, and the consensus is that it will happen this year.
Oil's at $91.43 as I write this — up 30% fromthe year's low.
Goldman says it'll “average $100 in 2010 and $110in 2012.” JPMorgan says we'll see $120 by the end of 2012.
Adding to the pricing fire, U.S. stockpilesdeclined by 19 million barrels this month thanks to intense cold and holidaytravel. That's the biggest monthly decrease since December 2006.
I'm sure you've noticed gas station marqueenumbers are back on the march.
Prices at the pump have officially broken $3.00for the first time since October 2008. And they aren't expected to ease anytimesoon.
John Hofmeister (former President of Shell,current Head of Citizens for Affordable Energy) is touring TV land this weekwith a new prediction:
We'll be paying $5.00per gallon in less than two years, and sometime between 2018 and2020 there will be another 1970s-style energy shortage requiringrationing.
And this guy didn't just jump on the bandwagon;he's been saying for years that “the last days of affordable gas are behindus.”
He's been attacking our national energypolicy since the turn of the century,saying business as usual would leadus to an “energy abyss”.
And like an ever-increasing cadre of oil execs, headmits conventional oil production is in decline, and is convinced we must turnto unconventional sources to fill the gap — and avoid gas stationrationing.
There's still time to put this trend to work foryour portfolio. Oil at $200 per barrel implies a 122% increase from today'sprices.
Buying an oil or gasoline fund like United StatesGasoline (NYSE: UGA) or ProShares Ultra Crude Oil (NYSE: UCO) or topunconventional oil plays will ensure rising oil prices translate intopersonal profits...
Those stocks and funds are already marching instep:
It explains the future of drilling for hard-to-getoil, and the one company that will make shareholders rich as it unlocksbillions of barrels worth of unconventional reserves.
Call it like you see it,

Oil at Ninety





An important item is covered here that lets us catch up on the present oilmarket.  Oil has recovered slowly backthrough to the $90 dollar mark as the global economy continues to recover backto pre 2008 levels of activity.  Duringthis recovery, OPEC has been able to ship a million barrels per day over theirso called quotas.  This all means thatthey are restraining supply to allow this price level to be reached whilecovering any shortfalls.

I suspect they have the capacity to keep the price in this particularrange.  This is important.  Any higher and contraction begins to imposeitself in the developed markets which is not desirable to anyone.

More important the investment to replace declining reserves is now in fullswing because the industry must replace cheap declining reserves with newexpensive reserves in the face of an expanding global economy.  Unsurprisingly the oil industry is spendingeverywhere they can.

Locking the price at $90 assures us that the development of North Americanshale oil reserves and restoration of depleted conventional reserves using thenew petro fracking method is profitable and will turn into a massive land rushthat will actually make North Americacompletely independent of global oil.

Major alternatives are also emerging and I have no doubt that we will seethe complete and rather abrupt end of the oil age quite soon.  Up until that is actually happening we haveto keep the economy turning over and oil does just that.  You will be amazed over how fast the finaltransition will actually be.

All things indicate that peak conventional oil has passed and the presentscramble should plausibly replace contracting reserves.

But keep in mind, this contraction is fast and happening across thespectrum of all our present production where any and all new production isexpensive.  That is why oil is at $90 andwhy the alternative options are now holding up economically.


OPEC Caught Lying...

By Nick Hodge | Tuesday,December 28th, 2010



Now that the Peak has passed, all sorts of interesting tidbits are emerging.
Take the December 13th BusinessWeek article thatdeclared OPEC is cheating the most since 2004...
Apparently, the oil cartel pumped 26.78 millionbarrels per day (mmbd) this year. Yet they have a production limit of only24.845 mmbd, set at the end of 2008 in response to the recession.
So your friendly neighborhood fuel gang has beenbreaking its output limit by 1.934 million barrels — everyday, all year long.
With crude at its highest price in two years,overproduction allows OPEC members to boost profits without formallychanging output targets.
An extra 1.934 mmbd at $80 works out to a nice “informal”$56.47 billion boost.
OPEC's been lying... That's nothing new.
What's important here is to note the willingnessto extract as much as they can as prices rise.
Analysts,start your engines
If the price of oil creeps high enough, OPEC willofficially raise its target to cash in.
$100 seems to be the obvious trigger to make thathappen, and the consensus is that it will happen this year.
Oil's at $91.43 as I write this — up 30% fromthe year's low.
Goldman says it'll “average $100 in 2010 and $110in 2012.” JPMorgan says we'll see $120 by the end of 2012.
Adding to the pricing fire, U.S. stockpilesdeclined by 19 million barrels this month thanks to intense cold and holidaytravel. That's the biggest monthly decrease since December 2006.
I'm sure you've noticed gas station marqueenumbers are back on the march.
Prices at the pump have officially broken $3.00for the first time since October 2008. And they aren't expected to ease anytimesoon.
John Hofmeister (former President of Shell,current Head of Citizens for Affordable Energy) is touring TV land this weekwith a new prediction:
We'll be paying $5.00per gallon in less than two years, and sometime between 2018 and2020 there will be another 1970s-style energy shortage requiringrationing.
And this guy didn't just jump on the bandwagon;he's been saying for years that “the last days of affordable gas are behindus.”
He's been attacking our national energypolicy since the turn of the century,saying business as usual would leadus to an “energy abyss”.
And like an ever-increasing cadre of oil execs, headmits conventional oil production is in decline, and is convinced we must turnto unconventional sources to fill the gap — and avoid gas stationrationing.
There's still time to put this trend to work foryour portfolio. Oil at $200 per barrel implies a 122% increase from today'sprices.
Buying an oil or gasoline fund like United StatesGasoline (NYSE: UGA) or ProShares Ultra Crude Oil (NYSE: UCO) or topunconventional oil plays will ensure rising oil prices translate intopersonal profits...
Those stocks and funds are already marching instep:
It explains the future of drilling for hard-to-getoil, and the one company that will make shareholders rich as it unlocksbillions of barrels worth of unconventional reserves.
Call it like you see it,

Peak Oil Already Here: Key oil numbers were distorted by U.S. pressure says whistleblower

Peak Oil Already Here:  Key oil numbers were distorted by U.S. pressure says whistleblower

by Terry Macalister, The Guardian, November 9, 2009

OilProduction

The world is much closer to running out of oil than official estimates admit, according to a whistleblower at the International Energy Agency who claims it has been deliberately underplaying a looming shortage for fear of triggering panic buying.

The senior official claims the US has played an influential role in encouraging the watchdog to underplay the rate of decline from existing oil fields while overplaying the chances of finding new reserves.

The allegations raise serious questions about the accuracy of the organisation's latest World Energy Outlook on oil demand and supply to be published tomorrow – which is used by the British and many other governments to help guide their wider energy and climate change policies.
'There's suspicion the IEA has been influenced by the US' Link to this audio

In particular they question the prediction in the last World Economic Outlook, believed to be repeated again this year, that oil production can be raised from its current level of 83m barrels a day to 105m barrels. External critics have frequently argued that this cannot be substantiated by firm evidence and say the world has already passed its peak in oil production.

Now the "peak oil" theory is gaining support at the heart of the global energy establishment. "The IEA in 2005 was predicting oil supplies could rise as high as 120m barrels a day by 2030 although it was forced to reduce this gradually to 116m and then 105m last year," said the IEA source, who was unwilling to be identified for fear of reprisals inside the industry. "The 120m figure always was nonsense but even today's number is much higher than can be justified and the IEA knows this.

"Many inside the organisation believe that maintaining oil supplies at even 90m to 95m barrels a day would be impossible but there are fears that panic could spread on the financial markets if the figures were brought down further. And the Americans fear the end of oil supremacy because it would threaten their power over access to oil resources," he added.

A second senior IEA source, who has now left but was also unwilling to give his name, said a key rule at the organisation was that it was "imperative not to anger the Americans" but the fact was that there was not as much oil in the world as had been admitted. "We have [already] entered the 'peak oil' zone. I think that the situation is really bad," he added.

The IEA acknowledges the importance of its own figures, boasting on its website: "The IEA governments and industry from all across the globe have come to rely on the World Energy Outlook to provide a consistent basis on which they can formulate policies and design business plans."

The British government, among others, always uses the IEA statistics rather than any of its own to argue that there is little threat to long-term oil supplies.

The IEA said tonight that peak oil critics had often wrongly questioned the accuracy of its figures. A spokesman said it was unable to comment ahead of the 2009 report being released tomorrow.

John Hemming, the MP who chairs the all-party parliamentary group on peak oil and gas, said the revelations confirmed his suspicions that the IEA underplayed how quickly the world was running out and this had profound implications for British government energy policy.

He said he had also been contacted by some IEA officials unhappy with its lack of independent scepticism over predictions. "Reliance on IEA reports has been used to justify claims that oil and gas supplies will not peak before 2030. It is clear now that this will not be the case and the IEA figures cannot be relied on," said Hemming.

"This all gives an importance to the Copenhagen [climate change] talks and an urgent need for the UK to move faster towards a more sustainable [lower carbon] economy if it is to avoid severe economic dislocation," he added.

The IEA was established in 1974 after the oil crisis in an attempt to try to safeguard energy supplies to the west. The World Energy Outlook is produced annually under the control of the IEA's chief economist, Fatih Birol, who has defended the projections from earlier outside attack. Peak oil critics have often questioned the IEA figures.

But now IEA sources who have contacted the Guardian say that Birol has increasingly been facing questions about the figures inside the organisation.

Matt Simmons, a respected oil industry expert, has long questioned the decline rates and oil statistics provided by Saudi Arabia on its own fields. He has raised questions about whether peak oil is much closer than many have accepted.

A report by the UK Energy Research Centre (UKERC) last month said worldwide production of conventionally extracted oil could "peak" and go into terminal decline before 2020 – but that the government was not facing up to the risk. Steve Sorrell, chief author of the report, said forecasts suggesting oil production will not peak before 2030 were "at best optimistic and at worst implausible."

But as far back as 2004 there have been people making similar warnings. Colin Campbell, a former executive with Total of France told a conference: "If the real [oil reserve] figures were to come out there would be panic on the stock markets … in the end that would suit no one."

Link:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/nov/09/peak-oil-international-energy-agency