Saturday, November 1, 2008

"we'd have to find a new Saudi Arabia every 18 months."

Rod Dreher on peak oil, something I have a hard time understanding:

"Sharon Astyk explains why peak oil hasn't gone away, despite the rapid deflation in oil prices. The Financial Times this week published findings from a leaked draft of a forthcoming International Energy Agency report showing that output from the world's oil fields is declining faster than experts thought. And a UK industrial task force -- note well: an industry task force, not environmentalists -- examining the potential for declining oil availability to affect the British economy published alarming results this week. Yes, new discoveries are being made, but if we were going to match the rate of depletion, we'd have to find a new Saudi Arabia every 18 months. Sharon explains why this rate of decline news is so important in this excerpt:"

Read the post. I simply don't understand the economic point being made, but maybe I'm missing something. Anyway, here's my comment:

I read the story in the FT, but I read it differently. It basically says that:

"Without extra investment to raise production, the natural annual rate of output decline is 9.1 per cent, the International Energy Agency says in its annual report, the World Energy Outlook, a draft of which has been obtained by the Financial Times."

And:

"The future rate of decline in output from producing oilfields as they mature is the single most important determinant of the amount of new capacity that will need to be built globally to meet demand," the IEA says."

So you need extra investment and new capacity.

What's the problem?

"The decline will not necessarily be felt in the next few years because demand is slowing down, but with the expected slowdown in investment the eventual effect will be magnified, oil executives say."

And:

"The watchdog warned that the world needed to make a "significant increase in future investments just to maintain the current level of production".

The only problem I see here is lack of investment.

"The effort will become even more acute as prices fall and investment decisions are delayed.'

The problem of investment could be compounded by the current crisis. This is a problem, but I've read plenty of articles in the FT about what oil countries and companies plan to do about this. The jury is still out.

And note this:

"All the increase in oil demand until 2030 comes from emerging countries, while consumption in developed countries declines.

As a result, the share of rich countries in global demand will drop from last year's 59 per cent to less than half of the total in 2030.

This is the clearest indication yet that the focus of the industry on the demand - not just the supply - side is moving away from the US, Europe and Japan, towards emerging nations."

Our consumption is already going to decline, even under this report.

The other story concerned only the U.K.

This story was about the effect of the current crisis and the drop in oil prices on investment. I don't see the story as saying anything more than that.

You might be right about peak oil, but, unless I'm missing something, this story doesn't seem alarming to me.

PS I don't drive or own a car.

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