Oil giant rejects ‘peak oil’ view

According to peak oil -> StarTelegram.com

Exxon Mobil on Tuesday lined up solidly against “peak oil” adherents, saying the estimated 4 trillion barrels of crude oil available for production will be more than enough to satisfy the estimated 60 percent increase in world demand for crude oil through 2030.

Such a view runs contrary to the peak oil argument, which warns that the world is near the peak production and any decline will weigh heavily in increased costs and geopolitical friction as demand continues to climb, particularly in China, India, Russia and the developing world.

“We are comfortable that the technology exists to produce sufficient oil through 2030,” Exxon Mobil planning manager Jaime Spellings said.

Fossil fuels will continue to make up 80 percent or more of fuels for transportation and utility use, Spellings said. Increased efficiency in automobiles, particularly the expected widespread use of hybrid automobiles and changed behaviors by consumers, will make the United States and other developed countries at least 40 percent more fuel efficient than at present.

“We think that economic output will grow faster than energy demand,” Spellings said. He added that although Exxon Mobil doesn’t predict crude-oil or gasoline prices, he said, “We feel that the current high prices for crude oil don’t reflect production costs,” and therefore, presumably, should ease.

Alternative fuels such as corn-based ethanol will account for no more than 2 percent of U.S. fuel usage by 2030, Spellings said. He said that at least 21 percent of the annual U.S. corn crop would be needed to produce that 3 percent of total gasoline use estimated for 2012.

Other estimates provided by Exxon Mobil

Global oil resources:

1984: 1.8 trillion barrels

1994: 2.2 trillion barrels

2005: 3.1 trillion barrels

Percentage of high-efficiency-technology car sales:

2005: 2 percent

2010: 3 percent

2020: 10 percent

2030: 30 percent

Daily fuel supply and demand in 2030:

Crude & condensate: 82 million barrels

Oil sands: 5 million barrels

Natural gas liquids: 8 million barrels

Biofuels: 1 million barrels

SOURCE: Exxon Mobil

- This is absolutely crazy claim by Exxon but no matter what they had to put in the good words before the world starts to be serious on alternative fuel and they will crumble like a deck of cards along with most government supported companies that invested on oil and gas. The remaining fossil fuel will be much more expensive to extract in regions such as deep sea, Alaska, political unstable countries and many more.

We can only pray the world can hold themselves together without “whatever regime should wipe off the map” discussion to raise tension!

 

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India-Singaporean consortium signs oil, gas deal with Myanmar

According to Yahoo!India News

An Indian and Singaporean consortium has signed a deal with the military junta in Myanmar to jointly drill for oil and gas off the country’s west coast, state-run media reported Friday.

The contract signed Wednesday between the consortium of Gail India Ltd. and Silver Wave Energy of Singapore and the state-owned Myanma Oil and Gas Enterprise calls for the companies to jointly explore, drill and produce oil and gas in offshore Block A-7 off Myanmar’s western Rakhine coast, the Kyemon daily reported.

Financial details of the contract were unavailable.

The contract is the latest evidence that India is stepping up its activity in neighboring Myanmar to counter the influence of its rival China.

During a visit last month to Myanmar, also called Burma, India’s air force chief offered a multimillion-dollar military assistance package, including helicopters, upgrades of Myanmar’s existing military aircraft, naval surveillance and counterinsurgency training.

India also views Myanmar as a likely source to meet its burgeoning energy needs and is exploring the possibilities of a pipeline to supply liquefied natural gas. In 2005-06, India invested around US$30.6 million (€24.4 million) in Myanmar’s oil and gas sector.

The moves by India to engage Myanmar has been widely criticized by rights groups like Human Rights Watch who fear efforts to invest in the country is helping prop up the repressive regime.

Since Myanmar liberalized its investment code in late 1988, it has attracted its largest investments mostly in the energy and oil and gas sectors.

More than half of cumulative investment comes from fellow members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, which also includes Brunei, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam, Indonesia, the Philippines, Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand.

The United States and the European Union have imposed economic sanctions on Myanmar in recent years to pressure the military government to improve human rights and release detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

Myanmar’s junta took power in 1988 after crushing the democracy movement led by Suu Kyi. In 1990, it refused to hand over power when Suu Kyi’s party won a landslide election victory.

Since then, Suu Kyi has been in and out of detention. She is kept in near-solitary confinement at her home, and is generally not allowed telephone contact or outside visitors.

- So Singapore is going to help Myanmar to drill for oil and gas….hmmm hopefully they find something there and port it to Singapore to refine and in time for LNG terminal to complete!

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Peak Oil Theory Analyzed by CERA

According to Yahoo!News:

Cambridge, MA (PRWeb) December 7, 2006 — Peak Oil, the widely discussed theory that world oil production will soon reach a peak and go into sharp decline, is the subject of a new analysis by Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA). CERA finds that the remaining global oil resource base is actually 3.74 trillion barrels — three times as large as the 1.2 trillion barrels estimated by Peak Oil theory’s proponents — and that the “peak oil” argument is based on faulty analysis which could, if accepted, distort critical policy and investment decisions and cloud the debate over the energy future.

“The global resource base of conventional and unconventional oils, including historical production of 1.08 trillion barrels and yet-to-be-produced resources, is 4.82 trillion barrels and likely to grow,” CERA Director of Oil Industry Activity Peter M. Jackson writes in Why the Peak Oil Theory Falls Down: Myths, Legends, and the Future of Oil Resources. The CERA projection is based on the firm’s analysis of fields currently in production and those yet-to-be produced or discovered.

“The ‘peak oil’ theory causes confusion and can lead to inappropriate actions and turn attention away from the real issues,” Jackson observes. “Oil is too critical to the global economy to allow fear to replace careful analysis about the very real challenges with delivering liquid fuels to meet the needs of growing economies. This is a very important debate, and as such it deserves a rational and measured discourse.”

“This is the fifth time that the world is said to be running out of oil,” says CERA Chairman Daniel Yergin, of the Peak Oil theory. “Each time — whether it was the ‘gasoline famine’ at the end of WWI or the ‘permanent shortage’ of the 1970s — technology and the opening of new frontier areas has banished the specter of decline. There’s no reason to think that technology is finished this time.”

The Peak Oil report emphasizes the importance of focusing on the critical issues. “It is not helpful to couch the debate in terms of a superficial analysis of reservoir constraints. It will be aboveground factors such as geopolitics, conflict, economics and technology that will dictate the outcome.” The report also points to such aboveground questions as timing and openness to investment, infrastructure development, and the impact of technological change on demand for oil.

Undulating Plateau vs. Peak Oil
The new report describes CERA’s liquids supply outlook as “not a view of endless abundance.” However, based on a range of potential scenarios and field-by-field analysis, CERA finds that not only will world oil production not peak before 2030, but that the idea of Peak Oil is itself “a dramatic but highly questionable image.”

Global production will eventually follow an “undulating plateau” for one or more decades before declining slowly. The global production profile will not be a simple logistic or bell curve postulated by geologist M. King Hubbert, but it will be asymmetrical — with the slope of decline more gradual and not mirroring the rapid rate of increase — and strongly skewed past the geometric peak. It will be an undulating plateau that may well last for decades.

During the plateau period in later decades, according to the CERA analysis, demand growth will likely no longer be largely met by growth in available, commercially exploitable natural oil supplies. Non-traditional or unconventional liquid fuels such as production from heavy oil sands, gas-related liquids (condensate and natural gas liquids), gas-to-liquids (GTL), and coal-to-liquids (CTL) will need to fill the gap.

Critical Issue
CERA argues that understanding the difference between a plateau and a peak followed by a precipitous decline, as well as the timing of events, is critical to the global energy future. “Corporations, governments, and other groups, including nongovernmental organizations, need to have a coherent description of how and when the undulating plateau will evolve so that rational policy and investment choices can be made,” according to the Peak Oil report.

“It is likely that the situation will unfold in slow motion and that there are a number of decades to prepare for the start of the undulating plateau. This means that there is time to consider the best way to develop viable energy alternatives that would eventually provide the bulk of our transport energy needs and ensure that there is a useable production stream of conventional crude for some time to come,” CERA concludes.

Peak Oil Theory Shortcomings
The CERA review also finds that current “peak oil” advocacy suffers from several problems:
• The peak oil argument is not presented in the context of a credible systematic evaluation of available data; its proponents have not made available a transparent and detailed analysis that would allow an objective and rational discussion. At base “their methodology is to impute decline curves against currently proven reserves and declare that the game — and the argument — is over.”
• The underlying peak oil analytical model formulated by the late M. King Hubbert both fails to recognize that recoverable reserve estimates evolve with time and are subject to significant change, and it also underplays the substantial impact of technological advances. Consequently, total annual production at the high point in 1970 was 600 million barrels higher — 20 percent — than Hubbert’s projection of peak production for the US Lower 48, although he correctly anticipated its timing within two years.
Hubbert’s method requires accurate knowledge of the ultimate recoverable reserves of an area, but his 1956 analysis could never have incorporated the impact of giant discoveries in Alaska and the deepwater Gulf of Mexico, and therefore couldn’t have predicted the production profile for the U.S. As a result, total cumulative U.S. production between the high point in 1970 and 2005 exceeded Hubbert’s predictions by the equivalent of more than 10 years of US production at present rates.
• Hubbert-posited post-peak reservoir decline curve assumptions are rebutted by observation that the geometry of typical oilfield production profiles is often distinctly asymmetrical and does not generally show a precipitous mirror-image decline in production after an apparent peak, even without the application of new technology or enhanced oil recovery techniques. As a result, in the US Lower 48 where Hubbert came closest to accurately forecasting a peak, oil production in 2005 was some 66 percent higher than projected by Hubbert, and cumulative production between 1970 and 2005 was some 15 billion barrels higher, a variance equal to more than eight years of US production at present rates.
• Peak Oil proponents who believe a peak is imminent tend to consider only proven remaining reserves of conventional oil, which they currently estimate at about 1.2 trillion barrels. In the view of many petroleum geologists, this is a pessimistic estimate because it excludes the enormous contribution likely from probable and possible resources, those yet to be found, and plays down the importance of unconventional reserves in the Canadian oil sands, the Orinoco tar belt, oil shale and GTL projects. CERA believes the global inventory is some 4.8 trillion barrels, of which about 1.08 trillion barrels have been produced, leaving 3.72 trillion conventional and unconventional barrels, an order of magnitude that will allow productive capacity to continue to expand well into this century.
• The “peak oil” argument is frequently supported with data indicating that new exploration finds are not sufficient to replace annual production. Their data sets have serious deficiencies. The peak argument is an incomplete and therefore misleading analysis because it ignores the role of development (vs exploration) projects in expanding reserves, fails to understand economic factors that can point company and national strategies to emphasize development vs exploration work. By focusing on “discovery” and ignoring the increased knowledge and confidence about field volumes, it disregards the fact that revisions, additions and exploration together have generated resource growth of 320 billion barrels – 80 billion barrels more, or one-third more, than total production – during the period from 1995 to 2003. CERA draws both on its own data bases and those of its parent company IHS, which has the world’s most complete proprietary data bases on oil production and resources.
• Hubbert’s method does not incorporate economic or technical factors that influence productive capacity; most importantly, it ignores the impact of both price and demand, both major drivers of production.
• Peak Oil proponents projections of the date a peak would be reached continue to come and go, the most recent targeted around Thanksgiving Day 2005, give or take a few weeks.

Signposts

“It is no longer sensible to allow the issues about future supplies to be clouded in a debate grounded in a flawed technical argument,” the CERA report concludes. “There is general agreement that a peak or plateau of sorts will develop in the next 50 years, and it is not helpful to couch the debate in terms of a superficial analysis of reservoir constraints.” The report emphasizes the importance of the aboveground factors cited earlier.

“There is a need to identify the signposts that will herald the onset of the inevitable slowdown of production growth and ensure that policymakers outside the energy community have a clear understanding of possible outcomes and risks.”

Cambridge Energy Research Associates (CERA), an IHS company, is a leading advisor to energy companies, consumers, financial institutions, technology providers, and governments. CERA (www.cera.com) delivers strategic knowledge and independent analysis on energy markets, geopolitics, industry trends, and strategy. CERA is based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and has offices in Bangkok; Beijing; Calgary; Dubai; Johannesburg; Mexico City; Moscow; Mumbai; Oslo; Paris; Rio de Janeiro; San Francisco; Tokyo; and Washington, DC.

-  Well, this report totally threw peak oil theory out the window as if it’s the last thing that will ever happens!!! OMG! I can see the CERA is energy advisor for companies and governments…hmmm. Oil will NEVER RUN OUT but it will get more expensive, peak oil is not about oil running out but our population increases faster and consumption of OIL and GAS becomes faster then we can produce! The general peak in oil production is a confirm deal for lot’s of oil producing countries and the rest of the oil is in harder to reach locations!

Oil in Deep Sea and Unstable location that will COST A LOT of money to extract and deliver! Our New Oil discovery MUST BE able to sustain our ever increasing population growth and oil consumption growth rates!

Let’s hope our Government knows more alternatives to Oil and Gas and START IT QUICK! Geothermal, Nuclear, Wind, Sun, Waves and many more! Go Start your trial!!

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