Energy execs debate whether oil crisis looms


According to Yahoo!UK Ireland News:

HOUSTON (Reuters) – Are the lacklustre production and reserve replacement rates reported by the largest oil companies precursors to a looming oil crisis?

The largest oil companies have had increased difficulty meeting a range of challenges to increase their production, including mature oil fields with declining production rates and restrictive regimes that have tightened their hold on their resources as commodity prices have.

The issue was much debated by oil executives and industry watchers at the CERA energy conference this week.

An oil crisis is coming in the next 10 years,” said John Hess, chief executive of Hess Corp . He said that he believes oil producing companies and countries are not investing enough to ensure sufficient production capacity to meet growing demand.

“While recent discoveries … are promising, we need to find a new production basin like the Alaska North Slope or Angola every year to ensure that we can grow our oil resource base to support increases in production for future generations. We stopped making such meaningful discoveries during the late 1990s,” he said.

As their coffers have swelled in recent years from record oil prices, many oil companies have spent more on dividends and share repurchases than on capital projects.

Earlier this year, Chevron and Royal Dutch Shell indicated that their replacement levels of produced oil and gas for 2007 would disappoint investors, and even Exxon’s first-quarter production was lighter than many analysts had hoped.

There is an urgent need to strengthen the flow of capital into upstream oil,” said Nobuo Tanaka, executive director of the International Energy Agency. “We remain comfortable with the adequacy of the world’s hydrocarbon reserves, but we are anxious to mitigate the above ground risks that complicate today’s markets.”

PEAK APPROACHING?

Ironically, StatoilHydro CEO Helge Lund said the shortage of industry spending is due in part to the high oil prices that have brought in that windfall to the companies.

Oil companies could be hesitant to spend money to pick up new exploration and production projects because they will have to pay for these assets based on an oil price that they believe is inflated.

It is a question of whether you can make efficient investment decisions and be at the right cost level in the current environment,” he said.

Cambridge Energy Research Associates, the conference’s host organization, believes that adequate oil supply should be available in the near term.

According to a study released last month, CERA estimates that the global decline rate of fields currently in production is 4.5 percent — a lower number than previously believed. The group says this means that the oil supply won’t hit a peak and start to contract in the short term.

Even those who don’t see a peak approaching still expect challenges.

The supply of easy oil will not keep up,” said Linda Cook, executive director of gas and power at Royal Dutch Shell, noting that unconventional resources like oil sands and oil shale, as well as liquefied natural gas, will have to pick up the slack

- They all talking like they know what they are talking about, mostly just want more money to spend to “discover” more oil, improve the “technology” of extraction and other “projects” to harvest “unconventional” natural “resources”. The price tag for oil will continue it’s bullish run until someone either found a super mega oil fields or discovered abundance of cheap alternative energy somewhere, both unlikely to happen so soon.

Political tension in the middle east plus substantial rise in global demand for “energy” will be making oil prices generally high and fluctuating wildly. Gold, platinum, wheat, and palm oil are few commodities that many had switch their funds into wishing for more bullish run. Seriously, the higher the cost of these “commodities” the more unlikely that human can survive the destruction force of hyper inflation and stagnant growth – stagflation.

Economic recession + high inflation will create a situation that money means absolutely nothing when cost of bread for example, increase to a certain point of being “unavailable” on the shelves and buying from the black market will be result in even more unreasonable prices. By then nobody can afford anything even when they used to be considered well off with “high” salary.

If you earn 3k and above, you are pretty well off for now but in the future when food cost 10 times more…then you will not have enough to survive on plus additional security cost (body guards and locks etc) to protect from the looters and robbers formed by the poor and desperate.

Of course most people will ask me to “deal with it” as inflation had been always there and nothing is going to change that but they don’t realize the solutions to “deal with it” might not be everyone taste and those who are not mentally prepared or never wanted to prepare anything like super spike in cost of living including food, electricity, transportation, medical and more.

Maybe I am the only one fearing for the worst…maybe it’s better to pretend I don’t know about peak oil and carry on living as normal. Using the movie “The Matrix” comparison, “Peak Oil” is the blue pill that waken me up to the “real world” and it’s hard to take back the “red pill” and go back into the matrix forgetting all my research…and throw away my solar panels and renewable energy experiments. It’s hard to understand majority of the population still thinks it’s business as usual.

“The wake up call is here, follow the white rabbit, Neo…knock knock”

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  • Sleepless

    Hi Simon,

    “Maybe it’s better to pretend I don’t know about peak oil and carry on living as normal.”

    Better in what way? So we can “live” in blissful ignorance until SHTF and it is too late?

    Ignore the doubters and deniers; they are the negative sheep who will suffer most when Peak Oil hits us.

    I intend to fully prepare best I can. And I thank you and lowen for helping me see the signs ahead so I can take action now…

  • Simon Tay

    I don’t think anyone can fully prepare ahead totally. Hope one day we can sit down and discuss more on our plans.

    i believe it can be done.

  • bluegal

    My parents any myself are stocking up food and water for the moment. The food in our house can last us for at least one month.

  • Simon Tay

    I applaud you and your parent’s effort however do remember to stagger your purchase unless it’s desperate.

    If you buy everything all at once you might inevitably trigger a hoarding panic by other onlookers. If everyone does the same as us, the panic will cause more empty shelves and higher price spikes at a much earlier date.

    Do try to buy small amount over time and higher frequencies.

    Imagine someone buying 10 packets of rice clearing the shelves right in front of you and other shoppers…everyone will panic and buy 20 packets each and soon only 10% of the population hoard 100% of the rice…

    I believe that is happening in China and Malaysia…which is very bad.

    The best solution now is find a source of food in alternative urban farming which I am still experimenting and failing many times….sigh. Hope you have more luck then me.

  • chris

    bluegal,I can’t believe you did that, please do not encourage the class to do that.

  • Simon Tay

    Chris,

    You are right…Bluegal, don’t spread this by yourself. It’s hard for anyone to believe the crisis is are looming when everyone does not understand the situation.

    It’s better not to spread without proper understanding otherwise risking being ridicule.

    Singapore diversify their food imports hence not much of a panic yet however some cheaper imports from China had been drastically gone.

    Rice will be getting scarce soon, but do not panic! It’s not the end of the world yet!! To the newspaper it’s a weather or climate phenomenal that Australia lost 90% of their rice productions and China are massively importing rice from other countries now.