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Plan now for a world without oil
by Michael Meacher
Wednesday January 07, 2004 at 12:55 PM
January 5 2004, Financial Times. The former UK environment minister with a chilling warning about life on the down slope of oil depletion. (Michael Meacher stepped down from the Blair government in protest in June)
Four months ago, Britain's oil imports overtook its exports, underlining a
decline in North Sea oil production that was already well under way. North
Sea oil output peaked at about 2.9m barrels per day in 1999, and has been
predicted to fall to only 1.6m bpd by 2007. Even the discovery of the new
Buzzard field, the biggest British oil find in a decade, with a total of
some 500m barrels recoverable, will not alter by much the overall picture of
dwindling resources.
This prospect would not be so bleak were it not that similar trends are now
becoming manifest around the globe. The three main oil-producing regions are
Opec, the former Soviet Union, and the rest of the world. According to
papers presented at the latest annual meetings of the Association for the
Study of Peak Oil, Opec's future production is expected to peak in 2020 at
about 40-45m bpd. Under-production in the former Soviet Union in the 1990s
has been followed by a new surge in east Siberia and Sakhalin. Together with
new discoveries in the Caspian, this will yield a peak of about 10m bpd in
2010.
Combining the models for Opec, the former Soviet Union and the remaining 40
or more major oil-producing countries puts ultimate world oil recovery -
past and future - at some 2,200bn barrels, with production peaking at about
80m bpd between 2010 and 2020. To this may be added non-conventional oil and
other liquids brought into commercial production by the rising price as oil
becomes more scarce. These include oil from coal and shale, bitumen and
derived synthetics, heavy and extra-heavy oil, deep-water oil, polar oil and
liquids from gas fields and gas plants. These sources, though at very much
greater cost, could provide an ultimate recovery of about 800bn barrels and
might peak in 2050 at around 20m bpd. But the combined model suggests a peak
from all sources of about 90m bpd around 2015.
Today we enjoy a daily production of 75m bpd. But to meet projected demand
in 2015, we would need to open new oilfields that can give an additional 60m
bpd. This is frankly impossible. It would require the equivalent of more
than 10 new regions, each the size of the North Sea. Maybe Iraq with
enormous new investments will increase production by 6m bpd, and the rest of
the Middle East might be able to do the same. But to suggest that the rest
of the world could produce an extra 40m barrels daily is just moonshine.
These calculations place the coming oil crunch some time between 2010 and
2015, perhaps earlier. The reserves in the world's super-giant and giant
oilfields are dwindling at an average rate of 4-6 per cent a year. No more
big frontier regions remain to be explored except the north and south poles.
The production of non-conventional crude oil has already been initiated at
enormous cost in Venezuela's Orinoco belt and Canada's Athabasca tar sands
and ultra-deep waters. Yet no major primary energy alternative can replace
oil and gas in the short-to-medium term.
The implications of this are mind-blowing, since oil provides 40 per cent of
all traded energy and no less than 90 per cent of transport fuel. But not
only are the motor vehicle and farming industries dependent on oil, so is
national defence. Oil powers the vast network of planes, tanks, helicopters
and ships that provide the basis of each country's armaments. It is hard to
envisage the effects of a radically reduced oil supply on a modern economy
or society. Yet just such a radical reduction is staring us in the face.
The world faces a stark choice. It can continue down the existing path of
rising oil consumption, trying to pre-empt available remaining oil supplies,
if necessary by military force, but without avoiding a steady exhaustion of
global capacity. Or it could switch to renewable sources of energy, much
more stringent standards of energy efficiency, and a steady reduction in oil
use. The latter course would involve huge new investment in energy
generation and transportation technologies.
The US response to this dilemma is very striking. The National Energy Policy
report prepared by Dick Cheney, US vice-president, in May 2001 proposed the
exploitation of untapped reserves in protected wilderness areas within the
US, notably the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in north-eastern Alaska. The
rejection of this extremely contentious proposal forced President George W.
Bush, unwilling to curb America's ever-growing thirst for oil, to go back on
White House rhetoric and accept the need to increase oil imports from
foreign suppliers.
It was a fateful decision. It means that, for the US alone, oil imports, or
imports of other sources of oil, such as natural gas liquids, will have to
rise from 11m bpd to 18.5m bpd by 2020. Securing that increment of imported
oil - the equivalent of total current oil consumption by China and India
combined - has driven an integrated US oil-military strategy ever since.
There is, however, a fundamental weakness in this policy. Most countries
targeted as a source of increased oil supplies to the US are riven by deep
internal conflicts, strong anti-Americanism, or both. Iraq is only the first
example of the cost - both in cash and in soldiers' lives - of facing down
resistance or fighting resource wars in key oil-producing regions, a cost
that even the US may find unsustainable.
The conclusion is clear: if we do not immediately plan to make the switch to
renewable energy - faster, and backed by far greater investment than
currently envisaged - then civilisation faces the sharpest and perhaps most
violent dislocation in recent history.
The writer was UK environment minister from 1997 to June 2003
more on peak oil
by mark
Tuesday January 13, 2004 at 08:14 PM
mark@nospam.oilempire.us
http://www.oilempire.us/peakoil.html
http://www.oilempire.us election coups, 9/11 (the American Reichstag Fire), fascism, World War IV and the peak of petroleum production
www.oilempire.us/peakoil.html
Life After Oil.
by Dr. M.J. Canoy
Monday February 02, 2004 at 12:44 PM
m_canoy2002@yahoo.com (605) 693-4062 South Dakota, USA
The portrayed scenario is pretty factual and there is no arguement. If anything it is understated. Now, run a natural extrapalation. Oil, all fossil hydrocarbons, are essential for agriculture (not for fuel, for fertilizers, harvest and storage materials) plastics, pharmacueticals, electronics. Sit where you are now and look around you. Virtually everything you see and are touching would not exist without these hydrocarbons, both directly and indirectly. All the "alternative" energy proposals except for local power from primative water or wind recuire more energy to build, maintain, and exploit than you can get out of them. Sorry. Michael
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