Guardian | The end of oil is closer than you think 

Oil production could peak next year, reports John Vidal. Just kiss your 
lifestyle goodbye 


John Vidal 
Thursday April 21, 2005 
http://www.guardian.co.uk/life-/feature/story/0,13026,1464050-,00.html 


The one thing that international bankers don't want to hear is that the 
second Great Depression may be round the corner. But last week, a group of 
ultra-conservative Swiss financiers asked a retired English petroleum 
geologist living in Ireland to tell them about the beginning of the end of 
the oil age. 
They called Colin Campbell, who helped to found the London-based Oil 
Depletion Analysis Centre because he is an industry man through and through,

has no financial agenda and has spent most of a lifetime on the front line 
of oil exploration on three continents. He was chief geologist for Amoco, a 
vice-president of Fina, and has worked for BP, Texaco, Shell, ChevronTexaco 
and Exxon in a dozen different countries. 
"Don't worry about oil running out; it won't for very many years," the 
Oxford PhD told the bankers in a message that he will repeat to businessmen,

academics and investment analysts at a conference in Edinburgh next week. 
"The issue is the long downward slope that opens on the other side of peak 
production. Oil and gas dominate our lives, and their decline will change 
the world in radical and unpredictable ways," he says. 
Campbell reckons global peak production of conventional oil - the kind 
associated with gushing oil wells - is approaching fast, perhaps even next 
year. His calculations are based on historical and present production data, 
published reserves and discoveries of companies and governments, estimates 
of reserves lodged with the US Securities and Exchange Commission, speeches 
by oil chiefs and a deep knowledge of how the industry works. 
"About 944bn barrels of oil has so far been extracted, some 764bn remains 
extractable in known fields, or reserves, and a further 142bn of reserves 
are classed as 'yet-to-find', meaning what oil is expected to be discovered.

If this is so, then the overall oil peak arrives next year," he says. 
If he is correct, then global oil production can be expected to decline 
steadily at about 2-3% a year, the cost of everything from travel, heating, 
agriculture, trade, and anything made of plastic rises. And the scramble to 
control oil resources intensifies. As one US analyst said this week: "Just 
kiss your lifestyle goodbye." 
But the Campbell analysis is way off the much more optimistic official 
figures. The US Geological Survey (USGS) states that reserves in 2000 (its 
latest figures) of recoverable oil were about three trillion barrels and 
that peak production will not come for about 30 years. The International 
Energy Agency (IEA) believes that oil will peak between "2013 and 2037" and 
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq and Iran, four countries with much of the world's

known reserves, report little if any depletion of reserves. Meanwhile, the 
oil companies - which do not make public estimates of their own "peak oil" -

say there is no shortage of oil and gas for the long term. "The world holds 
enough proved reserves for 40 years of supply and at least 60 years of gas 
supply at current consumption rates," said BP this week. 
Indeed, almost every year for 150 years, the oil industry has produced more 
than it did the year before, and predictions of oil running out or peaking 
have always been proved wrong. Today, the industry is producing about 83m 
barrels a day, with big new fields in Azerbaijan, Angola, Algeria, the deep 
waters of the Gulf of Mexico and elsewhere soon expected on stream. 
But the business of estimating oil reserves is contentious and political. 
According to Campbell, companies seldom report their true findings for 
commercial reasons, and governments - which own 90% of the reserves - often 
lie. Most official figures, he says, are grossly unreliable: "Estimating 
reserves is a scientific business. There is a range of uncertainty but it is

not impossible to get a good idea of what a field contains. Reporting 
[reserves], however, is a political act." 
According to Campbell and other oil industry sources, the two most widely 
used estimates of world oil reserves, drawn up by the Oil and Gas Journal 
and the BP Statistical Review, both rely on reserve estimates provided to 
them by governments and industry and do not question their accuracy. 
Companies, says Campbell, "under-report their new discoveries to comply with

strict US stock exchange rules, but then revise them upwards over time", 
partly to boost their share prices with "good news" results. "I do not think

that I ever told the truth about the size of a prospect. That was not the 
game we were in," he says. "As we were competing for funds with other 
subsidiaries around the world, we had to exaggerate." 
Most serious of all, he and other oil depletion analysts and petroleum 
geologists, most of whom have been in the industry for years, accuse the US 
of using questionable statistical probability models to calculate global 
reserves and Opec countries of drastically revising upwards their reserves 
in the 1980s. 
"The estimates for the Opec countries were systematically exaggerated in the

late 1980s to win a greater slice of the allocation cake. Middle East 
official reserves jumped 43% in just three years despite no new major 
finds," he says. 
The study of "peak oil" - the point at which half the total oil known to 
have existed in a field or a country has been consumed, beyond which 
extraction goes into irreversible decline - used to be back-of-the envelope 
guesswork. It was not taken seriously by business or governments, mainly 
because oil has always been cheap and plentiful. 
In the wake of the Iraq war, the rapid economic rise of China, global 
warming and recent record oil prices, the debate has shifted from "if" there

is a global peak to "when". 
The US government knows that conventional oil is running out fast. According

to a report on oil shales and unconventional oil supplies prepared by the US

office of petroleum reserves last year, "world oil reserves are being 
depleted three times as fast as they are being discovered. Oil is being 
produced from past discoveries, but the re-serves are not being fully 
replaced. Remaining oil reserves of individual oil companies must continue 
to shrink. The disparity between increasing production and declining 
discoveries can only have one outcome: a practical supply limit will be 
reached and future supply to meet conventional oil demand will not be 
available." 
It continues: "Although there is no agreement about the date that world oil 
production will peak, forecasts presented by USGS geologist Les Magoon, the 
Oil and Gas Journal, and others expect the peak will occur between 2003 and 
2020. What is notable ... is that none extend beyond the year 2020, 
suggesting that the world may be facing shortfalls much sooner than 
expected." 
According to Bill Powers, editor of the Canadian Energy Viewpoint investment

journal, there is a growing belief among geologists who study world oil 
supply that production "is soon headed into an irreversible decline ... The 
US government does not want to admit the reality of the situation. Dr 
Campbell's thesis, and those of others like him, are becoming the 
mainstream." 
In the absence of reliable official figures, geologists and analysts are 
turning to the grandfather of oil depletion analysis, M King Hubbert, a 
Shell geologist who in 1956 showed mathematically that exploitation of any 
oilfield follows a predictable "bell curve" trend, which is slow to take 
off, rises steeply, flattens and then descends again steeply. The biggest 
and easiest exploited oilfields were always found early in the history of 
exploration, while smaller ones were developed as production from the big 
fields declined. He accurately predicted that US domestic oil production 
would peak around 1970, 40 years after the period of peak discovery around 
1930. 
Many oil analysts now take the "Hubbert peak" model seriously, and the USGS,

national and oil company figures with a large dose of salt. Similar patterns

of peak discovery and production have been found throughout all the world's 
main oilfields. The first North Sea discovery was in 1969, discoveries 
peaked in 1973 and the UK passed its production peak in 1999. The British 
portion of the basin is now in serious decline and the Norwegian sector has 
levelled off. 
Other analysts are also questioning afresh the oil companies' data. US Wall 
street energy group Herold last month compared the stated reserves of the 
world's leading oil companies with their quoted discoveries, and production 
levels. Herold predicts that the seven largest will all begin seeing 
production declines within four years. Deutsche Bank analysts report that 
global oil production will peak in 2014. 
According to Chris Skrebowski, editor of Petroleum Review, a monthly 
magazine published by the Energy Institute in London, conventional oil 
reserves are now declining about 4-6% a year worldwide. He says 18 large 
oil-producing countries, including Britain, and 32 smaller ones, have 
declining production; and he expects Denmark, Malaysia, Brunei, China, 
Mexico and India all to reach their peak in the next few years. 
"We should be worried. Time is short and we are not even at the point where 
we admit we have a problem," Skrebowski says. "Governments are always 
excessively optimistic. The problem is that the peak, which I think is 2008,

is tomorrow in planning terms." 
On the other hand, Equatorial Guinea, Sao Tome, Chad and Angola are are all 
expected to grow strongly. 
What is agreed is that world oil demand is surging. The International Energy

Agency, which collates national figures and predicts demand, says developing

countries could push demand up 47% to 121m barrels a day by 2030, and that 
oil companies and oil-producing nations must spend about $100bn a year to 
develop new supplies to keep pace. 
According to the IEA, demand rose faster in 2004 than in any year since 
1976. China's oil consumption, which accounted for a third of extra global 
demand last year, grew 17% and is expected to double over 15 years to more 
than 10m barrels a day - half the US's present demand. India's consumption 
is expected to rise by nearly 30% in the next five years. If world demand 
continues to grow at 2% a year, then almost 160m barrels a day will need to 
be extracted in 2035, twice as much as today. 
That, say most geologists is almost inconceivable. According to industry 
consultants IHS Energy, 90% of all known reserves are now in production, 
suggesting that few major discoveries remain to be made. Shell says its 
reserves fell last year because it only found enough oil to replace 15-25 % 
of what the company produced. BP told the US stock exchange that it replaced

only 89% of its production in 2004. 
Moreover, oil supply is increasingly limited to a few giant fields, with 10%

of all production coming from just four fields and 80% from fields 
discovered before 1970. Even finding a field the size of Ghawar in Saudi 
Arabia, by far the world's largest and said to have another 125bn barrels, 
would only meet world demand for about 10 years. 
"All the major discoveries were in the 1960s, since when they have been 
declining gradually over time, give or take the occasional spike and 
trough," says Campbell. "The whole world has now been seismically searched 
and picked over. Geological knowledge has improved enormously in the past 30

years and it is almost inconceivable now that major fields remain to be 
found." 
He accepts there may be a big field or two left in Russia, and more in 
Africa, but these would have little bearing on world supplies. 
Unconventional deposits like tar sands and shale may only slow the 
production decline. 
"The first half of the oil age now closes," says Campbell. "It lasted 150 
years and saw the rapid expansion of industry, transport, trade, agriculture

and financial capital, allowing the population to expand six-fold. The 
second half now dawns, and will be marked by the decline of oil and all that

depends on it, including financial capital." 
So did the Swiss bankers comprehend the seriousness of the situation when he

talked to them? "There is no company on the stock exchange that doesn't make

a tacit assumption about the availability of energy," says Campbell. "It is 
almost impossible for bankers to accept it. It is so out of their mindset." 
Crude alternatives 
"Unconventional" petroleum reserves, which are not included in some totals 
of reserves, include: 
Heavy oils 
These can be pumped just like conventional petroleum except that they are 
much thicker, more polluting, and require more extensive refining. They are 
found in more than 30 countries, but about 90% of estimated reserves are in 
the Orinoco "heavy oil belt" of Venezuela, which has an estimated 1.2 
trillion barrels. About one third of the oil is potentially recoverable 
using current technology. 
Tar sands 
These are found in sedimentary rocks and must be dug out and crushed in 
giant opencast mines. But it takes five to 10 times the energy, area and 
water to mine, process and upgrade the tars that it does to process 
conventional oil. The Athabasca deposits in Alberta, Canada are the world's 
largest resource, with estimated reserves of 1.8 trillion barrels, of which 
about 280-300bn barrels may be recoverable. Production now accounts for 
about 20% of Canada's oil supply. 
Oil shales 
These are seen as the US government's energy stopgap. They exist in large 
quantities in ecologically sensitive parts of Colorado, Wyoming and Utah at 
varying depths, but the industrial process needed to extract the oil demands

hot water, making it much more expensive and less energy-efficient than 
conventional oil. The mining operation is extremely damaging to the 
environment. Shell, Exxon, ChevronTexaco and other oil companies are 
investing billions of dollars in this expensive oil production method. 


Guardian Unlimited ) Guardian Newspapers Limited 2005 


http://www.antic.org











 
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