The IEA joins an increasing number of oil companies predicting a
crisis starting around 2015.

Jon

==================================================================

The Wall Street Journal                 
May 22, 2008

Energy Watchdog Warns Of Oil-Production Crunch
IEA Official Says Supplies May Plateau Below Expected Demand
By NEIL KING JR. and PETER FRITSCH
May 22, 2008; Page A1

The world's premier energy monitor is preparing a sharp downward
revision of its oil-supply forecast, a shift that reflects
deepening pessimism over whether oil companies can keep abreast of
booming demand.

The Paris-based International Energy Agency is in the middle of
its first attempt to comprehensively assess the condition of the
world's top 400 oil fields. Its findings won't be released until
November, but the bottom line is already clear: Future crude
supplies could be far tighter than previously thought.

A pessimistic supply outlook from the IEA could further rattle an
oil market that already has seen crude prices rocket over $130 a
barrel, double what they were a year ago. U.S. benchmark crude
broke a record for the fourth day in a row, rising 3.3% Wednesday
to close at $133.17 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

For several years, the IEA has predicted that supplies of crude
and other liquid fuels will arc gently upward to keep pace with
rising demand, topping 116 million barrels a day by 2030, up from
around 87 million barrels a day currently. Now, the agency is
worried that aging oil fields and diminished investment mean that
companies could struggle to surpass 100 million barrels a day over
the next two decades.

The decision to rigorously survey supply -- instead of just
demand, as in the past -- reflects an increasing fear within the
agency and elsewhere that oil-producing regions aren't on track to
meet future needs.

"The oil investments required may be much, much higher than what
people assume," said Fatih Birol, the IEA's chief economist and
the leader of the study, in an interview with The Wall Street
Journal. "This is a dangerous situation."

The agency's forecasts are widely followed by the industry, Wall
Street and the big oil-consuming countries that fund its work.

The IEA monitors energy markets for the world's 26 most-advanced
economies, including the U.S., Japan and all of Europe. It acts as
a counterweight in the market to the views of the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries. The IEA's endorsement of a crimped
supply scenario likely will be interpreted by the cartel as yet
another call to pump more oil -- a call it will have a difficult
time answering. Last week, the Saudis gave President Bush a
lukewarm response to his plea for more oil, saying they were
already adding 300,000 barrels a day to the market, an
announcement that did nothing to cool prices.

At the same time, the IEA's conclusions likely will be seized on
by advocates of expanded drilling in prohibited areas like the
U.S. outer continental shelf or the Alaska National Wildlife
Refuge.

The IEA, employing a team of 25 analysts, is trying to shed light
on some of the industry's best-kept secrets by assessing the
health of major fields scattered from Venezuela and Mexico to
Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Iraq. The fields supply over two-thirds
of daily world production.

The findings won't be definitive. Big producers including
Venezuela, Iran and China aren't cooperating, and others like
Saudi Arabia typically treat the detailed production data of
individual fields as closely guarded state secrets, so it's not
clear how specific their contributions will be. To try to
compensate, the IEA will use computer modeling to make
estimates. It will also collect information gathered by IHS Inc.,
a major data and analysis provider based in Colorado, as well as
the U.S. Geologic Survey, a smattering of oil and oil-service
companies, and national petroleum councils.

Supply-Side Gloom

But the direction of the IEA's work echoes the gathering
supply-side gloom articulated by some Big Oil executives in recent
months. A growing number of people in the industry are endorsing a
version of the "peak-oil" theory: that oil production will plateau
in coming years, as suppliers fail to replace depleted fields with
enough fresh ones to boost overall output. All of that has
prompted numerous upward revisions to long-term oil-price
forecasts on Wall Street.

Goldman Sachs grabbed headlines recently with a forecast saying
that oil could top $140 a barrel this summer and could average
$200 a barrel next year. Prices that high would add to the
inflationary pressures weighing on the world economy and to the
woes of fuel-sensitive industries such as airlines and autos.

The IEA's study marks a big change in the agency's efforts to peer
into the future. In the past, the IEA focused mainly on assessing
future demand, and then looked at how much non-OPEC countries were
likely to produce to meet that demand. Any gap, it was assumed,
would then be met by big OPEC producers such as Saudi Arabia, Iran
or Kuwait.

But the IEA's pessimism over future supplies has been building for
some time. Last summer, the agency warned that OPEC's spare
capacity could shrink "to minimal levels by 2012." In November, it
said its analysis of projects known to be in the works suggested
that the world could face a shortfall by 2015 of as much as 12.5
million barrels a day, unless there was a sharp drop in expected
demand. The current IEA work aims to tally the range of
investments and projects under way to boost production from the
fields in question to get a clearer sense of what to expect in
production flows.

"This is very important, because the IEA is treated as the world's
only serious independent guardian of energy data and forecasts,"
says Edward Morse, chief energy economist at Lehman
Brothers. Examining the state of the world's big oil fields could
prod their owners into unaccustomed transparency, he says.

Some critics of the IEA, while praising its new study, say a
revision in the agency's long-term forecasting is long
overdue. The agency has failed to anticipate many of the big
energy developments in recent years, such as the surge in Chinese
demand in 2004 and this year's skyrocketing prices. "The IEA is
always conflicted by political pressures," says Chris Skrebowski,
a London-based oil analyst who keeps his own database on big
petroleum projects and is pessimistic about supply. "In this case
I think they want to make as incontrovertible as possible the fact
that we are facing a real crunch."

U.S. Forecasts

The U.S. Energy Department's own forecasting shop, the Energy
Information Administration, has long stuck to the same
demand-driven methodology as the IEA, assuming that supply will
keep up with the world's growing hunger for oil. But the
U.S. agency also has embarked on its own supply study, which it
hopes to complete this summer. Like the IEA, its preliminary
findings are somewhat gloomy: They suggest daily output of
conventional crude oil alone, now about 73 million barrels, will
plateau at 84 million barrels, and that it will take a significant
uptick in production of nonconventional fuels such as ethanol to
push global fuel supplies over 100 million barrels a day by 2030.

"We are optimistic in terms of resource availability, but wary
about whether the investments get made in the right places and at
a pace that will bring on supply to meet demand," says Guy Caruso,
the U.S. agency's administrator.

In Paris, analysts at IEA also fret that a lack of investment in
many OPEC countries, combined with a diminished incentive to ramp
up output, casts serious doubt over how much the cartel will
expand its production in the future. The big OPEC producers have
been raking in record profits, creating a disincentive in many
countries to sink more billions into increased oil production.

Meanwhile, politics and other forces are delaying projects that
could bring more oil on-stream. Continued fighting in Iraq has
stymied efforts to revive aging fields, while international
sanctions on Iran have kept investments there from moving
forward. Rebel attacks in Nigeria and political turmoil in
Venezuela have cut into both countries' output. Big non-OPEC
producers such as Mexico and Russia, which have either barred or
sidelined international operators, are seeing production
slump. The U.S., with a legal moratorium barring exploration in
85% of its offshore waters, is struggling to keep its output
steady.

The IEA study will try to answer one question that bedevils those
trying to forecast future prices and the supply-demand balance:
How rapidly are the world's top fields declining? The rates at
which their production dwindles over time are a much-debated
barometer of the health of the world's oil patch.

Depletion Rate

A study released earlier this year by the Cambridge Energy
Research Associates, a consulting firm and unit of IHS, concluded
that the depletion rate of the world's 811 biggest fields is
around 4.5% a year. At that rate, oil companies have to make huge
investments just to keep overall production steady. Others say the
depletion rate could be higher.

"We are of the opinion that the public isn't aware of the role of
the decline rate of existing fields in the energy supply balance,
and that this rate will accelerate in the future," says the IEA's
Mr. Birol.

Some analysts, however, contend that scarcity isn't the issue --
only access to reserves and investment in tapping them. "We know
there is plenty of oil and gas resource in the world," says Pete
Stark, vice president for industry relations at IHS. He says the
difficulties of supply aren't buried in oil fields, but are "above
ground."

Mr. Morse at Lehman Brothers notes that there are plenty of
questions about supply yet to be answered. "However confident the
IEA may be about the data it has, they know nothing about the
resources we've yet to discover in the deep waters or in the
arctic," he says.

URL for this article:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB121139527250011387.html

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