Untitled Document
Summary:
Kenneth Deffeyes of Princeton is the first to give us numbers showing that
planet Earth has passed peak oil production. This would be consistent with
FTW’s analysis saying that we were at peak, plus or minus six months
as of last fall. If Deffeyes is correct then total world oil production will
never surpass what was being pumped last December. That won’t be hard
to verify. If Deffeyes is wrong he will not be off by much.
As this distinguished colleague of M. King Hubbert has observed, his career
as a prophet is over and his career as a historian has begun. For the rest
of us alarm bells should be going off everywhere. I agree with Deffeyes that
planet earth will be back in the Stone Age, or well past the halfway point
there, by 2025. For all of us, the sense of urgency must be doubled now. There
is precious little time to waste. – Michael
C. Ruppert
[Posted By mkane]
_______________________________________
By Kenneth Deffeyes
Republished from Current
Events
Kenneth Deffeyes of Princeton was a colleague of M.
King Hubbert. Using Hubbert's formula that predicted Peak Oil in the U.S., Deffeyes
says the world has now Peaked
Join us as we watch the crisis unfolding
February 11, 2006
In the January 2004 Current Events on this web site, I predicted that world
oil production would peak on Thanksgiving Day, November 24, 2005. In hindsight,
that prediction was in error by three weeks. An update using the 2005 data shows
that we passed the peak on December 16, 2005.
“A decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires” that I present
an update on the data sources and the interpretation.
The underlying methodology is Hubbert’s postulate that the rate of new
oil discoveries depends on the fraction of the oil that has not yet been discovered.
Similarly, the rate of oil production depends on the fraction of oil that has
not yet been produced. A test of Hubbert’s hypothesis, using the long
history of US oil production, is on pages 35—42 of my book Beyond Oil.
An algebraic result from the Hubbert theory says that the production rate peaks
when half of the oil has been produced.
The most accurate measure of the eventual total oil comes from the “hits”
graph on page 48 of Beyond Oil. The input data for that graph are the dates
of the first well in each oilfield. The February 2006 edition of Colin Campbell’s
ASPO newsletter contains his updated version of the ExxonMobil discovery dates.
I enlarged Campbell’s graph and scaled off data for 2004 and 2005. An
update of the calculation reported on page 49 of Beyond Oil gives an unchanged
estimate: 2.013 trillion barrels. (There is always a statistical nervousness
when an estimate does not change. I make the estimates by stepwise trials, and
the winning step was 2.013. What I know is that neither estimate was 2.012 or
2.014.)
The world peak would then happen when 1.0065 trillion barrels have been produced
(half of 2.013). Following Hubbert, I used the Oil & Gas Journal end-of-year
production numbers. It isn’t that the Oil & Gas Journal reports are
divinely inspired; their methodology is well explained and their reports constitute
a relatively consistent data set. The cumulative world production at the end
of 2004 was 0.9812 trillion barrels and at the end of 2005 it was 1.00748 trillion.
During the year, we passed the halfway point. The graph shows the date of the
crossover: December 16, 2005.
During the year, we passed the halfway point. The graph shows the date of the
crossover: December 16, 2005.
There are some interesting additional bits in the end-of-year statistics. Compared
to 2004, world oil production was up 0.8 percent in 2005, nowhere near enough
to compensate for a demand rise of roughly 3 percent. The high prices did not
bring much additional oil out of the ground. Most oil-producing countries are
in decline. The rise in production was largely from Saudi Arabia, Russia, and
Angola. The Saudi production for 2005 was 9.155 million barrels per day. On
March 6, 2003 Saudi Aramco and the government of Saudi Arabia announced by way
of the Dow Jones newswire that they were maxed out at 9.2 barrels per day. In
retrospect, that statement seems to be accurate. Further details are in Matthew
Simmons’ book Twilight in the Desert.
Could some new discovery come along and reverse the global oil decline? The
world oil industry is a huge system: Annual production worth 1.7 trillion dollars.
I don’t see anything on the horizon large enough to turn it around.
So what are the policy implications? Numerous critics are claiming that the
present world economic situation is a house of cards: built on trade deficits,
housing price bubbles, and barely-adequate natural gas supplies. Pulling any
one card out from the bottom of the pile might collapse the whole structure.
There are calls for embargoing Iranian oil because of the nuclear weapons situation.
Pulling four million barrels per day out from under the world energy supply
might trigger a severe worldwide recession. In the post-peak era, we’re
playing a new ball game and we don’t yet know the rules.
Ghawar, the supergiant Saudi oilfield, is producing increasing amounts of water
along with the oil. When Simmons sent Twilight in the Desert to the printer,
the water cut at Ghawar was around 30 percent. There are later reports on the
Internet (home.entouch.net/dmd/ghawar.htm) of water cuts as high as 55 percent.
Ghawar has been producing 4 million barrels per day; when the Ghawar field waters
out, you can kiss your lifestyle goodbye.
Since we have passed the peak without initiating major corrective measures,
we now have to rely primarily on methods that we have already engineered. Long-term
research and development projects, no matter how noble their objectives, have
to take a back seat while we deal with the short-term problems. Long-term examples
in the proposed 2007 US budget (Feb. 9, 2006 New York Times page A-18) include
a 65 percent increase in the programs to produce ethanol from corn, a 25.8 percent
increase for developing hydrogen fuel cell cars, and a 78.5 percent increase
in spending on solar energy research. The Times reports that solar energy today
supplies one percent of US electricity; the hope is to double that to 2 percent
by the year 2025. By 2025, we’re going to be back in the Stone Age.
By 2025, we’re going to be back in the Stone Age.
Ethanol, fuel cells, and solar cells are not the only shimmering dreams. Methane
hydrates, oil shale, and the Yucca Mountain radioactive waste depository would
be better off forgotten. There are plenty of solid opportunities. Energy conservation
is by far the most important. Initiatives that are already engineered and ready
to go are biodiesel from palm oil, coal gasification (for both gaseous and liquid
fuels), high-efficiency diesel automobiles, and revamping our food supply. Every
little bit helps, but even if wind energy continues its success it will still
be a little bit.
That’s it. I can now refer to the world oil peak in the past
tense. My career as a prophet is over. I’m now an historian.