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  • Have We Reached Peak Oil? [View article]
    As an exploration geologist I have changed my views to be more optimistic over the past few years. The reason: a new paradigm shift in both geologic thinking and technological ability that has resulted in HUGE changes of probable and possible natural gas reserves (if you don't get it- then you don't understand the new paradigm). To the extent that natural gas can replace oil, there will not be an extreme consequence from a decline in oil production. In reality, the bigger risk is demand outstripping supply since adding new oil production can take years.

    For the most part, I still believe the real threat to oil production has nothing to do with geology, and everything to do with politics, which is why it will not follow Hubbert's Curve. We may be approaching peak political oil much sooner than we reach true peak oil production capacity. There are still many billions of barrels of oil that are not reachable due to political constraints all around the world.
    Oct 30 15:05 pm |Rating: 0 -1 |Link to Comment
  • Will Drilling Offshore Affect World Oil Prices?  [View article]
    While everyone is debating the results of exploring new areas with offshore drilling, no one is actually being honest and admitting that
    1) these estimates of the "undiscovered reserves" are nebulous at best. As a geologist involved in these sorts of studies I can assure you the results could be dramatically different, either with much higher or much lower amounts, and the error bars in those sorts of studies would allow for about an order of magnitude of error in the figures. The amount of data that these sorts of studies are based on would be laughable to most other fields of study. We probably have more data for Mars than we do on some of these areas.

    2) that the long period of time it takes to lease and then drill is partially filled with government delays- so the five or ten years it takes to drill- is actually more the result of government than industry. The time delays in drilling leases are often self-fulfilling prophecy by the politicians who are promoting the regulatory morass that exists rather than solving it.

    Finally, while I too will be happy to see alternative energy supply a larger share of our energy needs, the biggest lie out there is that any of those alternatives can be developed faster than drilling for oil. If you think oil prices are high now, wait and see how high it is in ten years with continued restrictions on drilling in the US.

    It is very conceivable that a large discovery in the offshore area could actually affect the market in advance of production. As it does begin to produce, only a few hundred thousand barrels a day can have a significant impact on market prices (as the frequent small supply interruptions do now), and it is wrong to say that small increments of supply do not affect prices, and do not have significant supply implications over many years. Keep in mind, about 15% of US production today comes from wells that produce less than 10 barrels a day from each well. We actually depend on these small increments for stability in the market.

    Your mention of Iraq is something I consider ludicrous. It will very likely still be a decade before anyone is willing to situate a nicely lighted 175 ft tall oil rig motionless in one place for a month at a time like a giant target for attacks in the Iraqi desert. Infrastructure (pipelines, compressor stations, separators, water disposal, etc.) has to be built, since it either does not presently exist or is in disrepair, and that will take years while providing more targets for hostility. Iraq is not going to be any immediate solution (nor is it likely to be cheaper than offshore), and the Iraqis are barely able to supply themselves at present, while still importing large amounts of oil products.
    Aug 17 23:53 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • How Elastic Is the World's Oil Supply? [View article]
    Thanks for the link to the report. As someone on the supply side of the business, maybe I have some insight. Maybe.

    "Based on these inventory figures, current prices, although high, are not prompting the
    inventory accumulation that would be associated with artificially high prices."

    I think the problem they are alluding to is that while market demand has dropped, it appears that market supply has fallen as well. In this business, falling supply is not necessarily related to market forces. There are lots of areas the world-around that are in declining production mode and even more that are politically-impeded. There are very few that are actually increasing their production, and this is not due to the market, it is mostly due to geology and engineering.

    It takes time find new oil reservoirs and to drill new wells and add production using the newly justified economics of higher prices. Most oil companies (wisely) refuse to have faith in current market prices to predict economics of drilling new prospects, and whatever benchmark price they use (often only 50% of current prices) can determine whether or not a well gets drilled.

    There are very few producers that have the ability to turn on the taps and produce oil at a higher rate just because prices are rising. The market impetus is there, but geology and engineering limitations do not always respond to market forces. Often, increasing production rates can damage a field and reduce long-term production. One of the few short-term responses in the market supply is often the oil moving in tankers, which can be diverted to different ports depending on prices while still in transit.

    The problem is not the speculators, it is declining production and the failure of many producers to replace reserves- pointing to long-term problems and thus changing the market character from backwardation to contango. The speculators have merely reacted to the inability of the supply side to respond to the demand side in a timely manner.

    For everyone who thinks the oil market is somehow a perfect market (and that speculators are the control), I like to use the analogy of the corn market. If you can predict the weather a year ahead, you can master the corn market. Oil is no different- except there are probably just about as many factors as those that affect the weather, and they are just as complex.

    As for the previous comment on how prices of gasoline are not falling as fast as the price of oil -be very very glad. Gasoline prices never got up to an equivalent price of oil and were lagging behind strongly. Oil was selling for $3.45 a gallon at $145 per barrel, and a barrel of oil does not make 42 gallons of gasoline- it only makes about 25 gallons, meaning wholesale gasoline could have reached well above US$4.00 per gallon (that would have put retail above US$5/gallon)!!!
    Jul 31 16:47 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
  • So You Think Oil’s Expensive Now? [View article]
    These are only the events that would cause a short-term spike in price. Contrary to the rhetoric from Washington, there are major structural problems in the market that weigh much more heavily than these short-term events. Bigger and more important questions abound. Can the Saudis actually increase production or are they at peak? (With over 100 rigs operating, they are obviously working very hard to maintain production). Can the Iranians sustain production? They may be in decline. Will the Russians begin investing in infrastructure that is badly needed to reverse Russia's production decline? Will the US change its tax structure and cause oil production in the US (currently 25% of US consumption) to further decline? (a significant amount of US production comes from stripper wells that are marginally profitable under the current tax regime) Will Mexican and Venezuelan production continue to decline? Will the portions of the world that subsidize consumption (Venezuela, Middle East, China, Indonesia, India, Malaysia, Columbia, Mexico, Taiwan, Thailand, etc) of oil continue to do so, offsetting and preventing demand destruction? These types of questions are much more important and fundamental than these short-term and local risks. For example, until the Saudis can prove they can meet the projected new levels of production, it is apparent that the market does not really believe them. Since the majority of buyers in the market are currently commercial positions (industry participants) it seems likely they truly understand the short term risks but are much more uncertain about the long term factors, and that risk is probably being priced in incrementally as oil prices fluctuate. BTW, you forgot hurricanes. Another major Katrina/Rita hit on the Gulf would cause a major price spike. It is hurricane season.
    Jun 27 13:00 pm |Rating: 0 0 |Link to Comment
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