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  • International Energy Association: Forced to Eat Their Optimistic Data on Future Oil Supply?  [View article]
    Max was 9.9mbpd during the first Gulf War


    On Nov 11 06:47 PM OFWHAP wrote:

    > @Oilfinder
    >
    > At what point has Saudi Arabia ever produced 12.5 million barrels
    > per day? They have been SAYING that they plan to produce that for
    > 2009, but I have yet to find data that they have ever produced numbers
    > that high.
    Nov 12 15:34 pm |Rating: +1 -2 |Link to Comment
  • International Energy Association: Forced to Eat Their Optimistic Data on Future Oil Supply?  [View article]
    What a load of tosh.

    KSA has likely passed peak; and either cannot or will not increase supply. It doesn't matter which, the extra production will not happen.

    As for Brazil, Africa and Iraq, you can believe what you like, but I am not nearly so sanguine. Technology, lack of investment, politics and war are more than not likely to intervene.

    You mention The UK, Mexico and Norway as representative of declines, almost in passing. Decline rates average at least 5%, or over 4mbpd every year. That is a new KSA every 2 years just to stay even, a statistic the IEA itself has quoted. How many new KSA's are there?

    As I say - complete tosh. Peak Oil happened over the period 2004-2008.


    On Nov 11 01:37 PM OilFinder wrote:

    > The IEA is not being pessimistic on future oil supply.
    > Once you start adding up production plans you'll see why:
    >
    > 1. Iraq - Proudction will increase from the current 2+ million barrels/day
    > to around 10 million barrels/day by 2020. That's at least +7 million
    > barrels/day in new supply.
    > www.ft.com/cms/s/0/5bc...
    >
    >
    > 2. Brazil - Production will increase from the current 2+ million
    > barrels/day to around 5.7 million barrels/day in 2020. This does
    > not include discoveries made and gone into production in the interim,
    > of which there will be many:
    > www.thaindian.com/news...
    >
    >
    > So far we're at +10.5 million barrels/day
    >
    > 3. Angola - Figures from already-announced plans show an increase
    > in production by 1.2 million barrels/day by 2015. This does not include
    > discoveries announced in the interim or recent discoveries whose
    > production plans have yet to be made.
    > www.reuters.com/articl...
    >
    > So far we're at +11.7 million barrels/day in new supply.
    >
    > 4. Saudi spare capacity is currently around 4 million barrels/day:
    >
    > www.thenational.ae/app...
    >
    > And the former chief reservoir engineer at Saudi Aramco says they
    > can sustain 12-14 million barrels/day output for 50 years:
    > www.saudi-us-relations...
    >
    >
    > So we're now at + 15.7 million barrels/day in new supply. Conservatively.
    >
    >
    > 5. Canadian oil sands production will double by 2020. This is an
    > addition of 1.6 million barrels/day:
    > www.bloomberg.com/apps...;sid=aAXd0jJuIIoA
    >
    >
    > Subtotal is now 17.3 million barrels/day in new supply by 2020.<br/>
    >
    > 6. Non-Nigerian West African coast. Recent discoveries off the coast
    > of Ghana and Sierra Leone indicate a large new oil province opening
    > up. The Ghana discovery will begin production late next year. There
    > *will* be other discoveries in this area. Let's assume 1 million
    > barrels/day production from this province by 2020.
    > www.ogj.com/index/arti...
    >
    > blogs.wsj.com/environm.../
    >
    > investors.hyperdynamic...
    >
    >
    > Subtotal is now 18.3 million barrels/day in new supply by 2020.<br/>
    >
    > I could go on with more examples. Reaching 20 million barrels/day
    > by 2020 would be easy. I might even get to 25 million barrels/day,
    > especially if we make some reasonable assumptions about new discoveries
    > off the coast of Brazil and Angola.
    >
    > Now, what about declines?
    >
    > Let's be extremely pessimistic and assume production from Mexico,
    > the UK and Noway falls to ZERO. This loses you about 7 million barrels/day,
    > but we're still ahead by at least 11 million barrels/day. At this
    > point you would have to lose the entire production of Russia to get
    > to a measly +1-2 million barrels/day, but of course that won't happen.
    > And production from the UK, Norway and Mexico won't fall to zero,
    > either.
    >
    > I could write a much longer exposition on this, but you get the point.
    > The IEA is not being optimistic. Heck, they might even be *pessimistic*.
    Nov 11 17:43 pm |Rating: +2 -4 |Link to Comment
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