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Politics : Rat's Nest - Chronicles of Collapse -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Wharf Rat who wrote (2172)9/23/2005 9:03:26 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24210
 
IEA:Non-OPEC oil production to decline after 2010
by Bezat and Auzanneau

The IEA is not alarmist, but it is starting to prepare public opinion for a disappointing future: soon after 2010, production by non-OPEC member states is likely to start declining. This pessimistic forecast will be one of the messages contained in the IEA’s annual report “World Energy Outlook,” to be released on November 9. The IEA’s mandate is to represent the interests of consuming countries.

Non-OPEC countries include such large producers as Russia, China, the US, Mexico, Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan, and Norway. They currently produce 60% of world crude output. “Production of conventional oil-excluding heavy oil and bitumens-will reach a ceiling soon after 2010,” says Fathi Birol, director of economic studies at the IEA. “After that, the production curve will depend on technology, price and investments.”

This well-known expert adds that “if there is enough investment and the price is at the proper level, production may remain stable for some time,” before dropping off. On the other hand, he predicts, “low prices and insufficient investment-in exploration and production-will bring about a steeper decline.” He concludes that basic growth in oil output will therefore come from OPEC countries. Especially the Middle East and Africa, two regions studied in detail in the next “World Energy Outlook.”

“Like a girlfriend”

“Oil is like a girlfriend, you know from the beginning that one day she’s going to leave you,” is how Mr Birol sums up the situation. “If you don’t want your heart broken, you’d better leave her before she leaves you.” So he’s sending a double message to the consuming countries, much stronger than in the annual report published in fall 2004: “Conserve energy, conserve oil! And diversify, please. Get out of oil!”

For Claude Mandil, executive director of the IEA, “there really is a problem if we limit ourselves to conventional oil.” However, he reminds us that non-conventional crude (deep offshore, Canadian oil sands, Venezuelan heavy oil) has promising prospects. “I’m not an alarmist about global oil resources,” he continues, “even if we are going to be more and more dependent on fewer and fewer countries,” like Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, and the UAE. On the other hand, the IEA director says that he is “an alarmist on the climate change” which is shaping up.

A short-term production increase will be at the center of discussions by OPEC oil ministers, who meet on September 19 and 20 in Vienna. To reassure the industrial countries, the ten members of the cartel (except for Iraq, which is not subject to quota) are expected to choose either a production increase by 500,000 barrels a day (to 28.5 million), or else the solution supported by the Kuwaitian president of OPEC, Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahd al-Sabah: supplying, “on demand,” two million extra b/d.

It’s really a political decision, because the cartel is already pumping much more than its official quota, without reassuring the market. A barrel of light sweet crude for October delivery was at $63.71 in the Asian market on Monday September 19. In the near-term, the problem is less a shortage of crude than one of refining capacity (in Europe and the US), even tighter since the damage from Hurricane Katrina.

In the medium term, there’s more anxiety about the capacity of the producing countries to extract more of the black gold. In the absence of an international audit, we don’t know the level of OPEC reserves, or of their investments in exploration and production. The cartel’s annual report, published on September 12, says only that these investments increased in 2004: 7.5% more wells drilled, and 18.8% more platforms and derricks at work compared with 2003.

Jean-Michel Bezat with Matthieu Auzanneau.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Editorial Notes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This a translation from the French of the article La production pétrolière des pays non OPEP décroîtra "juste après 2010", prévient l'AIE that appeared in Le Monde. We published a partial translation yesterday. Thanks to Professor P.D. for this translation!

Jerome a Paris has more on the article at Daily Kos.

Bloomberg just published an article with a different slant on the IEA report:
IEA Dismisses Peak Oil Talk, Says Technology Can Boost Reserves.
Published on 20 Sep 2005 by Le Monde. Archived on 23 Sep 2005.
energybulletin.net



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (2172)9/23/2005 10:07:58 AM
From: Crocodile  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 24210
 
Driving 55 m.p.h. is looking pretty good.

speed limits on most secondary roads and highways
here in Ontario is 80 kph which is somewhere around
50+ mph i believe.

i drive that or a couple or so klicks above that
most of the time.
course, i'm never in much of a hurry to get anywhere,
so that's fast enough for me.
however, kind of amazing how much more this little van burns
when you have to drive faster.
noticed that on the way to Nova Scotia when we
had to travel at the normal "cruise speed" on the
TransCanada -- about 110-120 km.. which probably still
isn't fast by comparison with some of the states
where i've traveled.
the van was still pretty easy on gas, but it was
definitely burning through a tank of gas a lot
faster than usual.

so, will people slow down the higher gas goes?

btw, big line-ups at the pumps up here last night.
apparently, gas zoomed up to about 1.65 a litre
yesterday around Toronto.
last time gas climbed, we noticed much less
traffic on the roads. i expect that will happen
once again.
have a few mechanic friends and they said biz is
really down lately and people say they aren't
driving around as much and don't intend to
any more than they have to.

~croc