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By Daniel Howden
The Independent UK
Thursday 14 June 2007
Scientists challenge major review of global reserves and warn that supplies will start to run out in four years' time.
Scientists
have criticised a major review of the world's remaining oil reserves,
warning that the end of oil is coming sooner than governments and oil
companies are prepared to admit.
BP's
Statistical Review of World Energy, published yesterday, appears to
show that the world still has enough "proven" reserves to provide 40
years of consumption at current rates. The assessment, based on
officially reported figures, has once again pushed back the estimate of
when the world will run dry.
However,
scientists led by the London-based Oil Depletion Analysis Centre, say
that global production of oil is set to peak in the next four years
before entering a steepening decline which will have massive
consequences for the world economy and the way that we live our lives.
According
to "peak oil" theory our consumption of oil will catch, then outstrip
our discovery of new reserves and we will begin to deplete known
reserves.
Colin
Campbell, the head of the depletion centre, said: "It's quite a simple
theory and one that any beer drinker understands. The glass starts full
and ends empty and the faster you drink it the quicker it's gone."
Dr
Campbell, is a former chief geologist and vice-president at a string of
oil majors including BP, Shell, Fina, Exxon and ChevronTexaco. He
explains that the peak of regular oil - the cheap and easy to extract
stuff - has already come and gone in 2005. Even when you factor in the
more difficult to extract heavy oil, deep sea reserves, polar regions
and liquid taken from gas, the peak will come as soon as 2011, he says.
This
scenario is flatly denied by BP, whose chief economist Peter Davies has
dismissed the arguments of "peak oil" theorists.
"We
don't believe there is an absolute resource constraint. When peak oil
comes, it is just as likely to come from consumption peaking, perhaps
because of climate change policies as from production peaking."
In
recent years the once-considerable gap between demand and supply has
narrowed. Last year that gap all but disappeared. The consequences of a
shortfall would be immense. If consumption begins to exceed production
by even the smallest amount, the price of oil could soar above $100 a
barrel. A global recession would follow.
Jeremy
Leggett, like Dr Campbell, is a geologist-turned conservationist whose
book Half Gone: Oil, Gas, Hot Air and the Global Energy Crisis brought
" peak oil" theory to a wider audience. He compares industry and
government reluctance to face up to the impending end of oil, to
climate change denial.
"It
reminds me of the way no one would listen for years to scientists
warning about global warming," he says. "We were predicting things
pretty much exactly as they have played out. Then as now we were
wondering what it would take to get people to listen."
In
1999, Britain's oil reserves in the North Sea peaked, but for two years
after this became apparent, Mr Leggett claims, it was heresy for anyone
in official circles to say so. "Not meeting demand is not an option. In
fact, it is an act of treason," he says.
One
thing most oil analysts agree on is that depletion of oil fields
follows a predictable bell curve. This has not changed since the Shell
geologist M King Hubbert made a mathematical model in 1956 to predict
what would happen to US petroleum production. The Hubbert Curveshows
that at the beginning production from any oil field rises sharply, then
reaches a plateau before falling into a terminal decline. His
prediction that US production would peak in 1969 was ridiculed by those
who claimed it could increase indefinitely. In the event it peaked in
1970 and has been in decline ever since.
In
the 1970s Chris Skrebowski was a long-term planner for BP. Today he
edits the Petroleum Review and is one of a growing number of industry
insiders converting to peak theory. "I was extremely sceptical to start
with," he now admits. "We have enough capacity coming online for the
next two-and-a-half years. After that the situation deteriorates."
What
no one, not even BP, disagrees with is that demand is surging. The
rapid growth of China and India matched with the developed world's
dependence on oil, mean that a lot more oil will have to come from
somewhere. BP's review shows that world demand for oil has grown faster
in the past five years than in the second half of the 1990s. Today we
consume an average of 85 million barrels daily. According to the most
conservative estimates from the International Energy Agency that figure
will rise to 113 million barrels by 2030.
Two-thirds
of the world's oil reserves lie in the Middle East and increasing
demand will have to be met with massive increases in supply from this
region.
BP's
Statistical Review is the most widely used estimate of world oil
reserves but as Dr Campbell points out it is only a summary of highly
political estimates supplied by governments and oil companies.
As Dr Campbell explains: "When I was the boss of an oil company I would never tell the truth. It's not part of the game."
A
survey of the four countries with the biggest reported reserves - Saudi
Arabia, Iran, Iraq and Kuwait - reveals major concerns. In Kuwait last
year, a journalist found documents suggesting the country's real
reserves were half of what was reported. Iran this year became the
first major oil producer to introduce oil rationing - an indication of
the administration's view on which way oil reserves are going.
Sadad
al-Huseini knows more about Saudi Arabia's oil reserves than perhaps
anyone else. He retired as chief executive of the kingdom's oil
corporation two years ago, and his view on how much Saudi production
can be increased is sobering. "The problem is that you go from 79
million barrels a day in 2002 to 84.5 million in 2004. You're leaping
by two to three million [barrels a day]" each year, he told The New
York Times. "That's like a whole new Saudi Arabia every couple of
years. It can't be done indefinitely."
The Importance of Black Gold
- A
reduction of as little as 10 to 15 per cent could cripple oil-dependent
industrial economies. In the 1970s, a reduction of just 5 per cent
caused a price increase of more than 400 per cent.
- Most farming equipment is either built in oil-powered
plants or uses diesel as fuel. Nearly all pesticides and many
fertilisers are made from oil.
- Most plastics, used in everything from computers and
mobile phones to pipelines, clothing and carpets, are made from
oil-based substances.
- Manufacturing requires huge amounts of fossil fuels.
The construction of a single car in the US requires, on average, at
least 20 barrels of oil.
- Most renewable energy equipment requires large amounts of oil to produce.
- Metal production - particularly aluminium - cosmetics, hair dye, ink and many common painkillers all rely on oil.
Alternative Sources of Power
Coal
There
are still an estimated 909 billion tonnes of proven coal reserves
worldwide, enough to last at least 155 years. But coal is a fossil fuel
and a dirty energy source that will only add to global warming.
Natural Gas
The
natural gas fields in Siberia, Alaska and the Middle East should last
20 years longer than the world's oil reserves but, although cleaner
than oil, natural gas is still a fossil fuel that emits pollutants. It
is also expensive to extract and transport as it has to be liquefied.
Hydrogen Fuel Cells
Hydrogen
fuel cells would provide us with a permanent, renewable, clean energy
source as they combine hydrogen and oxygen chemically to produce
electricity, water and heat. The difficulty, however, is that there
isn't enough hydrogen to go round and the few clean ways of producing
it are expensive.
Biofuels
Ethanol
from corn and maize has become a popular alternative to oil. However,
studies suggest ethanol production has a negative effect on energy
investment and the environment because of the space required to grow
what we need.
Renewable Energy
Oil-dependent
nations are turning to renewable energy sources such as hydroelectric,
solar and wind power to provide an alternative to oil but the
likelihood of renewable sources providing enough energy is slim.
Nuclear
Fears
of the world's uranium supply running out have been allayed by improved
reactors and the possibility of using thorium as a nuclear fuel. But an
increase in the number of reactors across the globe would increase the
chance of a disaster and the risk of dangerous substances getting into
the hands of terrorists.
(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. h o t g l o b e has no affiliation whatsoever with the originator of this article nor is h o t g l o b e endorsed or sponsored by the originator.)
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