Warnings about running out of oil are overdone. It's a useful sound bite for proponents of so-called peak oil, who don't have the foggiest knowledge of petroleum geology. But they do have something to sell. Some oil trading fund managers, for instance, hope to spook other investors into bidding up prices, and neo-green activists advocate ending oil usage because it's "dirty" and say we'll run out soon anyway.
Doomsday forecasts are off base in two key respects:
This doesn't mean that oil and fuels will be dirt cheap. Crude oil produced from fields miles below the ocean or in frigid, inhospitable climates costs more than sinking a well in Texas, Oklahoma or California reserves. But over time, the ramp-up of production will ease extreme price volatility and help curtail sharp price run-ups experienced the past two years.
Until the middle of this decade, there had been about a 3 million barrel a day surplus in world production that could buffer unexpected supply disruptions. The cushion evaporated in 2007, courtesy of an unanticipated surge in oil usage in China and India. A small reserve materialized this year, but it was so small that investors became even bolder about bidding up crude oil prices. And alarmist talk about peak oil grew louder.
The decline in reserves also negatively affected oil production. "Producers such as Venezuela could let production fall and nationalize the oil industry because there was no punishment for doing this when prices kept rising," says Lucian Pugliaresi, president of the Energy Policy Research Foundation.
However, that psychology has been reversed the past couple of months. With slowing demand growth restoring the cushion to 2 million barrels a day or so next year, and reduced chances that oil prices will climb endlessly, oil producing nations have a new incentive to increase production, Pugliaresi says.
For weekly updates on topics to improve your business decisionmaking, click here.
POSTED BY: bert (August 10, 2008 04:25 AM)
We do need an approach that is not alarmist to wean ourselves from foreign oil dependency. Foreign oil runs up our already staggering trade deficit and weakens our dollar and our economy. We need to keep the energy dollars and jobs here. Many producers of foreign oil are not our friends, why send money to them and enable their bad behaviors? A common sense approach to conservation and domestic production is needed here to get past the alarmist predictions in an election year.
POSTED BY: Robert I Spengler (August 14, 2008 09:26 PM)
You folks are suppose to be our source of good balanced and factual information. If so then this article should have taken into account the political and global Muslim religious conflict and threats to our way of life and implications of continuing to depend on oil out of the middle East. Maybe the dollar cost will not sky rocket but the social and indirect cost of funding the conflict with fundamentalist Muslims will. Now is the time to move away from any reliance on the middle East oil and sink our dollars into finding other ways of providing our energy needs from within our economy and limits of control. Current history is showing us what happens when we are dependent on other less stable countries for our basic resources.
POSTED BY: David (August 17, 2008 02:35 AM)
It is comforting to know that we will never run out of oil.