ROCKMAN wrote:ralfy - "...the effects of peak oil may take place even before oil production peaks." And how far back would you go to tie events to some future global peak oil DATE? Maybe all the way back to the price spike of the late 70's?
Long ago I coined the "POD"...the Peal Oil Dynamic. Mostly to get folks away being focused on the relatively meaningless date. Perhaps using "PO" as part of the acronym was the best choice because it still connects the idea to peak oil. In reality all the highs and lows we've experienced with respect to oil production would have occurred whether global oil production ever happens or not.
The recession inducing high oil prices, military activities in the ME that has cost the US $trillions and thousands of our personnel's lives, the volatile prices that boom and the crush the petroleum industry, etc: none were due to some future max future oil rate. If you look back such events often induced some folks to argue we had reached peak oil. And then be proven wrong.
Tempting to come up with a more appropriate acronym. But I think most understand the meaning of the POD: all that is happening in the world of oil production, consumption, pricing, distribution, technology, etc. which has NOTHING to do with the peaking of the global rate of oil production.
ROCKMAN wrote:vt - All valid points. But what about .....
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Oil production has been the catalyst for major economic and social changes in society for a very long time. And will continue to do so whether we reach global PO today, in 2 years or 20 years. As long as oil production continues to play an important role in our lives its dynamic nature will persist IMHO.
ralfy wrote: the peaking is brought about by diminishing returns.
Revi wrote:How long do you think we are going to continue to get pushed around by this energy packed goo?
Revi wrote: I don't think it will continue forever. The stuff we're getting now uses up far more energy to get out than the stuff that came out under pressure.
Revi wrote:We are in the waning days of the stuff.
Revi wrote: Whenever the peak is doesn't matter as much as how much net energy it will give us. We haven't figured out how to use the stuff very efficiently, so it's no wonder it's running out.
ROCKMAN wrote:ralfy - "Actually it does, as the peaking is brought about by diminishing returns.". OK, let's look at your proposition...and everyone is invited to play along. So you feel that the " Arab embargo" of the 70's and oil prices spiking to $119/bbl (adjusted) was due to global oil production (GPO) peaking 40 years in the future? And that assumes we have reached GPO. I suspect few would agree on that cause/effect relationship but they can speak for themselves
But let's explore that possibility. For brevity let's call all those events I described to vt as THE HISTORY. He just described THE HISTORY as mostly positive. I doubt many would describe the global recession preceded by the 70's price spike as positive. Nor the $trillions of our tax dollars and the thousands of our military's lives expended in the 2 Gulf wars as very positive. And these events were obviously part of the POD. But overall positive or negative is a subjective call so we can pass on that debate.
Rather let's play the "what if" with respect to the date of GPO. Once there we can address vt expectation of what follows GPO. And we'll keep it simple...just 3 what its.
A: what if we have actually reached GPO in the last couple of years. Some feel maybe...some not. But that's not a question to debate here...it's the assumption.
So we had THE HISTORY we've had. And ralfy seems to disagree with my assertion that THE HISTORY isn't related to GPO. So let's consider another couple of what if's.
B: what if GPO doesn't hit until 2037? How production holds on a plateau and peaks is not a subject for debate here...it's an assumption. So if true how would THE HISTORY have be any different?
C: what if GPO doesn't hit until 2067? So if true how would THE HISTORY have be any different?
To answer both B and C THE HISTORY would not have played out differently IMO. Perhaps ralfy disagrees. If so I'll let him (or anyone else) defend that opinion.
So if you agree that GPO happening in 2027 or 2067 would not have changed anything that's happened with respect to the POD over the last 40 years then here's the next questions: how would the GPO happening in 2027 effect the POD over the next 10 years? how would the GPO happening in 2067 effect the POD over the next 10 years?
Easy answers if you agree that the POD for the last 40 years was not effected by reaching GPO recently: reaching GPO in 2027 or 2067 WILL NOT determine the nature of the POD by those dates.
Which is a long way of repeating what the Rockman has preached for a long time: the date of GPO is relatively unimportant and thus a waste of space to debate here. At least with respect to the nature of the POD before we reach GPO. Afterwards? That's vt's point and we'll dig into later.
ROCKMAN wrote:ralfy - "And diminishing returns are the underlying principle of PO. That's why there's a PO in your POD." As explained many times before: a company's ROR is neither solely a function of the price of oil nor how much is discovered. There no reason the industry's overall ROR would be lower in the future if only 20% of the oil is discovered as was last year. It has always has been and always will be a function of how much is spent finding new reserves.
I feel like many you think 50 years ago it was easy to make big profits in the oil patch because you see the big fields discovered back. What you can't appreciate is how much money was lost drilling dry holes looking for those fields. Exploration tech was so poor in those days compared to now it wasn't much more then just random drilling.
You've never looked at a well map along the Texas and Louisiana coast (one of the most prolific hydrocarbon trends on the planet) and seen hundreds of thousands of dry hole symbols with occasional oil/NG fields scattered among them. The exploration success rate today is much higher the ever before in history. The fields left to discover are smaller. But I don't have to drill dozens of dry holes looking for each of them like I did 50+ years ago.
"Also, why only GPO? Why not GPO per capita?" Simple: because this site is called "peak oil" and not "peak oil per capita". LOL. Yes, per capita numbers can be interesting. But also very misrepresentative: per capita oil consumption in India is meaningless because such a huge portion of the public has virtually no impact of the country's oil consumption. And won't for many decades and maybe never.
ROCKMAN wrote:So now to the biggest question: what will the POD post GPO? Again an easy answer: similar to the POD we have experienced before reaching GPO. I see no reason for a meaningful difference. If anyone does please explain why...in detail.
ROCKMAN wrote:vt - "...a decline in global oil production which is a entirely different dynamic than anything we have seen before so looking at history is of no use.". And that's exactly my point: why would we expect the POD to be much different post GPO then pre GPO? Shortage of oil production? What does " shortage even mean: not enough oil for everyone to buy what the WANT? In that case there's has always been a shortage of oil since the beginning of the petroleum age. So the big change post GPO would be high prices? We've going thru periods of high prices recently as well as more then 35 years ago...nothing new there. Economic recessions spurred by those high prices? Been there...done that. A collapse in demand (and prices) from economic down turns or alternative energy sources damaging the petroleum industry. Nothing new there: happened in the early 80's, late 90's and recently. Military conflicts over fossil fuel resources? Obviously nothing new there? High levels of drilling activity....low levels of drilling activity? Something new??? Massive borrowing by the petroleum industry to fund increased exploration or numerous bankruptcy fillings? Have read about both. Political mud slinging with one party blaming the other for climate change or blaming the other for the lack of energy independence due to excessive environmental regs? Yeah, where have we heard that before? LOL.
So, you see a different dynamic post GPO then any of the developments we've seen pre GPO. Please describe some IN DETAIL.
ROCKMAN wrote:ralfy - That's exactly my point: all that you mention have been a part of the "D" for at least the last 35+ years. In fact name one situation post PO that we haven't experienced in the last several decades: high/low oil prices, drilling booms/busts, consumer demand growing/declining, political stability/turmoil in oil exporting countries, etc. And I'm not talking subtle changes but large swings of the pendulum.
Why I keep and will keep pounding the same point: the date of GPO will be of little practical significance.
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