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Page added on January 31, 2012

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Global Oil Production Update: A Strange Future Has Arrived

Global Oil Production Update: A Strange Future Has Arrived thumbnail

Since 2005, European oil consumption has fallen by 1.5 million barrels a day. And, in the same period, US oil consumption has fallen by 2 million barrels a day. If oil was priced at $60 a barrel, rather than $100 a barrel, then a fair portion of that lost demand might return. Instead, since 2005, global crude oil production has been bumping up against a ceiling around 74 million barrels a day. Thus, the tremendous growth in oil demand which emanates from the developing world, in Asia primarily, has been supplied by the reduction of demand in Europe and the United States. Why doesn’t the world simply increase the production of oil to 77, or 78 million barrels a day? After all, that is precisely the history of global oil production: a continual increase in supply to capture the advantage of rising prices.

Today, in 2012, I observe that many analysts of global oil production—and the interaction between oil prices and the global economy—continue to engage in a guessing game about the future. But, frankly, the future has already arrived. And it is not a random future, but a future that was held to be improbable, if not impossible. For each extra barrel of oil produced over the past seven years from Russia, and Canada, there has been a loss of production from the North Sea, from Mexico, from Indonesia and elsewhere. And in the case of OPEC, there has been a stubborn flatlining of production growth, which, in the true spirit of argumentum ad ignorantium, has been taken as proof of OPEC’s hidden and secret supply. Thus, we are led to the newest and strangest meme of all: the failure of global oil production to grow over seven years, in the face of a phase transition in oil prices, is not even suggestive of peak oil. But rather, proof of oil’s imminent supply resurrection.

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Gregor.us


6 Comments on "Global Oil Production Update: A Strange Future Has Arrived"

  1. MrEnergyCzar on Tue, 31st Jan 2012 4:50 am 

    Nice updated graph. The bumpy plateau is shaping up as expected…

    MrEnergyCzar

  2. BillT on Tue, 31st Jan 2012 5:15 am 

    No surprises here. Just more of the same until more big fields fail. Then each ‘recovery’ will be lower on the chart.

  3. Kenjamkov on Tue, 31st Jan 2012 8:01 pm 

    “Thus, we are led to the newest and strangest meme of all: the failure of global oil production to grow over seven years, in the face of a phase transition in oil prices, is not even suggestive of peak oil. But rather, proof of oil’s imminent supply resurrection.”

    Is it just me or is the author saying bau in that last line?

    The author is saying it’s not peak oil, it’s the high prices and supply will increase because of the high price.

    Am I just reading this wrong, or did the author describe peak oil and then say it isn’t peak oil?

  4. kiwichick on Wed, 1st Feb 2012 1:40 am 

    kenjamkov

    no

    he is saying it is strange that the facts are being taken as showing the opposite…..

    by the vested interests like faking the news corp

  5. Frank on Wed, 1st Feb 2012 2:16 am 

    It makes sense if the word “restriction” is substituted for “resurrection.”

  6. Kenz300 on Thu, 2nd Feb 2012 5:22 am 

    Quote — ” Since 2005, European oil consumption has fallen by 1.5 million barrels a day. And, in the same period, US oil consumption has fallen by 2 million barrels a day.”
    ———————-
    The rise in oil prices will cause each of us to make energy efficiency a more important part of our purchase decisions. Efficiency of cars, trucks, appliances, light bulbs and home insulation are all becoming more important as the price of energy rises.

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