With the media awash in stories telling us how much oil is being
discovered around the world, there is one word which the optimists
quoted in these stories refuse to utter: Depletion.
The simple
fact is that depletion never sleeps. It starts as soon as an oil well
begins production and goes on 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
Furthermore, it is not exactly news that oil is being discovered all
around the world. The industry has been spending record amounts to find
it.
What’s critical is the difference between the annual additions
to oil production capacity and the annual decline in the rate of
production from existing wells, a decline which is running anywhere from
4 to 9 percent depending on whom you talk to.
Even at the low end
of decline rate estimates, the world must find and put into production
the equivalent of what is currently coming out of the entire North Sea,
one the world’s largest finds, and we must do so EVERY SINGLE YEAR
before worldwide production can rise. So difficult has this task become,
that we’ve only just been able to keep global production on a bumpy plateau since 2005. For now, the oil industry is on a treadmill which requires ever more drilling just to keep production even.
(Many
regular readers will wonder why I continually emphasize the flat
trajectory of world oil production since 2005. It’s so new readers will
be introduced to this central fact about oil supplies—an indisputable
trend which the industry simply refuses to talk about and even tries to
obscure by changing the definition of oil to include things which are not oil. This trend has ominous implications for our society if it continues or, even worse, turns downward.)
To
the untrained observer the quantities of oil recently discovered sound
large. But, when put into the context of how much we consume, they won’t
extend the oil age by much. Norway, which produces oil from the North
Sea, recently announced its largest find since 2000, a field with nearly 1.8 billion barrels. How long would the oil in that field last the world at the current rate of consumption? About 24 days.
The
math looks like this. The world currently consumes about 27.4 billion
barrels a year of crude oil including lease condensate—which is the definition of oil.
So, just divide 1.8 billion by 27.4 billion and multiply the fractional
result by 365 days in a year, and you’ll get the number of days such a
discovery could supply the world if we could pump it out at any rate we
want to (which we can’t).
Well, there are larger discoveries in
Brazil, you may say. If we accept the government’s figures on their face
(and we really ought to be a little skeptical), then the Tupi field has
5 to 8 billion barrels and the Sugarloaf field has 33 billion. (The
truth is no one really knows because there hasn’t been enough drilling.)
Let’s
take the top end of the estimates and call it 41 billion barrels. If we
do the above calculation for just one billion barrels, we find that it
will last about 13 days. And so, a little multiplication tells us that
two of the most massive finds ever (if they actually pan out) will give
us 41 X 13 days of oil or 533 days, which is about a year and a half.
It’s nothing to sneeze at; but it doesn’t exactly change the overall
picture that much.
And, of course, this number holds only if the
world does NOT increase its rate of oil consumption. But economic growth
is dependent on ever increasing supplies of oil, a fuel central to
every economy on the globe. India, China and many other developing
countries have consistently increased oil consumption to fuel their
economic growth. But because worldwide production has been flat since
2005, consumption in places such as the United States has had to fall in order to make room for growing demand from Asia.
This has happened because American and European consumers aren’t willing or aren’t able to pay as much. Oil
analyst Steven Kopits has explained the counterintuitive idea that poor
Asians are willing to pay more for oil and oil products than rich
Westerners because poor Asians get so much more economic
productivity out of the marginal barrel of oil than rich Westerners who
consume many times more barrels of oil per person. The result has been
that developed countries in North America and Europe have seen very
little growth in their economies as Asian economies continue to sprint
ahead.
Of course, the optimists have been telling us (and telling
us and telling us) that so-called tight oil—the kind that comes from
hydraulically fractured wells—will now finally move the needle on
worldwide production. Well, so far, the net result is nada, nothing,
zilch. Production from such wells has risen, but not enough to offset
declines elsewhere.
And, as it turns out, fracked oil wells are
now the poster children for the problem of production decline. Average
annual oil production decline rates for two of the most well-developed
tight oil plays, Bakken in North Dakota and Eagle-Ford in Texas, are 38 percent and 42 percent, respectively.
That means that drillers in those plays must replace 38 to 42 percent
of their current production EACH YEAR before they can increase
production. It’s a ferociously high decline rate, some 10 times the rate
worldwide. And, this is the oil that the optimists tell us is going to
raise global production!
Humans evolved to be optimistic
risktakers. That genetic heritage has served us well up to this point.
But, sometimes that trait makes us incautious and gullible. And, the oil
industry is taking advantage of a natural human inclination to believe
the presumed experts, especially when they offer an optimistic tale that
is designed to make us comfortable with the status quo.
In truth,
unprecedented disruptions and changes in our worldwide energy system
have been underway for more than a decade. We can ignore that fact, but
only at our peril.
Kurt Cobb is an author, speaker, and columnist focusing on energy and the environment. He is a regular contributor to the Energy Voices section of The Christian Science Monitor and author of the peak-oil-themed novel Prelude. In addition, he writes columns for the Paris-based science news site Scitizen,
and his work has been featured on Energy Bulletin, The Oil Drum,
OilPrice.com, Econ Matters, Peak Oil Review, 321energy, Common Dreams,
Le Monde Diplomatique and many other sites. He maintains a blog called Resource Insights and can be contacted at kurtcobb2001@yahoo.com.
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