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"Providence Resources Plc, an Irish and UK company, has confirmed its Barryroe site, 30 miles off the Cork coast, should yield 280m barrels of oil. "
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-19889948
Moderator: Peak Moderation
We are saved for another 3 days!snow hope wrote:This looks like great financial news for Ireland.![]()
"Providence Resources Plc, an Irish and UK company, has confirmed its Barryroe site, 30 miles off the Cork coast, should yield 280m barrels of oil. "
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-19889948
No... Peak oil is all about flow rates. They won't be able to extract it all in just three days.ziggy12345 wrote:We are saved for another 3 days!snow hope wrote:This looks like great financial news for Ireland.![]()
"Providence Resources Plc, an Irish and UK company, has confirmed its Barryroe site, 30 miles off the Cork coast, should yield 280m barrels of oil. "
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-19889948
Not everyone being quite so pessimistic on the topic.Mean Mr Mustard wrote:No... Peak oil is all about flow rates. They won't be able to extract it all in just three days.ziggy12345 wrote:We are saved for another 3 days!snow hope wrote:This looks like great financial news for Ireland.![]()
"Providence Resources Plc, an Irish and UK company, has confirmed its Barryroe site, 30 miles off the Cork coast, should yield 280m barrels of oil. "
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-19889948Unless there's a blowout.
Sorry...just found this one as well.Mean Mr Mustard wrote:
No... Peak oil is all about flow rates.
Peak Oil is about supply capacity as well you know RGR. When that is permanently constrained due to the physical limitations on the wells then there will be a concomitant price signal.AnOriginalIdea wrote:Interesting...peak oil about price. So would "peak" solutions be about mitigating price?
Well, I can't say I know what your friend would say on the topic, but hasn't the world been waiting around for permanent constraint long enough now for the concomitant price signal to be at least as much as it was, like, 4 years ago now? Or is our currently lower price the signal necessary for enough change to have mitigated use down even farther than the supply constraint would normally require?JavaScriptDonkey wrote:Peak Oil is about supply capacity as well you know RGR. When that is permanently constrained due to the physical limitations on the wells then there will be a concomitant price signal.AnOriginalIdea wrote:Interesting...peak oil about price. So would "peak" solutions be about mitigating price?
What planet do you live on ? Here on Earth we have had a global recession, demand destruction, and some 1st world countries have huge unemployment.AnOriginalIdea wrote:hasn't the world been waiting around for permanent constraint long enough now for the concomitant price signal to be at least as much as it was, like, 4 years ago now? Or is our currently lower price the signal necessary for enough change to have mitigated use down even farther than the supply constraint would normally require?
RGR, [why is he still posting here?]AnOriginalIdea wrote:Well, I can't say I know what your friend would say on the topic, but hasn't the world been waiting around for permanent constraint long enough now for the concomitant price signal to be at least as much as it was, like, 4 years ago now? Or is our currently lower price the signal necessary for enough change to have mitigated use down even farther than the supply constraint would normally require?JavaScriptDonkey wrote:Peak Oil is about supply capacity as well you know RGR. When that is permanently constrained due to the physical limitations on the wells then there will be a concomitant price signal.AnOriginalIdea wrote:Interesting...peak oil about price. So would "peak" solutions be about mitigating price?
I live on a planet where jobs are going wanting in the North Dakota oil patch because Americans don't have the skills or desire to actually work for a living any more, a planet where my car no longer requires gasoline to get me to work, the price of oil is becoming less relevant as abundant natural gas begins to raise expectations of what can be done with it as a fuel rivaling the ease and certainly beating the cost of oil (even after conversion to synthetic crude) and unemployment isn't even an issue for those with actual skills and desire in an economy where such things matter. Versus punishing companies for laying people off (thereby encouraging them to not hire...see Europe).Catweazle wrote:What planet do you live on ? Here on Earth we have had a global recession, demand destruction, and some 1st world countries have huge unemployment.AnOriginalIdea wrote:hasn't the world been waiting around for permanent constraint long enough now for the concomitant price signal to be at least as much as it was, like, 4 years ago now? Or is our currently lower price the signal necessary for enough change to have mitigated use down even farther than the supply constraint would normally require?
Is your planet far ? I'd consider moving there.
There is money to be made, when there is blood in the streets. Economic hurricane? Take advantage of it, much more productive than whining about it.UndercoverElephant wrote:
The current situation is far too complex to draw simplistic conclusions based on "oil price signals" supposedly being driven by normal supply and demand. We're in the middle of an economic hurricane.