Original article here.Nov 10 (Reuters) - The availability of oil worldwide has already peaked, the European Union's energy chief Guenther Oettinger said on Wednesday.
"My fear is that the global consumption of oil is going to increase, but European oil consumption has already reached its peak. The amount of oil available globally, I think, has already peaked," Oettinger told a news briefing in Brussels.
Global oil availability has peaked - EU energy chief
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Global oil availability has peaked - EU energy chief
Any thoughts on this?
Last edited by Adam Polczyk on 20 Nov 2010, 18:30, edited 1 time in total.
"The uncertainty of our times is no reason to be certain about hopelessness" - Vandana Shiva
And there we have it. Rising consumption in Chindia will have to be offset by falling consumption in the West. Oil has peaked and there is no spare capacity to support demand growth across the globe.
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Re: Global oil availability has peaked - EU energy chief
The availability of oil worldwide has already peakedNov 10 (Reuters) - The availability of oil worldwide has already peaked, the European Union's energy chief Guenther Oettinger said on Wednesday.
"My fear is that the global consumption of oil is going to increase, but European oil consumption has already reached its peak. The amount of oil available globally, I think, has already peaked," Oettinger told a news briefing in Brussels.
global consumption of oil is going to increase
Bit of an oxymoron isn't it?
Last edited by JohnB on 20 Nov 2010, 19:15, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Global oil availability has peaked - EU energy chief
JohnB wrote:Just what I thought. Sloppy editing from Reuters.Adam Polczyk wrote:The availability of oil worldwide has already peakedNov 10 (Reuters) - The availability of oil worldwide has already peaked, the European Union's energy chief Guenther Oettinger said on Wednesday.
"My fear is that the global consumption of oil is going to increase, but European oil consumption has already reached its peak. The amount of oil available globally, I think, has already peaked," Oettinger told a news briefing in Brussels.
global consumption of oil is going to increase
Bit of an oxymoron isn't it?
- UndercoverElephant
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Re: Global oil availability has peaked - EU energy chief
Strictly speaking, no. If at the point of maximum availability, consumption is only 75% percent of capacity, then availability can decrease by 20% and consumption can still increase.JohnB wrote:The availability of oil worldwide has already peakedNov 10 (Reuters) - The availability of oil worldwide has already peaked, the European Union's energy chief Guenther Oettinger said on Wednesday.
"My fear is that the global consumption of oil is going to increase, but European oil consumption has already reached its peak. The amount of oil available globally, I think, has already peaked," Oettinger told a news briefing in Brussels.
global consumption of oil is going to increase
Bit of an oxymoron isn't it?
Re: Global oil availability has peaked - EU energy chief
So are there huge stocks somewhere, waiting to be sold? If stocks haven't been increasing, it may have been possible to produce more, but if availability has peaked, it's no longer possible to do so, so the opportunity to increase supply has gone. Or are we just discussing sloppy journalism, rather than real facts?UndercoverElephant wrote:Strictly speaking, no. If at the point of maximum availability, consumption is only 75% percent of capacity, then availability can decrease by 20% and consumption can still increase.
- Lord Beria3
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Conventional oil has apparently peaked globally, unconventional oil may still have significant production increases in the future. Look at shale gas, a few years ago I was reading articles in the Oil Drum talking about how natural gas production in the US was going to fall of a cliff, the opposite has happened, shale gas production has exploded and send natural gas prices to lows.
Whether the same can happen to unconventional oil is a interesting question - I remain open minded.
Demand/consumption is anather matter, if China's growth rates slow dramatically (along with the rest of Asia) that reduces demand... ditto if Americans start to be much more frugal with their energy usage, than will free up supplies and potentially lower prices.
Demand is not inelastic... there is a lot of low hanging fruit available in terms of demand destruction.
Whether the same can happen to unconventional oil is a interesting question - I remain open minded.
Demand/consumption is anather matter, if China's growth rates slow dramatically (along with the rest of Asia) that reduces demand... ditto if Americans start to be much more frugal with their energy usage, than will free up supplies and potentially lower prices.
Demand is not inelastic... there is a lot of low hanging fruit available in terms of demand destruction.
Peace always has been and always will be an intermittent flash of light in a dark history of warfare, violence, and destruction
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Re: Global oil availability has peaked - EU energy chief
I was just making a point about the logic of the argument, personally. It is not logically impossible (i.e. oxymoronic) for consumption to peak at a later date than peak availability, provided the oil industry was not pumping oil at 100% of capacity at the point of maximum availability.JohnB wrote:So are there huge stocks somewhere, waiting to be sold? If stocks haven't been increasing, it may have been possible to produce more, but if availability has peaked, it's no longer possible to do so, so the opportunity to increase supply has gone. Or are we just discussing sloppy journalism, rather than real facts?UndercoverElephant wrote:Strictly speaking, no. If at the point of maximum availability, consumption is only 75% percent of capacity, then availability can decrease by 20% and consumption can still increase.
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Global stocks are quite high. Measured in billions of barrels. There are commercail onshore stocks, strategic reseves, and unspecified amounts near the well head and at storage points in OPEC countries. At any one time, maybe another billion barrels are in transit, and other tankers at anchor waiting for 'the right price'. Maybe a couple of month's worth of global production. Long distance pipelines hold a lot of oil.
The world can consume more than it pumps out of the ground, by a few percent, for many months.
Unconventional oil will expand, but the rate of expansion will probably be less than the rate of decline from conventional, once it sets in. Unconventional sources are by their nature either of lower energy value like NGLs, or very capital expensive and slow to extract like tar sands, or simply uneconomic like shale oil, or not even fossil fuels, like corn ethanol.
The world can consume more than it pumps out of the ground, by a few percent, for many months.
Unconventional oil will expand, but the rate of expansion will probably be less than the rate of decline from conventional, once it sets in. Unconventional sources are by their nature either of lower energy value like NGLs, or very capital expensive and slow to extract like tar sands, or simply uneconomic like shale oil, or not even fossil fuels, like corn ethanol.
Re: Global oil availability has peaked - EU energy chief
I still think it's lazy editing, rather than a "nice" point of distinction that’s being made.UndercoverElephant wrote:I was just making a point about the logic of the argument, personally. It is not logically impossible (i.e. oxymoronic) for consumption to peak at a later date than peak availability, provided the oil industry was not pumping oil at 100% of capacity at the point of maximum availability.
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Just check that against reality, please.Lord Beria3 wrote:Look at shale gas, a few years ago I was reading articles in the Oil Drum talking about how natural gas production in the US was going to fall of a cliff, the opposite has happened, shale gas production has exploded and send natural gas prices to lows.
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As I said...
Isn't that important?Adam Polczyk wrote:Isn't the significant thing, that the European Commissioner for Energy has openly acknowledged that he thinks "The amount of oil available globally ... has already peaked"?
"The uncertainty of our times is no reason to be certain about hopelessness" - Vandana Shiva
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