Author: Neville

  • Shale gas is not a low emissions fuel

    Shale gas is not a low emissions fuel

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    Bloomberg reported that too much valuable methane from natural gas is leaking into the atmosphere, hurting the bottom line as well as the climate. We know how to stop it. It’s cheap to do and it can pay for itself.

    Natural gas production in the United States has been booming and is expected to keep growing. Already, there are more than 500,000 wells and 300,000 miles of pipeline in place. In 2012, US producers brought more than 25 trillion cubic feet of natural gas to market. And by 2020, the United States is projected to be a net exporter of natural gas.

    Natural gas is here to stay. Its low price is spurring investment and jobs and increasing energy security. But it’s important to get it right. Much of the growth is driven by hydraulic fracturing or fracking a process in which producers can drill more than one mile down and one mile across to access gas in rock formations. While shale gas has been an economic boon, the process can contaminate water supplies, cause air pollution, and have other disruptive impacts on the land and communities.

    Without methane leakage, natural gas would create only about half the greenhouse gases per unit of energy as coal. Yet, methane is 72 times more potent than CO2 measured over 20 years, which is particularly important given that climate change is happening even more quickly than many models have predicted. (Methane has around 25 times more warming potential than CO2 over a 100 year timeframe.) At around three percent leakage, natural gas becomes more harmful than coal in the near term.

    WRI recently conducted an analysis to find out what we know about US methane emissions from natural gas and what can be done to rein them in.

    According to the most recent estimate from EPA, more than 6 million tonnes of fugitive methane leaked from US natural gas systems in 2011. In terms of climate impacts, that’s equivalent to 432 million tonnes of CO2 per year over a 20 year time horizon that’s more than CO2 emissions from all sources in Australia in 2011. It’s also more greenhouse gases than from all US petroleum refining, iron and steel, cement and aluminum manufacturing facilities combined.

    Methane leaks are estimated to be around two to 3% of total production though there is troubling uncertainty around the total. The biggest source of emissions is from new wells. Starting up a new gas well is like popping a Champagne bottle: it releases gas under pressure quickly and with force. Emissions can also leak out through the production process, if proper safeguards are not in place.

    Shale gas is not only expanding in the United States, it’s on the rise around the globe. Large natural gas reserves have been found in China, South Africa, Turkey, Poland, the United Kingdom and elsewhere. According to official Chinese estimates, the country may have 886 trillion cubic feet of shale gas or nearly three times the United States. Reaching the shale potential in China will take additional technology and consume huge water resources significant challenges to be overcome.

    Source – Bloomberg

    (www.coalguru.com)

    Tags: Shale | gas | is | not | a | low | emissions | fuel |

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  • Scientists find Antarctic ice is melting faster

    Scientists find Antarctic ice is melting faster

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    Ice melt shows through at a cliff face at Landsend on the coast of Cape Denison in Antarctica December 14, 2009. REUTERS/Pauline Askin

    CANBERRA | Mon Apr 15, 2013 2:44am EDT

    (Reuters) – The summer ice melt in parts of Antarctica is at its highest level in 1,000 years, Australian and British researchers reported on Monday, adding new evidence of the impact of global warming on sensitive Antarctic glaciers and ice shelves.

    Researchers from the Australian National University and the British Antarctic Survey found data taken from an ice core also shows the summer ice melt has been 10 times more intense over the past 50 years compared with 600 years ago.

    “It’s definitely evidence that the climate and the environment is changing in this part of Antarctica,” lead researcher Nerilie Abram said.

    Abram and her team drilled a 364-metre (400-yard) deep ice core on James Ross Island, near the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula, to measure historical temperatures and compare them with summer ice melt levels in the area.

    They found that, while the temperatures have gradually increased by 1.6 degrees Celsius (2.9 degrees Fahrenheit) over 600 years, the rate of ice melting has been most intense over the past 50 years.

    That shows the ice melt can increase dramatically in climate terms once temperatures hit a tipping point.

    “Once your climate is at that level where it is starting to go above zero degrees, the amount of melt that will happen is very sensitive to any further increase in temperature you may have,” Abram said.

    Robert Mulvaney, from the British Antarctic Survey, said the stronger ice melts are likely responsible for faster glacier ice loss and some of the dramatic collapses from the Antarctic ice shelf over the past 50 years.

    Their research was published in the Nature Geoscience journal.

    (Reporting by James Grubel; Editing by Paul Tait)
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    Environment

  • Pictures of lame horse a PR disaster on the magic day Black Caviar came back to Sydney

    Pictures of lame horse a PR disaster on the magic day Black Caviar came back to Sydney

    Richard Zachariah
    The Daily Telegraph
    April 14, 2013 11:05PM

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    Hamish McLachlan has come under heavy criticism for riding a lame horse while interviewing Black Caviar’s jockey Luke Nolen at Randwick.

    Herald Sun14 April 2013
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    Jockey ‘blown away’ by Black Caviar

    Jockey Luke Nolen marvels at Black Caviar’s unbeaten run after the mare won her 25th race at Randwick.












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    Luke Nolen eases champion mare Black Caviar off the rails and she does the rest with a runaway win in front of an adoring Sydney crowd.












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    Hamish McLachlan

    Hamish McLachlan says that once his live cross from Randwick was out of the way, he dismounted immediately to tend Snowy. Source: Herald Sun

    Hamish McLachlan

    Unfortunate moment: Renowned horseman Hamish McLachlan on Snowy interviews Luke Nolen aboard Black Caviar. Source: Supplied

    CHANNEL 7 and Royal Randwick have been besieged with complaints that Saturday’s historic celebration of Black Caviar was ruined by alleged footage of animal cruelty.

    Viewers pointed to the peak audience moment when Seven’s mounted sports reporter Hamish McLachlan interviewed the great mare’s jockey Luke Nolen while riding a horse named Snowy that was lame.

    Saturday’s live race telecast of Black Caviar’s superb sequence of 25 consecutive wins was watched by 1.127 million on Seven in Sydney and the station’s allied digital channels in other states.

    Unfortunately for racing, rarely delivered a mass audience, McLachlan’s decision at 5.11pm to go ahead with the Nolen interview knowing his horse’s condition has become a PR disaster.

    It has caused social media to pillory the sport on perhaps its greatest day in 50 years and to accuse Channel 7 of a lapse in care of duty for not truncating the footage.

    Snowy

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    McLachlan, a fifth generation horseman from a famous Australian pastoral family, was contrite yesterday.

    “I knew I was in a no-win situation,” McLachlan said. “People will think the horse was lame all day when in reality it happened only just before I drew alongside Black Caviar.

    “People will want to hang me, I know that,” he added.

    In McLachlan’s words, 15 seconds before the elation of Black Caviar’s triumph he felt his horse Snowy stumble and begin to hobble.

    “It was unbelievable that it should happen right at that moment. Do I get on or off,” McLachlan said.

    “One minute he was right the next he was unsound, clearly lame at the walk, he must have stepped on a stone or in a hole while we cantered up to Black Caviar.

    “I was distressed, you can’t imagine, my thoughts were to get off but in my ear the director was screaming for me to get in a position alongside Luke. I thought I might do the interview standing but Luke said the mare wouldn’t co-operate, she wouldn’t stand still for a second immediately after racing.”

    McLachlan said his spur-of-the moment decision to continue with the Nolen interview was partly caused by the pressure he was under from his director, he was torn between doing his job or aborting it.

    McLachlan agreed his duty to his employer was uppermost in his mind, but with his live cross out of the way, he dismounted immediately to tend Snowy.

    Royal Randwick’s own Facebook page drew strong criticism with hundreds agreeing that to screen the interview rather than aborting it was a victory of “greed over animal welfare”.

    One Facebook user described the coverage as “Agony and Ecstasy – shame Seven shame”. Another promised “I will never watch racing again nor will I allow my children to watch it”.

    A sympathetic Bruce McAvaney, hosting the telecast, made brief mention of the unfortunate incident minutes after the interview and assured his audience Snowy was in the hands of the vets and his welfare was paramount.

    Channel 7 spokesman Greg Smith yesterday said all was well with the horse on loan from the Australian Turf Club’s clerk of course team now “happy and healthy in his stable at Warwick Farm”.

    Meanwhile, chief steward Ray Murrihy, whose job description means he is in charge of what happens on course and particularly horse welfare, said yesterday he was unaware of Snowy’s lameness.

    “I know Mick Stanley (clerk of course) would not send out any horse he knew was lame,” Murrihy said.

    “I know nothing about it, it seems a fanciful story.”

    HOOFNOTE: It’s amazing how a promoter’s dream on a day made in heaven can come crashing down around you.

    While Snowy will be forgotten and Black Caviar revered forever, Saturday’s ill-judged moment cannot be dismissed as bad luck.

    It was a basic error of judgment – and broke every rule of television. I was always taught you can never say anything near a microphone you don’t want the world to know.

    Similarly you can’t show pictures that you don’t want the world to see and will cause upset in the name of sport/entertainment.

    Television is so engaging you can’t hope that something like Snowy’s sore front legs will not be noticed by an animal-loving public.

    On a day when it should have been all good news, we are left with a muted feeling and a tainted taste.

    As a nation, we love Black Caviar, we love winners.

    But in the moment of a famous victory we cannot ignore an innocent bystander who steps on a stone or a hole in the wrong place at the wrong time.

  • Gillard faces fight with states as poll support dips

    Gillard faces fight with states as poll support dips

    ABCUpdated April 15, 2013, 8:52 am

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    Reform push: Julia Gillard is facing a struggle to get the states on side
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    Julia Gillard is facing a fight with Coalition-led states over her plan to overhaul school funding, as a new poll shows support for Federal Labor dipping below 30 per cent.

    At the weekend the Federal Government announced plans to increase school funding by $14.5 billion over six years, saying it wanted the states to chip in about a third of the money.

    The money flows from the so-called Gonski education reforms – a major part of Labor’s re-election strategy.

    But critics have lined up to , and several states are already baulking at the cost.

    New South Wales Premier Barry O’Farrell says his state will have difficulty coming up with a requested $1.7 billion.

    “The only thing certain at this stage is that we don’t have $1.7 billion lying around unused,” he said.

    “Further state spending cuts would be required if New South Wales were to sign up to the Gonski reforms.”

    Queensland Premier Campbell Newman says he does not have enough information to commit to the deal, while Victoria’s Education Minister Martin Dixon is demanding more details ahead of Friday’s COAG meeting.

    “They haven’t actually negotiated with the state of Victoria, so there’s a lot of work to do between now and Friday,” Mr Dixon said.

    Ms Gillard is hoping state and territory leaders will sign up to the plan when they meet at COAG, but has

    This morning she told Channel Nine the funding overhaul was aimed at promoting equity across schools.

    “It’s not about the fight … it’s about the outcome in schools,” she said.

    The Australian Council of State School Organisations is urging the states and territories to get on board.

    “I can’t understand why any state or territory is reluctant to sign up,” president Peter Garrigan said.

    “I think we need to get out of the political game. I know politics have been played on all sides of the spectrum, but what we’re talking about here is a positive outcome for all young Australians.

    “It’s imperative that as a nation we support the education of our young.”

    School Education Minister Peter Garrett stands by the decision to make cuts to university funding to provide some of the extra money for schools.

    “I’m confident that universities can find scope in their significant budgets for the efficiencies that we’ve asked, which only go for two years,” he said.

    Nielsen poll dip

    Today’s Nielsen poll, published in Fairfax papers, shows support for Labor slipping below 30 per cent for the first time in 10 months.

    The poll puts Labor’s primary vote down two points at 29 per cent, while support for the Coalition has risen two points to 49 per cent.

    On a two party-preferred basis, the Coalition is ahead on 57 per cent, while Labor sits at 43 per cent.

    Opposition Leader Tony Abbott leads Ms Gillard in the preferred prime minister stakes 50 per cent to 42 per cent.

    It is the first time Labor’s primary vote has slipped below 30 per cent since June 2012, before the carbon tax was introduced.

    The poll follows a big week for Ms Gillard, who has also announced a strategic partnership deal with China and an overhaul of Australia’s superannuation system.
    Fifty-two per cent of those polled opposed the superannuation changes, despite the Government saying they would only affect about 16,000 of Australia’s top earners.

  • Peak Oil As Seen Through The Eyes Of Arab Oil Producers

    Peak Oil As Seen Through The Eyes Of Arab Oil Producers

    By Robert Hirsch

    13 April, 2013
    Fabius Maximus

    Reflections by the author of the “Hirsch Report” on the Conference “Peak Oil: Challenges and Opportunities for the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Countries.”

    I was fortunate to be among the few westerners invited to attend and speak at this first-of-its kind “peak oil” (PO) conference in a Middle East. The fact that a major Middle East oil exporter would hold such a conference on what has long been a verboten subject was quite remarkable and a dramatic change from decades of PO denial. The two and a half day meeting was well attended by people from the GCC as well as other regional countries.

    The going-in assumption was that “peak oil” will occur in the near future. The timing of the impending onset of world oil decline was not an issue at the conference, rather the main focus was what the GCC countries should do soon to ensure a prosperous, long-term future. To many of us who have long suffered the vociferous denial of PO by Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) and OPEC countries, this conference represented a major change. In the words of Kjell Aleklett (Professor of Physics at Uppsala University, Sweden), who summarized highlights of the conference, the meeting was “an historic event.”

    While many PO aficionados have been focused on the impacts and the mitigation of “peak oil” in the importing countries, most attendees at this conference were concerned with the impact that finite oil and gas reserves will have on the long-term future of their own exporting countries. They see the depletion of their large-but-limited reserves as affording their countries a period of time in which they either develop their countries into sustainable entities able to continue into the long term future or they lapse back into the poor, nomadic circumstances that existed prior to the discovery of oil/gas. Accordingly, much of the conference focus was on how the GCC countries might use their current and near-term largesse to build sustainable economic and government futures.

    A flavor of the conference can be gotten from the following loosely translated, random quotations:

    About the Conference:

    >>This is a groundbreaking conference.

    >> The organizers were brave to organize this conference.

    Peak Oil:

    >> Peak oil provides an incentive to consider important national and regional issues. The GCC is currently working new problems with old solutions.

    >> Oil revenue represents about 93% of the Saudi budget. Everything is now imported — foreign expertise and most labor. Saudi can’t continue on the current track, because it would lead to a “bad future.” We need radical change.

    >> After peak oil, will there be great cities, or will Middle East cities end up like the gold mining ghost towns of the old U.S. west?

    >> So far we have wasted our opportunity.

    >> Shale oil in the U.S. is so much foolishness and does not invalidate peak oil. We definitely must worry about peak oil.

    The Gulf States:

    >> Political reforms have failed to properly address our lack of democracy and accountability.

    >> When people are excluded from politics, they get unruly.

    >> Citizens in the Middle East prefer public sector jobs because they pay better than private sector jobs.

    >> Foreigners are the majority of our populations, typically 80%.

    >> Schools are teaching children “old stuff.” Schools are a disaster.

    >> The current culture is one of waste.

    >> There are job vacancies in Saudi but local people are not prepared to fill them. Saudi’s go abroad to get advanced degrees but don’t qualify for Saudi jobs, so Saudi must import foreign labor. Aramco did a good job of training Saudi nationals.

    >> The GCC must educate women and give them greater rights and equality.

    >> In many countries absolute rulers get the incomes and revenues and not much is left for the people. A selfish dictator does not develop his country.

    >> The Arab legal system is in bad shape and needs attention.

    >> People read religious literature when they should be reading technical literature.

    >> The region has wealthy, wealthy persons and poor, poor people.

    >> Rulers must understand that the people must be part of the future.

    >> Future generations must have rights.

    About the world and peak oil:

    >> Globalization is being broadly viewed more negatively now. When peak oil comes, it will be extremely difficult to maintain.

    >> High oil prices will impact the world even before the onset of peak oil.

    >> Peak oil is the most important question in this part of the world.

    Robert Hirsch ran the US Fusion Program during the 1970′s, and went from there to become one of America’s top energy experts. He was the lead author of one of the major papers about 21st century energy: “Peaking of World Production: Impacts, Mitigation, and Risk Management“ (aka “Mitigations”), commissioned by the Dept of Energy, published February 2005. Co-authors are the economists Roger Bezdek and Robert Wendling. They also wrote The Impending World Energy Mess: What It Is and What It Means to You (2010). See Wikipedia for a list of his positions and publications. He has over 50 publications, plus 14 patents — including Farnsworth–Hirsch fusor (see Wikipedia)

  • Peak oil isn’t dead: An interview with Chris Nelder

    Peak oil isn’t dead: An interview with Chris Nelder

    Posted by Brad Plumer on April 13, 2013 at 12:18 pm

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    Warnings about “peak oil” have been with us since the OPEC crisis in the 1970s. At some point, the experts said, the world would hit a limit on how much oil could be extracted from the ground. Production would then drop, prices would soar, chaos would ensue.

    But after a worrisome series of price spikes starting in 2007, oil triumphalism is once again ascendant. Companies are now using new technologies to extract crude from hard-to-reach sources, from the tar sands of Alberta to shale formations in North Dakota. After decades of decline, U.S. oil production has risen to its highest levels since the 1990s. And that’s led many analysts and journalists to confidently declare that “peak oil is dead.”

    Not everyone’s convinced, however, that oil is really on the verge of a new boom. Energy analyst Chris Nelder, for one, has spent a lot of time scrutinizing the claims of the oil triumphalists. Our newfound oil resources, he argues, aren’t nearly as promising as they first appear. And peak oil is still as relevant as ever.

    I talked to Nelder by phone this week. A lightly edited transcript follows.

    Brad Plumer: Let’s start with the basics. How would you define “peak oil”?

    Chris Nelder: There has always been a lot of confusion about this point. Peak oil was never about “running out of oil.” The only people who characterized it that way either didn’t know what they were talking about or were trying to confuse the issue. Peak oil has always referred to the production rate of oil — it’s about finding the point where that production rate peaks.

    BP: So back in 2005, plenty of analysts were suggesting that the world would soon hit a ceiling in annual oil production. How has that panned out?

    CN: The predictions weren’t monolithic. But what everyone agreed on was that at some point in the near future, maybe five or 10 or 15 years away, the rate of oil production would stop growing. Some said we’d hit an absolute peak in a specific year. Others said we’d reach a “bumpy plateau” that might be five or 10 years long. But everyone agreed that sometime after 2005, within 10 or 15 years, global oil production would stop growing.

    And that’s exactly what happened. The growth in conventional oil production ended in 2004, and we’ve been on a bumpy plateau ever since.

    Global Average Annual Crude Oil Production mbpd 2002 – 2012
    Note: Chart only shows crude oil, not “total liquids.” (Credit: Gregor Macdonald)

    BP: It looks to me like there was an uptick in 2012. Doesn’t that mean we’ve finally broken the plateau?

    CN: Not necessarily. In 2005, we reached 73 million barrels per day. Then, to increase production beyond that, the world had to double spending on oil production. In 2012, we’re now spending $600 billion. The price of oil has tripled. And yet, for all that additional expenditure, we’ve only raised production 3 percent to 75 million barrels per day [since 2005].

    BP: So what we’re seeing is that the world can no longer increase its production of “easy” oil — many of those older fields are stagnant or declining. Instead, we’re spending a lot of money to eke out additional production from hard, expensive sources like Alberta’s tar sands or tight oil in North Dakota.

    CN: Right, and that’s entirely consistent with peak oil predictions, which said that extraction would plateau, that the decline in conventional oil fields would have to be made up by expensive unconventional oil. Right now, we’re struggling to keep up with declines in mature oil fields — and that pace of decline is accelerating.

    Mature OPEC fields are now declining at 5 to 6 percent per year, and non-OPEC fields are declining at 8 to 9 percent per year. Unconventional oil can’t compensate for that decline rate for very long.

    Even all the growth in U.S. tight oil from fracking, which has produced about 1 million barrels per day, hasn’t been enough to overcome declines elsewhere outside of OPEC. Non-OPEC oil has been on a bumpy plateau since 2004:

    Global Crude Oil Production – Non-OPEC vs OPEC in mbpd 2002-12
    (Credit: Gregor Macdonald)

    BP: Now when you say “mature” oil fields are declining — these are older fields in places like Saudi Arabia or California that used to produce cheap, easy-to-extract oil. And we’re replacing them with fields that decline more quickly and are difficult to produce?

    CN: Look at Ghawar in Saudi Arabia [the largest conventional oil field in the world]. We know that its water cut has been increasing — they’re getting more water with the oil that comes out, which is an indication that the field is in decline. That’s a field with a high flow rate and cheap production costs.

    And we’re replacing it with tight oil wells in the U.S. that decline 40 percent in the first year, where the production cost is over $70 per barrel. Or deepwater wells, which deplete at 20 percent per year. Or tar sands, which is expensive. Anticipated production growth for tar sands has consistently failed to meet expectations, year after year after year. Ten years ago, tar sands production today was expected to be twice what it actually is.

    These are just low-quality oil resources, and we’re relying on them to compensate for the decline in cheap, high-quality stuff.

    BP: One of the things peak-oil analysts often talk about is the “energy return on investment,” or EROI. The idea seems to be that we’re now spending more and more energy just to extract oil from difficult places like Alberta’s tar sands. Why is this important?

    CN: At some point, you wind up investing so much energy to produce more energy that you start losing the race. It becomes non-useful or ineffective to keep trying to produce more energy.

    And there’s a turning point on this — it’s called the “net energy cliff.” When the ratio of energy output to energy input gets down to about 6, then you fall off this cliff, and it’s just not worth doing. In the early days of oil production, that ratio was about 100 to 1. Globally, right now, it’s approaching 11 to 1. And it’s even lower for some newer sources. The return on investment for heavy oil from the Kern River field in California is about 4 to 1.

    The point is that the net energy available to society has been declining radically. Researchers have done a number of papers on this. If you want to run a society, your net energy for oil production has to be at least 5. And if you want to run a modern complex society, with televisions, iPads, highly advanced medicine, etc., then you probably need an EROI closer to 10. So it’s reaching the point where we’re in the danger zone.

    BP: Now what about prices? We’ve seen oil prices soar from around $40 per barrel in 2004 to $140 per barrel in 2008. And nowadays, prices in the $100 range are pretty much normal.

    CN: One of the implications of peak oil is that as production starts to falter, we need much higher prices in order to sustain production. And that’s exactly what’s happened since 2005.

    Another implication is that the economy would be unable to tolerate those high prices and would contract. That also seems to have happened. U.S. employment is still below 2008 levels. Europe is struggling. Now, it’s difficult to sort out the effects of high oil prices on the global economy because we also had the financial crisis and everything else. But guys like James Hamilton have done some interesting research showing that when oil expenditures reach a certain percentage of GDP, that induces a recession. So there is some evidence.

    BP: It seems like one of the implications of peak oil is that prices will bounce around a narrow window. They can’t go too low, because then all those tight oil wells in North Dakota will be unprofitable. But they can’t go too high, because that will crush the global economy.

    CN: A number of analysts have argued that the floor on oil prices is now around $85 per barrel. It might vary from place to place. An existing well in the Bakken might be profitable when oil’s at $70 or $75. For Arctic drilling, prices might have to rise to $110 per barrel. But the floor is around $85.

    But there’s also a price ceiling for what consumers are able to pay. I think that’s probably around $105 for West Texas Intermediate and $125 for Brent. This is why world prices have been bouncing around this narrow ledge between floor and ceiling since 2007. We have to keep prices in that range, not too high to kill demand, but not too low to kill supply. Again, that’s very consistent with the concept of what peak oil has always been.

    BP: The other interesting dynamic you’ve noted is that once oil production stagnates, we’re essentially in competition for oil with China and India.

    CN: Right now, all of the new oil consumption in the world is coming from outside the OECD and the developed world. It’s largely coming from in China and India. And that new oil demand is now being met, almost exactly, by declining demand in North American and Europe:

    Source: Samuel Foucher/Logi Energy LLC
    Source: Samuel Foucher/Logi Energy LLC

    Another consequence of hitting that plateau is that net global oil exports will continue to fall. Oil-exporting nations will make a lot of money thanks to higher prices, and they’ll grow as a result. But that means they’ll also start consuming more of their own oil. And this is exactly what’s happening worldwide — net global oil exports have declined since 2005. Countries like Saudi Arabia have seen enormous growth in oil consumption.

    And what that means is that the United States will have to cut consumption in response. We are the most vulnerable oil importer: We consume about 18 million barrels per day and produce about 7 million. So as net global exports decline, our consumption will have to fall. And that’s already happened.

    BP: I’m not sure I quite follow. If there’s only a limited amount of oil to go around in a growing world, why does that oil go to Saudi Arabia or China instead of the United States?

    CN: The growing economies of Asia get so much more marginal economic utility out of a gallon of fuel than we do. In a poorer country, you might have a couple guys on a moped, burning one gallon of fuel to get to the market and back. They get so much more economic value out of doing that than a construction worker in the U.S. gets in his pickup truck burning 5 gallons per day.

    In China you’ve now got cars that get 50 miles per gallon. And I’ve done the math on how many of these new vehicles they’re building in China and how many new vehicles we’re buying per year. And it turns out we will never catch up with China on fuel economy, because we still have 240 million vehicles out there with low fuel economy.

    BP: I see. As long as production plateaus, they’ll always be able to outbid us for oil — it’s worth more to them. So what’s the upshot of all this?

    CN: The upshot is that we need to prepare for the day when oil is going to leave us. The sooner we commit to an energy transition, to renewable energy, the better off we’ll be in every respect. You can make that argument just on the basis of production rates and price. And that’s not even considering carbon emissions and climate change, which is another great reason. Let alone what oil is doing to the global economy.

    And there are always going to be unforeseen developments. If you were a hard-core doomer 10 years ago, you might have said that when oil gets to $100 per barrel, our economy will simply shut down. But you would’ve missed the fact that a lot of Americans have quit driving and switched to public transportation. You would’ve missed a significant transition from 18-wheel trucking to rail over the past decade — a huge transformation of freight.

    So you can’t always predict things perfectly. But likewise, it’s just not correct to say that because we’ve unlocked tight oil and we’re drilling in shale that everything is great, that we’re off to the races, that we can keep growing the global economy on this stuff.

    Further reading:

    –Colin Sullivan has an overview of the recent debate over “peak oil.”

    –One of the most optimistic predictions about oil production has been a study (pdf) by Leonardo Maugeri of the Harvard Kennedy School. Here’s Nelder’s essay disputing Maugeri’s optimism.