Matt Damon's character in Syriana was righthttp://news.independent.co.uk/sci_tech/article2656034.ecehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubbert_peak_theory
6/14/2007 2:13:46 PM
That article is long on rhetoric and short on facts. Both BP and this "Oil Depletion Analysis Centre" have their own agendas.Reaching peak oil is probably a good thing in the long run. It will hurt in the short-term, though.
6/14/2007 2:20:31 PM
6/14/2007 2:22:41 PM
6/14/2007 2:28:24 PM
It's funny how they keep revising their predictions.
6/14/2007 2:35:27 PM
6/14/2007 4:29:39 PM
we did pretty damn well 110 years ago with the horse and buggycan always go back to it
6/14/2007 5:50:57 PM
tell me you're joking.
6/14/2007 5:53:16 PM
The human race can easily weather peak oil, we've done it a few times before. The last time was in 1980 when Iraq invaded Iran, so civilization dramatically reduced oil consumption. True, at that time it was not a real peak-oil shortage, since it was imposed through a political mechanism called the Iran-Iraq war. But, whatever the cause, the effect was the same: production fell, prices went up, consumption fell, prices fell and never recovered. Civilization did not collapse; there were no riots in the street; people just went on with their lives, the only difference is they exerted real effort to reduce oil consumption. What about gas lines? In 1980 there were very few reported instances of gas lines, this is because Government price controls by this point had been almost completely eliminated. So, if you want to have an energy crisis tomorrow, re-institute price controls. Otherwise, even sudden and unforseen supply drops will result in little more than temporary higher prices.
6/14/2007 6:01:24 PM
This thread has never been done before...
6/14/2007 6:04:28 PM
^^ I'm usually inclined to agree with you, but I'm not sure on this one. Disruptions in the supply of crude oil are always buttressed by the assumption that, eventually, more oil will become available either through the elimination of the disruption or the discovery of new oil sources. By definition, peak oil is just that, a peak which intiates a period of ever reducing returns. The market's reaction to that realization will determine how big the shock will be.The question of when we'll hit peak oil is less important than the question of when we realize it.[Edited on June 14, 2007 at 6:07 PM. Reason : ^]
6/14/2007 6:06:55 PM
18% of world's oil tapped?topic=432677if someone wants, they can request a mod to bttt it.
6/14/2007 6:15:12 PM
But if you look at the graph, oil production did not recover to 1978 levels for over 25 years. This is why prices had to shoot up so high, the oil was not just trapped in the ground, the oil infrastructure had suffered aerial bombardment. The #3 and #4 oil exporters became oil importers almost overnight, and no one saw it coming. Peak Oil is not going to be anywhere near that dramatic, so why do you assume the effects will be?
6/14/2007 6:19:42 PM
Peak Oil is not a singular event that we can pinpoint until many years later. With rising demand and dwindling supplies, we will see continuing escalation in gasoline prices. This will force consumers and businesses to explore alternative energy sources and strive to be more efficient. It also may trigger a recession. But I doubt you will see any massive repercussions from gradually-escalating gas prices. Rather, you will see a market shift towards an electron economy, with coal and nuclear power plants providing the energy to power plug-in electric cars.
6/14/2007 6:20:27 PM
^^^ Not sure what your point is?
6/14/2007 6:47:44 PM
What does it matter when we realize it? Peak oil is irrelevant to me and everyone else; today we are paying more than ever for gasoline, at the same time we are producing more than ever. All that matters to any of us are two questions: How much does oil cost today? How much do I think it will cost in the future? In the year 1987, people did not care that oil production was only 94% of what it had been nine years earlier, all that mattered was that gasoline was cheap again.
6/14/2007 7:16:11 PM
6/15/2007 11:25:00 AM
6/15/2007 12:15:12 PM
Point taken about the movement of goods being cheaper internationally, I'll give you that since I remember reading that somewhere as well now that you mention it. But you agree that there would be a massive shift in how we do business in the United States should a "peak oil" type situation occur. Though I do wonder how much petroleum is consumed in the production of said super-massive ships.You're right, we haven't drilled everywhere, but the concept of "peak oil" doesn't rely on us running out of oil, but rather reaching a point of diminishing returns. Oil that cannot be cheaply recovered isn't really any good. Additionally, eventually, we will still run out of oil. Even if it is a hundred years from now.[Edited on June 15, 2007 at 12:33 PM. Reason : .]
6/15/2007 12:32:45 PM
Don't forget the Athabasca Oil Sands areas in Canada:
6/15/2007 12:34:50 PM
6/19/2007 2:56:44 PM
6/19/2007 3:16:21 PM
6/19/2007 5:15:48 PM
True, less consumption means that the price will fall and it will become a more attractive resource, but I do think that the government should encourage research into alternative technologies. It'd be a head start worth having. Even if it was not economically feasible for mass consumption, it could be distributed more quickly in the event that it was needed.
6/20/2007 10:53:31 AM
No, it would be a head start YOU would like to have. Why should I be forced to pay for research that at most makes you feel better? Any research we can do today we will be able to do in 50 years time for 1/10th the cost. It is wasteful to perform it today, when we don't need it, when it can be completed in much less time with much less effort in the future, when it will actually be useful. That said, why do you assume the "research" has not been done already? How would you know it had been done? If, in fact, renewables will never be as good as oil is today, we should not be surprised to see renewables rare in an oil rich world. What exactly do you want to see developed? We already know how to make all the renewables you mention; all we miss is the know-how of actually doing it (gaining economies of scale). So, what I guess you must be saying is you want to go ahead and build huge production facilities just for the experience, and then shut them down until oil becomes expensive enough to operate them cost effectively. But this is rediculous: we would not only be making the present generation poorer (they built factories that do nothing), but harming future generations (they are using factories that are 50 years out of date). From an engineering standpoint, renewables can never be as efficient as fossil fuels; so use fossil fuels while you have them, stop wasting effort on dead-end technology. Of course, from an engineering standpoint fusion could become more efficient than fossil fuels, so effort expended here makes sense, as it could work out to help the present generation.
6/20/2007 1:39:32 PM
6/20/2007 2:18:36 PM
6/20/2007 2:31:51 PM
6/20/2007 5:03:42 PM
6/20/2007 9:50:50 PM
6/20/2007 10:24:46 PM
http://tinyurl.com/24chzl
6/21/2007 3:14:51 PM
for whatever its worth, i sold all my TSO, am going to sell my remaining VLO soon, and i own UCR, DIG, and USU as my energy plays.
7/12/2007 1:02:11 AM
I couldnt find a more complex graph that those above
7/12/2007 10:23:17 PM
incase there were any doubts:http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/16/AR2007091601287_pf.html
9/17/2007 3:22:06 PM
9/17/2007 3:42:00 PM
9/17/2007 4:44:17 PM
^ damn, you look familiar.have we met?
9/17/2007 5:57:41 PM
9/17/2007 9:05:32 PM
Get rid of the Federal Reserve, eh? Do you seriously want to live in a world without a lender of last resort? You can argue that the inflation target should be zero, or perhaps even slightly negative, but abolishing government control over the money supply would be counter-productive; especially since the Federal Reserve is perfectly constitutional.
9/17/2007 10:36:19 PM
9/17/2007 10:47:14 PM
9/18/2007 12:34:15 AM
i just noticed how he quoted "Federal" when talking about the "Federal" Reserve.looks like we've got layers of dirty-kike conspiracies at the uppermost levels of our "government"
9/18/2007 2:00:36 AM
you low IQ neanderthals need to stop blaming the jooz for everything. seriously, it got old a long time ago. i don't have time to school you on the cleverness of Roman public policy, and how Pontius Pilate really needed a bloke named "Judas" to bring Christ in.you retards will believe anything.now, back to tmy thread:http://tinyurl.com/yqh44d
10/2/2007 4:17:05 PM
bummer...i just posted that in the stock market thread
10/2/2007 7:40:52 PM
10/3/2007 6:04:22 AM
10/3/2007 2:11:53 PM
So Petrobras finds a gigantic oilfield, and the Venezualan public don't want a dictator. looks like we'll be getting more oil from our own hemisphere, so there's less reason to mess with Iran and Russia for now.http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/nation/bal-te.brazil02dec02,0,1375165.storythat plus the agencies realising that we don't need a lame duck to get us into another military quagmire (which the Dems won't be in favor of once they take over), leads to an incredibly timely report revealing that they haven't been seeking weapons since 2003.also, with increased supply, the Dow transports will provide a floor on how much the averages will drop on any given market downturn.don't get me wrong. i don't see conspiracies, only patterns of behavior.
12/4/2007 12:05:43 PM
Petrochina is making mainland finds, Petrobras found some stuff off their coast, and there's unfound stuff in Sudan; but UAE is scheduled to run out in 2016, and other gulf states may follow:http://www.eetimes.com/news/design/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=206800281
2/21/2008 1:26:02 PM
http://www.business24-7.ae/cs/article_show_mainh1_story.aspx?HeadlineID=5523
4/14/2008 2:16:03 PM
So they're underproducing by almost 3million bpd because 'the market doesn't neede it.'
4/14/2008 4:33:48 PM