That’s the scary question posed in this opinion from Saadallah Al Faithi, former head of Energy Studies Department at OPEC Secretariat in Vienna. The International Energy Agency publishes an annual report called World Energy Outlook, which offers the best available long-term predictions for oil and energy. According to the IEA, 2/3 of oil in 2030 will need to be produced from oil fields which…currently don’t even exist. According to al-Faithi, “sustained investment is needed mainly to combat the decline in output at existing fields, which will drop by almost two-thirds by 20303.
Here’s the question. Where’s all that oil? Despite many countries’ ever-increasing commitment to alternative energy, 77% of our energy demands are now being met by fossil fuels. The World Energy Outlook predicts that our oil dependency will grow by as much as 30% by 2030. So what happens if the future of oil is dried up? According to a mathematical principle called the Hubbert Linearization, we’ve already depleted 52% of the planet’s oil reserves. With rapid industrialization in China and India on the horizon, there’s no way we will even consume oil at the same rate. Energy Bulletin author Jeffrey Brown studied the Texas Oil fields. His conclusion? “This is close to where Texas and the Lower 48 peaked and started irreversible declines in production. Based on the HL method and historical models, I believe that Saudi Arabia and the world are now on the verge of irreversible declines in conventional oil production.” The world’s two most populated nations are industrializing at warp speed, ready to guzzle oil, and we’re planning to extricate it from oil fields that don’t exist yet. Oil barons are talking wind power. Looks like it’s time to increase our focus on creating clean energy and increasing carbon markets in the US. Thankfully, we here at Harvest Power have invested in cutting-edge urban mining technologies to create new ways to get energy. Click here to find out more. Scroll down to read the article. The International Energy Agency (IEA) recently released its World Energy Outlook (WEO), an annual long term forecast for energy and the oil market. This research is usually sought after for the wealth of information it contains and for the forecasts of energy demand and supply as seen by an organisation representing the rich industrial countries as major consumers of all forms of energy. This year’s WEO raises questions as much as it gives answers due to the alarmist views that were pronounced this year. The IEA prepared this outlook against a background of the worst economic slump in a long time but with some signs of recovery already emerging. The collapse of oil prices in 2008 and their rebound in 2009 affected the outlook. The IEA assumes future oil prices will rise with the marginal cost of energy production, reaching $190 (Dh697.90) per barrel in nominal terms in 2030. At the same time and because of the above the slump in investment needs time to recover but this may lay the ground for future shortages. Finally the heated activities and conferences to tackle climate change will undoubtedly affect the outlook. Against this backdrop and in the reference case, IEA forecasts are less than those of 2008 despite the promised economic recovery. Energy demand is forecast to grow from 12,000 million tonnes of oil equivalent (mtoe) in 2008 to 16,800 mtoe in 2030. The demand increase, or 93 per cent of it, is predicted to happen in the non OECD countries and essentially in China and India where energy demand is likely to grow from 2,700 mtoe in 2008 to over 5,000 mtoe in 2030. Fossil fuels are seen to contribute about 77 per cent of energy demand and therefore begs the question if this path is sustainable considering the risk of climate change. Oil demand which stood at 85 million barrels a day (mb/d) in 2008 is expected to increase to 105 mb/d in 2030, a huge difference from the 2005 forecast of 120 mb/d. This reduction is the result of factoring in the impact of the economic crisis, expected higher prices and policies of the industrial countries regarding climate change. But the most important question regarding the oil forecast is the alarming view of the IEA that the majority of oil production in 2030 will be coming from “fields yet to be developed or found”. The IEA goes on to say “sustained investment is needed mainly to combat the decline in output at existing fields, which will drop by almost two-thirds by 20303. A few years ago and even when forecasts were very much higher, the IEA was always assured of the availability of resources without such lost and found statements. This has led some commentators to call this “capitulation to peak oil” and the Guardian on November 9 quoted an unidentified employee of the IEA as saying the world is “closer to running out of oil”. However, the IEA does not want to admit this in case it causes panic buying and a severe impact on oil prices and financial markets. The Americans are always influencing the IEA to underplay the rate of decline and to overplay the chances of finding new oil and it is a “rule” in the IEA not to anger the US. Other unidentified former employees called the 105 mb/d 2030 production as “at best optimistic and at worst implausible”. Fatih Birol, Chief Economist at the IEA, who used to work for Opec secretariat before joining the opposition, said in a recent interview that global oil production would “peak within 10 years and that the governments were “woefully’ underprepared for the crisis”. Although the statement was somehow retracted or given a different interpretation, it is probably going to raise further debate and the importance of what is involved cannot be underestimated. Similarly, gas demand is expected to increase from 3 trillion cubic metres (TCM) in 2007 to 4.3 TCM in 2030 at a rate of 1.5 per cent a year, similar to oil. Reserves of 180 TCM are sufficient for 60 years at current consumption yet the IEA expects as a result of depletion that “close to half of the world’s existing production capacity will need to be replaced by 20303, again suggesting a peak and decline of existing fields. Trade in gas is likely to increase from 677 billion cubic meters (BCM) in 2007 to 1070 BCM in 2030 where the Middle East is expected to see the biggest increase in production and export. However, in the short run, a glut is likely to develop until demand really picks up.
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