Tuesday, August 9, 2011

How much oil is there really?

How much oil is there really?

There's good reason to cast a cold eye on estimates of proven reserves. By indifference or design, there's simply no source for reliable information.


What is the "right" price for a barrel of oil?

Japan's oil minister has said, based on fundamentals, that the price of crude should be $60 a barrel, not the $130 to $140 we see today.

During congressional testimony, five oil-industry CEOs each gave estimates of where oil "ought" to be, with results ranging from $35 to $65 a barrel up to $90.

Even the implacable Saudis are reportedly about to increase production by half a million barrels a day, a sign that they are concerned that the current price is too high.

A strategic resource
Think of the host of financial and economic statistics available to you every day: stock prices, unemployment data, company results, foreign exchange prices, GDP growth rates, etc. Market information is precise. Government statistics, while a little fuzzier, are complied and computed in a generally consistent fashion.

But oil is in a completely different category: It's a strategic resource bought and sold internationally. Many countries, either by indifference or design, simply don't provide reliable information.

Price is a result of both demand and supply;

The International Energy Agency, a prime source of oil-related information, was caught off guard by the surge in oil prices, so it decided it needed to get a better grip on capacity. The IEA is only partway through a survey of the world's biggest oil fields, yet says it expects to show a significant reduction in estimated reserves. But even when concluded, this project will be far from reliable. For starters, OPEC, which is estimated to control two-thirds of the oil reserves and to provide 36% of oil production worldwide, is largely unresponsive to IEA inquiries.

And cooperation doesn't always translate into insight. For instance, Iraq recently claimed it has as much as 350 billion barrels of oil, triple its proven reserves and more than even oil kingpin Saudi Arabia has. Is this claim completely crazy?

No one knows for sure; Iraq is relatively unexplored, with only 2,000 oil wells versus more than 1 million in Texas.

Seeking to resolve this debate, investment research firm Sanford Bernstein performed satellite analysis of the oil field, reviewing high-resolution images dating back to 2001. The water-injection methods used by the Saudis produce surface depressions when oil reservoirs become depleted.

Bernstein found no signs of surface collapse. Instead, it found some areas slightly elevated, which could indicate use of high-pressure recovery, an advanced extraction technique. It concluded that only one of the oldest sections was in decline.

That report was dismissed as "junk science" by industry analyst and peak-oil theorist Matthew Simmons.

Indeed, some old oil hands argue that the entire method for computing reserves is fundamentally flawed.

Richard Pike, president of the Royal Society of Chemistry, who spent 25 years in the petrochemical industry, contends in an article in the Petroleum Review that published estimates are less than 50% of their actual level. As The Independent summarized his argument:

"Companies add the estimated capacity of oil fields in a simple, arithmetic manner to get proven oil reserves. . . . However, mathematically it is more accurate to add the proven oil capacity of individual fields in a probabilistic manner based on the bell-shaped statistical curve used to estimate the proven, probable and possible reserves of each field. This way, the final capacity is typically more than twice that of simple, arithmetic addition."

Pike is no oil-industry shill and contends that producers understand this issue but prefer to show lower totals, to help support higher oil prices. Some economists think they can cut the Gordian knot of the oil supply/demand debate. Paul Krugman (along with others) has argued that if the spot-market price exceeds the level at which production meets end-user demand, inventories will rise -- a far easier measurement to track than trying to estimate world demand and supply.

Yet 2008 oil supplies remain within recent historical ranges, which would mean that current prices reflect fundamental forces.

2 comments:

  1. Subject: Water - is the "oil of the 21st century


    Water
    Water, it’s been said, is the "oil of the 21st century" -- a commodity whose availability and quality may be subject to both known and unknown influences. For companies, that poses significant risks, and many companies are making water a strategic issue, creating water management plans that include efficiency and conservation as well as contingency plans should water become less available or more costly. Many firms are examining their products, policies, and processes through the lens of a world in which the availability of water becomes a constraint to doing business.

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  2. Lindsey Williams - crude lays beneath the North Slope of Alaska

    http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=3340274697167011147


    The short version:

    Mr. Williams claims 200yrs worth of "sweet" (low sulfur) crude lays beneath the North Slope of Alaska. Oil Companies and politicians have known about it since Henry Kissinger was in power. According to the video, Kissinger put the oil field under wraps so "the powers that be" could blackmail oil producing states in Arabia and South America into buying up the United States national debt in exchange for their crude. Saddam Hussein and The Shaw of Iran refused to go along with the plan thus we make war in the middle east. Iran is planning on flooding the market with cheap oil and doing so will crash the U.S. economy. The reason gas prices are so high is because someone at a computer in London or New York tells the Saudi's, Iranians, Iraqi's, and everyone else in the oil producing industry how much oil will cost. Essentially, a shadow group of international power brokers controls and enslaves the world by controlling the price and production of oil. They won't open the supposed filed in the North Slope because doing so would drastically lower the price of oil, crash the U.S. Economy, and loosen their control over us.

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