Ten Years To Prevent Catastrophe
'GLOBAL WARMING ULTRA'
www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/EnergyMar2006.htm
The Climate Change Implications Of 'Peak Oil'
As Conventional Oil Production Faces Accelerating Decline

Energy Update, March 2006


"Non-conventional oil is now commercial, but it remains extremely energy-intensive to turn into usable form. Most new oil found globally is either heavy or sour, or both. What seems to have passed peak supply is light, sweet oil - the easiest oil to produce and the simplest to refine into light, finished product.... Like it or not, 2006 will be eventful for oil. It will also be the year when the Peak Oil topic intensifies into a debate on the scale of climate change/ global warming.'"
What a difference 20 years make in crude oil prices
World Oil Magazine, February 2006

tarsands2s.jpg (6943 bytes) oilsandstrucksSS.jpg (12770 bytes)

Responding To Peak Oil With 'New Technology'
High CO2 Intensity Oil Production From Tar Sands In Canada
As The Sun Begins To Set On Global Conventional Oil Production


Shell Admits The Peak For Conventional Oil Production
Is Already Here

"..... My view is that 'easy' oil [i.e. conventional oil] has probably passed its peak."
Jeroen van der Veer, CEO of Royal Dutch Shell
Financial Times, 24 January 2006

And Is Now Turning To More Polluting Unconventional Sources

"Other new hydrocarbon energy frontiers include heavy oils and where oil is contained in sand and shales... But they are more carbon-intensive and increase the urgency of finding ways of tackling carbon emissions...."
Jeroen van der Veer, CEO of Royal Dutch Shell
Financial Times, 24 January 2006

But Use of Non-Conventional Oil Substitutes On The Same Scale
Will Produce Accelerated Climate Change

"The UK could face major flooding and tropical temperatures by the year 3000 if greenhouse gas emissions are not sharply reduced, a new study says. The report, from the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research, claims Britain could look radically different with sea levels rising as much as 11.4m. The study was commissioned by the Environment Agency..... Dr Tim Lenton, the UEA lead author on the paper and a climate change modeller, said: 'If we follow business-as-usual then we will commit future generations to dangerous climate change, and if we exploit unconventional fossil fuels we could return the Earth to a hot state it hasn't seen since 55 million years ago.'"
UK's 'sobering' climate forecast
BBC Online, 16 February 2006

"... 'Let's be very clear about this. This is not a one or two year game. We will be mining this [oil sands] area for the next 50 years. And we could be producing the deeper resources for the next two centuries.' ...... There's no denying that there are environmental issues here. The extraction process itself generates huge amounts of greenhouse gases... And it it all seems inevitable. The world is thirsty for oil..."
Canada: Competition for oil sands increases
BBC Online Video News, 13 February 2006

“Burning a clean fuel [natural gas] to make a dirty fuel [from oil sands] is a form of reverse alchemy, like turning gold into lead. It also leaves less gas for more sensible uses, such as making electricity and heating your home.... When you calculate the toll on gas reserves, the cleanest and most versatile hydrocarbon, the oil sands don’t look like a godsend after all.”
'Oil Sands Fever – The Environmental implications of Canada’s oil sands rush'
Pembina Institute, November 2005


"Newly minted Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, adopting a more plain-spoken style than his predecessor, Alan Greenspan, assured lawmakers on Wednesday that the nation's economic expansion 'remains on track.' But Bernanke signaled that Fed policymakers will continue to raise interest rates to keep inflation in check. And he warned the world's tight oil and natural gas supplies mean the economy will be operating within a 'zone of vulnerability.' We're in a difficult period because,
for the foreseeable future, we are operating close to the margins of available global supply of oil and natural gas,' Bernanke said."

Fed chief says growth 'on track'
Houston Chronicle, 16 February 2006

"The EIA [US Energy Information Administration] projects OPEC production at 44 million barrels a day in 2025, about 11 million barrels less than had been predicted a year ago."
Gov't report: $50-plus oil here to stay
Associated Press, 12 December 2005

"Several of the world's largest oil fields show signs of fading, according to several studies, raising questions about the reliability of global energy supplies."
Mexico's Oil Output May Decline Sharply
Wall St Journal, 9 February 2006

".... there are a number of additional categories of oil that require non-standard extraction and processing. These form part of a group known as ‘unconventional’ oils, and their production is increasing. They include liquids derived from gas, as well as oil derived from solid mineral deposits known as oil sands and oil shales.... Today the IEA [International Energy Agency] believes that investment in non-conventional oil production can help in delaying the onset of peak production."
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
RICS Valuation Conference, 29 November 2005

"The U.S. Department of Energy is predicting crude oil from Alberta's oil sands - not alternative energy sources, such as biomass ethanol - will help halve the U.S.'s dependence on overseas oil within two decades.... the White House and other U.S. lawmakers have been eying Canada's oil as they search for more secure and stable energy sources....".
Energy relief in oil sands, not ethanol
National Post, 4 February 2006

"Today there are more than 60 sites proposed or under development in the Alberta Tar Sands. Total greenhouse gas emissions from the proposed oil sands projects alone are estimated to grow from 21 million tonnes in 2000 to over 80 million tonnes per year by 2010. These emissions are just from the production of this oil, before the end products are even used.
Kyoto (Don't worry, it will never happen)
Strathcona County Council, Alberta, 9 October 2002

"After open-pit strip mining, extraction of low-quality crude oil from oil shale and tar sands requires extraordinary amounts of energy, heat and water, resulting in further impacts to water quality and supply as well as extra energy use and air pollution. Because of this resource-intensive process, the greenhouse gas emissions from tar sands production are three times that of conventional oil production. Oil shale production, which is still largely experimental, may be even more energy intensive.... 'Fast-tracking the development of low quality oil shale and tar sands which create three times or more greenhouse gas emissions than conventional oil development is near the top of a long list of irrational, dangerous, and irresponsible energy and global warming policies from the Bush administration in 2005,' said Siegel. 'Development of oil shale and tar sands is not part of a climate-safe future for the United States or the world.'"
Bush Administration Ignores Global Warming In Proposal To Open Vast Areas To Open Pit Mining For Low Quality Fossil Fuels

Center for Biological Diversity, 31 January 2006

"Extracting oil from the tar sands is already the single biggest contributor to the growth of Canada's greenhouse gas emissions.... According to the provincial government in Alberta output of marketable oil sands production increased to 858,000 barrels per day in 2003, up from 741,000 the year before. It is anticipated that in 2005 Alberta's oil sands production may account for one-half of Canada's total crude output. This steadily increasing output is coinciding with Canada’s deteriorating greenhouse gas emissions record. Figures release by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in November 2005 show that in 2003 Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions were 24% above their 1990 level, as against a 6% reduction requirement under Kyoto - a 30 percentage point gap.  By the end of 2005 that gap can be expected to have widened further as the expansion of oil production from tar sands continues apace. However, Canada’s tar sands are by no means the end of the story when it comes to considering the potential for highly polluting unconventional sources of oil to threaten the onset of a dangerous ‘global warming ultra’ outcome."
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
RICS Valuation Conference, 29 November 2005

"George Bush’s leading climate modeller, Jim Hansen, said a month ago that we have 'at most ten years' to make the drastic cuts in emissions that might head off climatic catastrophe.... it requires more urgent and radical change in our transportation, economic systems and lifestyles than governments or industries anywhere have yet seriously contemplated. What then is to be done? If climate change is driven primarily by the burning of fossil fuels, the world must diversify quickly into renewable sources of energy — wind power, biomass, wave and tidal power and solar energy. Carbon capture and storage may be an option, but no clean coal-technology prototype has yet been built...."
Michael Meacher, former UK Environment Minister
Ten Years To Prevent Catastrophe
London Times, 10 February 2006

In This Bulletin

The Pressure Is On
Mexico, Kuwait, Norway, And Britain
New Evidence Of Oil Production Declines For Major Producers
US Department Of Energy Downgrades Forward OPEC Oil Production Forecast
By Enormous 11 Million Barrels Per Day
Canadian Bank
Global Conventional Oil Production Has Already Peaked
Shell Chief Acknowledges Arrival Of Global Peak In Conventional Oil Production
And Turns To CO2 Intensive Alternatives
The Implications For Climate Change
Oil Sands And CO2 Generation
Oil Sands And Carbon Sequestration?
Don't Hold Your Breath
Desperate Energy Hungry Nations
US, China, Japan, And India, All Turning To Oil Sands
'Global Warming Ultra'
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
Time For Action Is Running Out Fast
Ten Years To Prevent Catastrophe

The Pressure Is On
Mexico, Kuwait, Norway, And Britain

New Evidence Of Oil Production Declines For Major Producers

WSJMexico.gif (31292 bytes)
Graphic: Wall St Journal, 9 February 2006
(Most Mexican Oil Fields Due To Peak Within 5 Years)

MEXICO

"Mexico's huge state-owned oil company may be facing a steep decline in output that would further tighten global oil supply and add to global woes over high oil prices. The potential decline faced by Petroleos Mexicanos, or Pemex, also could undermine U.S. efforts to reduce dependence on Middle East oil, and complicate Mexican politics and financial stability. An internal study reviewed by The Wall Street Journal shows water and gas are encroaching more quickly than expected in Cantarell, Mexico's biggest oil field, and might cause output to drop precipitously over the next few years. Currently, Cantarell produces two million barrels of oil a day, or six of every 10 barrels produced by Mexico. It is the world's second-biggest-producing field after Saudi Arabia's Ghawar... A significant decline in Mexican output would put further pressure on global oil prices. A refining bottleneck and surging demand, especially in China and India, have driven up oil prices substantially over the past two years; yesterday, the March crude contract on the New York Mercantile Exchange fell 54 cents to $62.55 a barrel. A supply shortfall would also be bad news for the U.S., which relies on its southern neighbor as its No. 2 source of oil, behind Canada. In his State of the Union address, President Bush said the U.S. must reduce its imports from the politically volatile Middle East.... The report, which recommends that Pemex scrap 26 of 30 new wells planned for the northern part of the field due to gas encroachment, concludes that the 'window of exploiting the reserve is closing fast.'"
Mexico's Oil Output May Decline Sharply
Wall St Journal, 9 February 2006

"In March 2005 BP geologist Francis Harper presented a paper at an international oil and gas sector conference in London. He reported that of the 120 deepwater basins (i.e. of more than 500 metres in depth) explored to date only thirty had produced discoveries, of which twenty were economic. Of these the most important oil provinces were Niger Delta, Lower Congo, Campos, and Gulf of Mexico. In April 2005 Mexico’s state oil monopoly Pemex published a study stating that the potential for oil exploration in the Gulf of Mexico has been greatly overestimated. It reported that terrain in waters deeper than 3,000 meters (an area known as the Abyssal Plain) were 'not suitable for oil exploration.'. The new report reduced previous oil estimates in the zone by 53 percent. Previously the head of Pemex had already described the oil company as being 'on the verge of bankruptcy' with total liabilities of $88.5 billion and an annual investment requirement of $10 billion. Mexico’s growing oil troubles do not end there. The country’s Cantarell oil field is the largest oil field in the western hemisphere. In 2005 Pemex announced that Cantarell had begun irreversible decline, with production in other fields already having fallen 18% between 1996 and 2002. Mexico is the world’s fifth largest oil producer and one of the top three suppliers to the USA along side Canada and Saudi Arabia. But Mexico may become a net importer within a decade. In the past Pemex has provided the Mexican government with 30% of its revenue. However, it made loses of £3.6 billion in 2003 and £1.4 billion in 2004. The difficulties that Pemex has also encountered with deep-water exploration in the Gulf of Mexico mean that it looks unlikely that unconventional oil will rescue the decline of Mexican production in good time."
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
RICS Valuation Conference, 29 November 2005

 KUWAIT

"OPEC producer Kuwait's oil reserves are only half those officially stated, according to internal Kuwaiti records seen by industry newsletter Petroleum Intelligence Weekly (PIW).  'PIW learns from sources that Kuwait's actual oil reserves, which are officially stated at around 99 billion barrels, or close to 10 percent of the global total, are a good deal lower, according to internal Kuwaiti records,' the weekly PIW reported on Friday. It said that according to data circulated in Kuwait Oil Co (KOC), the upstream arm of state Kuwait Petroleum Corp, Kuwait's remaining proven and non-proven oil reserves are about 48 billion barrels."
Kuwait oil reserves only half official estimate-PIW
Reuters, 20 January 2006

"But the days of easy oil [in Kuwait] are over. Even the great Burgan field is beginning to falter and will no longer compensate for stalling oil production in the north of the country, where the oil fields are ageing more quickly. After many years in which it did not have to look beyond its borders for help, the country is being forced to seek the advanced equipment and managerial skills only foreign oil companies can supply. Kuwait is not alone. From the Middle East to the North Sea, and Alaska to Latin America, the large oil fields on which the world has come to rely to fuel its economic expansion since the second world war are requiring increasingly advanced technology and know-how to coax their last oil barrels to the surface.... Removing, cleaning and disposing of the millions of barrels of water the north fields will produce every day as they come to the end of their lives, is more than Kuwait's oil company can handle, its engineers and executives say.... It is crucial for the oil majors' future that they win the day. With few, if any, big oil fields left to find, the big western companies are facing shrinking production and reserves. They are forced to venture into riskier spots such as the harsh terrain of Siberia's Sakhalin island where extracting a barrel of oil can cost 6-7 times as much as it does in Kuwait."
Field work: why Kuwait's rulers are being forced to ponder a new pact with big oil

Financial Times, 24 January 2006

NORWAY

"Preliminary figures from the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate for 2005 indicate that average daily production on the Norwegian Shelf dropped to around 2.5 million barrels per day in 2005, down 11% from 2.8 mbpd in 2004. Final figures will be available later in January. The results mark a continued decline from the peak in 2000 of 3.14 million barrels per day (excluding condensate)."
Norwegian Oil Production Down 11% in 2005
Green Car Congress, 2 January 2006

"Norway's oil production slipped to a preliminary 2.46 million barrels per day on average in February from 2.49 million in January, and the tally is a marked drop from previous years, reports reaching here from Oslo said on Friday. Production in February 2005 was 2.657 million bpd, and in February 2004 it was 2.988 million, according to figures from the Norwegian Petroleum Directorate (NPD). Even if gas production during the same period has shown a steady rise, the decrease in oil production of 500,000 bpd over two years is dramatic. Oil companies predict that the current situation is likely to last through the year."
Norway's oil production continues to fall
Xinhua (China), 11 March 2006

"Norway's once vast oil reserves in the North Sea are dwindling, and the government is facing tough choices when planning for the country's economic future. Since oil was discovered on the Norwegian continental shelf in 1971, this small nation has been propelled into the world's third largest oil and gas exporter, and petroleum activities contribute 20% of the gross domestic product (GDP). But now forecasts suggest the country's economic mainstay has started its inevitable decline. The oil and energy minister, Einar Stensnaes, told BBC News Online it was time to start looking at the alternatives."
Norway prepares for dry North Sea
BBC Online, 14 April 2004

"The Norwegian State’s Petroleum Directorate (NPD) regularly supplies very good and detailed data describing the resource situation at the Norwegian Continental Shelf, but unfortunately that is not matched in terms of rhetoric. The latest report shows production figures and assumed remaining reserves, but in a number of interviews lately, the NPD has underlined that We will still be exploring for oil 50 years from now, and for natural gas in 100 years’ time. This kind of rhetoric gives people the message that oil and gas will flow almost 'forever', and hinders much needed investment in other sources of energy. The comments by the NPD are extremely misleading. In an attempt at clarifying the situation, I have studied the NPD data and the result is surprising. If we continue the exploitation of the shelf at today’s extraction rate (163 million standard cubic meters of oil equivalents a year), production from current fields would last only 8 years. The NPD also lists discoveries, awaiting evaluation and development approval, together with the potential for improved recovery in current fields, adding another 2 years of life at present rates. Potential new discovery is estimated at 1.385 million Sm3 oil equivalent, which divided by the annual extraction as of today gives another ten years. In other words, at today’s extraction rate, oil will last only between 8 and 18 years."
Harald Røstvik
ASPO Newlsetter 52, April 2005

BRITAIN

"Britain lost its oil independence last year for the first time since the 1970s as the country continued to run down its North Sea reserves. The UK imported £670m more oil than it exported in 2005, the Office for National Statistics said. It is the first annual deficit for oil trade since 1979, when the North Sea's first fields came online....The landmark follows figures last year showing Britain became a net importer of natural gas in 2004....In a further sign of the UK's reliance on oil, the Department of Trade and Industry said the amount stockpiled by oil companies in their refineries was almost halved in December as suppliers dug into stocks to satisfy growing demand for fuel."
UK goes back to being oil importer
Daily Telegraph, 10 February 2006

"British North Sea oil output has declined steadily since 1999.... as OPEC was quick to point out the biggest fall in production by any major producer since 1999 is not an OPEC nation. It is the UK... The rate of decline has ranged from 6% to 17%, year-on-year. Experts say this is not surprising. 'It is because the way offshore fields are developed, [which is] all in one go and produced as fast as possible, for economic reasons,' says Dr Michael Smith, head of research analysts EnergyFiles. 'When they start to decline, they do so fairly rapidly. All these big fields came on stream roughly at the same time so they have all tended to reach their maximum at the same time, then combining to decline.'  The International Energy Agency (IEA) has forecast a slight pick-up in UK output next year to 1.85 mbpd but it too sees a continuing decline to 1.66 mbpd in 2007. Even the UK Offshore Operators Association (UKOOA) says that declines are inevitable. Even with increased spending of about £4.3bn a year, it believes the decline will still be about 7%....The UK produced an average of 2.72 million barrels a day (mbpd) in 1999, hitting a high of 3.1 mbpd in August. But by June 2005 this had fallen to 1.7 mbpd, a drop of 34%. 'These declines do seem to be irreversible now,' says Deborah White, senior energy analyst at Societe Generale. 'In my experience, even when [oil] prices are extremely high and spending [on extraction] is extremely high, it has been virtually impossible to reduce decline rates below 3%.' What is also interesting about the UK's declining oil output is that it has been rather consistent. In 2000, production was down 8.1% from its 1999 high, then falling 6.8% in 2001. The decline slowed to 0.5% in 2002, prompting calls that an output 'rebound' was on the cards. But 2003 saw an 8.8% decline, rising to 10% in 2004. This year has seen a similarly startling decline. In February, year-on-year levels were down 13%, rising to 17% in March.... As Britain becomes a net importer of oil, as it first did this summer, not only does falling output cost money. So does the very expensive energy - oil, gas and liquefied gas - bought to replace it. In this respect, government figures do not provide much hope for North Sea gas output either. Output fell 5.5% in the second quarter of 2005, according to DTI figures, while imports increased by 53.5%. ..... The UK is facing a sea-change in attitudes towards oil. Whilst high prices may ease the pain right now by providing extra tax for the chancellor, our own supplies are dwindling.  'I am forecasting that the UK will be a net importer of oil around 2007,' says Dr Smith. 'By 2015 the UK will need to import between 600-700,000 bpd.'"
Is UK oil output running on empty?
BBC Online, 22 November 2005

"A marked downturn in North Sea oil production means that the UK will become a net importer of oil at least three years earlier than the government anticipates, according to new figures from the Royal Bank of Scotland. Even the contribution from the Buzzard field - which will add about 180,000 barrels of oil per day from 2007 - is seen as insufficient to prevent a looming dependence on the vagaries of world markets. The Department of Trade & Industry is sticking to its prediction that the UK will not become a net importer of oil on a sustained annual basis until 2010. However, figures from the RBS Oil & Gas Index show production from the UK continental shelf unexpectedly shrank to 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) in October, 8-per cent down on the previous month and a 14-per cent fall on October 2004. Andrew McLaughlin, group chief economist at RBS, said: 'The International Energy Agency is predicting UK demand of 1.8 million bpd in 2007. But we'll be lucky to produce an average of 1.7 million bpd in 2005 and it seems unlikely that North Sea production is going to rise above 1.8 million bpd over the next 12 months. 'There had been a hope both in the oil industry and within government that a period of sustained high oil prices would create more incentives to produce in the North Sea. But that has not come through. North Sea fields are maturing rapidly and as a result the UK looks set to become a net importer of crude oil earlier than the government is anticipating. Even current high prices will be insufficient to stem the long-term depletion of North Sea fields.' UK crude production peaked at 2.9 million bpd in 1999 but has been in long-term decline ever since. Since 2004, the UK has been a net importer of gas."
North Sea Production Slump Casts Doubt on Government Figures
Sunday Herald, 6 February 2006

"Oil companies will probably sell at least as many U.K. North Sea assets as they did in 2005 to cash in on high prices and get rid of maturing oil and gas fields, a U.K. acquisitions consultant said... 'The U.K. is not where our future growth is going to come from,' said Martin Tiffen, Total's U.K. business development director. 'The U.K. is already one of the highest cost basins in the world and the only direction is up.' Shell sold the most U.K. fields over the past three years, though it also participated in the largest number of exploration and appraisal wells over that period. 'We cannot ignore the fact that it is a mature business,' Robert Jan van Melson, Shell's business development manager for Europe, told the conference."
North Sea Companies May Sell More Oil, Gas Fields Than in 2005
Bloomberg, 15 February 2006

GLOBAL

"Whilst the situation in relation to post-peak UK oil production in the North Sea is reasonably clear, the British government’s position in relation to global oil supplies is more opaque. Claire Durkin, head of the Energy Markets Unit at the Department of Trade and Industry, spoke at a conference on oil depletion organised by the Institute of Energy in London on 2 November 2005. She has responsibility for international energy policies, and in particular for securing a safe and secure supply for the UK. Although the meaning of ‘imminent’ was not defined, the text of her formal presentation concluded that  'There are uncertainties but we are not in imminent danger of global oil production peaking…. But the world faces serious energy challenges…'. The principal challenge identified was the need to ensure that the development of global oil reserves 'is timely, sufficient and sustainable' bearing in mind that a 'Huge amount of investment is needed throughout the global oil supply chain' and that 'A greater proportion of future supply will come from countries currently perceived as politically or economically unstable'. However, Ms Durkin also spoke beyond the text of her prepared presentation. In discussing when the global peak might be she said: 'We just don’t know… I don’t think OPEC is a given…. We are not talking comfort zone…'. She also referred to the difficult dilemma that government faces between 'waking people up to the realities' and 'not scaring them'."
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
RICS Valuation Conference, 29 November 2005

"In the US, Richard Heinberg, a professor at New College of California recently discussed the issue of peak oil and said: 'Many analysts are zeroing in on the next five years as the point where this is going to happen. Meanwhile in the UK, Jeremy Leggett, author of the book 'Half Gone: Oil, Gas, Hot Air and the Global energy Crisis, who also happens to head up Solarcentury, has been talking at the Society of Investment Professionals, and warned that global peak production of oil is likely to be hit in 2008. Mr Leggett emphasised that the world's largest oil fields, situated in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia were found in the1930s and 40s, and that the best year for finding new oil reserves was 1965. Mr Leggett argued that Opec has been exaggerating statistics for almost 20 years now, and refers to Matt Simmons, a former energy advisor to the Bush government, who believes that Saudi is already past peak."
Oil: are we running out?
Investment and Business News, 16 January 2006

Jeremy Leggett - 'What they don't want you to know about the coming oil crisis'

"... 2005 will go down in history books as perhaps the poorest year for exploration success for both oil and gas since World War II. This dismal success was not for lack of effort. Record amounts of funds are being plowed into E&P [exploration and production] capital spending, which is why all the world's rigs are now in use...."
What a difference 20 years make in crude oil prices
World Oil Magazine, February 2006

SimmonsBook.jpg (9524 bytes)
'Twilight In The Desert'


US Department Of Energy Downgrades Forward OPEC Oil Production Forecast
By Enormous 11 Million Barrels Per Day

"The EIA projects OPEC production at 44 million barrels a day in 2025, about 11 million barrels less than had been predicted a year ago."
Gov't report: $50-plus oil here to stay
Associated Press, 12 December 2005

"The press headlines for this story — US Govt. slashes 2025 forecast for OPEC production by 11 million barrels per day — focus on the increased long term forecast for the price of oil (which many will regard as still too optimistic), but the real news is that the EIA has downgraded its long term forecast of production for 2025 from OPEC by 11 million bpd : ' OPEC production is now likely to be about 11 million barrels a day less than what the EIA projected in its 2005 report. ' (Associated Press). To put this in perspective, this is more than the whole of current Saudi production (9.5million per day). There is some reference in the report to 'lack of investment', but if this is the reason for the poor outlook, the report does not go on to explain why this might be the case in an environment of high oil prices. Some might say that OPEC wants to keep the oil price high; others that there is a shortage of manpower and equipment; others that OPEC knows the oil isn't there in the first place. Whichever it is, the outcome is the same: less oil available going forward than had previously been assumed. The net result is that global production/consumption between now and 2025 will not exceed 111 mbpd according to the EIA (a couple of years ago in its 2004 International Energy Outlook the EIA forecast a total global production capacity of 126 mbpd by 2025), although it also forecasts 118 by 2030 (compare this with Peak Oil 'pessimists' who tend to be in the range of 90 - 100 for maximum production somewhere between 2010 and 2020).... It seems the only way the forecasters can now deal with this situation is to trim their figures for future oil demand (which is what PFC said would be necessary back in September 2004).  EIA oil consumption growth forecasts therefore now seem to have been cut from 1.9% pa down to 1.4%. Basically this is a 'demand destruction' scenario driven by tightening supply/demand imbalances pushing up prices and in turn reducing consumption. Total global non-conventional oil production is shown by the EIA as increasing from 2.49 million barrels per day in 2004 to 9.25 in 2025, with most coming from 'Other North America' (presumably Canadian tar sands), Asia (China and India?), and South and Central America (presumably Venezuelan heavy oil).... Meanwhile somehow losing 11 million bpd of forward OPEC production doesn't seem to have made the front pages! "
Comments on revised US Govt forecast for OPEC
From The Wilderness Publications, 13 December 2005

"We will use Saudi Arabian oil for some time to come. But the goal is to recognize that at some point in time ... we will have to recognize that oil and natural gas, we will run out of it in the world. So we must make plans for it."
Sam Bodman, US Energy Secretary
Energy Secretary to OPEC: Reveal plans
Reuters, 12 November 2005


Canadian Bank
Global Conventional Oil Production Has Already Peaked

"Over 60% of the 3.6 million barrels of new oil production that will come on stream in 2006 will not support demand growth but simply offset the loss from depletion of existing fields such as the North Sea or the giant Burgan field in Kuwait (see pages 6-9). Net of depletion, conventional oil supply will continue to decline this year, just as it did last year. 2004, in hindsight, will prove to be a Hubbert curve peak, at least insofar as low-cost conventional crude is concerned..... Depletion, the other key determinant of effective supply, along with new field development, has received added attention with the news that Kuwait’s giant Burgan field, the second largest in the world, has started to run dry. Rising depletion levels mean in effect that oil firms these days must run faster just to stand still. Facing the loss of more than 2 million barrels per day of production every year, some two thirds of projected capacity growth over the next three years will go not for incremental consumption, but will simply replace falling output at tired, aging fields like Mexico’s Cantarell complex, the North Sea and now Burgan .... Assuming that consumption continues to increase at near a 2.5% trend rate, spurred by rapidly rising energy demand in countries like China and India, oil consumption will soon exceed projected global supply growth, requiring further price rationing to bring demand growth back in to line with the very modest supply growth we see lying ahead."
Monthly Indicators
CIBC World Markets, 9 January 2006

"The failure of the 50% increase in crude prices over the last year to cool demand has seen West Texas Intermediate jump back over US$60/bbl and slowly inch its way back to the US$70/bbl peak hit last summer. While the rise has seen oil companies rapidly ramping up exploration and development budgets, the supply picture for at least the rest of the decade is already in place, painted by lead times of five years or more between discovery and production. The 164 pending oil field and oil sands projects already at some stage of their development pretty well defines the upper limit of global production over the balance of the decade. Our analysis of the supply pipeline, suggests that not only will net supply increases to the global market be extremely limited over the next several years, but that on a net basis, all of the new supply will come from non-conventional sources such as deep-water and Canadian oil sands—a development that can only buttress fears of growing depletion of conventional resources. That concern is now being echoed by some of the world’s largest oil companies, firms that have historically scoffed at the very notion of depleting oil supplies. Today they are increasingly speaking of an unprecedented gap between supply and demand growth. For example, Exxon has recently concluded that more than half of the world’s hydrocarbon needs over the next 15 years has yet to be found... Not only is depletion significant, but it is also accelerating, forcing more and more reliance on non-conventional sources of supply such as Canada’s vast but largely undeveloped oil sands. While the resource has proven reserves that rival those of Saudi Arabia, they can only be extracted at three to four times the cost of conventional oil."
Monthly Indicators
CIBC World Markets, 9 January 2006

"Production from the oil sands will ramp up at a slower pace than deep-water wells, due to even larger capital spending requirements and other constraints, but should replace deep sea and conventional oil as the key factor driving production capacity growth by decade’s end. With 30 new oil sands developments on tap, representing close to 3 million added barrels of daily production, Alberta has more new capacity on the drawing boards than even oil super-heavyweight Saudi Arabia. Announced new oil sands projects will lift estimated daily Canadian oil and gas liquids production to 3.5 million bbl by 2008 and 4 million barrels by 2010, solidifying Canada’s role as a key player in energy markets."
Monthly Indicators
CIBC World Markets, 9 January 2006


Shell Chief Acknowledges Arrival Of Global Peak In Conventional Oil Production
And Turns To CO2 Intensive Alternatives

The Chief Executive Of Shell Believes That
1. Global Conventional Oil Production Has Probably Already Passed Its Peak
2. The World Must Now Turn To Higher CO2 Intensity Alternatives Such As Tar Sands (Oil Sands)

"On top of concerns about high oil prices now comes the fear that we have reached 'peak oil' and that global oil output will start to decline. Have we? If oil has peaked, do we face a future of growing energy shortages, rising prices and international conflict for supplies? No one should underestimate the energy challenge... My view is that 'easy' oil [i.e. conventional oil] has probably passed its peak. But there are other reserves that are still a long way from their peak. In unconventional oil and gas - resources that are harder to tap - there are plenty of reserves. The oil industry has to explore new frontiers, develop new hydrocarbon energy sources and integrate 'CO2 solutions'.... Other new hydrocarbon energy frontiers include heavy oils and where oil is contained in sand and shales, contaminated and tight gas and coal-bed methane. There is lots of coal, too, particularly in the US and China.... But they are more carbon-intensive and increase the urgency of finding ways of tackling carbon emissions...."
Jeroen van der Veer, CEO of Royal Dutch Shell
Financial Times, 24 January 2006

"Anecdotal evidence suggests Shell is not alone in struggling to find new sources of oil. Mr Van der Veer said: 'If you expect that the world should be supplied from traditional, on-shore, near-to-the-market oil and gas, then there are not sufficient supplies.' Shell reckons that [unconventional] oil sands and gas-to-liquids technology will fill the gap."
An exercise in futility at Shell
London Times, 3 February 2005

"The oil and gas industry must apply new technologies on unprecedented scale and pace to meet the world's expanding demand for fossil fuels, said Jeroen van der Veer, chief executive of Royal Dutch Shell PLC, at the Cambridge Energy Research Associates annual energy conference in Houston. With continued economic growth, the world's energy needs could increase by 100 million b/d of crude [equivalent] over the next 25 years— 'more than we added over the past quarter century,' ... Consumption of liquefied natural gas could double over the next decade, depending on 'technological as well as commercial innovation,' said Van der Veer.... Other large unconventional resources include heavy oil, oil sands and shales, 'contaminated' and tight gas, coalbed methane, and 'lots of coal, particularly in countries like the US and China,' he said. Royal Dutch Shell and other major oil companies are involved in developing those resources. ... Enhanced oil recovery techniques using heat, gas, or chemicals to increase the oil flow are costly, complex, and technically demanding but will be increasingly important, he said...  'That means applying advances on the scale necessary to make real progress,' Van der Veer said. 'It means learning from experience to use them increasingly effectively and quickly sharing that learning around the world. It means integrating many technologies because that's where the real benefits come in this complex business. It means applying those technologies in increasingly demanding projects — accessing more difficult resources and creating the complex chains needed to deliver the energy people need.'"
Shell CEO says technology needed to meet fuel demand
Oil and Gas Journal, 10 February 2006

"The U.S. Department of Energy is predicting crude oil from Alberta's oil sands - not alternative energy sources, such as biomass ethanol - will help halve the U.S.'s dependence on overseas oil within two decades. The assessment, in a report to be released later this month, follows U.S. President George W. Bush's challenge this week for the United States to sharply reduce oil imports from unstable nations in the Middle East. The U.S. Energy Information Administration estimates U.S. oil imports from Canada will almost double by 2025, from 1.6 million barrels a day to 2.7 million b/d. Most of that increased will come from Alberta's oil sands, which are expected to produce up to three million b/d by 2020. 'If [the United States] receives it all, which we don't have in our forecast, it could reduce even more our dependence on the Middle East,' an Energy Department official said. The U.S. predicts the surge in Canadian oil will be a major factor in slashing imports of Middle East oil from six million b/d now to three million. The news comes just days after Mr. Bush, in his annual State of the Union address, declared, 'America is addicted to oil.' The U.S. must move 'beyond a petroleum-based economy,' he said, and set a target of reducing 75% of oil imports from the Middle East by 2025. His prescription for reducing oil consumption included sharply increased use of bio-based fuel, solar energy, cleaner coal plants and nuclear power. But with many alternative fuels still years away from commercial viability, the White House and other U.S. lawmakers have been eying Canada's oil as they search for more secure and stable energy sources. ... Dick Cheney, the U.S. Vice-President, was due to visit Fort McMurray, the hub of Alberta's oil sands production, last September but postponed the trip because of Hurricane Katrina. Officials at the Canadian embassy in Washington say they are trying to reschedule the visit.... The U.S. awareness of Canadian oil supplies has jumped markedly within the last year, partly because of advocacy by officials at the Canadian embassy. The opening of the Alberta government's Washington office, headed by former provincial energy minister Murray Smith, has also had a major impact."
Energy relief in oil sands, not ethanol
National Post, 4 February 2006

"Canadian oil production could rise a hefty 10 percent this year as oil sands output climbs to meet surging U.S. demand for energy supplies from outside the Middle East, analysts said on Thursday. Such a jump, following a year when overall production slumped due to a long outage at a major oil sands plant, would be the largest annual increase in at least a decade, lifting volume to 2.7 million barrels a day.  With oil companies from Canada, the United States, France and China planning an estimated $100 billion in oil sands projects, few countries can match growth on that scale, said Steven Paget, analyst with FirstEnergy Capital Corp.   'Longer term, with the ability to grow production, there's only really one rival and that's Saudi Arabia,' Paget said. The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers has forecast output will hit 3.9 million barrels a day in 2015. Canada's resources of tar-like bitumen in the oil sands rival the dominant OPEC member's conventional reserves in size, but are far more costly to develop.... conventional light oil output in Western Canada is expected to keep slipping at the rate of about 4 percent a year as the region keeps maturing, Wise said. In 2005, Canada's light crude production averaged 830,000 barrels a day, down from 868,000 in 2004, the NEB said."
Oil sands boom seen lifting Canadian output 10 pct
Reuters, 16 February 2006

"Canada's wild west is experiencing an oil boom, thanks to Alberta's ability to exploit its vast reserves of tar sands... The sands' open-pit mines could be cut from a science fiction movie. Craters 100 metres deep have been gouged into the boreal forest to create a barren moonscape, where spidery draglines furiously haul chunks of tar sands, and huge 400-ton Caterpillar 797 trucks, the largest in the world, rumble the earth with tires larger than a double-decker bus. Giant smoke-stacks billow steam, sulphur dioxide, nitrous oxide, and carbon dioxide, and are lit up at night to allow around-the-clock work. Bison roam nearby on reclaimed land, while cannons are fired over tailings ponds to frighten off migratory birds that might land in the toxic pools of sludge. These oil sand operations produce around one million barrels a day, projected to reach three million by 2015, and six million by 2030, according to the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers.... The oil sands continue to be Canada's largest producer of greenhouse gases and threaten its Kyoto commitments, which have been cast into doubt with the election of a new federal government that has hinted it will scrap the Kyoto protocol."
The world's energy reserves: Where the buffalo roam...
Independent, 11 February 2006

"Oil major Chevron Corp. (CVX.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Thursday it is planning a major project in the oil sands region of northern Alberta that could produce more than 90,000 barrels a day by the middle of the next decade. The company said it recently acquired five oil sands leases in the Athabasca region, covering more than 180,000 acres (73,000 hectares), that could contain as much as 7.5 billion barrels of tar-like bitumen. A portion of that resource could be produced using thermal methods like steam-assisted gravity drainage, where steam is pumped into the ground to liquefy the heavy oil. James Bates, vice-president of operations and asset development at Chevron's Canadian unit, said the leases could support daily production of 90,000 barrels or more should the company proceed with the development. 'This is a strategic investment in a large resource base,' Bates said. 'It's very early ... but (the cost) is going to be in the billions, not the millions.' Bates said the company will begin assessing its newly acquired properties next year, with a drilling program that will determine where a project could be located. The project will be Chevron's second in Canada's oil sands region. It has a 20 percent stake in the Athabasca project, 60 percent owned and operated by Shell Canada Ltd."
Chevron plans Canadian oil sands project
Reuters, 2 March 2006

"U.S. Energy Secretary Samuel Bodman says future energy from the Alberta oilsands is a 'very important component' of the country's supply and he is hoping proximity will ensure most of it flows south.... 'We certainly are very anxious that the oilsands development be as swift as possible,' but such a 'gargantuan' undertaking is going to take time. 'We're certainly pleased at the prospect. We have a very good relationship with our energy colleagues in Canada and we're very anxious to see them expand as much as is reasonable given the constraints on people and personnel and facilities.'"
U.S. is eyeing Alberta oilsands as key part of supply, official says
CBC News, 2 March 2006

BBC TV report on oil sands - Click Here

The production processes for creating oil from tar sands produce three times the CO2 generated from conventional oil production
(see the 'Global Warming Ultra' section of  'Power Politics - The Worldwide Dash For Energy Resources' )


The Implications For Climate Change
Oil Sands And CO2 Generation

"A 67-page report released earlier this year on the subject of Peak Oil and sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy drew several conclusions... [It stated that] 'In addition to needing a substitute for natural gas for processing oil sands, there are a number of other major challenges facing the expansion of Canadian oil sands production, including water and dilutent availability, financial capital, and environmental issues, such as SOX and NOX emissions, waste water cleanup, and brine, coke, and sulfur disposition. In addition, because Canada is a signatory to the Kyoto Protocol and because oil sands production results in significant CO2 emissions per barrel, there may be related constraints yet to be fully evaluated.”
US Govt Sponsored Peak Oil Report Draws Disturbing Conclusions
Resource Investor, 29 July 2005

“In 2001 Canada’s emissions of CO2 equivalent were 720 mega-tonnes. Of this amount it is reasonable to assume that the emissions of CO2 equivalent from the oil sands industry did not exceed 30 mega tonnes… emissions from Canada’s oil sands industry alone will likely be somewhere between 60 and 100 mega-tonnes per year by 2012… [making] it very difficult for Canada to fulfil its obligations under the Kyoto Agreement. The emissions from the oil sands industry alone create a significant gap of 195 mega-tonnes between increasing emissions and need for reduction.
Canada’s Oil Sands Resources and Its Future Impact on Global Oil Supply
University of Uppsala, Sweden, 2005

Pembina-oilsands.jpg (19222 bytes)
Greenhouse Gas Density Of Canadian Oil Production (kg CO2 eq/barrel of oil)
Left, conventional oil average
Right, oil sand average
Source: Pembina Institute, November 2005

The production processes for creating oil from tar sands produce three times the CO2 generated from conventional oil production
(see
'Global Warming Ultra?' section of  'Power Politics - The Worldwide Dash For Energy Resources' )

"In the first phase ending today of a planning process for the development of low quality fossil fuels in the western United States, the Bush administration has entirely omitted consideration of global warming. 'The proposal to open huge areas of public land in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming to tar sands and oil shale development would create vast quantities of new greenhouse gas pollution and destroy biologically and recreationally important areas,' said Kassie Siegel, Climate, Air and Energy Program Director for the Center for Biological Diversity. 'It is scandalous that that the Bush administration is attempting to omit global warming from the list of issues under consideration.' The development of oil shale and tar sands in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming was fast-tracked by the Oil Shale, Tar Sands, and Other Strategic Unconventional Fuels Act of 2005 (Section 369(d)(2) of the Energy Policy Act of 2005), which requires the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), the agency charged with management of the public lands affected, to complete a draft environmental impact statement within 18 months and a final regulation establishing a leasing program for tar sands and oil shale within six months thereafter.... After open-pit strip mining, extraction of low-quality crude oil from oil shale and tar sands requires extraordinary amounts of energy, heat and water, resulting in further impacts to water quality and supply as well as extra energy use and air pollution. Because of this resource-intensive process, the greenhouse gas emissions from tar sands production are three times that of conventional oil production. Oil shale production, which is still largely experimental, may be even more energy intensive.... 'Fast-tracking the development of low quality oil shale and tar sands which create three times or more greenhouse gas emissions than conventional oil development is near the top of a long list of irrational, dangerous, and irresponsible energy and global warming policies from the Bush administration in 2005,' said Siegel. 'Development of oil shale and tar sands is not part of a climate-safe future for the United States or the world.'"
Bush Administration Ignores Global Warming In Proposal To Open Vast Areas To Open Pit Mining For Low Quality Fossil Fuels

Center for Biological Diversity, 31 January 2006

"Today there are more than 60 sites proposed or under development in the Alberta Tar Sands. Total greenhouse gas emissions from the proposed oil sands projects alone are estimated to grow from 21 million tonnes in 2000 to over 80 million tonnes per year by 2010. These emissions are just from the production of this oil, before the end products are even used.
Kyoto (Don't worry, it will never happen)
Strathcona County Council, Alberta, 9 October 2002

"Canada's dismal [climate change] performance isn't just about Ottawa's failure to take meaningful action to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions, as required by the Kyoto agreement on climate change, which Canada signed in 2002. It's about Ottawa's active complicity in a policy that dramatically increases our emissions. That policy is the full-scale development of the oil sands, the vast pool of oil that lies embedded in a tarry muck beneath large swaths of northern Alberta. Extracting oil from the oil sands is the single biggest contributor to the growth of Canada's greenhouse gas emissions. And yet, Ottawa is fully supporting ambitious plans by the oil industry and the Alberta government to triple production there in the next decade, to 3 million barrels a day.... Among other things, this means that a large amount of Canada's diminishing natural gas reserves will be consumed by the oil sands, where the gas will be used to produce oil primarily for the U.S. market. This will leave less gas for Canadian heating needs. It also means that we'll be using up our natural gas — a relatively benign form of energy — in order to develop oil — an energy form that produces far higher levels of greenhouse gas emissions."
Oil sands make Canada complicit in global warming
Toronto Star, 26 November 2005

"Three of the top five Canadian polluters are tar sands operators. If present trends continue, Canada will be 44 per cent above its permitted Kyoto levels by 2010. Either the Harper government will let the tar sands run amok (supported by generous federal subsidies to Big Oil) and thereby cast Kyoto to the wind, or it will get serious and rein it in. Moreover, tar sands developments will require huge amounts of natural gas to extract the deeper reserves of oil from the bitumen and process it as crude oil. For this purpose, a pipeline corridor through the Mackenzie Valley is currently being proposed to transport natural gas from the Arctic. In other words, one of Canada's last remaining frontier sources of natural gas, a relatively clean fuel, will be tapped to help extract dirty crude oil. It's like turning gold into lead. And for what purpose? So Canada can feed the U.S.'s insatiable demand. Alberta, the North, and First Nations people are already bearing the destructive ecological and social consequences. Critics in Alberta are starting to call for a moratorium on new tar sands projects. Today, the Alberta energy corridor to the U.S. poses a dilemma for Harper's government. On the one hand, the rapid tar sands development is destined to fuel the industrial and military interests of the U.S., thereby putting Canada's own energy security in jeopardy, while reinforcing our dependence."
U.S. oil addiction could make us sick
Toronto Star, 10 March 2006

"Extracting oil from the tar sands is already the single biggest contributor to the growth of Canada's greenhouse gas emissions.... According to the provincial government in Alberta output of marketable oil sands production increased to 858,000 barrels per day in 2003, up from 741,000 the year before. It is anticipated that in 2005 Alberta's oil sands production may account for one-half of Canada's total crude output. This steadily increasing output is coinciding with Canada’s deteriorating greenhouse gas emissions record. Figures release by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in November 2005 show that in 2003 Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions were 24% above their 1990 level, as against a 6% reduction requirement under Kyoto - a 30 percentage point gap. By the end of 2005 that gap can be expected to have widened further as the expansion of oil production from tar sands continues apace. However, Canada’s tar sands are by no means the end of the story when it comes to considering the potential for highly polluting unconventional sources of oil to threaten the onset of a dangerous ‘global warming ultra’ outcome."
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
RICS Valuation Conference, 29 November 2005


Oil Sands And Carbon Sequestration?
Don't Hold Your Breath

"Many policymakers and energy executives say there's a solution that can keep the oil sands progressing while keeping Kyoto alive. None seems willing - or able - to spell out exactly what that answer is. Shaper said Kinder Morgan is interested in carbon sequestration - binding up the greenhouse gas and injecting it back into the ground. The company has experience with it in Texas because it runs a pipeline through which captured carbon dioxide is taken to old oil fields and pushed down wells to force more oil to the surface. [Alberta's] Energy Minister Melchin likes the idea of sequestration but said that, as it stands, the economics are marginal at best. One industry insider said that despite Kyoto's impending deadline, most decision makers aren't giving it too much thought. 'Not really,' he said. 'Everybody's too busy making money.'"
Spinning tar into oil
Houston Chronicle, 6 November 2005

"[Canadian] Environment Minister Stephane Dion says he'll be able to steer negotiations at a crucial [UN sponsored] international climate conference that opens in Montreal this month even if an election [in Canada] is called. .....  Asked  whether Canada can credibly lead the global effort to cut emissions when its own emissions are rising due to new oil developments, notably the Alberta tar sands, Dion was unapologetic. 'There is no country that will say, 'If we had these oil sands we would keep them in the sand.' They are not hypocritical. 'There is no environment minister on Earth that will stop this oil from being produced.'"
Environment minister to steer climate conference
Canadian Press, 17 November 2005

"Former U.S. vice-president Al Gore has accused the oil industry of financially backing the Tories [in Canada] and their 'ultra-conservative leader' to protect its stake in Alberta's lucrative oilsands. Canadians, Gore said, should vigilantly keep watch over prime minister-designate Stephen Harper because he has a pro-oil agenda and wants to pull out of the Kyoto accord - an international agreement to combat climate change. 'The election in Canada was partly about the tar sands projects in Alberta,' Gore said Wednesday while attending the Sundance Film Festival in Utah. 'And the financial interests behind the tar sands project poured a lot of money and support behind an ultra-conservative leader in order to win the election . . . and to protect their interests.'"
Gore accuses big oil of bankrolling Tories
Calgary Herald, 26 January 2006

"Canada's new Conservative government made its first international appearance at a Group of Eight meeting today, with an agenda to increase spending on aid and defense and improve ties with the U.S. that may give it more clout within the organization. Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty, who's meeting with his counterparts in Moscow, will be more inclined than the previous Liberal government to take on a military role in hotspots such as Afghanistan and press ahead with energy integration with the U.S., said John Kirton, a G-8 specialist at the University of Toronto.... Over the past year, Flaherty's predecessor, Ralph Goodale, sought to be taken more seriously by the club's bigger members by underlining the potential for Canada's oil reserves to lower energy prices and curb the industrialized world's dependence on the Middle East. Canada's oil output is projected to rise to about 4 million barrels a day in 2015 from about 2.5 million barrels today to make the country the world's fifth-biggest producer of crude, according to the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers. Goodale told his counterparts from the U.S., Japan, Germany, the U.K., France and Italy at the finance ministers' last meeting in December that Canada already is leading the way with $75 billion committed by companies such as Royal Dutch Shell Plc to mine Canadian oil, which mostly is trapped in untapped tar sands in Alberta that represent that world's second largest-reserves after Saudi Arabia. The Liberals were criticized for cutting budgets for defense and foreign aid during their 12 straight years in power, while efforts to move to the forefront of global politics were also hampered by souring relations with the U.S., said Thomas Velk, an economist at McGill University. Martin, for example, warned the U.S. last year that Canada may use its energy resources as leverage in trade disputes, possibly by strengthening relations instead with other countries such as China. The Liberals also criticized the U.S. for refusing to sign onto the Kyoto protocol on cutting greenhouse-gas emissions...."
Canada's New Focus on Defense May Raise G-8 Clout
Bloomberg, 10 February 2006

"The oil sands industry currently consumes about 0.6 billion cubic feet of natural gas per day.  To produce two million barrels per day in 2012 will require approximately two billion cubic feet of natural gas per day - roughly equivalent to the amount of natural gas needed to heat all of the homes in Canada for a day.  Oil sands are the single largest contributor to greenhouse gas emissions growth in Canada.  The most recent estimate of greenhouse gas emissions for the entire oil sands industry is for the year 2000 (i.e. when production levels were much lower than today). At that time the industry emitted 23.3 million tonnes, or 3% of Canada’s total greenhouse gas emissions. This figure could rise to 175 Million tonnes by 2030 if mitigating measures are not taken."
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
RICS Valuation Conference, 29 November 2005


Desperate Energy Hungry Nations
US, China, Japan, And India, All Turning To Oil Sands

US

"Saskatchewan Premier Lorne Calvert will meet U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney next week to talk up the province's energy resources. Calvert's trip to the U.S. begins Monday in Minneapolis, but the Cheney meeting will take place Tuesday. Calvert says Americans need to know Saskatchewan is Canada's second-largest energy provider of oil behind Alberta....Alberta's tar sands recently had a moment in the U.S. spotlight thanks to a piece on the CBS program 60 Minutes."
Calvert to sell U.S. on energy
Calgery Sun, 10 February 2006

"Canada has become the leading energy satellite of the U.S. at a time when America has reasserted itself globally with imperial ambitions, as witnessed by the ongoing war in Iraq. Furthermore, the fact that securing energy supplies has risen to the top of the U.S. national security agenda during George W. Bush's presidency, has put Canada in a strategic but also delicate and vulnerable position. Meanwhile, Canada's own energy security is at risk. Expanding exports to the U.S. has rapidly depleted our conventional reserves of oil and natural gas. It is now estimated that Canada has less than a 10-year proven supply of both conventional oil and natural gas.   Despite having the second largest proven petroleum reserves in the world, Canada is already compelled to import nearly 50 per cent of the oil needed to fuel our homes, cars and industries. Quebec and the Maritimes import 90 per cent of their oil needs. The more we supply the U.S., the more we endanger our own energy security. Enter the Athabasca tar sands of northern Alberta, covering almost one quarter of the province. The largest known hydrocarbon deposit of unconventional oil supplies discovered, it is estimated to contain between 175 and 200 billion barrels of recoverable oil using existing technologies. The tar sands, however, could contain as much as 2.5 trillion barrels of oil, but new and questionable technologies would be required to access these reserves at enormous financial and environmental costs. As a result, the Athabasca tar sands has become the centrepiece of a continental energy plan to send massive new oil and gas supplies to the U.S. Three major crude-oil producing projects are in operation with another six planned over the next 20 years. As the largest single emitter of greenhouse gases, the tar sands also puts Canada in a bind over our Kyoto commitments. Three of the top five Canadian polluters are tar sands operators. If present trends continue, Canada will be 44 per cent above its permitted Kyoto levels by 2010. Either the Harper government will let the tar sands run amok (supported by generous federal subsidies to Big Oil) and thereby cast Kyoto to the wind, or it will get serious and rein it in. Moreover, tar sands developments will require huge amounts of natural gas to extract the deeper reserves of oil from the bitumen and process it as crude oil. For this purpose, a pipeline corridor through the Mackenzie Valley is currently being proposed to transport natural gas from the Arctic. In other words, one of Canada's last remaining frontier sources of natural gas, a relatively clean fuel, will be tapped to help extract dirty crude oil. It's like turning gold into lead. And for what purpose? So Canada can feed the U.S.'s insatiable demand. Alberta, the North, and First Nations people are already bearing the destructive ecological and social consequences. Critics in Alberta are starting to call for a moratorium on new tar sands projects. Today, the Alberta energy corridor to the U.S. poses a dilemma for Harper's government. On the one hand, the rapid tar sands development is destined to fuel the industrial and military interests of the U.S., thereby putting Canada's own energy security in jeopardy, while reinforcing our dependence."
U.S. oil addiction could make us sick
Toronto Star, 10 March 2006

"U.S. Treasury Secretary John Snow toured one of Canada's oil sands projects and said he was impressed by the potential abundance of secure energy available from its northern neighbor.  Meeting Friday with his Canadian counterpart, Minister of Finance Ralph Goodale, Snow was making his first official visit to Canada, which is the leading foreign supplier of oil to the United States.  The two toured the oil sands facility of Suncor Energy Inc. near Fort McMurray in northeastern Alberta. They met with executives from Suncor, Syncrude Canada Ltd., Albian Sands and Canadian Natural Resources Ltd.   'We in the United States are looking to make ourselves more energy secure,' Snow told reporters. 'To have our closest ally, Canada, with these resources available, with a natural market in the United States, it's a huge contributor to energy security for North America.'.... The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers says on its Web site that tar sands now account for approximately 31 percent of Canada's total oil production. By 2010, they are expected to account for more than 60 percent of the production in western Canada. Washington is eager to remain a chief market for that oil, particularly as China continues to invest heavily in Canada's energy markets."
Snow Lauds Canada's Oil Sands Projects
Associated Press, 9 July 2005

CHINA

"China's top national oil company is seeking a major investment breakthrough in Canada's oil sands this year, as the massive resources in the North American country offers it a potent supply option....Securing more oil sands reserves is of strategic importance to China, the world's second-largest oil consumer that is importing more than 40 percent of its needs, mostly from the volatile Middle East. 'Regarding oil sands, we will focus on it this year,' said a CNPC official, who does not want to be identified. 'Canada's oil sands reserves are so huge, we should never ignore it as it offers an effective supply alternative.'"
China shifts to Canada oilsands but barriers abound
Reuters, 10 February 2006

JAPAN

"Japan, which imports about 90 percent of its oil from the Middle East, will study the feasibility of importing oil sands, or heavy oil, from Canada to diversify its sources of energy supplies, a minister said. Officials from Japan's trade ministry, refineries and trading companies will begin a visit to Canada tomorrow, Trade Minister Toshihiro Nikai told reporters in Tokyo today. Japan, the world's third-biggest oil user, wants to reduce its dependence on a single region for its energy supplies after growing demand from China and India pushed oil prices to record last year."
Japan to Study Importing Oil Sands From Canada
Bloomberg, 13 January 2006

INDIA

"India has jumped into the intense competition for Canadian oil sands assets with plans to invest $1 billion over the next 12 months, a top Indian energy official said on Tuesday. India, which has mounted a high-profile hunt for foreign reserves to help power its growing economy, is not worried its plans will put it head-to-head with longtime rival China in bidding for Canadian oil sands assets, said M.S. Srinivasan, secretary of India's Ministry of Petroleum & Natural Gas.... Chinese firms have been enthusiastic investors in northeastern Alberta's vast oil sands resources over the past year, taking stakes in a handful of development projects and a pipeline proposal.... Alberta's oil sands are already the target of an estimated $100 billion of investments in new projects and expansions of those that are already producing. Current output is more than one million barrels a day, or about 40 percent of total Canadian crude production. The resources rival Saudi Arabia's conventional oil reserves in size, but are far more expensive to develop and refine into petroleum products like gasoline. With surging oil prices and tight energy supplies making headlines in the United States, oil sands have over the past year taken center stage amid the quest for secure reserves. Oil sands are either mined in open pits, as is done at projects run by Syncrude Canada Ltd., Suncor Energy Inc. and Shell Canada, or produced by [even more CO2 generation intensive] thermal means. That involves injecting steam into the ground to loosen the gooey crude so it can be pumped to the surface in wells. India is too late to the party to acquire major mining holdings, said Wilf Gobert, analyst with Peters & Co. Ltd. 'But 80 percent of oil sands are thermal 'in situ' projects, and there is lots and lots of acreage and thermal oil sands prospects around,' Gobert said .... Besides recent interest among Chinese firms, the region has attracted French oil major Total SA, which acquired a controlling stake in the $9 billion Joslyn development last year. Canada's industry estimates production of tar-like bitumen and synthetic crude processed from the unconventional resources will nearly triple to 2.7 million barrels a day by 2015, as a host of projects start up."
India eyes $1 bln investment in Canadian oil sands
Reuters, 1 February 2006


'Global Warming Ultra'
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources

Paper Presented At
Royal Institution Of Chartered Surveyors
Valuation Conference 2005

29 November 2005
Institution Of Civil Engineers

One Great George St
London

Contents

1. Climate Change
2.‘Security’ Of Energy Supply
3.The ‘Peak Oil’ Debate
4. Economists V Geologists
5. Non-Conventional Oil
6.
Global Warming Ultra?
7. Conservation, Technology, and ‘Demand Destruction’
8.  Sustainability

Further Reading
Annex – The Saudi Question

Conference Web Page - Click Here
Paper Web Page - Click Here
Download Paper Presentation (pdf) - Click Here
Download Paper Full Report (pdf) - Click Here

"In addition to the oil that most of the world is familiar with, and which currently forms the overwhelming bulk of global supplies, there are a number of additional categories of oil that require non-standard extraction and processing. These form part of a group known as ‘unconventional’ oils, and their production is increasing. They include liquids derived from gas, as well as oil derived from solid mineral deposits known as oil sands and oil shales... Today the IEA [International Energy Agency] believes that investment in non-conventional oil production can help in delaying the onset of peak production. The IEA’s definition of non-conventional oils includes 'especially heavy oils, bitumen, [and] oil shales'. The IEA calculates that non-conventional output could increase to 37 million barrels a day by 2030 if higher prices make its production economic. This would be close to a third of all world oil production and would make up 'for part of the sharp decline in conventional production,' the agency estimated in its 2004 World Energy Outlook ..."
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
RICS Valuation Conference, 29 November 2005

"Few can relish the prospect of a declining, or even devastated, global economy induced through inadequate energy supplies. Leaving the response to ‘after the event’ reactionary measures is likely to prove a high-risk strategy. Robert Kaufmann is a professor at the Center for Energy & Environmental Studies at Boston University. He has described the need to anticipate future requirements ahead of the markets in the following terms: 'We know that oil production will peak within our lifetime, we think market prices may not anticipate this peak and we know that not having alternatives in place at the time of the peak will have tremendous economic and social consequences. So, if society does too much now, as opposed to later, there will be some loss of efficiency. But if society does too little now, as opposed to later, the effects could be disastrous. Under these conditions, doing too little now in the name of efficiency will appear in hindsight as rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.' Logically, therefore, decision-making ought to be focused on energy conservation and the introduction of new technology at the earliest points possible. Although Peter Wells believes that any likely response will be inadequate, high oil and gas prices can serve as a catalyst for alternative investment and innovation, provided they are not so great as to also precipitate an economic reversal which is too rapid. In this respect some comments made in October 2005 by Lord Browne, Chief Executive of BP, during his fist business visit to India to discuss its emerging energy market, provide an interesting perspective: ‘There are two schools of thought - The ‘peak-ists’ say [oil prices] will keep going up and the other group somehow believes things are just the other way around. If you ask me, it could be in the wide $20-$40 range as usage changes. At current prices every single alternative energy source is economical today.’ But which types of alternative energy might come into play here will be critical, as will the political decisions that influence their adoption. For example, the climate change implications of deriving energy from tar sands or oil shale compared with other sources should be a major consideration. But will they be? According to one Canadian tar sands industry insider interviewed by the Houston Chronicle, most decision makers aren't giving too much thought to mitigating such effects: 'Not really. Everybody's too busy making money [out of tar sands].'"
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
RICS Valuation Conference, 29 November 2005

"This steadily increasing output [from oil sands] is coinciding with Canada’s deteriorating greenhouse gas emissions record. Figures release by the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change in November 2005 show that in 2003 Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions were 24% above their 1990 level, as against a 6% reduction requirement under Kyoto - a 30 percentage point gap. By the end of 2005 that gap can be expected to have widened further as the expansion of oil production from tar sands continues apace. However, Canada’s tar sands are by no means the end of the story when it comes to considering the potential for highly polluting unconventional sources of oil to threaten the onset of a dangerous ‘global warming ultra’ outcome. Another major candidate for non-conventional oil development is oil shale. Oil shale deposits are found in various countries around the world including Brazil, Jordan, Morocco, Australia, China, Estonia and Israel. But by far the largest quantities are to be found in the United States...A variety of other approaches are also being explored around the world to try and produce unconventional oil and gas from rock sources of one kind or another, including coal-to-gas technology. China, in particular, is starting to invest in coal-to-oil technology, which may involve similar environmental problems to those encountered with tar sands and oil shales. Although the details are not yet clear, the conversion process has been reported to involve 'high pressure and temperature'. All of these technologies potentially represent a serious threat to global efforts to combat climate change. This is particularly so if they are to be deployed without any parallel attempt to mitigate their impact through the adoption of appropriate and reliable carbon sequestration measures."
'Power Politics' - The Dash For The World's Energy Resources
RICS Valuation Conference, 29 November 2005

"China's biggest coal company, the Shenhua Group, will start production at its first coal-to-liquid project at the end of next year, a scheme that will supply 1 million tons of oil products a year to North China. The project will be the country's first facility producing oil from coal and has great market potential in China, which relies on coal for about 70 per cent of its energy needs and aims to cut the import of high-priced oil."
Coal-to-oil plant to begin work next year
China Daily, 10 March 2006

"New research released by the Environment Agency today shows that the decisions of this generation will leave a legacy of increasing climate change over the next millennium unless there is a major reduction in emissions. With temperatures increasing by up to 15°C and seas rising by up to 11.4 metres, low-lying areas of the UK would be threatened with flooding and the UK’s climate could resemble that of today’s tropics by the year 3000. Climate Change on the Millennial Timescale, by the Tyndall Centre for Climate Change Research and Environment Agency, is the first study to comprehensively examine impacts beyond the end of this century. The report implies that the UK will need to make major emissions reductions over the next couple of decades as part of a global effort to prevent abrupt climate changes. Environment Agency Chief Executive, Barbara Young, said the new research showed that the next 25 years were crucial in making tough decisions on reducing the impacts of climate change. 'We are running out of road on decision making - unless we dramatically change the use of fossil fuels then we will be committing future generations to the most severe impacts of climate change,' she said...The report takes into account a wide range of possible amounts of future emissions of carbon dioxide - principally greenhouse gas emitted by the burning of fossil fuels, it looks at three scenarios....[including] what happens in the worse case scenario - if humans burn 15000 GtC by 3000 by accessing unconventional fuels such as oil shales and methane hydrates. 'If we follow business-as-usual then we will commit future generations to dangerous climate change, and if we exploit unconventional fossil fuels we could return the Earth to a hot state it hasn't seen since 55 million years ago,' Dr Lenton said."
New science shows urgent action needed today on climate change
Tyndall Centre For Climate Change Research, 16 February 2006

"[Commenting on the Tyndall report] Baroness Young of Old Scone, the chief executive of the Environment Agency, said: 'We are running out of road on decision-making. Unless we dramatically change the use of fossil fuels then we will be committing future generations to the most severe impacts of climate change.'”
Waterworld: how life on Earth will look 1,000 years from now
London Times, 17 February 2006


Time For Action Is Running Out Fast
Ten Years To Prevent Catastrophe

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/0,,174-2033323,00.html

The Times February 10, 2006

Ten years to prevent catastrophe

The atmosphere at last night's Intelligence Squared/Times debate was full of foreboding

KATRINA MADE the Bush Administration take climate change seriously. Fortunately we have had no Katrina-like episode in this country, but the warnings are plain to see.

In recent months scientists across the world have reported compelling evidence that we face dramatic melting of Arctic sea ice, a shutdown of global ocean circulation systems in the North Atlantic, huge methane releases from melting permafrost in Siberia and Alaska, more violent hurricanes worldwide, and “mega-droughts” from northern China to the American West. Already the World Health Organisation estimates that 160,000 people die each year from the impacts of climate change, notably malaria, dysentery and malnutrition.

Some may dismiss this as remote from Britain, unlikely to affect us and anyway a risk only in the distant future. They are wrong. George Bush’s leading climate modeller, Jim Hansen, said a month ago that we have “at most ten years” to make the drastic cuts in emissions that might head off climatic catastrophe.

Nor, in one highly interconnected world, are these convulsions irrelevant to us. Rising sea levels, desertification and shrinking freshwater supplies will create up to 50 million environmental refugees by the end of this decade, according to the UN. If the ocean “pumps” around Greenland falter, northern European temperatures would plummet to those of Siberia. The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine estimates that of ten of the world ’s most dangerous vector-borne diseases, nine will increase their coverage because of climate change. As the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets melt, rising sea levels will threaten coastal cities worldwide (including London), as well as nuclear power stations and chemical waste dumps sited in coastal areas. Food supplies worldwide will be disrupted by intensifying droughts, and industrial agriculture will be particularly vulnerable to a surge in pathogens and pests from warmer temperatures.

Yet climate disaster is still only in its very early stages: this is not a linear but a dynamic process of intensification. Indeed, at certain “tipping points”, emissions of greenhouse gases could leap unpredictably. The impact of this on human civilisation is at this stage unknowable.

So is all this irreversible? Some is, but far the greater part is still to come and can be slowed and, over time, halted. But it requires more urgent and radical change in our transportation, economic systems and lifestyles than governments or industries anywhere have yet seriously contemplated.

What then is to be done? If climate change is driven primarily by the burning of fossil fuels, the world must diversify quickly into renewable sources of energy — wind power, biomass, wave and tidal power and solar energy. Carbon capture and storage may be an option, but no clean coal-technology prototype has yet been built.

But are renewables a feasible option? Europe’s offshore wind potential in waters up to 30m deep could theoretically supply all of the Continent’s power. China has so much wind energy that it could double its electricity generation by using it. The US Department of Energy estimates that just three states — North Dakota, South Dakota and Texas — have enough wind energy to meet America’s entire electricity requirements.

Equally, in the field of transport, while gas may provide a transitional feedstock to make hydrogen for fuel celldriven vehicles, a cost-competitive technology should be developed as rapidly as possible to make hydrogen from renewables.

All countries have to be involved in a global solution. The Kyoto Protocol aimed to get the 35 main industrialised countries to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions by 5 per cent by 2010, compared with 1990. If the world — 185 countries — is to achieve what the scientists say is necessary, a cut of 60 per cent by 2050, China, India, and the other big developing countries must sign up to significant action (even if not immediately to Kyoto targets) to reduce carbon emissions within limited timescales. Of course the US, the biggest polluter, must also be brought in at the earliest time.

Air travel — the single fastest rising cause of greenhouse-gas emissions — should now be urgently incorporated into Kyoto and given emission-reduction targets like other industries. The EU emissions trading system for the main industrial sectors should be progressively tightened.

But energy conservation is just as important for domestic households as for industry, since the waste of energy by both sectors is enormous. Higher standards should be laid down in building regulations, as in Sweden, and bigger incentives given to families to switch to renewables, both solar thermal panels and microgeneration, for water heating and house warming, as in Germany. If the energy-efficiency rating of a house had to be provided as part of a vendor’s pack at a house sale, it would provide all house owners with a powerful incentive to upgrade their insulation.

People need much bigger incenstives to use smaller engine cars and to make fewer car journeys. Above all, if a cap and trade system were applied to households as well as to industries, it would provide a market mechanism to guide individual choice while cutting domestic carbon emissions overall. Nothing less meets the challenge that confronts us all.

The author is a former Environment Minister. This is an edited version of his speech at yesterday’s Intelligence Squared/Times debate on global warming.


No Solution In Sight?
The Biggest Challenge Of All Is Changing The Way People Think
Transforming Global Consciousness - Before It's Too Late

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