Total Chief Says World 'Cannot Meet Oil Demand'
OPEC Minister Says 'Fundamentally There Is Nothing We Can Do'
www.btinternet.com/~nlpwessex/Documents/TotalOpec.htm
8 April 2006
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UAE Oil Minister |
Not Possible To Deny |
"The world lacks the means to produce enough oil to
meet rising projections of demand for fuel over the next decade, according to Christophe
de Margerie, head of exploration for Total and heir presumptive to the leadership of the
French energy multinational. The world is mistakenly focusing on oil
reserves when the problem is capacity to produce oil, M de Margerie said in an
interview with The Times."
World 'cannot meet oil demand'
London Times,
8 April 2006
"Gold hit $600 for the first time
in 25 years on futures markets as the commodities boom continued, and a top Opec official admitted there was
nothing the oil cartel could do about soaring crude oil prices."
Oil worries fuelling gold's 25-year high
Daily
Telegraph, 7 April 2006
"Opec is powerless to bring down oil prices that are
closing in on their record $70 a barrel high, United Arab Emirates oil minister
Mohammed bin Dhaen al-Hamli said on Thursday. 'Fundamentally there
is nothing we can do,' Hamli told reporters when asked how Opec might tame oil
costs that are at their highest for a quarter of a century in real terms.... Opec, which
accounts for over half the worlds oil exports, has been pumping almost flat out for
months.... Hamli, in Paris for a major oil conference on Friday, expressed some concern at
last weeks steep drop in US gasoline stocks. The United States, consumer of more
than 40% of the worlds gasoline, is starting to gear up for the summer driving
season when motor fuel demand peaks. 'The United States is a big and important market.
When there is a drawdown we are a little bit concerned,' he said. OPEC still has some
spare production capacity, primarily in Saudi Arabia, but Hamli noted this oil was the
sort of heavy, high sulphur crude that refiners find difficult to process."
Opec toothless to tame high oil prices : UAE
Reuters, 7
April 2006
The Excuses? |
"High oil prices have helped to spur investment needed
to calm world markets, but soaring project development costs could stifle production
activity, Opec ministers warned on Friday. 'Cost is a problem,' said Qatari energy
minister Abdullah al-Attiyah. 'Costs can sometimes kill the project. I am concerned about
that. You see the contractors trying to increase the cost very dramatically. Costs may
triple from estimate costs,' Attiyah told a conference in Paris. While US crude is trading
at around $67, within sight of the record of $70.85 a barrel hit in August last year,
other raw materials, including metals have also soared, driving up the price of projects
in the oil industry."
High costs threaten oil projects: Opec ministers
Financial
Express, 7 April 2006
The Reality? |
"The
world was told that the Russians would save us. The Soviet Union and its pathetic 14
million barrels a day was dead. When they upgraded their extraction techniques, oil was
going to be around $10 a barrel, we would be swimming in it. In 2004, Russian production
grew by 675,000 barrels a day, in 2005 by 222,000 barrels a day and this year the Russian
government told us it was going to put on another 240,000 barrels a day. So far they have
put on 170,000 barrels a day. It is about 9.4 million barrels
a day and it is not enough."
Peak Oil Passnotes: Oil Prepares to Push On
Resource Investor,
7 April 2006
"My view is that 'easy' oil has probably passed its peak."
Jeroen van der Veer, CEO of Royal
Dutch Shell
Financial
Times, 24 January 2006
"We have entered the post-oil era. I want to draw
all the consequences of this and give a real impulse to energy savings and to the
use of renewable energies."
Dominque de Villepin, French
Prime Minister
France promises aid to
households over oil price
Reuters,
1 September 2005
"As old wells become depleted
their pressure drops.... So although there may be plenty of
oil left in a reserve, its later production can only be
extracted more slowly. For
example, the biggest field in Saudi Arabia already has to be pumped with large quantities
of seawater to maintain pressure and daily production levels.... What forecasters want to
know is when global daily production capacity will peak and at what level. At the point
that oil (and later gas) demand exceeds the daily capacity to
pump, major adverse dynamics will come into play such as
large increases in prices and supply tensions, which will have a major impact on all
economies. The most pessimistic scenarios from credible analysts put the advent of global
peak oil as early as 2008, with a maximum daily production level of not much greater than
the current level. As anticipated oil demand growth is around two per cent per year, this
is a precarious prognosis."
The Energy Timebomb
RICS
Business, January 2005
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Waking People Up To The Realities
"Whilst the situation in relation to post-peak UK oil production in the North Sea is reasonably clear, the British governments 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 dont know
I dont 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'.""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
"
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.""The IEA predicted in its World Energy
Outlook that global demand for crude oil would reach
121 million barrels per day by 2030, of which more
than half would be supplied by Opec. The agency predicted that more than $3 trillion
(£1.72 trillion) of investment in wells, pipelines and refineries would be needed to
raise output to such levels. However, Totals
exploration chief reckons the output rise is impossible...."
World 'cannot meet oil demand'
London Times,
8 April 2006
No Solution In
Sight? |
'PEAK
OIL'
GLOBAL ENERGY CRISIS LOOMING
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