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  #11  
Old 06-14-2005, 07:44 PM
James Boston James Boston is offline
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Default Re: Peak oil

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I think my point is that their customers have no real choice.

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I obviously agree that we, the customer, can't control the situation. I think you're underestimating how quickly oil companies would do an about-face if the average American consumer completely changed their purchasing habits. Like I said in my initial response: We're worried, we're complaining, but we haven't really changed our habits. If everyone bought a hybrid car tommorrow, what do you think ExxonMobile would do? Think of oil companies as energy companies who sell oil because it's the best thing they've got going for them. Everyone talks about the huge costs of R&D to replace oil. No one's willing to pay it, because they haven't had to. Exxon won't go broke watching people switch to more fuel-efficient products, they'll get in on it.
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  #12  
Old 06-14-2005, 08:42 PM
DesertCat DesertCat is offline
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Default Re: Peak oil

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Once we hit the top of the bell curve, we will see prices begin to rise.

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I agree, we have already seen 500% rises. Huberts curve has been very accurate so far. Are we at the top yet?

....

The oil companies have vastly scaled back exploration, restated reserves downwards, and diversified into solar energy, (BP is the second biggest in the world) and the US hasnt built a new refinery in 3 decades. The tar sands in Canada arent economcally viable...or they would have been tapped by now. ...

Bingo

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Your post doesn't make sense. Oil prices are up 500% yet oil companies are cutting back on exploration?

The reality is that oil is as cheap as it ever has been, and has been getting cheaper over time. You are probably confused by U.S. "gas" prices, which aren't so cheap.

The reason that oil has recently gotten expensive in the U.S. has nothing to do with supply, it's caused by the declining value of the U.S. dollar and increased gas taxes over the last thirty years. Oil prices in Euros haven't changed much. As long as we run big deficits, our currency is likely to continue to depreciate and imported goods (such as oil) increase in price.

But even with this artificial boost to U.S. prices, look at oil prices vs. income and you'll see that oil is much cheaper now that it was 25 years ago, or 50 years ago. That's why oil companies aren't looking for more. That's why U.S. reserves and production peaked. No-one invests billions of dollars in new exploration to find something that's cheap and getting cheaper.

If we ever were really close to Peak Oil, prices would actually go up. We'd be paying $5+ a gallon, and over 100 Euros per barrel. Oil demand would plummet as people start lowering their consumption through very cheap and simple means (car pooling, mass transport, hybrid cars, not buying damn SUV's and buying econoboxes instead).

But since oil is still cheap and plentiful it doesn't make sense to do that now. Hybrids don't even pay for themselves at todays prices.

Most estimates are we are about 50-100 years from getting close to running out. The peak oil guys aren't very credible because they keep predicting doom in five years, and when it doesn't happen, they just move out their predictions another five years.
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  #13  
Old 06-14-2005, 10:07 PM
imported_bingobazza imported_bingobazza is offline
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Default Re: Peak oil

ok, Im not here to say I am for or against this oil thing...I hope it never happens. All Im saying is that it is real, based on the facts that western governments, scientists and the oil companies freely admit and are now openly discussing. In the interests of a reasonable debate about this, here are a few links to some articles that may enlighten some of you to the true state of play. Also, do not overestimate how much global oil production is used in private transportation....its a small fraction compared to agribusiness, plastics, shipping, the chemicals and computer industry, air conditioning, heating, power generation, construction and manufacturing of every kind.

http://www.technologyreview.com/arti...ew_oil.asp?p=0

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/4077802.stm

http://www.energybulletin.net/5429.html
This is US Congresman Bartlet talking last month about what peak oil is and its implications.

Eventually it will be good, as our children will depend on clean an renewable resources...but we will live in a very different world until other methods takes up the slack, if they ever do.

Bingo
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  #14  
Old 06-15-2005, 12:42 AM
natedogg natedogg is offline
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Default Re: Peak oil

Oh man, not another peak oil sucker. There has got to be a way to profit from these loonies. Any ideas anyone? How to get rich off of peak oil fears?

natedogg
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  #15  
Old 06-15-2005, 01:44 AM
DesertCat DesertCat is offline
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Default Re: Peak oil

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All Im saying is that it is real, based on the facts that western governments, scientists and the oil companies freely admit and are now openly discussing. ...

Bingo

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There are many scientists, and politicians who say and believe goofy things. Peak Oil is not a mainstream theory at this time. Most peole involved in oil exploration don't believe it (and some who claim to may be using it to convince congressman to provide more government subsidies to the energy industry).

Oil is still historically cheap. That by itself is strong counter evidence against a near term peak in oil production.

Rising prices reduces usage, even in agribusiness, plastics, shipping, chemicals and the computer industry (where'd you pull that one from???). It's how free markets work.

And we also have other energy sources that will become more attractive as oil increases in price, nuclear, coal, etc.

If you had any understanding of the power of free markets, you'd stop being so histerical.
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  #16  
Old 06-15-2005, 10:09 AM
imported_bingobazza imported_bingobazza is offline
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Default Re: Peak oil

[ QUOTE ]
Oh man, not another peak oil sucker. There has got to be a way to profit from these loonies. Any ideas anyone? How to get rich off of peak oil fears?

natedogg

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Sure, sell oil futures. Good luck with that.
[img]/images/graemlins/tongue.gif[/img]
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  #17  
Old 06-15-2005, 11:26 AM
imported_bingobazza imported_bingobazza is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2005
Posts: 171
Default Re: Peak oil

[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
All Im saying is that it is real, based on the facts that western governments, scientists and the oil companies freely admit and are now openly discussing. ...

Bingo

[/ QUOTE ]

There are many scientists, and politicians who say and believe goofy things. Peak Oil is not a mainstream theory at this time. Most peole involved in oil exploration don't believe it (and some who claim to may be using it to convince congressman to provide more government subsidies to the energy industry).

Oil is still historically cheap. That by itself is strong counter evidence against a near term peak in oil production.

Rising prices reduces usage, even in agribusiness, plastics, shipping, chemicals and the computer industry (where'd you pull that one from???). It's how free markets work.

And we also have other energy sources that will become more attractive as oil increases in price, nuclear, coal, etc.

If you had any understanding of the power of free markets, you'd stop being so histerical.

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OK, you have convinced me that the stock markets are the answer, and their wisdom will prevail, as it always has in the past. After all, they are the most efficient thing we have. If every chemical and agribusiness goes broke through using less oil and therefore producing less, why would I be worried, I dont work for one of them. I feel so stupid for thinking about a thoery that not everyone agrees with. Obvioulsy all those politicians and scientists, and the sneaky oil execs are conspiring against us...I dont know why I didnt see it. Now I see how wrong I am, but my girlfriend slapped me, and Ive come to my senses. Im off to buy 3 solar panels to run my light bulb.

Bingo
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  #18  
Old 06-15-2005, 04:24 PM
PokerMatt PokerMatt is offline
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Default Re: Peak oil

Interesting thread, there are some good thoughts going around. I thought I'd chime in with some of mine.

First, it's been said but let it be clear that oil isn't going to suddenly run out per say. Rather, the ability to produce oil is going to reach a peak and then slowly decline over time. People point mostly to the large increases over the past several months as evidence that we are at or near that peak. That alone isn't really enough to prove the existence of peak oil, however.

The strongest evidence is that the discovery of new oil fields has dwindled signifcantly and is now at the point where the oil companies are losing money on research of new fields. The oil companies do have many untapped fields that they are sitting on, which will be enough to last decades. The problem is that those fields tend to contain less oil and are harder to extract; the companies do not have a vested interest in tapping into the less profitable fields unless they need to (I'm not saying the companies are right or wrong. It's simple economics and I would do the same thing).

There will be oil for a long time, but it's going to get more expensive and there isn't a viable alternative at the current time. The oil sands that were mentioned earlier return about 1.5x the energy put in to extract it. Crude oil, on the other hand, yields 30x. All of the other alternatives don't approach oil's rate.

Without a cheap energy source, the world economy and basic way of doing this isn't going to be sustainable anymore. Cheap energy is the foundation because with it you can have a globalized economy. It allows you to mass produce goods in centralized locations and ship it cheaply all over the world. The airline industry, similarly, is already losing tons of money because the costs of flying everyone is getting much more expensive. Changes in costs of food production, both in pesticides and transportation (your average piece of food travels 1500 miles before it reaches your plate) will force agriculture to move back to a more localized economy.

The idea of peak oil isn't a conspiracy myth designed to make you think the world's going to end. Rather, it's acknowledging that cheap energy isn't going to be there forever (based on current and projected near-future technology). It's not going to be a sudden transformation where we're all of a sudden in a world war, but more of a gradual change over time as production drops from its peak. There will undoubtedly be significant adjustments to our lifestyle, as this will be the most significant development of the coming decades. So enjoy it now while you can! [img]/images/graemlins/smile.gif[/img]
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  #19  
Old 06-15-2005, 05:00 PM
DesertCat DesertCat is offline
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Location: Scottsdale, Arizona
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Default Re: Peak oil

[ QUOTE ]
OK, you have convinced me that the stock markets are the answer, and their wisdom will prevail, as it always has in the past. After all, they are the most efficient thing we have. If every chemical and agribusiness goes broke through using less oil and therefore producing less, why would I be worried, I dont work for one of them.

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boy, you really are all over the place. I said "free markets" not "stock markets", do you understand the difference? And if input costs rise uniformly for all agribusinesses, those costs don't bankrupt agribusiness, they are passed on to customers (though demand is lowered through the higher prices).

And in response to PokerMatt. There have been no large increases in oil prices recently. Review oil prices in Euros and tell me how big the "surge" was. And airline's aren't going bust because of oil prices, but because we have too much capacity in the airline business. Those airlines that are hanging on (and should be shut down IMHO) are praying for low oil prices to help keep them alive, but the real problem is they can't raise prices to compensate for higher costs with so much capacity.

As far as impacts on our economy, energy has been getting cheaper for hundreds of years. Energy accounts for a much lower percentage of our economies input costs than it did 25-30 years ago, so if it rises in cost, it's going to have a much smaller impact. A big part of this reason is technology, which tends to make most of our activities more efficient users of energy.

My laptop uses a fraction of the power of my first PC. My SUV gets better gas mileage than the typical 1970 car, while offering many more features and benefits. Current jetliners are much more efficient, and the A340 & 787 will be more efficient yet.

I agree with you in some of your points, oil is just too damn cheap to make it worthwhile to find more right now. But if oil prices increase it opens up the market to alternative sources. Higher prices makes Nuclear, Coal, Solar, Wind, Tidal, etc, etc, all more attractive.

Even today, powering electric cars from our electric power grid is cheaper than powering gas cars with gasoline. If oil prices increase dramatically, it's just going to make electric and hybrid cars more attractive (or their trade-offs easier to stomach).

I'm not tryin to tell anyone there is a conspiracy for or against peak oil. But as a theory it offers certain benefits to oil producing companies and states, so you'd have to think their executives and congresspeople are going to look favorably on the theory, whether it's true or not.
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  #20  
Old 06-15-2005, 06:20 PM
imported_bingobazza imported_bingobazza is offline
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Default Re: Peak oil

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And in response to PokerMatt. There have been no large increases in oil prices recently. Review oil prices in Euros and tell me how big the "surge" was.

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The dollar has depreciated about 40% against the euro, but the price of a barrell of oil has gone up 5 fold. I think you are confusing oil prices with the price of fuel for your car.
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