Busting Media Myths On Peak Oil

Submitted by Kurt Cobb via OilPrice.com,

Almost synonymous with the term “peak oil” is M. King Hubbert, perhaps the foremost geophysicist of the 20th century, who first theorized about the eventual decline of oil production in the 1930s. His life has now been chronicled by science writer Mason Inman in a new biography entitled The Oracle of Oil.

Depending upon whom you speak with, peak oil is either a catastrophe waiting to happen or a far-off concern that has already been solved or will be soon. Frequently, peak oil is referred to as a myth. What you rarely hear is that peak oil is an empirical fact having already occurred in dozens of countries.

The term “peak oil” simply means that crude oil production for any field, region or country eventually reaches a peak or plateau from which it inexorably declines. Because the amount of oil in the Earth’s crust is finite, it is logical to assume that one day peak oil production will occur worldwide. The concern is that we as a global society are so accustomed to rising oil production that we have built an entire world around that assumption. Will we be ready when oil production begins to decline?

To shed some light on that and other questions, author Inman takes us from Hubbert’s early days at the University of Chicago to his famous speech in 1956 (in which he predicted a peak in U.S. crude oil production no later than 1970) to his days in Washington, D.C. working for the U.S. Geological Survey and his fights there concerning the timing of a U.S. oil production peak.

In the course of the story Inman puts to rest misconceptions about Hubbert and about peak oil.

First and foremost, peak does NOT mean running out. As explained above it means the trend of rising oil production reverses into a decline. When this reversal occurs worldwide, it could pose challenges for a society that has yet to find a cheap, widely available substitute for petroleum to fuel its transportation system. Electric vehicles are still in their infancy and would require huge infrastructure investments. And, petrochemicals made from oil are the basis for a wide variety of clothing, medicines, lubricants, pesticides, and industrial chemicals. Oil is embedded practically everywhere in our lives, and finding substitutes won’t be easy in many cases.

 

Second, forecasting peak oil is NOT tantamount to forecasting disaster. Hubbert himself believed that society could make a successful transition away from petroleum and other fossil fuels to a nuclear- and solar-powered world so long as we started early enough. Far from being a pessimist, Inman tells us, Hubbert was a utopian who believed an efficiently run technocratic society with plenty for all was possible if only we would take the necessary steps.

 

In fact, Hubbert foresaw some things we now take for granted, for example, that postal mail would be largely replaced by “signals sent by wire” which we, of course, call email. He believed that energy efficiency in the form of thick insulation for homes would become increasingly common. We now see that development in weatherization programs for homeowners and the spread of Passive House technology which reduces heating and cooling needs by 80 to 90 percent.

 

Third, Hubbert was NOT anti-oil. In fact, he worked for Shell Oil Company for 20 years in production research. Hubbert understood deeply the benefits of oil to human society, and he wanted those benefits to continue. But he believed they would not continue unless new sources of energy were deployed before fossil fuel production began its inevitable decline.

 

Fourth, contrary to what his critics say, Hubbert did take technological improvements into account when calculating his forecasts for peak. He was aware of unconventional sources of oil such as tar sands, oil shale, and coal-to-liquids technology. But he realized that these sources would be challenging and expensive to exploit.

It turns out he was right. Operators in the Canadian tar sands today are having a difficult time simply maintaining production in the current low-price environment for oil. As for oil shale, despite more than 30 years of research and development including pilot plants, there is no commercial production of oil from oil shale in the United States (which has by far the largest deposits) and very limited production in Estonia (where oil shale is mostly burned directly to produce electricity). It’s not clear that standalone facilities that would produce only oil from oil shale would be economical given the American experience.

Coal-to-liquids technology continues to be too expensive to deploy worldwide though it does have a foothold in South Africa. South Africa built these expensive and environmentally dirty facilities during the apartheid period when the country’s leaders feared an embargo might curtail oil shipments to South Africa.

There is, of course, the question of just how oracular the “oracle of oil” was. As it turns out, Hubbert’s prediction of a peak in U.S. production (which at that time covered the lower 48 states) was right on the money. U.S. crude oil production fell starting in 1970 and continued to fall (with a short respite when Alaskan oil began to flow) until 2008. Then, the advent of a new kind of hydraulic fracturing or fracking (as it is popularly called) made possible the extraction of previously difficult-to-get oil from deep shale deposits (not to be confused with oil shale mentioned above).

U.S. production last year came close to eclipsing the 1970 number, but has fallen back as low prices have forced deep reductions in drilling. Meanwhile, non-shale production continues to fall. A rise in oil prices would certainly revive drilling in American shale deposits. But it is doubtful that this will happen before shrinking conventional production makes it all but impossible to achieve a new all-time high in U.S. production.

As for world production, in the early 1970s Hubbert calculated that a worldwide peak might come as soon as the mid-1990s. But, he did his original calculations before the high prices and oil crises of the 1970s led to an energy efficiency drive worldwide and resulted in the first ever sustained decline in world oil consumption and flat consumption for many years thereafter.

He later revised his view which ended up being close to that of the U.S. Energy Information Administration in the late 1970s. The agency forecast a probable peak about 2010, but offered a range of 1995 to 2035 depending on energy policies and consumption patterns.

As it turned out, conventional oil, the kind that Hubbert used in his models, the kind that flows as a liquid from the ground–which I call “Beverly Hillbillies oil” after the “bubbling crude” seen in the introduction to the now long-defunct television series–this kind of oil peaked in 2006 according to the International Energy Agency, a consortium of 29 countries which provides ongoing research and information about energy supplies worldwide.

Despite all protestations to the contrary, Hubbert proved prescient once again. That world oil production continues to eke out small gains is due entirely to production from unconventional sources not included in Hubbert’s models. But those sources have shown themselves to be exquisitely sensitive to price.

In the two countries best known for unconventional oil, the United States and Canada, production from U.S. deep shale deposits and Canadian tar sands is now shrinking. Alarmingly, without recent growth in oil production in these two countries, worldwide oil production would have declined from 2005 to today. Now that the twin engines of growth, the United States and Canada, are in decline, we may see a fall in worldwide production soon (though whether this will mark the ultimate peak will not be known until many years thereafter).

But, any peak will inevitably result from a mix of economic and geologic factors. So, the new question about oil is, “Can we afford to extract and refine the oil we have left?” Or, more precisely, “Will the cost of extracting these unconventional sources cause economic growth to slow or stagnate?”

This is just the sort of scenario Hubbert feared if we waited too long to address the inevitable transition away from fossil fuels. And, there is reason to believe that low oil prices today reflect an economy slowed by previously high oil prices. These high prices themselves are an indication that we are now facing ever more difficulty and effort in extracting the remaining marginal sources of oil. And, the fact that so many oil companies are now going bankrupt due to low prices tells us that high prices will have to return if we want to extract this difficult-to-get oil in great quantities again.

Hubbert died in 1989 living to see the nuclear accidents at Three Mile Island and Chernobyl. Long concerned about nuclear waste and impatient for a transition, Hubbert decided that global society needed to undertake the rapid deployment of an indisputably clean source of energy, solar power. We would use solar power not only for electricity, but also to make the liquid fuels needed for our transportation system which could be adapted to run on methanol or hydrogen.

Perhaps what irked Hubbert’s critics the most was his lifelong skepticism about exponential economic and population growth. So, firmly did he believe that population growth needed to be curtailed that he and his wife had no children. There were limits, he believed, and if they were breached, humans would pay dearly.

Hubbert and his work have once again come into our worldwide discourse as a result of the 2008 oil price spike and the highest ever daily average prices for oil from 2011 through 2014. He is much maligned and much praised these days. But he is perhaps not well understood.

Mason Inman’s compelling biography gives all of us, critics and supporters alike, a chance finally to understand this scientific giant and the context within which he spawned insights that continue to be central to our lives.

 

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21 Comments
anarchyst
anarchyst
July 24, 2016 2:37 pm

The term “fossil fuel” was coined in the 1950s when not much was known about the nature of naturally-occurring hydrocarbon products. Environmentalists have used this misconception about naturally occurring oil to their advantage; hence, the now-discredited concept of “peak oil”.
Oil is abiotic in nature, being produced deep within the earth by yet-unknown processes. Russian oil interests have been drilling deep wells, as much as 30,000 feet deep and coming up with oil deposits–far deeper than that of decayed plant and animal materials.
It turns that many of our depleted oil wells are “filling back up”; oil is migrating from deep within the earth, upward to many of our present drilling sites.
There are certain interests that do not want to see oil as a plentiful natural resource–FOLLOW THE MONEY…

Mesomorph
Mesomorph
  anarchyst
July 24, 2016 3:20 pm

I heard the Russians had hit oil at 60,000 feet even!
I think the abiotic theory is definitely possible but I just worry that pumping all that oil out of the ground might cause some big earthquakes.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
July 24, 2016 3:29 pm

I love it when admin is in a cordial mood! It really sets the proper tone.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
  Administrator
July 24, 2016 3:39 pm

Yeah I know. I once kicked PhD in Geology in the fuck about the abiotic BS and then found out it was one of Stucky’s alter egos.

Watching you kick morans in the nuts is like poetry in motion. I’m watching you give Debbie “Baby” Snelling what fer too! 🙂

Sam Fox
Sam Fox
  Administrator
May 8, 2023 2:42 am

Admin, you actually think oil is from fossils? Really?
Discovering that oil is NOT from fossils is what drove Russia up on the world oil stage as a major player.
Sure wells can be emptied. But nature can refill them.

https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Are-Oil-Wells-Recharging-Themselves.html

Earth Is An Oil-Producing Machine — We’re Not Running Out

SamFox

jamesthewanderer
jamesthewanderer
  Administrator
July 25, 2016 1:24 am

Uhh, this might not be a consequence of peak oil, but possibly such factors as:
the decision to gas flood (nitrogen) a major field, with short-term gain and long-term losses
the epic corruption, political staffing and questionable exploration ability of Pemex
external shocks from OPEC and other causes
lack of sufficient reinvestment to maintain reserves
and so forth. Of course, it’s also possible that Mexico’s share of oil (unevenly distributed across the Earth; not much oil in Japan, China, etc.) has run out; but then, the above surely didn’t help.

starfcker
starfcker
  jamesthewanderer
July 25, 2016 3:04 am

Pemex was a whole nother set of problems, even before any reserves started tapering off. That said, jimmy’s knife is sharp today, i’m out while the gittin’s good

Mesomorph
Mesomorph
July 24, 2016 3:46 pm

I’m not seeing any conspiracy. Just a possibility. Apparently you have ruled it out and that’s that. If you have a link that helped you come to that conclusion please share it.
Am I wrong to worry about earthquakes too?

Mesomorph
Mesomorph
  Administrator
July 24, 2016 4:45 pm

Thanks. I’ll check it out once I finish watching the Hungarian Grand Prix.

I do believe some crazy conspiracy stuff. The video of the “German-Iranian” right after the McMassacre looks to me like his mind control program had run its course. The dude is spun. I didn’t post the thought because I wanted to see if anyone else came to that conclusion. Not a peep. Another grain of sand falls on the side of the scale that says I’m nuts.
Zimmerman telegram = False flag
I can’t shut it off.

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
July 24, 2016 3:53 pm

It would have been a much more interesting piece had the author dug into the comments of Matthew Simmons, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_Simmons who was found dead in a hot tub after speaking out about the Deepwater Horizon disaster. By the way, did you know they’ve made a movie about it? Meantime BP is still trying to get out of paying their fines. http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/01/16/bp-fine-oil-spill_n_6486252.html

Homer
Homer
July 24, 2016 7:02 pm

I might as well get on one side of the fence. I also believe, pending further review, in abiotic oil.
The usual explanations for oil’s existence leave a lot to be desired. The ‘fossil fuel dinosaur’ theory, the collision of an oil asteroid with earth theory, or other theories that I can imagine strains any credulity. So, my belief in the abiotic theory is just as valid as any other. That doesn’t mean that I can dismiss the idea that we are running out of oil and can wantonly pump till were blue in the face. I may be wrong, so I really want to conserve oil and develop other energy sources. Modern civilization literally runs on oil.

There will be a point where EROEI will force a switch to another energy source. ‘Economy of action’ is the hallmark of all living things. We will do what ever is cheapest first. The low hanging fruit idea.

What will the future be and will we be manipulated into it? I have no idea, but I hope it’s ‘cold fusion’. Perhaps, it’s 500,000 denizens on the planet. That would certainly take care of the oil shortage.

Admin, it may take a very long time to refill the wells, abiotically. They say that the water aquifers, after being pumped down, may take 10,000 yrs to replenish. Nature may slow to replenish oil wells, as well. Not soon enough to do us any good, tho.

Wars are always wars over resources!

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
July 24, 2016 8:26 pm

“Wars are always wars over resources!”

Wars are over the CONTROL of resources to include what currency units they can be sold in and who said resources can be sold to.

Homer
Homer
  IndenturedServant
July 24, 2016 9:09 pm

IndenturedServant–What ever! I, too, am on occasion a nit picker.

jamesthewanderer
jamesthewanderer
July 24, 2016 10:42 pm

Hubbert died before recent improvements in directional drilling allowed hydraulic fracturing to economically exploit “tight” oil shale formations like the Permian Basin, Marcellus Shale & etc. The oil was always there, it just wasn’t economically feasible to recover with “vertical” oil wells; you would have to drill thousands (Swiss cheese method) to recover the same amount as one modern wellhead with a dozen directional wells fanning out horizontally through the same formation, and fracturing a vertical well exactly in the center of a formation is rather tough and tricky.
So, one new technique put off Peak Oil for a while. Are there more techniques to be discovered? Are there other, yet unknown formations to find that might be exploitable? Or do we know exactly where every barrel of crude oil is located in the entire world?
Certainty is a feature of ignorance; a healthy scepticism of what we think we know when 3/4 of the world is covered with water and mostly inaccessible to drilling (most of the oil fields discovered are in continental shelves, and similar shallow waters) would do us some good.

Sam Fox
Sam Fox
May 8, 2023 2:20 am

The first mistake is calling oil a ‘fossil fuel’. Oil is not from fossils.

https://yandex.com/search/?text=oil+is+not+from+fossils&lr=21467

That means it replenishes naturally deep in the earth.

https://yandex.com/search/?text=Canada+Free+Press+the+myth+of+peak+noil&lr=21467
“Climate Change” is a take power from the people attack front against the USA & the rest of the planet.
They leave China India & Russia alone, so we KNOW Al Climate Whore & Ketchup Kerry & their puppet masters don’t give a rip about the climate. Or saving the planet. They want to OWN it!
“Fossil fuel” banning id intended to weaken US.

SamFox