Just another Reality-based bubble in the foam of the multiverse.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

Bumpy Ride

...down the oil depletion curve has started.

Steep decline in oil production brings risk of war and unrest, says new study

· Output peaked in 2006 and will fall 7% a year
· Decline in gas, coal and uranium also predicted

Ashley Seager
Monday October 22, 2007
The Guardian

World oil production has already peaked and will fall by half as soon as 2030, according to a report which also warns that extreme shortages of fossil fuels will lead to wars and social breakdown.

The German-based Energy Watch Group will release its study in London today saying that global oil production peaked in 2006 - much earlier than most experts had expected. The report, which predicts that production will now fall by 7% a year, comes after oil prices set new records almost every day last week, on Friday hitting more than $90 (£44) a barrel...

The report's author, Joerg Schindler, said its most alarming finding was the steep decline in oil production after its peak, which he says is now behind us.

The results are in contrast to projections from the International Energy Agency, which says there is little reason to worry about oil supplies at the moment.

However, the EWG study relies more on actual oil production data which, it says, are more reliable than estimates of reserves still in the ground. The group says official industry estimates put global reserves at about 1.255 gigabarrels - equivalent to 42 years' supply at current consumption rates. But it thinks the figure is only about two thirds of that.

Global oil production is currently about 81m barrels a day - EWG expects that to fall to 39m by 2030. It also predicts significant falls in gas, coal and uranium production as those energy sources are used up.

Britain's oil production peaked in 1999 and has already dropped by half to about 1.6 million barrels a day.

The report presents a bleak view of the future unless a radically different approach is adopted. It quotes the British energy economist David Fleming as saying: "Anticipated supply shortages could lead easily to disturbing scenes of mass unrest as witnessed in Burma this month. For government, industry and the wider public, just muddling through is not an option any more as this situation could spin out of control and turn into a complete meltdown of society."

Mr Schindler comes to a similar conclusion. "The world is at the beginning of a structural change of its economic system. This change will be triggered by declining fossil fuel supplies and will influence almost all aspects of our daily life."

Jeremy Leggett, one of Britain's leading environmentalists and the author of Half Gone, a book about "peak oil" - defined as the moment when maximum production is reached, said that both the UK government and the energy industry were in "institutionalised denial" and that action should have been taken sooner.

"When I was an adviser to government, I proposed that we set up a taskforce to look at how fast the UK could mobilise alternative energy technologies in extremis, come the peak," he said. "Other industry advisers supported that. But the government prefers to sleep on without even doing a contingency study. For those of us who know that premature peak oil is a clear and present danger, it is impossible to understand such complacency."

Mr Fell said that the world had to move quickly towards the massive deployment of renewable energy and to a dramatic increase in energy efficiency, both as a way to combat climate change and to ensure that the lights stayed on. "If we did all this we may not have an energy crisis."


Unless the energy crisis has been incorporated into the shock doctrine and chaos is the plan.

3 comments:

Wiglaf said...

I too blogged about this article, and what was interesting, I found an article from a 2000 symposium that predicts 2006 as the gross peak-oil year -- correctly, it seems. (1979 was the peak year, per-capita.) This same article also predicts the "energy cliff" end of technosociety as we know it in the interval 2012--2030.

http://dieoff.org/page224.htm

Anonymous said...

I would like you to make a post that backs up your "Chaos is the plan" contention. What I see is that these architects of power do not want chaos (because chaos would threaten their control). What they want is control and to keep the people pacified and asleep. Choas would work against their goals. In the case of Iraq, you would say that the choas they have caused there is by design instead of the incompetence I see.
So please make a post explaining in detail why you think Chaos is the plan.

kelley b. said...

Thank you, Logan, and thank you, anon.

You have a good question, anon. A good place to start would be by reading Naomi Kline's Shock Doctrin I've linked to in the main post. You could also use the Blogsearch function on the upper left of the main page looking for "Chaos is the Plan" or google the same with my blog or Correntewire.

However, I'll honor your request with an extended post on this point later tonight.