Oil: Never Cry Wolf—Why the Petroleum Age Is Far from over
An argument against the imminent peaking of oil from Science Magazine.
An argument against the imminent peaking of oil from Science Magazine.
THE producers’ cartel that governs world oil supplies last night admitted it had lost control of the latest price rise as oil bubbled back up to near-record highs.
In our
view,
the recent high prices are just a practice run. The following is
drawn from
our recent research reports.
It’s official: the world is getting darker. Scientists are now agreed that as cloud cover and particles in the atmosphere increase, the amount of radiation reaching us from the Sun is falling.
Think gas is expensive now? Just wait. You’ve heard it before but this time it’s real. We’re at the begining of the end of cheap oil.
The last “super giant” oilfield (more than 10 billion barrels) was discovered 40 years ago; the last American refinery was built 25 years ago; each successive American “driving season” guzzles more gas than the last.
Some interesting realpolitik analysis and some philosophising against a peak oil back drop from ex-military man Stan Goff.
For the past several years, we have been publishing U.S. natural gas production surveys of publicly traded companies. The bottom-line story has remained essentially the same throughout this entire time: U.S. natural gas production is heading firmly downwards, despite a massive increase in drilling activity.
EIGHTEEN years after the Chernobyl nuclear explosion in Ukraine, as many as 359 Welsh farms are still restricted in moving sheep as a result.
“China’s growing weight in world consumption virtually assures a heavy long-term impact on energy prices, trade, and investment. In a decade, China has gone from self-sufficiency to being the most dynamic factor in the world oil market and one of the main elements in today’s $40-plus per barrel price,” said the report by Daniel Yergin and Scott Roberts.
Predicting another oil shock, analysts John Westwood Ltd., Canterbury, England, said depleting oil reserves, coupled with growing energy demand, will result in sustained oil price increases, greater capital investment in natural gas production, drastic conservation regulations, and fevered development of renewable energy substitutes funded by “windfall” profits.
Australian Deputy Prime Minister John Anderson who less than a week ago dismissed concerns about peak oil, today acknowledged it.