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lecture on oil since 1950

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  • The History of OilSince 1950Norman W. GarrickLecture 6Sustainable Transportation

  • Based mostly on

    Kunstler, The Long Emergency, 2005, Atlantic Monthly Press, New York, pg. 73-87(Chapter 2: Modernity and the Fossil Fuels Dilemma)

  • Hubberts Curve IPredicting the American PeakIn the 1940s M. King Hubbert developed a model for describing the geological limits of oil supply

    In 1956 he predicted that the US Peak would occur between 1966 and 1972

    Even though Hubbert was was a well respected, well connected geologist(He was a geology professor at Columbia and had been chief of research at Shell Oil)He was not believed

  • The Mythology and Science of Peak OilIn the early years of oil, no one knew how much oil was on the planet And how long it would last

    Were locations with oil relatively rare?Or were there untold reserves under the ground?

    As the fields of the east in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Indiana played outSome thought the petroleum era would be as transient as the whale oil era

    However, the discovery of giant fields in Texas, Oklahoma And then, California, Mexico, Venezuela and other placescalmed the fear

  • The Rise of Foreign OilHubberts model was based on relating trends in discovery and productionWhat he realized was that discovery of oil in America peaked in the 1930s

    One reason that no one paid attention to Hubberts prediction was thatthe rate of discovery was exploding in other places

    In 1948 the worlds reserve was 64 Billion BarrelsBy 1972 it had expanded to 534 Billion Barrels Almost all outside of the USA

    This explosion in discovery led to a 28 year glut in supply

    The US responded by using quotas to keep out foreign oil

  • Peak Discovery and Peak Productionhttp://www.grinningplanet.com/2005/06-14/peak-oil-article.htm

  • 1967 Testing the Embargo CardThe first attempt at using an oil embargo was attempted by Saudi ArabiaAfter the 6 day war in 1967

    It did not workAmerica still had spare capacity and was able to just increase production

  • 1970 The American PeakIn 1970 US production peakedNo one knew it at the time

    In 1970 the US produced 11.3 million barrels/dayBy the mid-1980s the production was 9 million barrels/dayIt was down to about 5 million barrels/dayNow it is back up to about 6 million barrels/day

    After 1970, American oil imports sky rocketedAfter peak, imports went from 2.2 million barrels/day To 6 million barrels/day in 1973

    Hubbert had been rightAnd Saudi Arabia was now in charge

  • 1970 The American Peakhttp://www.grinningplanet.com/2005/06-14/peak-oil-article.htm

  • 1970 The American Peakhttp://gailtheactuary.wordpress.com/2007/03/16/oil-quiz-test-your-knowledge/

  • 1970 The American Peakhttp://ocho.uwaterloo.ca/~pfieguth/Personal/EnergyLimits/Figures/US_Oil_Production_and_Imports_1920_to_2005.png

  • Recent Upturn in Productionhttp://www.eia.gov/dnav/pet/hist/LeafHandler.ashx?n=PET&s=MCRFPUS1&f=AUS Energy Information Administration

  • 1973 The First Oil ShockBy 1973, Saudi Arabia had tremendous surplus capacityAmerica had peaked and had lost it surplus

    Also world wide demand was soaring19 million barrels/day in 196044 million barrels/day in 1972

    When the 1973 Yom Kippur War precipitated an OPEC embargoThere was no surplus left to soften the effects

  • 1973 The First Oil Shockhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=VCLRlVxOH-Q

    NBC Nightly News coverage of OPEC's decision to cut exports of oil to the United States along with other nations. Reported by John Chancellor of the evening of October, 17 1973.

  • http://www.heatingoil.com/articles/arab-oil-embargo-happened-happen/

    http://automotivemileposts.com/garage/v5n2.html

  • 1973The Impact of the ShockIn 1973 the Arab nations proposed an embargo on the USAand increased price 70% for EuropeThis had a significant impact worldwide

    Although the embargo did not shut down supply to the USAOil found its way to America but in circuitous way The result was devastating

    In six months: Price quadrupledLong lines formed at gas stations with fights at the pumpsOdd/even license plate system used to manage suppliesDaylight Savings Time was extendedNo Sunday SalesRation stamps printed but not used

  • 1973The Economic ImpactStock prices dropped 45%Inflation took off, accompanied by high interest rateThe economy suffered from stagflationThe US recession was the worst since 1930s

    OPEC embargo and its aftershocks represented a unique crisis of a fossil fuel-addicted industrial civilization

    The embargo lasted just 7 months, but the effects lingered for years

  • 1973The Auto IndustryThe US auto industry was devastatedEurope and Japan offered small fuel efficient carsIn contrast the US offerings looked like lumbering dinosaursThe US auto industry never fully recovered

  • Hubberts Curve IIThe Worldwide PeakHubberts model showed that world oil discovery peaked in 1960

    His initial model suggests a world wide peak between 1990 and 2000

    That has been revised to between 2000 and 2010

  • All the Oil in the WorldThe total endowment of conventional liquid petroleum that ever existed on earth was 2 Trillion Barrels2,000,000,000,000

    Peak1 Trillion goneMostly since 19501 Trillion leftCurrent consumption: 80 million barrels/day = 29 billion barrels/year1,000,000,000,000/29,000,000,000 = 34 years

    This calculation does not account for increase in consumption1 Trillion left< 34 years

  • The Last TrillionThe last trillion will be much harder to recover than the first trillionMuch of it may even require more energy to recover than it will yieldAlso there is likely to be intense competition which will aggravate the cost

    Peak1 Trillion goneMostly since 19501 Trillion left1 Trillion left< 34 years

  • http://www.worldalmanac.com/blog/2008/01/world_oil_reserves_and_consumption.html

  • 1979The Second Oil ShockThis was precipitated by the Iran revolution

    In 1979 Iran produced only 5% of the worlds supply But with OPEC now controlling the oil marketThe loss of this production sent shock waves around the world

    Prices tripled at the gas pumpGas lines returned Inflation rekindled

    This crisis went on longer than the 1973 OPEC embargo

    The crisis was exacerbated by the Iran hostage crisis and the Iran/Iraq war which took 8% of the worlds production offline

  • 1980s and 1990sA Reprieve for the WestThe Alaska North Shore fields were discovered in the 1960sThe North Sea oil fields (controlled by the UK and Norway) were also discovered in the 1960s

    These fields came on board in the mid to late 1970sBut all at tremendous cost

    In the case of AlaskaIt required the building of a 800 mile pipeline costing $10b (1970 prices)

    For the North Sea OilIt required the development of expensive deep sea drilling technology

    The OPEC Oil Embargo was what made this extraordinary effort worthwhile

    But the embargo also caused other changes which led to more supply and less demand

  • 1985A 15 Year Oil GlutMore SupplyBy the mid-1980s there was a glut in oil supply

    The price increases led to more drilling and more explorationEspecially in deep sea locations

    So in addition to the Alaska and North Sea fieldsWe also saw development of the fields in the Gulf of MexicoAt the same time the Soviets stepped up production

    More DemandDemand fell during the recessions due to the higher pricesAnd there was a move to more fuel efficient (foreign made) cars

  • 1985Cheap Oil: A Return of the Good Old Days

    Many businesses benefited from the glut and low oil pricesUS Oil company suffered and exploration was shut downHouston and Tulsa went into a tailspin

    Most importantly, the American public saw low prices as a return to normal

    With President Reagan as the cheerleader in chief, Energy was no longer a major US political issueKunstler

    The public saw 1973 and 1979 as anomalous manipulations by them

  • Mid 1980s - 2000The Role of Saudi Arabia

    During the glut, OPEC took on the role of stabilizing pricesBy maintaining a production quota This system was successful in keeping prices at around $17 for a decade or so

    Saudi Arabia played a key roleActing as a swing producer to moderate global supply

    Saudi Arabia saw it in their interest to level out the peaks and valleys

  • Oil Prices in 2004 Dollars

  • 1991The First Gulf War

    The war was precipitated by the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait (10% of worlds reserve)

    The US coalition quickly ejected Saddam

    Oil prices were barely affectedAnd in fact, fell to under $20 during the warAnd stayed at that level into the 2000With a major assist by the Saudis

  • The 1990sGlobalization, SUVs, MacMansions, and Monica L.

    Kunstler characterizes the 1990s as the era when weOutsourced industry to AsiaAnd focused on hypertrophic** suburban land development and consumerism

    Leading to the need for more oil than everWith proportionately more being used for transportationSUVs took over with their exemption from fuel efficiency standards

    ** Hypertrophy is the increase in the volume of an organ or tissue due to the enlargement of its component cells

  • The 1990sGlobalization, SUVs, MacMansions, and Monica L.

    If Bill Clinton had any reservation about the economy becoming hostage to the creation of suburban sprawl he never voiced them.

    Like a lot of sunbelters, he might have viewed sprawl as good to live in and good for business

    Relative calm lead the public to pre-occupation with trivialities such as the public sex life of the president

    Kunstler

  • 2000-2010Crunch Time

    According to Kunstler 9-11coincided with strange happenings in the oil market

    Around this time crude price began to drift Above the $20 per barrel that the Saudis desiredBy 2003 price was ratcheting up

    Also demand was raising especially from China

    Although the Saudis claimed excess capacityProduction was not raising to meet the new demand!

  • Oil Prices in 2004 Dollars

  • 2000-2010Do we really know how much oil we have?

    That same year, 2004, it was revealed that reserves in Venezuela was inflated by 20%

    This lead to suspicion that other countries had also inflated reservesIncluding Saudi Arabia!

    In fact, it was suspected that Saudi Arabia had peaked15 years early

  • 2010Are We Past Peak?

    In the early 2000s, a Princeton geologist, Ken Deffeyes suggested that peak oil had occurred in 2001He later revised this estimate to 2005Based on events since then he might well have been right We dont know yet

  • Gasoline Prices in Real Dollars

  • Gasoline Prices in Real Dollars

  • 2010Epilogue

    I think what Dr. Deffeyes may be trying to tell us is this: Let us give thanks for this extraordinary period of human history we lived through. Lets recognize that we are moving into a new phase of history. Lets be brave and wise about itand prepare to more on

    Kunstler

    ******************************