Stories tagged with "cges"
A belated response to CGES
Posted by Heading Out on September 6, 2006 - 9:57am
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: cges, chevron, insurance, jack 2, mars, thunder horse [list all tags]
Further within the considerable comment that has been provided on a number of stations was the comment that this is the "final frontier" for oil exploration. Actually it probably isn't. There are still some places further North that have not yet been fully explored, but it is getting very close to the limit of where we can afford to economically look. We are, by the geological definition of where oil is likely to be found, starting to run out of places to look for these large fields.
Reserves Growth and Production Flows
Posted by Dave Cohen on August 30, 2006 - 3:46pm
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: cges, production flows, reserves growth [list all tags]
Dr. Leo P. Drollas, Deputy Director and Chief Economist for the Centre for Global Energy Studies has issued a response to Heading Out's Depletion estimates and the CGES. I feel that Drollas' comments deserve a response.
The argument concerns what is termed "reserves growth" which Drollas defines as
Growing knowledge tends to result in more oil reserves through oilfield extensions and revisions of reserves -- what is commonly known in the industry as `reserves growth' -- as well as through discoveries of new oilfields....The entire comment is below the fold.If there are no gross additions to reserves the depletion rate is equal to the world's rate of oil production as a percentage of global proven reserves (2.38% in 2005). However, gross additions have not been zero; indeed, since 1954 they have exceeded the world's production of oil.
Depletion estimates and the CGES
Posted by Heading Out on August 25, 2006 - 12:00pm
Topic: Supply/Production
Tags: abqaiq, cges, depletion, saudi arabia [list all tags]
I learned, to begin with that
Although it seems straightforward, depletion as a concept is not easy to pin down. The very use of the word "depletion" in this context - synonymous as it is with exhaustion - implies that oil resources are being run down and that one day they will dwindle into insignificance. Oil resources may well become insignificant in the years to come, but it is not certain whether this will be due to their physical exhaustion or to the world moving away from oil and towards another source of energy.Unfortunately, this suggests, as does the tone of much of the article that follows, that being concerned about oil supplies, largely from the point of the reserve available, is a pointless worry. I say unfortunately because this cornucopian view of the world of oil glosses over the changing situation in the world and conceals some of the assumptions that it makes, by hiding them within the overbounding simplification of its argument.

k Nation (Jim Kunstler)


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