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Convenor, ASPO-Australia

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1 Convenor, ASPO-Australia
Peak Oil What are the probabilities that the rate of global oil production will start its final decline soon? Bruce Robinson Convenor, ASPO-Australia 10th August 2007 Curtin Corner

2 ASPO-Australia is part of the international ASPO movement
An Australia-wide network of professionals working to reduce oil vulnerability ASPO-Australia Working groups Finance Sector Health Sector Social Services Sector Remote indigenous communities Active transport (bicycle & walking) Agriculture, Fisheries and Food Biofuels Urban and transport planning Oil & Gas industry Behavioural change Local Government sector Regional and city working groups Construction Industry Freight sector Public transport sector Defence and Security Economics Tourism Young Professionals working group  Senate inquiry submission ASPO-Australia is part of the international ASPO movement Senate Inquiry into Australia's future oil supply and alternative transport fuels

3 Outline 1930 1970 2010 2050 Peak Oil What is Peak Oil ? but
the time when global oil production stops rising and starts its final decline We will never "run out of oil" Is "Peak Oil" a fallacy, a theory, a probability, or an inevitability? inevitable When is the most probable forecast date ? perhaps Will market forces solve our Peak Oil problems ? no, sorry! Should Governments, universities, businesses and communities be preparing for Petrol Droughts and Peak Oil ? yes! 1930 1970 2010 2050 Peak Oil but when?

4 Fremantle Passenger Terminal
Unexpected transport pattern changes and infrastructure provision decisions Fremantle Passenger Terminal completed 1962

5 Unexpected transport pattern changes, and infrastructure
Passengers p.a. Fremantle Port Fremantle Passenger Terminal opened Unexpected transport pattern changes, and infrastructure World Air travel

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7 Many books about Peak Oil
Campbell & Laherrère March 1998 Campbell 2003 Brian Fleay Perth 1995 Deffeyes 2001 Heinberg 2003 Roberts 2004 2005 2006

8 1/3rd 1/3rd 1/3rd APPEA April 2005 Perth
Australian Petroleum Production & Exploration Association conference Please put your hand up if you think that we have crossed the Hubbert Peak and we are entering a demand driven pricing era, and hands up those who don’t? Undecided 1/3rd 1/3rd Eric Streitberg Executive Director ARC Energy Limited 1/3rd

9 US oil production: Peak in 1970
Mb/d US oil production: Peak in 1970 2007 Jeremy Gilbert, ex BP

10 Past World Oil Production
and Forecasts IEA 2002 Dr Ali Samsam Bakhtiari Iran 4 4 40 Shell Prof. Bauquis France 3 3 30 Deffeyes Bauquis, Total Gb pa 2 2 20 ASPO & Skrebowski 1 1 10 2007 1930 1970 2010 2050 Chris Skrebowski UK Prof. Aleklett, ASPO Sweden 1 1 2 2 4 4 6 6 8 8 10 10 12 12 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

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12 The world needs oil production flows Reserves are only useful as flows
Chris Skrebowski Editor, Petroleum Review, London The practical realities The world needs oil production flows Reserves are only useful as flows Worry about flows not reserves "Deliverability" (Les Magoon, USGS) When you take your car to a filling station you expect to simply fill up You’d be very alarmed if you were told to put the nozzle in the tank and come back 6 hours later You’d be even more alarmed if you were told to come back in a week and they might have supplies If there aren’t reliable flows you go somewhere else What if there’s no somewhere else? "40 years reserves left at current production rates" ....This is a very misleading statement

13 A simple observation -- or why peak will be earlier than most people expect
‘Global production falls when loss of output from countries in decline exceeds gains in output from those that are expanding.’ It is like a scales. Although we will still be finding oil, still developing new fields if just slightly more of the world’s production capacity -- maybe just 51% -- is declining. Then production will have peaked. This is why it will be far earlier than most people expect.

14 Why are oil supplies peaking?
We are not finding oil fast enough We are not developing fields fast enough Too many fields are old and declining A pretty comprehensive set of shortfalls.

15 Blue is water, green is water and oil mixed
and red/purple is “dry” oil with little water in it Ghawar is Saudi Arabia's and the world's biggest oilfield If it is at peak, then global peak is probably very close

16 The real oil discovery trend
Longwell, 2002

17 The real oil discovery trend
Discovery Forecast USGS The real oil discovery trend Longwell, 2002

18 How old are the fields? Of the 18 largest fields, 12 are in decline, 5 have some potential and 1 is undeveloped 70% of production from fields 30+ years old Few large recent discoveries Relying more and more on ageing fields and new small discoveries Ghawar, Burgan, Canterell and Daqing are the four largest oil fields in the world. All are now in decline. By global standards most of the new developments are tiddlers. You need a lot of tiddlers to offset declining giants.

19 The top five decliners in 2005
1970 US boosted by Gulf of Mexico but capacity has been permanently lost. That may not be conventional capacity loss to depletion but it is still capacity loss. Norway has moved off the slow decline shoulder to the ski slope Mexico is worrying 60% of production comes from Canterell. The IEA hopes Pemex will get enough money to restrict the decline to 10%/year!!!! Iran is struggling. Is improvement likely?

20 How the Megaprojects database is created and used
Megaprojects Report, Petroleum Review April 2006 All publicly available data Opec and 70 non-Opec projects Opec data (from their website) Incremental production allocated by start up date Graphed to show volumes available to meet demand Have been doing it now for over three years. Constantly revised month by month. Increasingly the changes are project slippage. Last big changes when Opec published future projects. Few new non-Opec projects. Listing of all key discoveries likely to be projects. Future projections now pretty stable. Average 6.4 years from discovery to first oil even excluding all projects involving discoveries more than 12 years ago

21 Global liquids capacity to 2015

22 Chris Skrebowski's conclusions
Supply will remain tight and prices high barring a major economic setback Oil supply will peak in 2010/2011 at around million barrels/day Oil supply in international trade may peak earlier Collectively we are still in denial Greatly to my surprise the new Medium Term outlook confirms my analysis. Output reaches 93mn b/d in Demand reaches 93.7mn b/d. No mention of peak of course but ‘Increments slow to kb/d after 2008’ they mean 2009 because of the way they do things but my analysis is becoming less controversial by the day.

23 UK Consumption Export/Import Production decline rate ~ 10%
1000 Barrel/day UK Consumption Export/Import Quelle: BP Analyse: LBST, ß Production decline rate ~ 10% UK already a net importer

24 Indonesia Consumption Export 1000 Barrel/day
Quelle: BP; Analyse: LBST, ß

25 China Consumption Production Imports 1000 Barrel/day 2020
Data: BP. Analyse: Zittel LBST, ß, Pang Xiongqi 2020 Production

26 Oil available for export

27 "Forecasters' Droop" ?? ABARE forecasts
"If the price of eggs is high enough, even the roosters will start to lay." ABARE to Senate inquiry into Australia's future oil supplies "Forecasters' Droop" ??

28 New York Metals Exchange NYMEX WTI futures $US/bbl
ABARE US$39 in 2011 NYMEX US$67 now US$70 (10th August 2007) 2005 US$35 in 2006 ABARE oil price forecasts US$/bbl 2002 for $26 2004 for $32 2004 for 2005 $ – 4.8% New York Metals Exchange Oil Futures Prices 10th August 2007 ABARE: 25th June 2007 "In the second half of 2007, oil prices are forecast to average U$63 a barrel" NYMEX WTI futures $US/bbl 10th April 2006

29 Australia’s oil production and consumption
1965 2025 2005 1985 1.0 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 Geoscience Australia, APPEA, ABARE Australia’s oil production and consumption Million barrels/day Actual Forecast Consumption Production P50

30 Australia uses 45,000,000,000 litres of oil each year
a cube of about 360 metres size 80% of Australia’s oil usage is in transport If Australia’s 20 M tpa wheat crop → ethanol = 9% =1.3 EfT3 Perth’s Central Park building is 249 m high, to top of tower 100 ml of oil contains 1 kWh of energy. Enough to move a small car to the top of the Eiffel tower

31 China Million barrels/ day 2005 Australia uses 0.9 China 7.0 US 20.6
United States 1 km l Million barrels/ day 2005 BP Statistical Review, 2006 Australia uses 0.9 China 7.0 US World US 1 cubic km oil / year

32 Oil production is not shared equitably
ENERGYFILES Energyfiles Ltd Oil production is not shared equitably US: % of world's population uses 25% of world oil China: 21% %

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34 "Federal agency efforts that could reduce uncertainty about the timing of peak oil production or mitigate its consequences are spread across multiple agencies and are generally not focused explicitly on peak oil. ....there is no coordinated federal strategy for reducing uncertainty about the peak’s timing or mitigating its consequences".

35 PEAKING OF WORLD OIL PRODUCTION:
IMPACTS, MITIGATION, & RISK MANAGEMENT Robert L. Hirsch, Roger Bezdek & Robert Wendling February 2005 for US Dept of Energy "The peaking of world oil production presents the U.S. and the world with an unprecedented risk management problem. As peaking is approached, liquid fuel prices and price volatility will increase dramatically, and, without timely mitigation, the economic, social, and political costs will be unprecedented. Viable mitigation options exist on both the supply and demand sides, but to have substantial impact, they must be initiated more than a decade in advance of peaking." "The world has never faced a problem like this. .. oil peaking will be abrupt and revolutionary".

36 Years After Crash Program Initiation Hirsch, Bezdek and Wendling, 2005
5 10 15 25 Years After Crash Program Initiation Impact (MM bpd) 20 35 EOR Coal Liquids Heavy Oil GTL Efficient Vehicles Worldwide Crash Program Mitigation of Conventional Oil Production Peaking A Study for US DOE NETL Hirsch, Bezdek and Wendling, 2005 Delay / Rapid growth. Roughly 35 MM bpd at year 20. 2005 Study

37 Dr Roger Bezdek is a senior energy economist in Washington
On his recent Australian tour for ASPO he briefed ministers for Transport and ministers for Energy in Victoria and Queensland, prominent multinational firms, nationwide TV, the Defence Department, the Federal Shadow Minister for Resources and Energy and had a number of meetings at Queensland Transport 3. HIGHER PRICES WILL CREATE MORE OIL? Not true “Economists are better at finding oil on paper than geologists are at finding it in the ground” 7. GOVERNMENT INTERVENTION NOT REQUIRED? Wrong: Intervention by governments will be required Economic and social implications of oil peaking would otherwise be chaotic Full presentation slides and video at

38 COST AS A FUNCTION OF START TIME (Notional)
Cost of Error Premature Start “It is also certain that the cost of preparing too early is nowhere near the cost of not being ready on time.” Alannah MacTiernan, 2004 Time - 20 Years Scenario III - 10 Years Scenario II Peaking Scenario I

39 Scenario Wait for peaking Start 10 years early Start 20 years early Result Oil shortages largest, longest lasting Delays peaking; still shortages Avoids the problem; smooth transition SCENARIOS ANALYSIS CONCLUSIONS Basis: Immediate crash program implementation No quick fix!

40 Is there a possible transition to another fuel?.
Probably not. Can we run ALL our cars on water, hydrogen, ethanol, GTL ?? No. EROEI (Energy return on energy invested) Very important Les Magoon, USGS 2001

41 Mortgage and Oil Vulnerability
in Perth

42 First: Community awareness and engagement 2: Frugality 3: Efficiency
Priorities First: Community awareness and engagement 2: Frugality 3: Efficiency Last: Alternative fuels Failure to act now will prove incredibly costly Oil vulnerability assessment and risk management is an important mechanism of minimising exposure and maximising opportunities. It is a new and promising field. Hint: Check your superannuation is not being invested into urban toll-roads, tunnels and airports.

43 a few more slides follow,
in case they are needed for questions

44 Australian Government Policy and Action Options
1: “Talk about it, Talk about it” 2. Engage people, “Participatory democracy” 3. Dismantle the "perverse policies" that subsidise heavy car use and excessive freight transport. 4. Encourage frugal use of fuel, and disadvantage profligate users. Fuel taxes should be incrementally raised to European levels to reduce usage. 5: SmartCard tradable personal fuel allocation system. A flexible mechanism for short-term oil shocks, as well for encouraging people to reduce their fuel usage.. 6. Concentrate on the psychological and social dimensions of automobile dependence, not just “technological fixes” 7. Implement nationwide "individualised marketing" travel demand management. 8. Railways, cyclepaths and public transport are better investments than more roads. 9. Give priority for remaining oil and gas supplies to food production, essential services and indigenous communities, using the Smart-Card system. 10. Review the oil vulnerability of every industry and community sector and how each may reduce their risks. 11 Promote through the United Nations an Intergovernmental Panel on Oil Depletion, and a Kyoto-like protocol to allocate equitably the declining oil among nations. An international tradable sliding scale allocation mechanism is one hypothetical option.

45 Petrol taxes OECD € Australia US UK Au$ cents/litre Portugal 0.80 0.60
IEA Dec 2003 Portugal UK Australia US 0.80 0.60 0.00 0.20 0.40 Au$ cents/litre

46 Nominal tax per litre (pence)
The UK Fuel Tax Escalator Margaret Thatcher Australian fuel taxes should be raised to European levels on a fuel tax escalator Nominal tax per litre (pence) Real tax 10 30 50 40 20 pence

47 Gboe/pa World All Oil } Oil 2007 ASPO 2006

48 } Gas Oil Gboe/pa World All Oil & Gas (gas at 10,000 cft=1bbl) 2007
ASPO 2006

49 } Shortfall World oil shortfall scenarios
2007 World oil shortfall scenarios Past Production of Oil Forecast Production Demand Trend Gb/year 10 20 30 40 50 Shortfall By 2030, the gap is equivalent to 6,000 nuclear reactors 2030

50 World oil shortfall scenarios
Past Production of Oil Forecast Production Demand Growth Deprivation, war City design/lifestyle Pricing / taxes Transport mode shifts Efficiency Other petroleum fuels gas, tar-sands Other fuels Gb/year no single “Magic Bullet” solution, probably no replacement ever for cheap plentiful oil Urgent preparation and adjustment are vital 2007

51 BP Statistical Review of World Energy, 2006
Oil Consumption million barrels/day UK Australia (x 5) Japan M bbl/d BP Statistical Review of World Energy, 2006 UK Fuel Tax Escalator started 石油消費 (単位100万バレル/日) 英国 日本 オーストラリア (5倍に誇張) 英国でのガソリン税課税強化開始

52 either Weetbix or abdominal fat
Bicycles are powered by biofuel, renewable energy, either Weetbix or abdominal fat No shortage of either

53 Perth Sydney

54 Urban passenger mode shares Australia
Car High automobile-dependence Public transport share is very low Potterton BTRE 2003

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56 STATE LIQUID FUEL SHORTAGE
Government of Western Australia STATE LIQUID FUEL SHORTAGE EMERGENCY PLAN OPERATIONAL PLAN PREPARED BY ENERGY SAFETY DIRECTORATE DEPARTMENT OF CONSUMER AND EMPLOYMENT PROTECTION 20 Southport Street, W Leederville WA 6007 Tel: (08) Fax: (08) January 2003

57 change to public transport
{ If 25% of car users change to public transport We need both petrol rationing plans and public transport rationing plans in place in case of fuel emergencies. Bicycle transport is one substantial opportunity for public transport load-shedding in the event of a liquid fuel emergency. PTA must have more input into Liquid Fuel Shortage planning

58 Australian Association for the Study of Peak Oil & Gas
An urgent challenge for sustainability Bruce Robinson Australian Association for the Study of Peak Oil & Gas 6th February 2006 ? ? ? ? ? Look Out !! Something serious is looming on the radar

59 Hurricane Katrina New Orleans
Govts warn of general hurricane risks, forecast, and track individual hurricanes Govts help: longterm; planning, standards, short-term; preparations & consequences They do not attempt to prevent hurricanes Peak Oil is a natural phenomenon too. Should we reduce fuel taxes? or strengthen the levees?

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62 February 2004 By 2015, we will need to find, develop and produce new oil and gas equal to eight out of every 10 barrels being produced today.

63 1 2 4 6 8 10 12 3 Past Oil Production and Forecasts Australia World
3 40 30 20 1930 1970 2010 2050 IEA Shell Bauquis Deffeyes ASPO World ASPO and others Gb pa Samsam Bakhtiari Demand Australia Geoscience Australia 2007 Past Oil Production and Forecasts Total Bass Strait

64 China US Australia


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