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munterk6
3rd May 2008, 10:22
Check this out! I think we are being forewarned here, what can we do about this? It will decimate our local economy and job losses galore!!
Think of the implications $3 a litre will cause.

http://stuff.co.nz/4507628a10.html

HRT
3rd May 2008, 10:26
And how much of the price will be going in the governments pocket?

Skyryder
3rd May 2008, 10:35
It'll be interesting to see how much petrol prices will fall if Key gets elected and reduces corperate tax. Don't hold your breath on this one.

Skyryder

Coyote
3rd May 2008, 10:56
I haven't been to the hospital in years! Lets get rid of them and cut tax, they're run like shit anyway.

Mully
3rd May 2008, 12:35
It'll be interesting to see how much petrol prices will fall if Key gets elected and reduces corperate tax. Don't hold your breath on this one.

Skyryder

My guess will be the same as what happened when Gull and Challenge came into the market - prices dropped immediately, and then started creeping back up as the new boys joined the club.

They'll drop the price slightly (our profits aren't much per litre, so we can't drop it too much) and then start the creep back up to fatten their profit margins.

Of course, Challenge is now owned by Caltex.

Big Dan
3rd May 2008, 13:03
kinda makes you think about more moving to aussie i know its been on my mind lately cause NZ is getting worse and worse and that stupid gubbermint does nothing to help i reckon the whole country should boycott the election in protest

i've been using the R word lately with co-workers and we agree that NZ is heading to a recession and the latest job loses are just the start

with the petrol price rising all the time the public transport system will have to put there prices up

Something needs to happen Mr Helen Clark and Mrs Micheal Cullin need to give us something

is there anything we as a country can do

trumpy
3rd May 2008, 13:31
And how much of the price will be going in the governments pocket?


Not just the Gubbermint, all of the petrol companies have had considerably better bottom lines this last financial year and you can be damned sure that the improvement was not due to cost savings, write downs etc. We are certainly getting screwed by the Gubbermint (particularly in terms of return on our tax investment) but there are a few other willing parties as well. I am a free marketeer by nature but I think there are times when a good case can be made both socially and economically for price controls on essential goods.

Forest
3rd May 2008, 13:59
The NZD is likely to decline in value (relative to the USD) over the next 12 months. Even if the price of oil stays constant, this will lead to even greater fuel costs in NZ as oil is traded internationally in USD.

Mikkel
3rd May 2008, 14:03
As long as there is petrol to buy I think we should consider ourselves lucky.

eliot-ness
3rd May 2008, 14:18
It's interesting to note that in the US gas prices are falling.
Current price in the most expensive state, California for premium grade varies from $US3,98 to $US4,35 per US gallon.
The doomsday prophets will be right, some day, but I doubt it will be in the near future. Oil companies and car manufacturers work hand in glove and are not about to cut their own throats by making petrol unaffordable until they have a viable alternative that everyone can afford.

onearmedbandit
3rd May 2008, 14:20
Price rises sound good to me, price all the losers in their piece of shit cars off the roads.

Gubb
3rd May 2008, 14:22
...gubbermint...


...Gubbermint......Gubbermint...

I think I need to change my name by deed poll.

YellowDog
3rd May 2008, 14:28
UK Petrol is presently NZ$2.80/ltr.

trumpy
3rd May 2008, 14:56
I think I need to change my name by deed poll.

http://www.growlery.com/wigwam/2004/06/gubbermint-done-changed-mah-name.html

munterk6
3rd May 2008, 18:25
Price rises sound good to me, price all the losers in their piece of shit cars off the roads.

I like the way you think Mr Bandit, problem is, every product we buy has a fuel cost component to it....remember? = price rises:argh:


Quote...UK Petrol is presently NZ$2.80/ltr.

yeah, but their standard of living is higher due to higher incomes etc.

R6_kid
3rd May 2008, 19:13
stop bitching about the price of gas going up, you cant do anything about it except find more oil in which case they'll just come up with some excuse to put the price up anyway. Start dealing with the problem rather than complaining about it.

That, or go show Mr Rockafella what you're made of.

BiK3RChiK
3rd May 2008, 19:19
stop bitching about the price of gas going up, you cant do anything about it except find more oil in which case they'll just come up with some excuse to put the price up anyway. Start dealing with the problem rather than complaining about it.

That, or go show Mr Rockafella what you're made of.

I disagree! On 3 News tonight both BP and Shell posted huge increases in profits over the previous year by something like 8% and 12%... We the general public are being shafted in more ways than one!

homer
3rd May 2008, 19:25
I disagree! On 3 News tonight both BP and Shell posted huge increases in profits over the previous year by something like 8% and 12%... We the general public are being shafted in more ways than one!

yep your right on

homer
3rd May 2008, 19:27
stop bitching about the price of gas going up, you cant do anything about it except find more oil in which case they'll just come up with some excuse to put the price up anyway. Start dealing with the problem rather than complaining about it.

That, or go show Mr Rockafella what you're made of.

yep your correct in a way as well
but r u stupid enough to believe that the oil amount left to extract is actually at the peak at the moment .
its more force fed BS

puddytat
3rd May 2008, 21:18
Its ALL going to escalate...
and i dont think Im overly paranoid :doctor:.....is it just me or are we in the shit?:buggerd:

Mike748
3rd May 2008, 22:40
I'll be surprised if it doesn't all turn to shit.

There are already enough people who are living day to day hoping to make financial gains on property investments (their homes) but are worried about interest rates, escalating living costs and the change in property market.

Add in more financial pressure and a little job insecurity and things get volatile.

rainman
3rd May 2008, 23:27
kinda makes you think about more moving to aussie
Won't help, sorry. Why do you think it would?


is there anything we as a country can do
I think there is... but you may not like the answer.


The doomsday prophets will be right, some day, but I doubt it will be in the near future.

Do you have any rational basis for holding that view? I'd count myself as a cautious doomsayer and so far pretty much everything I've expected has happened. And I'm expecting near term trouble.


...problem is, every product we buy has a fuel cost component to it....remember? = price rises:argh:
Sadly true, and part of the basis for that near term touble.


Start dealing with the problem rather than complaining about it.
This is a valid point, but it is harder than we think to solve this, and requires a fairly significant reprogramming of our society, politics, employment, international trade, the lot... I don't know if we're ready yet. Perhaps a first step is recognising (and maybe complaining about) the problem. I hope we will come to see this as an opportunity first and a threat second, before it isn't even an opportunity anymore.

I don't believe either of our major political parties can blink first and even acknowledge that there is a problem, and besides in an election year, most debate becomes a dick-measuring contest between the red and the blue teams - all wasted effort and not addressing the real issues we face.
If oil is becoming scarce and expensive, and we're a long way away from everything else, how should we act on issues such as foreign trade, free trade agreements, dependence on tourism and dairy, etc? I mean assuming we were sane...


.....is it just me or are we in the shit?:buggerd:
Nope, I think it's not just you. Even Fatih Birol (Chief Economist of the IEA, so not a left loony nutjob by a long way) said this the other day:



wir sollten das Öl verlassen, bevor das Öl uns verlässt
(we must leave oil, before oil leaves us)


He's predicting "turbulente und hochpreisige Ölmärkte" - turbulent and high priced oil markets, and doesn't believe that markets alone can solve the problems of the oil and gas supply crunch, climate change, and third world energy poverty. He expects a significant supply shortfall by 2015. That's 7 years away. And he's an optimist.

And there's a long list of mainstream people who are similarly signalling (ever so cautiously, in some cases) that there is a supply crunch likely in the short to medium term. (Plenty more who claim the shit starts now, and we're doomed). However, no matter which authority says what, I'm fully expecting this post to be greeted with the usual outpouring of derision - "there's plenty of oil", "climate change is a myth", "someone will do something"... If I'm lucky I might even get an abiotic oil enthusiast!

Mike748
4th May 2008, 07:35
.........................

And there's a long list of mainstream people who are similarly signalling (ever so cautiously, in some cases) that there is a supply crunch likely in the short to medium term. (Plenty more who claim the shit starts now, and we're doomed). However, no matter which authority says what, I'm fully expecting this post to be greeted with the usual outpouring of derision - "there's plenty of oil", "climate change is a myth", "someone will do something"... If I'm lucky I might even get an abiotic oil enthusiast!

-In the interest of discussion I'm keen to hear your possible solution.
-Climate change isn't a myth, someone will do something - one day.
-I only want oil/petrol for my bike everything else can go alternative.

For many the increase in living costs has easily been offset by the higher wages created by skill shortages etc. but now you can easily see the rise in basic foods cost as a result of the earlier fuel increases, so what are food prices going to be like at $3 a litre for fuel!?

Also I'm noticing (in general) a serious adversion by many companies to employ staff, or if they are employing it is undertaken as a fixed term contract only. So I ask the question is this the way of future employment, FTC, casuals etc or is this just employers bracing themselves for a downturn?

Taz
4th May 2008, 08:11
The answer is simple as much as we hate to admit it. All we have to do is stop using petrol or limit our use. Ride your push bike to work. Think twice about going on that ride etc. Not much fun but one way of limiting the impact of higher fuel prices.

rainman
4th May 2008, 11:24
-In the interest of discussion I'm keen to hear your possible solution.
-Climate change isn't a myth, someone will do something - one day.
-I only want oil/petrol for my bike everything else can go alternative.

For many the increase in living costs has easily been offset by the higher wages created by skill shortages etc. but now you can easily see the rise in basic foods cost as a result of the earlier fuel increases, so what are food prices going to be like at $3 a litre for fuel!?

Also I'm noticing (in general) a serious adversion by many companies to employ staff, or if they are employing it is undertaken as a fixed term contract only. So I ask the question is this the way of future employment, FTC, casuals etc or is this just employers bracing themselves for a downturn?

There is only one answer that really makes sense, but I'm not sure it actually is a solution, if by solution you mean something that continues business as usual. The option is to use less, mainly by relocalising our economies. (Getting rid of the penis extension SUV collection won't hurt either, but the market will take care of that - 2nd hand gas guzzler values aren't that good at the moment, according to the local car yards). If oil gets progressively more expensive over the long term, then globalisation basically stops working (this can be both good news and bad - no plasma TVs, but more scope for local manufacturing). Unfortunately, so does air travel for fun and tourism.

To be clear, I don't think we're running out of oil - just that it's going to get much more expensive over the medium term (it may even get a bit cheaper in the next 6 months or so as we all go on an economically enforced energy diet, that is unless Dipshit and Dipshit decide to bomb Iran before leaving office). There are some tech solutions worth implementing, but nothing that will continue today's comfy life as is, and we'd need to get cracking to do them as none are overnight miracles.

I think the long term outlook for food is that it will be more expensive - once more good news and bad: we can grow more of our own (we're quite good at that), but fewer bananas, maybe.

Re FTC, casuals etc: depends on who you elect at the end of the year, I imagine (although Labour aren't that labour-friendly anymore...) Expectation of a recession is slowing everything down, employment first.

And on the "someone will do something - one day" comment: we're the someones.

eliot-ness
4th May 2008, 13:03
[QUOTE=rainman;1548550]

Do you have any rational basis for holding that view? I'd count myself as a cautious doomsayer and so far pretty much everything I've expected has happened. And I'm expecting near term trouble.[QUOTE]

Oil company profits depend on being able to sell their products and by far the largest percentage of customers are the ones who can barely afford it now. To increase prices to a level that effectively prices them out of the market would hardly increase profits. I've no doubt that oil will reach $300 a barrel some day, and fuel prices will keep pace, but only when incomes have risen to a level that will sustain it, and that won't be in the short term.
I've lived with these threats of high fuel prices and oil shortages since the mid 1950s when gas cost related to income was more expensive than now, but the price has alway been kept at a level that would allow more people to buy cars, not force them off the road.

What?
4th May 2008, 13:47
"The impossible has become possible," Westpac Bank chief economist Brendon O'Donovan said.

I'd like to know why Brendon O'Donovan would think that 3 clams per litre was ever "impossible". What a tosser.

The upside is, high prices are good for availablity, as there is a whole big heap of oil still to be sucked out of the ground that has hitherto not been a financially viable option. Soon it will be.

rainman
4th May 2008, 13:59
Oil company profits depend on being able to sell their products and by far the largest percentage of customers are the ones who can barely afford it now. To increase prices to a level that effectively prices them out of the market would hardly increase profits. I've no doubt that oil will reach $300 a barrel some day, and fuel prices will keep pace, but only when incomes have risen to a level that will sustain it, and that won't be in the short term.
I've lived with these threats of high fuel prices and oil shortages since the mid 1950s when gas cost related to income was more expensive than now, but the price has alway been kept at a level that would allow more people to buy cars, not force them off the road.

So, no room in your mental model for actual physical shortage then? Not to mention other geopolitical factors outside of the control of the oil co's that make supply inaccessible?

Also, your logic is flawed: if price rises and demand can keep pace (as it broadly seems to be able to do at the moment) then why would the market care that the poor people in one place are no longer buying, but the less-poor people in another place are? Supply substitution may be a problem, demand substitution is way easier, at least until we have another great depression.

avgas
4th May 2008, 14:05
i reckon the whole country should boycott the election in protest
Ummmm no it does no good.
I boycotted the last 2 elections as did 20% of NZ.
We didn't get any vacant seats in the house. They just "reshuffled" the votes.
Democracy my left arse cheek. If there was democracy there would be 20% less politicians than the previous election. not 30% more.
Also did we get an explanation as to why our income tax increased in the last 3 months?

tri boy
4th May 2008, 14:22
My Aussie oil shares are doing quite nicely thank you. (please keep buying petrol);)

Nasty
4th May 2008, 14:38
Check this out! I think we are being forewarned here, what can we do about this? It will decimate our local economy and job losses galore!!
Think of the implications $3 a litre will cause.

http://stuff.co.nz/4507628a10.html

I think the term I would use is desensitised rather than forewarned ... now they have said it once they will continue saying it!

rainman
4th May 2008, 14:49
The upside is, high prices are good for availablity, as there is a whole big heap of oil still to be sucked out of the ground that has hitherto not been a financially viable option. Soon it will be.

Now that's a theory that's been bandied about for years, it's just the value of "financially viable" always seems to change... And despite E&P costs and rig counts going up, production for the oil majors is pretty close to flat.

It's like the Alberta tar sands (which are indeed large). Despite the current high prices, they're still not forecast to ever produce more than about 3mbd. In a world where we use 83mbd or more, and need to grow this to 120mbd by 2015 to preserve BAU.

And Brazil's Tupi field (another recent largish find) is 10kms below sea level, under hot, high-pressure, highly corrosive salt deposits.

"Tapping what may be the biggest oil finds in the Western Hemisphere in three decades will require equipment that can withstand 18,000 pounds per square inch of pressure, enough to crush a pickup truck, pipes that can carry oil at temperatures above 500 degrees Fahrenheit (260 Celsius) and drill bits that can penetrate layers of salt more than one mile thick." (Bloomberg)

Possible, yes, of course. Cheap ("financially viable"?), no. And I'd bet the Brazilians will drop the Tupi project smart quick if oil backs down to $80-90 owing to a bit of recession-led demand destruction...

eliot-ness
4th May 2008, 15:24
So, no room in your mental model for actual physical shortage then? Not to mention other geopolitical factors outside of the control of the oil co's that make supply inaccessible?

Also, your logic is flawed: if price rises and demand can keep pace (as it broadly seems to be able to do at the moment) then why would the market care that the poor people in one place are no longer buying, but the less-poor people in another place are? Supply substitution may be a problem, demand substitution is way easier, at least until we have another great depression.

1/ Apart from the world war two years the first physical shortage was at the time of the Suez crisis when petrol was severely rationed in the UK and when the Arabs took over the oil fields. At that time it was forecast that oil supply would run out before the end of the century and if an alternative wasn't found cars would become obsolete. The reverse happened, New fields were found and in the 60s the number of cars increased faster than ever before and that trend continues.

2/ Oil company profits will never depend on the rich, there would be no logic in pricing ten million cars off the road in one country in the hope that ten million in a more affluent country would make up the shortfall. The future of increasing profits relies on increasing use of the product worldwide, not just for the exclusive use for the few who can still afford it. That would be a rapidly descending spiral into oblivion

Personally I prefer to remain optimistic, and my forecast is that the number of cars on the road will double in the next twenty years, China, with it's low average income will become the worlds biggest oil consumer; and the pessimists will still be forecasting doom and gloom. I may just hang around long enough to see it.

rainman
4th May 2008, 17:25
1/ Apart from the world war two years the first physical shortage was at the time of the Suez crisis when petrol was severely rationed in the UK and when the Arabs took over the oil fields. At that time it was forecast that oil supply would run out before the end of the century and if an alternative wasn't found cars would become obsolete. The reverse happened, New fields were found and in the 60s the number of cars increased faster than ever before and that trend continues.

So, drawing conclusions from this:
a) shortages have occurred in the past, causing rationing (and price hikes, I'd expect?)
b) however around 1956 some forecasts of depletion were made which have proven not to be absolutely accurate
...therefore, ignoring the fact that oil production is affected by a wide range of factors that are just about impossible to predict with the accuracy you seem to demand, all will be peachy evermore for our current motoring lifestyle? Infinite growth is fine - because we found more oil before, we will always continue to do so? That's a big claim to have to prove.

Around 1956 Hubbert predicted the peak (not running out, maxing out) of US lower 48 states oil production. He got that right to within a year or so (1971). How's that fit your model?

There were indeed more discoveries in the 60's and 70's, but discovery peaked in the 60's. How's that fit your model?


2/ Oil company profits will never depend on the rich, there would be no logic in pricing ten million cars off the road in one country in the hope that ten million in a more affluent country would make up the shortfall. The future of increasing profits relies on increasing use of the product worldwide, not just for the exclusive use for the few who can still afford it. That would be a rapidly descending spiral into oblivion

But if there is steady demand (not hope of demand) from China and India at a price that most of Africa can't afford, then there is no problem in sustaining the high prices, even if it means the Africans have major impacts to their transport and agriculture systems. Markets aren't inherently moral or equitable - if a buyer will pay, the price will rise.


Personally I prefer to remain optimistic, and my forecast is that the number of cars on the road will double in the next twenty years, China, with it's low average income will become the worlds biggest oil consumer; and the pessimists will still be forecasting doom and gloom. I may just hang around long enough to see it.

Good luck with that. Optimism is useful, because we do currently still have a great opportunity. Blind optimism as an article of faith is just silly.

I agree China and India will continue to be big in relative terms, and even that they will growth their share of oil, but the pie is likely to be shrinking in the medium term, and staying about the same size for the short term - a plateau followed by a decline, in other words. In the meantime, increasing demand as the BRICs industrialise, plus lower export quantities as the exporters increase domestic use, will lead to more expensive oil for the rest of us. We are a long way from running out, but the age of cheap oil is over.

eliot-ness
4th May 2008, 18:29
So, drawing conclusions from this:
a) shortages have occurred in the past, causing rationing (and price hikes, I'd expect?)
b) however around 1956 some forecasts of depletion were made which have proven not to be absolutely accurate
...therefore, ignoring the fact that oil production is affected by a wide range of factors that are just about impossible to predict with the accuracy you seem to demand, all will be peachy evermore for our current motoring lifestyle? Infinite growth is fine - because we found more oil before, we will always continue to do so? That's a big claim to have to prove.

Around 1956 Hubbert predicted the peak (not running out, maxing out) of US lower 48 states oil production. He got that right to within a year or so (1971). How's that fit your model?

There were indeed more discoveries in the 60's and 70's, but discovery peaked in the 60's. How's that fit your model?



But if there is steady demand (not hope of demand) from China and India at a price that most of Africa can't afford, then there is no problem in sustaining the high prices, even if it means the Africans have major impacts to their transport and agriculture systems. Markets aren't inherently moral or equitable - if a buyer will pay, the price will rise.



Good luck with that. Optimism is useful, because we do currently still have a great opportunity. Blind optimism as an article of faith is just silly.

I agree China and India will continue to be big in relative terms, and even that they will growth their share of oil, but the pie is likely to be shrinking in the medium term, and staying about the same size for the short term - a plateau followed by a decline, in other words. In the meantime, increasing demand as the BRICs industrialise, plus lower export quantities as the exporters increase domestic use, will lead to more expensive oil for the rest of us. We are a long way from running out, but the age of cheap oil is over.

a/ Shortages of oil have never occured in the past. The Suez crisis escalated in a war between France, Britain and Egypt which in turn resulted in a shortage of supply and rationing in the UK. The price hikes were within the customers ability to pay, as always.

b/ Forecasts from that time were not simply inaccurate, they were totally wrong, as has been proved. Production now, nearly 50 years later is higher than ever before. c/ I have never demanded total accuracy, never even mentioned it, but a bit better than total inaccuracy would be an improvement.
Nor have I said "everything will be peachy evermore for our motoring lifestyle" The words I used in my first post were, "in the near future".

c/ Peak oil production can be predicted to the day, if you are in charge of production. Production now is limited to keep prices stable and it can be, and is, increased or decreased on demand to control prices.

d/ China is unlikely in the next 50 years or so to reach the level of income that most other developed countries enjoy. At the moment the average hourly rate is lower than that of Mexico. Yet the number of vehicles on their roads is increasing faster than anywhere else in the world. Could it be that oil is supplied to them at a lower price? ie. a price the customer can afford.

Finally. My optimism is far from blind. It's built on a fairly long lifetime of observation and, being an incurable optimist, I still enjoy life.
Pessimism however is an excercise in futility. Its only reward, if you manage to get it right, is to say "I told you so" when everyone else has forgotten what you said in the first place.

rainman
4th May 2008, 19:09
a/ Shortages of oil have never occured in the past. The Suez crisis escalated in a war between France, Britain and Egypt which in turn resulted in a shortage of supply and rationing in the UK.
Um, apart from the example you cite, how about 1973, and 1979?


The price hikes were within the customers ability to pay, as always.
The price hikes were within some customers ability to pay, as always.


b/ Forecasts from that time were not simply inaccurate, they were totally wrong...
What's "totally wrong"? Out by 10-15 years over a period of over a hundred? Besides, how does even a hundred incorrect forecasts mean that a peak can't occur?


c/ Peak oil production can be predicted to the day, if you are in charge of production.
I'm sorry, but that's just horseshit. It's just about impossible to estimate the size of oil provinces that accurately, and both demand and supply are affected by a range of factors which are hard to model. You obviously have no idea what you're talking about.

eliot-ness
4th May 2008, 19:42
Um, apart from the example you cite, how about 1973, and 1979?


The price hikes were within some customers ability to pay, as always.


What's "totally wrong"? Out by 10-15 years over a period of over a hundred? Besides, how does even a hundred incorrect forecasts mean that a peak can't occur?


I'm sorry, but that's just horseshit. It's just about impossible to estimate the size of oil provinces that accurately, and both demand and supply are affected by a range of factors which are hard to model. You obviously have no idea what you're talking about.

Once again for the less literate readers.
A/ Shortage of "supply" are the words I used. Nothing to do with the amount of oil availlable. There was a war on. Getting it from A to B was the problem.

B/ The number of cars on the road in the UK continued to increase despite higher prices and rationing and yes, even the lower paid still managed to run them.

C/ Don't know where your 100 comes from.The predictions were made in the late 50s and still haven't eventuated.

D/ the size of the oil fields has nothing to do with "controlling" supply. OPEC supply on demand and have total control of how much they supply.

E/ I have even less idea of what you are talking about.

Mike748
4th May 2008, 22:06
.........

But if there is steady demand (not hope of demand) from China and India at a price that most of Africa can't afford, then there is no problem in sustaining the high prices, even if it means the Africans have major impacts to their transport and agriculture systems. Markets aren't inherently moral or equitable - if a buyer will pay, the price will rise.

.............

I agree China and India will continue to be big in relative terms, and even that they will growth their share of oil, but the pie is likely to be shrinking in the medium term, and staying about the same size for the short term - a plateau followed by a decline, in other words. In the meantime, increasing demand as the BRICs industrialise, plus lower export quantities as the exporters increase domestic use, will lead to more expensive oil for the rest of us. We are a long way from running out, but the age of cheap oil is over.


Agreed

Simply put if it were my business I would:
-take any opportunity to reduce production costs eg produce less.
-preserve oil stocks for future sales eg produce less.
-supply just enough oil that alternative products remain non viable.
-make sure I had a good handle on the alternatives.



................
2/ Oil company profits will never depend on the rich, there would be no logic in pricing ten million cars off the road in one country in the hope that ten million in a more affluent country would make up the shortfall. The future of increasing profits relies on increasing use of the product worldwide, not just for the exclusive use for the few who can still afford it. That would be a rapidly descending spiral into oblivion.

Why not?. Cream it while you can and if the rich run out of money or find an alternative then drop your price. The more money you make for less product the better.

Then to top it off make sure the cheap alternative to be supplied to the less wealthy is also your product, of course it won't be anywhere near as good as it could be because you don't want the competition.

puddytat
4th May 2008, 22:15
Ahhh your splittin hairs...personally I think we're stuffed,dont you fellas believe in the word of GOD as written by several eternally squabbling religions about the end being nigh? Funny how they have quite alot in common....

rainman
4th May 2008, 22:43
c/ Peak oil production can be predicted to the day, if you are in charge of production.


D/ the size of the oil fields has nothing to do with "controlling" supply. OPEC supply on demand and have total control of how much they supply.

- Peak oil is the point when we produce more than we ever will again, the top of the "bell curve"
- Given no one country or organisation controls oil (it's a market) this ends up being roughly aligned with about 50% of the available reserves being used, although several factors affect this. Hopefully when we hit peak we've used less than 50%, not more, because that means a fast crash on the other side.
- Even in an individual province under single control, unless you know the total endowment you can't meaningfully guarantee peak production "to the day", particularly since production is affected by demand in the real world
- Despite this intrinsic uncertainty it is still logical to conclude that a peak will happen, and reasonable to forecast it based on aggregate performance of provinces to date (eg. US peaked in 1971, Iran in 1974, Mexico in 2004, Norway in 2001, UK in 1999. Production is falling in 60 countries).
- There is some debate about exactly when this will happen but it is generally accepted that it will happen, even by mainstream economists and oil co execs (eg Chevron)
- Optimists cluster their forecasts around 2030ish, doomers around now
- Either way there is not a lot of time to address the issue given the magnitude of the task. Markets can help solve this but we are the (literal) drivers of those markets. Now is the time for a rational debate on whether to restructure our economies to reduce our dependence on oil.


A/ Shortage of "supply" are the words I used. Nothing to do with the amount of oil availlable. There was a war on. Getting it from A to B was the problem.
So there was an effective shortage, but not at some theoretical overall level. Pardon me if I don't care about the semantics when the effective shortage of oil causes my actual fuel price to skyrocket and the real economy to tank, despite there being another trillon or so theoretical barrels in the ground.


C/ Don't know where your 100 comes from.The predictions were made in the late 50s and still haven't eventuated.
Fair cop, I was referring to the total length of the oil age, and didn't make that clear. All economic predictions are fraught with error (yes, even mine!) - consider those fools (cough, Yergin) who have continually predicted oil at $35 despite all evidence to the contrary. Or our MED forecast, which has been consistently wrong while the greenie nutbar peaknik forecast has been far more accurate.

It's just a risk management problem, with very incomplete information, but high stakes.