The following article is from The Vancouver Sun newspaper in Vancouver
BC, one of Canada's most respected dailies.  Its website is at
http://www.vancouversun.com.

Sam:I almost jumped out of bus seat when I read this is my daily Conrad
Black owned rag. Gwynne Dyer is a well known talking head-blowhard type
from the CBC TV news. Interestingly, about half way through he mentions
the word Crash and yes capitalized. Mark or Tom or whoever is
administrating  is this guy subbed to the Crash list. Maybe the good
denizens of the crash list are making progress. There are some poor
parts of this articles like taking Paul Krugman seriously. 

Oil's precarious future

Motorists, truckers and farmers protest as global oil stocks dwindle and
Third World industrialization sends demand soaring. The need for further
development of conservation measures and alternative energy is urgent.

Gwynne Dyer Vancouver Sun

A barrel of crude oil still costs less than a barrel of Coke or a barrel
of Perrier water, as the website of the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries (OPEC) helpfully points out.
For all the screams of anguish about the recent steep rise in price, oil
is actually selling at the moment for around its average price over the
past 30 years. But the next 30 years are going to be very different,
because we will soon be running out of the stuff.
Three years ago, geologist Craig Bond Hatfield of the University of
Toledo calculated that even if global oil consumption remained steady,
worldwide oil production would go into absolute decline by 2036. But it
isn't remaining steady; it's going up each year, so the deadline is a
lot closer than that.

There has been some progress in the West in economizing on the use of
oil, mainly because the "new economy" gets a lot of its growth in areas
that don't use large amounts of energy. American economist Paul Krugman
estimates that the U.S. burns only half as much oil per dollar of gross
domestic product as it did in the early 1970s. But Western oil
consumption hasn't actually fallen, and elsewhere it's soaring.

The surge of economic growth in industrializing Third World countries
means that global oil consumption has risen from 59.7 million barrels a
day in 1985 to 69 million b/d in 1995, and 75 million b/d this year.
When you factor in this continuing growth in consumption, according to
Hatfield, the date when total world production peaks moves up to 2011.

No doubt there is more oil still to be discovered, but the trendline is
undeniable. Since 1985, each year's newly discovered oil reserves have
amounted to only about 40 per cent of that year's global oil
consumption. By now it's down to 25 per cent.
Even the conservative International Energy Agency agrees with Hatfield's
figures, estimating that somewhere between 2009 and 2012 global oil
production, after rising steadily for 140 years, will peak and start
down again. By 2020, about one-fifth of the predicted consumption will
have to come from "unidentified unconventional" sources (i.e. they have
no idea where it's coming from).

 By 2040, according to other studies, total global oil production may be
down to less than half what it is now.
What will this do to the global industrial economy that we have built
largely on oil over the past century and a half? Well, if we don't have
time to develop and put into place alternatives sources of energy to
carry the load that is now borne by oil, it will simply crash in ruins.

Alternative energy sources can be developed. We even have a good idea
what sorts of technologies would be involved, from solar power to fuel
cells. But we will need a very long time to shift an entire world's
industrial plant and transportation system over from oil.
So if we are not to have the Crash of all time in 10 or 15 years, two
things must start happening soon: serious oil conservation measures, to
give us more time for the transition, and a big push to get the
alternative technologies out of the labs and on to the streets.

In a market-driven economy, that means the price of oil needs to go up,
and stay up. No more wild fluctuations between $8 and $35 a barrel
within an 18-month period; just a steady rise towards, say $40 a barrel
by late next year, and then further gradual rises towards about $60 per
barrel by 2005. Is this break with the traditional pattern possible?

Yes, because power is moving back towards OPEC, whose long-term interest
is in sustainable higher prices.
What has driven the huge gyrations of oil prices over the past three
decades has been the fact that whenever OPEC's deliberate strategy or
incidents like the Iranian revolution or the Gulf War drove them up, the
industrialized countries would invest more in their own (higher-cost)
oilfields. Increased non-OPEC production, together with a recession
caused by the high oil prices, would then cause a world glut of oil and
bring prices back down.
But there are no more North Seas and Alaskan North Slopes waiting to be
developed. The West can pull off this trick at most once more -- and
maybe not at all.

OPEC's share of the world's remaining proven reserves has gone up from
67 per cent to 78 per cent in the past 10 years. Moreover, even within
OPEC, power is shifting toward the big Middle Eastern oil producers with
relatively small populations. At the moment, OPEC as a whole supplies 41
per cent of the world's oil. By 2010, its Middle Eastern members alone
will account for half the world's production.

Unlike OPEC members like Venezuela, Nigeria and Indonesia, who need
every dollar they can squeeze out right away, the cartel's Middle
Eastern members (with the exception of Iran) are countries that can
afford to restrict production in the short term in order to push prices
up. It's wonderful when the world's long-term best interest coincides
with your own self-interest, so they probably will.
And will these higher prices slow down the growth of the world's
industrial economies? Of course they will -- but it's generally a good
idea to slow down when you're driving straight towards the edge of a
cliff.
Gwynne Dyer Canadian journalist on international affairs based in
London.


The article you just read is from The Vancouver Sun newspaper in
Vancouver BC. Looking for a job in Vancouver? Try our Careerclick site
at http://www.careerclick.com/bc.  Canucks fan? Follow the team at
http://www.thecanucks.com.

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