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NEWSLETTER #59
April 13, 2004
Oil News Briefs

>From "The Global Energy Outlook for the 21st Century," a lecture
delivered on May 21, 2003 by Peter R. Odell, Professor Emeritus at the
Erasmus University in Rotterdam, where he was the Director of the Center
for International Energy Studies:

     Finally, a word of caution on the essential fragility of a
     study on the very long-term future for the world's energy
     supply which accepts without question the validity of the
     original 18th century hypothesis that all oil and gas
     resources have been generated from biological matter in the
     chemical and thermodynamic environments of the earth's crust.
     There is an alternative theory - already 50 years old - which
     suggests an inorganic origin for additional oil and gas. This
     alternative view is widely accepted in the countries of the
     former Soviet Union where, it is claimed, "large volumes of
     hydrocarbons are being produced from the pre-Cambrian
     crystalline basement". Recent applications of the inorganic
     theory have, however, also led to claims for the possibility
     of the Middle East fields being able to produce oil "forever"
     and to the concept of repleting oil and gas fields in the gulf
     of Mexico. More generally, it is argued, "all giant fields are
     most logically explained by inorganic theory because simple
     calculations of potential hydrocarbon contents in sediments
     shows that organic materials are too few to supply the volumes
     of petroleum involved."

     The significance of the alternative theory of the origin of
     additional oil and gas potential is self evident for the issue
     of the longevity of hydrocarbons' production potential and
     production costs in the 21st century. Instead of having to
     consider a stock reserve already accumulated in a finite
     number of so-called oil and gas plays, the possibility emerges
     of evaluating hydrocarbons as essentially renewable resources
     in the context of whatever demand developments may emerge. If
     fields do replete because the oil and gas extracted from them
     is abyssal and abiotic (based on chemical reactions under
     specific thermodynamic conditions deep in the earth's mantle),
     then extraction costs should not rise as production from such
     fields continues for an indefinite period. Neither do
     estimates of reserves, reserves-to-production ratios and
     annual rates of discovery and additions to reserves have any
     of the importance correctly attributed to them in evaluating
     the future supply prospects under the organic theory of oil
     and gas' derivation. In essence, the "ball park" in which
     consideration of the issues relating to the future of oil and
     gas has hitherto been made would no longer remain relevant.
     [more:
     http://www.clingendael.nl/ciep/pdf/Odell_2003_05_21_lecture.pdf]

>From "The New Pessimism about Petroleum Resources: Debunking the Hubbert
Model (and Hubbert Modelers)," by Michael C. Lynch, president of
Strategic Energy and Economic Research, Inc. and research affiliate at
the Center for International Studies, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology:

     Recently, numerous publications have appeared warning that oil
     production is near an unavoidable, geologically-determined
     peak that could have consequences up to and including "war,
     starvation, economic recession, possibly even the extinction
     of homo sapiens" (Campbell in Ruppert). The current series of
     alarmist articles could be said to be merely reincarnations of
     earlier work which proved fallacious, but the authors insist
     that they have made significant advances in their analyses,
     overcoming earlier errors. For a number of reasons, this work
     has been nearly impenetrable to many observers, which seems to
     have lent it an added cachet. However, careful examination of
     the data and methods, as well as extensive perusal of the
     writings, suggests that the opacity of the work is - at best -
     obscuring the inconclusive nature of their research.

     Some of the arguments about resource scarcity resemble those
     made in the 1970s. They have noted that discoveries are low
     (as did Wilson (1977) and that estimates of ultimately
     recoverable resources (URR) are in the range of 2 trillion
     barrels, approximately twice production to date. But beyond
     that, Campbell and Leherrere in particular claim that they
     have developed accurate estimates of URR, and thus, this time
     the wolf is really here. But careful examination of their work
     reveals instead a pattern of errors and mistaken assumptions
     presented as conclusive research results.

     The Hubbert Curve

     The initial theory behind what is now known as the Hubbert
     curve was very simplistic. Hubbert was simply trying to
     estimate approximate resource levels, and for the lower-48 US,
     he thought a bell-curve would be the most appropriate form. It
     was only later that the Hubbert curve came to be seen as
     explanatory in and of itself, that is, geology requires that
     production should follow such a curve [editor's note: if, that
     is, petroleum is organic in origin]. Indeed, for many years,
     Hubbert himself published no equations for deriving the curve,
     and it appears that he only used a rough estimation initially.
     In his 1956 paper, in fact, he noted that production often did
     not follow a bell curve. In later years, however, he seems to
     have accepted the curve as explanatory.

     [...]

     Revival of the Hubbert Method

     The recent authors, notably Campbell and Leherrere have
     apparently rediscovered the Hubbert curve, but without
     understanding it, at least initially. Campbell and Leherrere
     initially argued that production should follow a bell curve,
     at least in an unconstrained province. But this is
     demonstrably not the case in practice: most nations'
     production does not follow a Hubbert curve. In fact, Campbell
     (2003) shows production curves (historical and forecast) for
     51 non-OPEC countries, and only 8 of them could be said to
     resemble a Hubbert curve even approximately.

     The authors initially responded to this weakness by arguing
     the Hubbert curve could have multiple peaks, which of course
     means it would not follow a bell curve at all, and destroys
     the explanatory value of the bell curve. As the alleged value
     of the Hubbert curve lies partly in demonstrating the
     production decline post-peak, not knowing whether any given
     peak is the final one renders this useless, nor would the peak
     imply that midpoint production had been reached (indicating
     URR).

     Recognizing this, the theory has been modified again, to "The
     important message from Hubbert's work, which is often
     forgotten by economists, is that oil has to be found before it
     can be produced." (Laherrere 2001b, p.4) In other words, the
     Hubbert curve, originally held as scientific and inviolable,
     is of no particular value. Yet the authors have not only
     mistakenly believed in its properties, they have not been
     forthcoming about their own errors.

     [...]

     Opaque Work, Unproven Assertions

     The lack of rigor in many of the Hubbert modelers' arguments
     makes them hard to refute. The huge amount of writing, along
     with undocumented quotes and vague remarks, necessitates
     exhaustive review and response ...

     Perhaps because they are not academics, the primary authors
     have a tendency to publish results but not research. In fact,
     by relying heavily on a proprietary database, Campbell and
     Leherrere have generated a strong shield against criticism of
     their work, making it nearly impossible to reproduce or check.
     Similarly, there is little or no research published, merely
     the assertion that the results are good.
     [much more at: http://www.energyseer.com/NewPessimism.pdf]

>From James Bernstein's "Oil Giants Taking Heat," Newsday, March 31,
2004:

     Worried about a downward slide in oil prices later this year,
     OPEC is expected today to announce a cut in production, which
     will likely result in higher pump prices. But consumer groups
     are charging that big oil companies are largely responsible
     for the current upward spiral in gasoline costs, saying they
     have deliberately withheld supplies and reduced storage
     capacity.

     [...]

     But in the United States, consumer groups say the blame for
     higher pump prices lies not so much with OPEC as with the huge
     oil companies. Public Citizen, a Washington, D.C.-based
     watchdog organization, is preparing to release a report later
     this week charging that the oil industry deliberately
     consolidated in the 1990s so that it could withhold supplies
     and reduce storage capacity.

     [...]

     The Consumer Federation of America said in a recent report
     that in the past 15 years, more than 70 refineries in the
     United States were closed. Additionally, its report said, the
     nation's storage facilities were reduced by nearly 15 percent.
     Mark Cooper, the organization's research director, said an
     updated report is expected soon.

     "The problem is not crude oil," Cooper said. "It's inadequate
     refinery capacity and inadequate stockpiles, all of which are
     the result of decisions made by the oil companies to tighten
     the market."
     [more:
     
http://www.nynewsday.com/business/local/newyork/ny-bzoil313730511mar31,0,4111615.story]

>From "Mergers, Manipulation and Mirages: How Oil Companies Keep Gasoline
Prices High, and Why the Energy Bill Doesn't Help" (March 2004), the
Public Citizen report referenced in the Newsday article:

     The United States has allowed multiple large, vertically
     integrated oil companies to merge over the last five years,
     placing control of the market in too few hands. The result:
     uncompetitive domestic gasoline markets. Large oil companies
     can more easily control domestic gasoline prices by exploiting
     their ever-greater market share, keeping prices artificially
     high long enough to rake in easy profits but not so long that
     consumers reduce their dependence on oil ...

     The largest five companies operating in the United States
     (ExxonMobil, Chevron Texaco, ConocoPhillips, BP and Royal
     Dutch Shell) now control:

         * 14.2% of global oil production (nearly as much as the
     entire Middle East members of the OPEC cartel).
         * 48% of domestic oil production (which is significant
     given the fact that the U.S. is the 3rd largest oil producer
     in the world).
         * 50.3% of domestic refinery capacity.
         * 61.8% of the retail gas market.
         * These same five companies also control 21.3% of domestic
     natural gas production.

     It is therefore little wonder why these top companies enjoyed
     after-tax profits of $60 billion in 2003 alone.

     These figures are in stark contrast to just a decade ago, when
     the top five oil companies controlled only:

         * 7.7% of global crude oil production.
         * 33.7% of domestic crude production
         * 33.4% of domestic refinery capacity.
         * 27% of the retail market.
         * In addition, in 1993, the top five U.S. companies
     controlled only 12.7% of domestic natural gas production.

     The major difference between 1993 and 2003 is that the largest
     oil companies have merged with one another, creating just a
     handful of oil monopolies that control significant chunks of
     the American oil and gas markets. Armed with significant
     market share, companies can more easily pursue uncompetitive
     activities that result in price-gouging ...

     Gasoline prices are rising because of uncompetitive actions by
     this handful of new mega-companies, not because of
     environmental regulations ...

     The U.S. Federal Trade Commission (FTC) concluded in March
     2001 that oil companies had intentionally withheld supplies of
     gasoline from the market as a tactic to drive up prices -- all
     as a "profit-maximizing strategy." These actions, while
     costing consumers billions of dollars in overcharges, have not
     been investigated by the U.S. government.

     ... Since 2001, President Bush has been removing more than
     100,000 barrels of oil a day from the market to stock the SPR
     [Strategic Petroleum Reserve], filling it by more than 100
     million barrels since he's been in office to over 640 million
     barrels -- well more than 90% capacity. President Bush's
     actions, while providing more than enough protection against
     external supply shocks, severely strains domestic supplies for
     the market.

     [...]

     Companies have exploited [their] strong market position to
     intentionally restrict refining capacity by driving smaller,
     independent refiners out of business. A congressional
     investigation uncovered internal memos written by the major
     oil companies operating in the U.S. discussing their
     successful strategies to maximize profits by forcing
     independent refiners out of business, resulting in tighter
     refinery capacity. From 1995-2002, 97% of the more than
     920,000 barrels of oil per day capacity that have been shut
     down were owned and operated by smaller, independent refiners.

     [...]

     If these allegations of price gouging sound too conspiratorial
     for some to accept, examples in related industries demonstrate
     that price-fixing, collusion and price-gouging are regular
     occurrences in today's economy, as large corporations
     routinely abuse their market power to engage in
     anti-competitive behavior.

     [...]

     Contracts representing hundreds of millions of barrels of oil
     are traded every day on the London, New York and other energy
     trading exchanges. An increased share of this trading,
     however, has been moved off regulated exchanges such as the
     New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX) and into unregulated
     Over-the-Counter (OTC) exchanges. Traders operating on
     exchanges like NYMEX are required to disclose significant
     detail of their trades to federal regulators. But traders in
     OTC exchanges are not required to disclose such information
     allowing companies like Enron, ExxonMobil, and Goldman Sachs
     to escape federal oversight and more easily engage in
     manipulation strategies.

     The growth of these OTC exchanges exploded in 2000 when
     Congress passed the Commodity Futures Modernization Act. The
     Act, among other things, punched a large loophole in
     government of energy trading by greatly expanding the ability
     of traders to operate in unregulated over-the-counter
     exchanges. These OTC markets do not feature the tighter
     regulation that typically applies to traders engaged in
     regulated exchanges, such as the New York Mercantile Exchange
     (NYMEX). Since this deregulation law took effect, the industry
     - led by Enron - has been plagued by dozens of high-profile
     scandals attributed to the lack of adequate regulatory
     oversight over traders' operations. Free from government
     transparency regulations, energy traders have demonstrated an
     ability to manipulate prices more easily.

     [...]

     The fuel economy average for passenger vehicles in the U.S.
     peaked in 1988. Due to the changing mix of vehicles on the
     road and the absence of meaningful government action, the
     average is currently lower today than it was a decade ago.
     This fuel economy is stagnating because no new significant car
     or truck fuel economy standards have taken effect for 15
     years, and SUVs and pickups are subject to lower standards
     than regular autos.
     [full report: http://www.citizen.org/documents/oilmergers.pdf]

>From a press release for the Consumer Federation of America report (July
2001) referenced in the Newsday Article:

     Gas price increases are not mainly the result of any change in
     crude oil prices. Instead, they have been caused principally
     by growing industry concentration that has allowed refiners
     and marketers to reduce refining and storage capacity and
     withhold supplies in individual markets. Between 1994 and
     1999:

         * Over ten percent of the nation's refineries and branded
     gasoline stations were closed. In the past 15 years, more than
     70 refineries were closed.
         * The nation's petroleum storage facilities were reduced
     by nearly fifteen percent.
         * The industry systematically lowered stocks on hand to
     the point where only a one or two-day supply above minimum
     levels was available to keep the country's gasoline
     distribution running (compared to a supply of a bout a week in
     the 1980s)

     This consolidation and concentration has been permitted by
     mergers that allowed the industry to manipulate prices. By
     standards of the Reagan Administration's Justice Department,
     four-fifths of the national refinery and gasoline markets now
     are considered to be dangerously concentrated.

     "A concentrated, vertically integrated industry has responded
     slowly to price shocks and has even acted to keep supplies off
     the market," noted Cooper. "While the industry complains that
     clean air standards requiring different additives in different
     markets restrict region-to-region flows of gasoline, these
     requirements actually give individual suppliers greater market
     power, aggravating the concentration problem," added Cooper.

     Over the past two years, the refiner/marketer share of the
     pump price has more than doubled, escalating industry profits.
     Compared to 1999, in 2000 net income from refining and
     marketing doubled. In the first quarter of 2001, profits
     increased by nearly 75 percent.
     [full report: http://www.consumerfed.org/gaspricespiral.pdf]

Lastly, these interesting comments from some correspondence by the late
Colonel L. Fletcher Prouty:

     Oil is often called a 'fossil' fuel; the idea being that it
     comes from formerly living organisms. This may have been
     plausible back when oil wells were drilled into the fossil
     layers of the earth's crust; but today, great quantities of
     oil are found in deeper wells that are found below the level
     of any fossils. How could then oil have come from fossils, or
     decomposed former living matter, if it exists in rock
     formations far below layers of fossils - the evidence of
     formerly living organisms? It must not come from living matter
     at all!

     [...]

     This response is for Daniel E. Reynolds, 29 July 1996 on the
     subject of "Oil - A renewable and abiotic Fuel?"

     Dan, your use of the word "abiotic" is good. As a non-fossil
     fuel, petroleum has no living antecedent. It contains chemical
     elements found in living matter; but it is not "formerly
     living matter." There has not been enough true "formerly
     living matter" through all of creation to account for the
     volume of petroleum that has been consumed to date.

     My background in this subject goes back to 1943. I was the
     pilot who flew a U.S. Geological Survey Team from Casablanca
     to Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. We met the Cal. Standard Oil team
     holding down that lease. Then we went back to Cairo to meet
     President Roosevelt during the Nov. 1943 "Cairo Conference"
     with Churchill and Chiang Kai Shek. FDR ordered the immediate
     construction of an oil refinery there for WW II use. This led
     to ARAMCO.

     During the "Energy Crisis" of the 1970's I was detailed to
     represent the U.S. Railroad industry as a member of the
     "Federal Staff Energy Seminar" program started by the Center
     for Strategic and International Studies, sponsored by
     Georgetown University. That began in Jan 1974 and continued
     for four years. It was designed to discuss "the working of the
     United States national energy system, and new horizons of
     energy research." Among the regular attendees were such men as
     Henry Kissinger and James Schlesinger...most valuable
     meetings.

     During one meeting we took a "Buffet Break" and I was seated
     with Arthur Kantrowitz of the AVCO Company..."Kantrowitz Labs"
     near Boston. At the table with us were four young geologists
     busily talking about Petroleum. At one point one of them made
     reference to "Petroleum as organic matter, and a fossil fuel."
     Right out of the Rockefeller bible.

     Kantrowitz turned to the geologist beside him and asked, "Do
     you really believe that petroleum is a fossil fuel?" The man
     said, "Certainly" and all four of them joined in. Kantrowitz
     listened quietly and then said, "The deepest fossil ever found
     has been at about 16,000 feet below sea level; yet we are
     getting oil from wells drilled to 30,000 and more. How could
     fossil fuel get down there? If it was once living matter, it
     had to be on the surface. If it did turn into petroleum, at or
     near the surface, how could it ever get to such depths? What
     is heavier Oil or Water?" Water: so it would go down, not oil.
     Oil would be on top, if it were "organic" and "lighter."

     "Oil is neither."

     They all agreed water was heavier, and therefore if there was
     some crack or other open area for this "Organic matter" to go
     deep into the magma of Earth, water would have to go first and
     oil would be left nearer the surface. This is reasonable. Even
     if we do agree that "magma" is a "crude mixture of minerals or
     organic matters, in a thin pasty state" this does not make it
     petroleum, and if it were petroleum it would have stayed near
     the surface as heavier items, i.e. water seeped below.

     My D. Van Nostrand "Scientific Encyclopedia" says "Magma is
     the term for molten material. A natural, complex, liquid, high
     temperature, silicate solution ancestral to all igneous rocks,
     both intrusive and effusive. The origin of Magma is not
     known." My "Oxford English Dictionary" does not even have the
     word "Magma."

     Some years ago I wrote two or three pages that appeared in the
     McGraw Hill Yearbook of Science and Technology, i.e. "Railroad
     Engineering." Even that source is a bit uncertain about the
     "origin of petroleum" to wit:

     "Less than 1% of the organic matter that originates in or is
     transported to the marine environment is eventually
     incorporated into ocean sediment," and

     "Most petroleum is formed during catagenesis (undefined
     anywhere). If sufficient organic matter is present oceanic
     sediments that undergo this process are potential petroleum
     sources. Deeply buried marine organic matter yields mainly
     oil, whereas land plant material yields mainly gas." (Their
     idea of "deeply buried" is the "out.")

     All this leaves us no where. I still go with Kantrowitz. Since
     oil is lighter than water, everywhere on Earth, there is no
     way that petroleum could be an organic, fossil fuel that is
     created on or near the surface, and penetrate Earth ahead of
     water. Oil must originate far below and gradually work its way
     up into well-depth areas accessable to surface drilling. It
     comes from far below. Therefore, petroleum is not a "Fossil"
     fuel with a surface or near surface origin.

     It was made to be thought a "Fossil" fuel by the Nineteenth
     [sic] oil producers to create the concept that it was of
     limited supply and therefore extremely valuable. This fits
     with the "Depletion" allowance philosophical scam.

     During one of our C.S.I.S. "International Nights" (1978) the
     Common Market Energy boss, M. Montibrial of France, told us
     that while petroleum was being marketed then for $20.00 per
     barrel or more, it cost no more than 25 cents per barrel at
     the well-head. There is our petroleum problem! We were paying
     more than $1.50-$1.60 per gallon, one 42nd of a barrel, at
     that time. Interested folks need to learn more about the
     Chartered Institute of Transport, and not waste their time
     with OPEC, the "Cover" story.

     Those who pumped the Pennsylvania wells "dry" during the late
     eighteen hundreds saved what they had for those better days.

     L. Fletcher Prouty
     [http://www.prouty.org/oil.html]

* * * * * * * * * *

I leave you all now with a very special Easter gift. Follow the link
below and you will be rewarded with a rather unique little morsel of
poetry reading. This gentleman seems to have (quite unwittingly)
pioneered a new genre that I think could best be described as 'Christian
porn poetry.' Drop by and have a listen. You'll be glad you did. I think
he got the title wrong though; he should have gone with "The Passion of
the Christ: The Condensed Version."
[http://www.rgpoetry.com/wethinkwereright2s.mpg]



(Permission is hereby granted for this material to be widely distributed
and reposted, provided that the content is not altered in any way.)


www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
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