Too hectic to transcribe the segment on Shell oil/Reserve replacment
right now, but this just showed up on my site newsfeed
<http://leighm.net/wp/e-news/>, and says it all:

"...there is enough to last about 40 years."
"...the world's oil reserves are up to 80 percent less than predicted."
"They (Sweden's University of Uppsala) claim that production levels
will peak by 2013."

Suck it up 'deniers'... 'straw-conspiracy' bashers.

Your Priuses (priusi? prii?) will soon be 'mini-flower planters'.


Leigh

June 19, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- The debate over how much readily accessible
oil remains on Earth has been revived with the release of a new report
that suggests there is enough to last about 40 years.

But critics say British Petroleum's 2007 "Statistical Review Of World
Energy," released this month, is far too optimistic.

In 2003, a team of scientists from Sweden's University of Uppsala
presented evidence that purported to prove that the world's oil
reserves are up to 80 percent less than predicted. They claim that
production levels will peak by 2013.

Colin Campbell, a former chief geologist and vice president of BP,
disagrees with the company's latest oil-reserve estimates. He recently
explained in the "Independent" that he believes the production of
regular oil, the kind which is easy and cheap to extract, peaked in
2005. By his estimates oil will become a rare commodity by 2011.

And Campbell confesses that he mistrusts figures provided by oil
companies. He told the "Independent" in a recent article that, "When I
was the boss of an oil company I would never tell the truth. It's not
part of the game."

Saudi And Russian Reserves

Estimates of proven oil reserves in the Middle East have befuddled
analysts for years because the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia has kept
estimates of its reserves a state secret.

BP estimates of countries' oil reserves:

Iran: 86.7 years
Kazakhstan: 76.5
Saudi Arabia: 66.7
Azerbaijan: 29.3
Russia: 22.3 years
India: 19.3
United States: 12
China: 12
Turkmenistan: 9.2
United Kingdom: 6.5

Nevertheless, the BP report states that by the end of 2006, Saudi
Arabia had reserves of 264.3 billion barrels, or almost 30 percent of
the world's reserves.

Matthew Simmons, author of "Twilight In The Desert -- The Coming Saudi
Oil Shock And The World Economy," published in 2005, believes that the
Saudis are overstating the size of their reserves. Simmons writes:
"Saudi Arabian production is at or very near its peak sustainable
volume (if it did not peak almost 25 years ago) and is likely to go
into decline in the very foreseeable future."

Simmons based his analysis on technical documents about the kingdom's
seven giant oil fields that have been the workhorses of Saudi oil
production for decades.

Fatih Birol, the chief economist of the International Energy Agency
admitted in 2004 that Saudi production was "about flat."

Russian oil reserves are also a state secret. BP reported that by the
end of 2006 Russia's proven oil reserves were 79.5 billion, or 6.6
percent of the world's total.

Estimates of Russian oil reserves keep increasing almost yearly. In
2004 BP's survey listed them to be 69.1 billion barrels, up from 45
billion in 2001. Some oil auditing firms believe that the reserves are
much greater -- between 150 billion barrels and 200 billion barrels.

Dry Holes

Part of the problem of predicting how long oil will be readily
available is the tremendous pressure placed on oil companies by
shareholders to meet demand.

In January 2004 Royal Dutch Shell, the third-largest oil company in
the world, shocked energy markets around the globe by announcing that
its proven oil reserves were overstated by 23 percent.

At the time Shell was falling behind its competition in new oil-field
discoveries and in acquiring other oil companies and their reserves.
That year, two-thirds of Shell's most promising wells had been
determined to be dry holes, and in an apparent attempt to maintain its
market position the company overstated its proven reserves.

Accurate information is key at a time when many states are seeking to
cut their growing consumption of oil in order to stave off global
warming and reduce their dependence on foreign producers.

And the stakes are high, as once oil consumption overtakes production,
an unprepared world faces a volatile situation.

<http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/6/ab214a94-f710-4383-84ee-9c5388971caf.html>
On 6/16/07, Michael Perelman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Not again!

On Sat, Jun 16, 2007 at 12:28:24PM -0400, Doug Henwood wrote:
>
> Some of them, but a lot of them are also 9/11 conspiracists. Because
> of peak oil, Cheney blew up the WTC, which paved the way for the
> invasion of Iraq, giving the U.S. control over some of the world's
> largest oil reserves in a time when those reserves are dwindling.

--
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929

Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael at ecst.csuchico.edu
michaelperelman.wordpress.com

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