http://cassandralegacy.blogspot.it/2013/02/the-twilight-of-petroleum.html

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2013

The Twilight of Petroleum

In this post, Antonio Turiel examines the perspectives of oil production in 
light of some often neglected parameters: the energy density, the energy yield 
(EROEI), and realistic estimates of new discoveries. As expected, the result 
are far from supporting the optimism that seems to be prevalent today.

Original post by Antonio Turiel from “The Oil Crash”

Translation By Max Iacono

(translated from a previous translation to Italian from Spanish by Massimiliano 
Rupalti. We're not professional translators, so please, take this into account 
while reading it :-) )

Dear Readers,

I begin this post as my preceding one ended: with the graph of the forecast for 
petroleum production contained in the last annual report of the International 
Energy Agency (IEA), referring to its central (or main) scenario on New 
Policies. This graph, as earlier mentioned, shows that on a global level 
production of crude oil soon will begin its decline. The forecasts of the IEA 
contain certain elements which are at the very least “slightly optimistic”, to 
not say outright fanciful, regarding the expected future production from 
reservoirs yet to be discovered and developed as well as considerably inflated 
prospects regarding non-conventional oil; based on the latter the IAE obtains a 
daily production level of 100 million barrels of oil per day (Mb/d) in 2035 
compared to the almost 87 Mb/d in 2011. All of this already was commented in my 
last post.

Carlos de Castro made an interesting comment to this same post about the 
correct interpretation of the figures in this scenario. It made me think of a 
small exercise, with simple numbers, to demonstrate that even in the marvelous 
scenario envisioned for the future by the IEA, the figures don’t add up. And 
that even in the best of hypotheses for the future, we are entering already the 
stage of petroleum decline. Let’s have a look:

I took the above graph, and I brought it to high definition (600 dpi) and 
measured the relative height of the bars. Then by a simple rule of 3, I 
converted the bars to an equivalent amount of production for each year shown, 
expressed in Mb/d. Here are my results:

2000 65.9 65.9 65.9 73.8 74.9 74.9 76.7
2005 70.0 70.0 70.0 79.7 82.0 82.0 83.9
2011 68.2 68.2 68.2 80.2 83.2 84.4 86.2
2015 64.1 68.2 68.2 82.6 86.8 89.3 91.7
2020 56.3 65.3 66.5 82.1 88.0 91.1 94.0
2025 48.0 61.1 65.9 82.1 89.2 93.3 95.8
2030 36.7 56.4 65.3 82.1 90.9 94.6 97.6
2035 25.9 52.2 65.3 83.2 93.3 97.0 100.0

Logically, and given the method used, these figures have a certain margin of 
error, but it is certainly small enough. (for instance, for 2035 the total 
production of petroleum I obtain is 100 Mb/d whereas the report indicates that 
it is 99.7 Mb/d and therefore the error in the figures I provide relative to 
the actual ones by the IEA should be less than 0.5%)

With this as my starting point I prepared a continuous graph (a simple linear 
extrapolation for the years for which we don’t have data); the colors 
approximately correspond  to those of the IEA graph:

Let us recall the various categories: The black band at the bottom shows the 
production of crude oil currently in production (2011). The band in light blue 
shows the production of crude oil reservoirs which are known already but which 
are not being exploited either because of lack of demand or due to excessive 
production costs. The band in blue shows the production of crude oil which 
should come from reservoirs yet to be discovered. All the other bands represent 
non-conventional oil and imperfect petroleum substitutes. The purple band 
represents the production of liquids from natural gas, the yellow one comes 
from the production of all main non-conventional petroleum except shale oil, 
the red band represents shale oil and the green one (different from the color 
used in the IAE report) represents improvements in refining.

Represented in continuous form, even if with a linear extrapolation between 
consecutive points, one can obtain a more complete idea of the scenario which 
the IEA considers the closest to the future course of events. In particular, 
the gentle decline in crude oil production becomes more noticeable.

But coming back to the comment by Carlos de Castro, this graph obscures a 
fundamental fact. We are adding various categories of hydrocarbons assuming 
they are equivalent, when in fact, they are not. Non-conventional oils, (all of 
them) have lower energy densities per volume, and roughly 70% that of crude 
oil. In addition, the refining improvements refer to the increase in volume of 
products derived from the refining of petroleum, and such an increase in volume 
obviously does not assume an increase in the energy which is extracted from the 
petroleum. This does not mean that the products refined starting from a barrel 
of oil contain exactly the same energy as a barrel of oil, or even less, given 
losses during the transformation process. (the Second Law of Thermodynamics is 
ever present and operative) In reality such products contain more energy than 
that of the original barrel because their processing uses natural gas for the 
hydrogenation of the less saturated hydrocarbons. What obviously occurs is that 
the energy of the refined products from a barrel of oil is equal to the energy 
of the original barrel plus that of the natural gas used in refining it. Making 
these adjustments (non conventional oils have about 70% of the energy by volume 
as normal crude oil(*), the improvements in refining do not increase the energy 
of the petroleum), we then obtain the following graph in millions of barrels of 
oil equivalents to crude oil per day:

This is the graph which the IEA should have presented if it had counted 
properly, that is, by reporting energy flows, not volumes. As one easily can 
see the prospects for an increase in production when expressed in terms of 
associated energy are much more meager and less attractive: We will go from 
79.5 Mb/d (now understood as energy equivalents) in 2011 to 87.5 Mb/d in 2035.

Notwithstanding all of this the graph still does not tell the whole story given 
that it is a graph of gross or total energy that does not tell us how much 
energy actually remains available to society once the energy required for its 
mere production - the energy required to maintain such energy flows- is 
subtracted out.

To do an estimate of the net energy we need to know the EROEI (Energy Returned 
on Energy Invested) of the various sources of hydrocarbons mixed in with the 
petroleum. Remembering that the EROEI is obtained using the following formula:

EROEI = Te/Ep

Where Te is the total energy produced by a source and Ep is the energy required 
for its production with both taken over the entire usable lifetime of the 
source in question. I will assume that given the elevated number of reservoirs 
and production systems, that the overall production system is in dynamic 
equilibrium and that both Te as well as Ep can be taken as snapshot values (a 
simplification which in reality softens the decline). With this formulation, 
the net energy En which an energy source delivers during its useful life (and 
if we have many sources at different moments of their useful lives it is 
equally valid as a snapshot of the whole) is:

En = Te - Ep = Te x (1 – 1/EROEI)

We only need to know the EROEI values for all the various categories in the 
graph of the IEA. Coming to know those values is a difficult task and not 
exempt from controversies, depending on the methodology used. I will not 
present an in-depth discussion of all such values. I simply will propose a few 
which appear reasonable to me. Since the numbers are on the table, anyone can 
play with them and propose those changes which appear most reasonable and valid 
to them, and thereby obtain one’s own version. It also can be said that this 
exercise should have been done by the IEA itself, so as to provide a clearer 
idea of what will be the future of the actual availability of energy to 
society. (because providing the gross figure which includes the cost for the 
implementation and maintenance of the systems of production for petroleum, is 
rather deceptive) Here are my own values; they are all constant over time, 
which in reality makes the decline more gentle;

+ For crude oil presently in production I assume an EREOI value of 20, in 
keeping with the most typical estimates. Such a high value has little impact, 
given that it subtracts out only about 5% of the net energy.

+ For the more expensive crude oil which is not being extracted I assume an 
EROEI of 5. Some authors quantify it as even 3 or 2, others 10. The value of 5 
seems to me a reasonable compromise: sufficiently small to explain that some of 
these reservoirs could not be developed economically up to now, but 
sufficiently large to allow that now, with higher prices, they can be brought 
into production. All this implies a return of net energy about 80% that of the 
gross energy.

+For the petroleum which is yet to be discovered I assume an EROEI of 3. The 
reservoirs to be discovered are mainly in deep waters, where typically one has 
to drill 4 or more dry wells before drilling one which actually produces 
petroleum. In addition such oil has rates of decline which are more rapid than 
those of petroleum through simple platforms or on land, which implies having to 
drill more, or do horizontal drilling. It also has greater problems of 
maintenance and much of it is found in tropical areas where hurricanes can 
require periodic shut-downs and also can do damage thereby increasing the 
production costs in terms of Ep. Arctic petroleum is also part of this category 
and with analogous difficulties. Here the return of net energy is roughly 66% 
that of gross energy.

+For non-conventional petroleum, including shale oil, I assume an EROEI of 2. 
This category includes mainly bio-fuels with an EROEI of 1 or less and the 
shale oils which have an EROEI of 3 or less. This means that only 50% of the 
gross energy comes to be utilized as net energy.

Taking into account all of these values one obtains the following graph:

This graph too should have been produced by the IEA if it took seriously its 
own work and, as you can see, explains a story quite different from the 
official one. According to this same graph the net energy from all petroleum 
liquids, even according to the highly inflated future forecast by the IEA, 
would reach its peak around 2015, with a maximum value of 79.7 Mb/d in 2035. In 
short, we would find ourselves very close to the zenith of net petroleum 
energy, an extremely alarming message.

What would happen if instead of suggesting such inflated estimates as those of 
the IEA, we took a little bath in cold realism? It is difficult for me to do a 
precise estimate of how the production of the various categories of liquids 
assimilated in petroleum will proceed in reality. (at least for myself who is 
not a geologist, although the members of ASPO have good estimates for all of 
them) Nonetheless it is rather easy to do a slightly more realistic 
approximation regarding the real future of petroleum production. (An 
approximation which of course could be discussed, if one wishes). Here I leave 
the hypotheses and the numbers so that whomever may wish to, can repeat the 
calculations as they prefer.

+According to the 2010 edition of the annual report by the same IEA and 
according to the CEO of Shell, Peter Voser, the decline of crude oil wells 
recently in production is of 5% per year and not of 3.3%, as one would conclude 
from the current report. I am rectifying this tendency.

+ Regarding wells that at present are not being exploited, surely not all will 
be able to put into production, in part also because the price per barrel at 
which it would be convenient to do so, is excessive for society to be able to 
pay it, (we already have said that contrary to what is affirmed by economic 
orthodoxy, energy is not just any good and not all prices can be paid by our 
current system) and in part because there are no effective methods for 
processing this potential production (the most obvious case being that which we 
already have commented many times regarding the Manifa reservoir in Saudi 
Arabia, whose petroleum has such a high vanadium content that there isn’t a 
refinery in the world that can process it). I believe that the IEA is guilty of 
excessive optimism regarding the potential of such sources. Taking all of this 
into account, I reduce this quantity by half.

+Regarding those reservoirs yet to be discovered, it is well known that the 
estimates of the IEA assume a pace of discovery which is four times greater 
than that of the past 20 years. Add to this also the fact that in a context of 
economic instability the tendency of large oil companies is not to invest 
further in exploration and development, but instead invest less. (from 2008 to 
2009 investment has fallen by 19% recovering only by a small amount during the 
following years when it should have grown enormously to compensate for the 
growing difficulties in production. In fact many oil companies have pulled in 
their oars and have renounced the continuing search for more petroleum. 
Consequently I reduce this quantity by one quarter of that estimated by the IEA.

+With respect to the natural gas liquids, only one third of their mass content 
contains sufficiently long hydrocarbon chains to allow being utilized as fuel 
for present cars, refined as gasoline (but not diesel, a fuel which poses many 
specific challenges). One would have to do significant modifications to 
existing gasoline engines so they could use directly the lighter gasses (the 
name “natural gas liquids” is fairly deceptive) that is, the propane and the 
methane (one also can synthesize ethanol starting with ethane and use it 
directly). The costs of adaptation are not that high but nonetheless require a 
certain amount of investment, towards which society is little predisposed in 
times of crisis and, moreover, is something only effective for gasoline engines 
(whereas in Europe the greater part of private transport runs on diesel oil and 
all heavy transport vehicles throughout the world run on diesel). To be 
generous I accept that one third of these natural gas liquids can be used as 
petroleum substitutes.

+Regarding shale oil, we have indicated already that these estimates are very 
inflated. I reduce them by half.

+The rest of conventional petroleum I leave as is.

With these premises, the graph of net energy that we obtain is as follows:

The results are easily visible: The year of the beginning of terminal decline 
in net energy is already here. In reality it could be any year from now until 
2015 since the data which I provided are discretized by 5 year periods and 
moreover the dating cannot be more precise than that shown. On the other hand 
it also should be said that the peak in net energy does not mean the peak of 
all energy, given that a great part of the sources still have somewhat of a 
margin for their decline and in part will compensate for this fall. 
Nonetheless, to the extent that the decline in petroleum will be stronger, the 
fall will be more difficult to compensate and at a given moment not far away, - 
also associated with the exhaustion of growth of the major portion of the 
sources-, the fall will be inexorable. As a final point I also would like to 
highlight that the fall in net energy from petroleum will not be recognized 
until the fall in its volume also becomes evident (as was shown in the first 
graph), given that the concept of net energy is more difficult to grasp. We 
know already that classic economic education cannot recognize the concept of 
EROEI and therefore the explanation which will be given when petroleum 
production will decline, will be that there is insufficient investment in 
exploration and development (as already is occurring in Argentina), without 
understanding that the economic accounting cannot come right, if the energy 
accounting doesn’t. This will give rise to heated debates which will lead to 
wrong policies that will do more harm than good, to more radicalized positions, 
and to the final adoption in many cases of draconian measures of populist 
character, which will resolve nothing and in fact will aggravate the lot.

The final fact is that the petroleum era has come to its end. Petroleum will 
continue to be available for many decades but always in lesser quantities and 
in the end it will become a luxury good. Our epoch of accelerated economic 
development based on inexpensive petroleum is already over. It is the sunset of 
petroleum. And if we are unable to recognize it, it could also very well be our 
own.

Cheers.

AMT

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