Peak Oil News

 

  Login or Register
 
Menu
 News
 Search
 Topics
 Stories Archive
 Submit News
 Discussions
 Code of Conduct
 Forums
 Forums Search
 Last 24 Hours
 PO 24hrs
 Peak Blog
 Resources
 About Us
 Downloads
 Web Links
 PeakWiki
 PeakPortal
 Focus Search
 Peak TV
 Peak Oil Boston
 Members
 Your Account
 Members List
 Ignore List
 JOIN!
 Private Messages
 
google
 
PeakSpeak
NICKNAME

Download TeamSpeak
What is PeakSpeak?
Peak Oil on IRC
 
Photo Album
Submit Photo
Peakoil.com is You!


member photos
 
Light Sweet Crude Oil
 
Member Quotes
I want my mommy!

Buggy

Suggest Quote

 
aspo08
 
ICM
Cisco & Net App Training
 
Energy security and America
Production; Extraction; Explorationby Tony Hayward , Group Chief Executive, BP, London

Energy security is a front-of-mind issue for the people of the world. We face the difficult fact that the current market environment is a tough one, and the energy industry is working hard to keep the energy flowing. The oil price is close to the real-term record set in 1979. Every geopolitical event causes a spike in the price, but these spikes only happen because the underlying market is itself tight. Strong demand is coming mostly from the developing world, led by China, and it is a lesser known fact that rising demand is also coming from oil and gas producing nations themselves, many of which are using their booming oil revenues to invest in their own economies.

Oil supplies have not already peaked. There are, at the very least, 40 years of proved oil reserves left, at current rates of production, and over 60 years of natural gas. Unfortunately, political and technical obstacles hinder bringing these reserves to market, and become more challenging all the time. For the medium term, the era of cheap energy is behind us.


To the consumer, energy security means access to reliable sources of energy, at an affordable price, produced in an environmentally responsible and safe manner. However, energy security cannot be examined in isolation, as it is linked to other issues, such as economic efficiency, competitiveness and growing concerns about climate change.

Anxieties about energy security arise when high prices alert consumers to the tensions in the energy market. Across the world, geopolitical events, rising investment costs, prolonged project delay and high decline rates of major fields are together creating a drag on worldwide production capacity, particularly in oil.

These trends are global, because the world energy market is interlinked and interdependent. US imports account for 60% of domestic consumption last year, up from 33% only 20 years ago.

World Oil Magazine

Posted on Monday, December 31 @ 19:32:52 PST by Leanan
 
Related Links
· More about Production; Extraction; Exploration
· News by Leanan


Most read story about Production; Extraction; Exploration:
Does Thermal Depolymerization Solve the Problem of Peak Oil?

 
Article Rating
Average Score: 2
Votes: 4


Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

 
Options

 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly

 Send to a Friend Send to a Friend

 
"Login" | Login/Create an Account | 0 comments
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.

No Comments Allowed for Anonymous, please register

Atom News FeedRSS 1.0 News FeedRSS 2.0 News FeedRSS Forums Feed