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Hoarding is exactly what the government is doing right now by filling the SPR, and frankly it's the best thing that could happen. It drives prices up. High prices encourage demand destruction. They also finance new well development. The hoarded oil gives us a buffer to fall back on once shortages become more prevalent. High prices are what we need in order to adapt to what's coming, and the sooner they happen, the better.

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Peakoil.com :: View topic - Help with deconstructing the EIA 2037 peak curve?
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Help with deconstructing the EIA 2037 peak curve?
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Sparaxis
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude


Joined: Apr 27, 2005
Posts: 108
Location: California

PostPosted: Wed Jul 13, 2005 7:37 pm    Post subject: Add User to Ignore List Reply with quote

That's good stuff Khebab..thanks for the post. I hadn't seen the USGS scenarios--except the mean one--in a typical depletion case since EIA appears to prefer to keep the peak year as far out as possible (which I interpret as any year beyond their forecasting mandate for demand, which is now 2035).

EIA explains their R/P=10 rationale based on the US experience of having had a R/P=10 for several years in the 1990s. The problem of course is that it is a ratio, so both the numerator and denominator can both change. And given the US SEC reporting requirements for reserves (i.e. no backdating), the annual incremental of "reserve extension" shifted the numerator while production (and thus reserve reduction) shifted the denominator, and only coincidentally stayed at 10 for these years. If the reserve extensions were properly backdated, I doubt we would have seen this phenomenon. But it has absolutely nothing to do with geology or depletion or any dynamic process.
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