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Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.

Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby Sixstrings » Thu 24 Sep 2009, 00:37:51

Ok that was Drudge's headline, not mine, so don't jump on me.. just posting this to see what everyone's take on it is.

The oil industry has been on a hot streak this year, thanks to a series of major discoveries that have rekindled a sense of excitement across the petroleum sector, despite falling prices and a tough economy.

These discoveries, spanning five continents, are the result of hefty investments that began earlier in the decade when oil prices rose, and of new technologies that allow explorers to drill at greater depths and break tougher rocks.

“That’s the wonderful thing about price signals in a free market — it puts people in a better position to take more exploration risk,” said James T. Hackett, chairman and chief executive of Anadarko Petroleum.

More than 200 discoveries have been reported so far this year in dozens of countries, including northern Iraq’s Kurdish region, Australia, Israel, Iran, Brazil, Norway, Ghana and Russia. They have been made by international giants, like Exxon Mobil, but also by industry minnows, like Tullow Oil.

Just this month, BP said that it found a giant deepwater field that might turn out to be the biggest oil discovery ever in the Gulf of Mexico, while Anadarko announced a large find in an “exciting and highly prospective” region off Sierra Leone.

It is normal for companies to discover billions of barrels of new oil every year, but this year’s pace is unusually brisk. New oil discoveries have totaled about 10 billion barrels in the first half of the year, according to IHS Cambridge Energy Research Associates. If discoveries continue at that pace through year-end, they are likely to reach the highest level since 2000.

While recent years have featured speculation about a coming peak and subsequent decline in oil production, people in the industry say there is still plenty of oil in the ground, especially beneath the ocean floor, even if finding and extracting it is becoming harder. They say that prices and the pace of technological improvement remain the principal factors governing oil production capacity.

While the industry is celebrating the recent discoveries, many executives are anxious about the immediate future, fearing that lower prices might jeopardize their exploration drive. The world economy is weak, oil prices have tumbled from last year’s records, corporate profits have shrunk, and global demand for oil remains low. After falling to $34 in December, oil prices have doubled, stabilizing near $70 a barrel. But if the world economy does not pick up, some analysts believe the price could fall again.

Oil companies contend that is not a prospect they can afford. Despite reaping record profits in recent years, many executives have warned that they need prices above $60 a barrel to develop the world’s more challenging reserves. In fact, some exploration activity has already slowed this year, as producers seek better terms from service companies and contractors.

It is not just oil that is benefiting from the exploration boom. Repsol, Spain’s biggest oil company, said this month that it had discovered what could turn out to be Venezuela’s biggest natural gas field. In recent years, companies have found substantial natural gas reserves in the United States, from shale rocks once believed to be impossible to drill.

“The No. 1 question that exploration teams have right now is, Where do we go next?” said Robert Fryklund, who ran the operations of ConocoPhillips in Libya and Brazil, and is a vice president in Houston at Cambridge Energy Research Associates.

Exploration spending swelled in recent years, partly to offset a doubling of costs throughout the industry — from steel prices to the cost of renting deepwater drilling rigs. A big issue confronting the industry now is how to drive down costs while maintaining a high level of exploration. On average, costs have fallen by 15 to 20 percent from their peak, according to petroleum executives.

Exploration remains a risky, and costly, business, where some deepwater wells can cost up to $100 million. From 30 to 50 percent of exploration wells find oil.

Some executives are also worried the world might face a shortfall in supplies in coming years if another decline in oil prices causes exploration to falter.

The chief executive of the French oil giant Total, Christophe de Margerie, has warned that such a supply crunch is possible by the middle of the next decade. “There could be a shortage of capacity,” he said.

His concerns echoed those of Abdullah al-Badri, the secretary general of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, who said that lower oil prices also threatened investments by OPEC nations.

Saudi Arabia is also unlikely to expand its production in coming years because of the uncertainty clouding future oil demand, Ali al-Naimi, the kingdom’s oil minister, signaled earlier this month. Saudi Arabia is just completing a $100 billion program to increase its capacity to 12.5 million barrels a day, from around 9 million barrels a day just a few years ago.

Although they are substantial, the new finds do not match the giant fields discovered in the 1970s, like Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay, Ekofisk in the North Sea, or Cantarell in Mexico. They are also dwarfed by the last enormous discovery, the Kashagan field in the Caspian Sea, discovered in 2000 and estimated to hold over 20 billion barrels of oil.

“We have not seen another Kashagan, but still these finds are very material,” said Alan Murray, the exploration service manager at Wood Mackenzie, a consulting firm in Edinburgh.

Since the early 1980s, discoveries have failed to keep up with the global rate of oil consumption, which last year reached 31 billion barrels of oil. Instead, companies have managed to expand production by finding new ways of getting more oil out of existing fields, or producing oil through unconventional sources, like Canada’s tar sands or heavy oil in Venezuela.

Reserve estimates typically rise over the life of a field, which can often be productive for decades, as companies find new ways of getting more oil out of the ground.

The industry’s record has improved in recent years, thanks to high prices. According to Cambridge Energy Research Associates, oil companies have found more oil than they produced for the last two years through a combination of exploration and field expansions.

“The appetite for opening new frontiers when prices were low in the 1990s was very small,” said Paolo Scaroni, the chief executive of Italy’s oil giant Eni. “Today, the biggest discovery of all is technology.”

One of the largest finds this year was made by a small producer, Heritage Oil, at the Miran West One field in the Kurdistan region of northern Iraq. It found nearly two billion barrels of oil and plans to drill a second well before the end of the year. While the central government of Iraq has had a hard time attracting investors to develop its huge fields, local authorities in Kurdistan have been successfully wooing foreign producers.

Meanwhile, in the Gulf of Mexico, BP’s discovery proves that the area remains one of the most promising oil regions in the United States. BP has estimated that the Tiber field holds four billion to six billion barrels of oil and gas, which would be enough, in theory, to meet domestic consumption for more than a year.

“In 30 years I’ve been in the business, the Gulf of Mexico has been called the Dead Sea countless times,” said Bobby Ryan, the vice president of global exploration at Chevron. “And yet it continues to revitalize itself.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/09/24/business/energy-environment/24oil.html?_r=1
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby Golgo13 » Thu 24 Sep 2009, 00:42:54

10 billion barrels!

Hot damn, that's like 4 whole months of world oil consumption!
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby hardtootell-2 » Thu 24 Sep 2009, 01:12:40

We're saved!

Happy motoring America! :)
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby gandolf » Thu 24 Sep 2009, 01:22:48



Interesting

A previous artical I read (Cant put my finger on it at the moment) suggested that BP estimated the amount to be 1 - 3 Billion. They also estimated that they would be able to extract up to 30% but may be as low as 5%

Not quite so exciting now is it

Best scenario 10B x 30% = 3B 35days supply


Worst scenario 1B X 5% = 50Million barrels... Yeah that will take us to just after lunch for 1 day

Seems to me that this is all just smoke screens and they dont have a bloody clue

Opps can I say Bloody on here?
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby ian807 » Thu 24 Sep 2009, 13:23:16

Yes, "they" are finding new oil. The finds consist of numerous smaller fields, which in aggregate, may amount to the reported quantities. These are estimates of course. Oil extraction isn't like sipping a straw in a milk-shake. There's no predicting how much can actually be extracted, what kind of oil it will be (light or heavy) and in what proportions, or how much time and/or money it will take to get this to a refinery (much of it is deep water, expensive finds).

With some luck, we'll be getting some of this oil out while we still can get oil out. Oil depends on a lot of systems working correctly. Multiple economic, infrastructure or political failures of any sort could turn off the spigot permanently.

But it's good news. At best it buys us some time. Another decade or two could make a big difference. We might change to other hydrocarbon stores in a significant way, or we could come up with other power sources. Heck, we might even be persuaded to fully exploit dull but reliable sources like hydroelectric power and turn it into inefficient but workable hydrogen power.
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby kiwichick » Sat 26 Sep 2009, 01:03:55

they are being told not to report the truth

imagine if obama announced that we are post peak

wall street would have a conniption
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby Revi » Sat 26 Sep 2009, 21:50:00

"Although they are substantial, the new finds do not match the giant fields discovered in the 1970s, like Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay, Ekofisk in the North Sea, or Cantarell in Mexico."

Unless they are as big as those finds, we are still in big trouble.
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby energyhoggin » Sat 26 Sep 2009, 22:40:03

who knows, both sides have good arguments...either the world is floating on a mega sea of oil or its starting to run dry. The optimist say 2030 and the pessimist say we are there now or almost at the top, both sides scare me.
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby eastbay » Sat 26 Sep 2009, 22:48:32

.... actually the 'pessimists', as you say, say we passed the peak in 2005. I happen to be one of them. We call ourselves, 'realists', btw. 8O
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby shortonsense » Sat 26 Sep 2009, 23:03:14

eastbay wrote:.... actually the 'pessimists', as you say, say we passed the peak in 2005. I happen to be one of them. We call ourselves, 'realists', btw. 8O


I would agree. "Conventional" crude is a done deal, Deffeyes won the prediction game.

And as long as the oil companies keep finding "enough" ( however much that might be ) everyone will probably continue to not notice...lets all hear it for demand destruction and substitution.
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby eastbay » Sat 26 Sep 2009, 23:24:37

Hear, hear!! :)
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby yesplease » Sat 26 Sep 2009, 23:46:51

Kinda OT, but does anyone know when demand destruction replaced elasticity of demand in PO lingo, and why no one uses demand creation too?
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby shortonsense » Sat 26 Sep 2009, 23:51:07

yesplease wrote:Kinda OT, but does anyone know when demand destruction replaced elasticity of demand in PO lingo, and why no one uses demand creation too?


I certainly don't know. I do like "demand creation" though, thats a good one. I wonder if thats even possible for crude when faced by the onslaught of Insights, Prius's, Volts, Smartcars and some of us starting to take a bus to work? In this country anyway, I suppose whatever supply we free up will find its users somewhere else until they get into the same "electric transport is better than ICE powered transport" bent that we are slowly learning, a hybrid at a time.
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby shortonsense » Sun 27 Sep 2009, 10:34:58

pstarr wrote:Hallelujah. [smilie=angel8.gif] We are all saved. Short is sometimes taking the bus to work. With such beneficent self sacrifice and selflessness erupting throughout the land (ahem) we must be saved.

It's gotta be time to to change out of these dusty farmers overalls and get me some BLING !


Conventional peak oil happened 4 years ago Pstarr, going on 5. We've apparently already been saved from what peak oil hysteria was feeding us at the time...

http://www.bluegreenearth.us/archive/ar ... -2005.html

and you are just cranky because you don't understand WHY.
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby mcgowanjm » Sun 27 Sep 2009, 10:40:34

pstarr wrote:
kiwichick wrote:they are being told not to report the truth

imagine if obama announced that we are post peak

wall street would have a conniption

What you said makes complete sense, but how do you explain the "they" being told not to report the truth by the "whom?"

Who are the "whom?"



It's worse than that. "They" have had the meme inserted into their genetic code (Monsanto Patent Pending).

My Dad just read me that article and when asked if he wanted to hear about Cantarell or the "other side", refused and stated I won't be around then.

And that about sums it up. By the time the "other side" entertains the idea of PO and it's consequences, they won't be around. ;}
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby mcgowanjm » Sun 27 Sep 2009, 10:48:16

And what's worse, a lot of the folks who do believe in the inevitable Hubbert's curve, look at the bell and say, 'well, we've got at least
15 or so more years before things get out of hand.'

But that's NOT the way the backside of a Parabolic Curve operates.

Once you get into the Fat Tail past Asymptote, the 'smooth sailing'
line ALWAYS goes non linear.

ALWAYS

At some point, there will be no more exports, as these countries will use all available supplies for internal consumption purposes. Countries such as the United States, that are big importers of oil, stand to be quickly cut off from their oil supplies. Thus the available exports of oil will come to a much more rapid end than total world production of oil, which in turn will be much more rapidly decreasing than the symmetrical bell shaped curve would lead us to believe.


http://kickingthegasoline.com/

See Mexico for details.
Cantarell now pumping 500,000 bpd and dropping.
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Re: Oil Everywhere: it's a boom year for new finds

Unread postby mcgowanjm » Sun 27 Sep 2009, 11:51:35

Reflecting this reality, we now see producers mining the “tar sands” of Canada in an effort to cook the oil out of these sands. Not only is this effort tremendously environmentally destructive, but it consumes a great deal of energy in order to produce oil. Thus the cost of producing each barrel of oil is going up. At the same time, the quality of each barrel thereby produced continues to go down. Combining these two trends, we see that the world will reach a point where it is no longer economical to produce any oil. Mind you, this occurs considerably before the point where the world runs out of oil, and so the curve of world oil production does NOT reflect the relationship that individuals have with the gas tank in their cars. We can’t just keep going until we run out. A lot of oil will be left in the ground because it simply won’t make sense to produce it.
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