My Argument, Part IX
The world has enough oil reserves that can be extracted with current technologies to be able to meet demand two times over until 2050, Dale told reporters in London. As demand growth tapers, holders of these resources could potentially decide to produce sooner rather than later, he said.
Abundant Reserves
“Over the long run, there seems to be increasing incentive for those producers that hold lots of low-cost oil” to rethink the strategy of rationing production, Dale said. “The view that a barrel not be produced today, but produced tomorrow,” may become less compelling, he said.
This is the logic that producers have adopted in the marketplace today. We have so much oil and gas in reserves, just get it onto the market. Is this the wise and prudent strategy in which to approach this abundance of resources? No, it becomes a race to the bottom where everyone loses forever. If you could also defer the recognition of the capital costs of the producer in this capital intensive industry you could convince your investors that you were making money for a while. This could keep the treadmill of new and progressively more naive shareholders available to the producer firm. Keep them lined up and sell them a story that never comes true.
If the Saudi’s et al are realizing that the North American producers have so destroyed the commodity marketplaces that it makes no sense to hold reserves for tomorrow. Then the North American producers should congratulate themselves on completely destroying the industry. No one is going to touch this industry again, that is until 2050. This has to stop. There has to be a better way. The more logical and valuable way is to recognize the value that is inherent in each and every molecule of energy. That it is irreplaceable and should be cherished to ensure that it is not wasted. We have a responsibility to our own future to ensure that all energy is produced profitably from this point forward. And conversely, the largest consumer of oil and gas will be the most economically productive in terms of its GDP. Energy provides mechanical leverage over labor. We should seek to use energy in every application possible. The consumers value proposition of a barrel of oil at $50 or $150 is undeniably irreplaceable and invaluable.
We therefore need to recognize the crisis that is the oil and gas industry. Production, as a result of what the BP economist is saying, consists of a race to the bottom. There is no understanding or appreciation of value of the commodity or the money that the investors provide. Everything for the past four decades has been a waste. As it will be until 2050. The tragedy is that there is nothing outside of People, Ideas & Objects that recognizes or appreciates these facts. The producer organizations are designed to enhance the bureaucrats lifestyle and accommodate their needs exclusively. The impact on society of the oil and gas industry is negative from the point of view of the people it discards as surplus from both industry and the service industry, the money it loses from investors and bankers and the opportunity costs lost in paying dividends, royalties and taxes. If this is not a crisis it certainly qualifies as a tragedy.
Now if we turn our attention to the prolific nature of shale reservoirs, the crisis deepens and the tragedy takes a much darker turn. This initial phase of shales impact has been felt and the business is in tatters. Remember the U.S. holds 17% of all shale reservoirs in the world. What’ll happen when the rest of the world learns the technologies that have so far destroyed the industry in the hands of those that do not care.
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