[Dosi]
Part IV Opportunities incentives and the intersectoral patterns of innovation.
Dr. Dosi notes that the purpose to involve an industry in innovative activities is based on incentives and opportunities. Noting this Dosi starts his analysis with the key question.
"Are the observed intersectoral differences in innovative investment the outcome of different incentive structures, different opportunities or both."
A. Technological opportunities: Exogenous Science and Specific Learning.To state the oil and gas industry is heavily dependent on the sciences is an obvious comment. The issue that I am raising is not so much the use of science but industries ability to keep pace with the changes in the current and prospective earth sciences and engineering disciplines. Scientific changes will be the fuel of innovative producers in the near to long term. Producers that are able to interpret these scientific findings will be rewarded with higher levels of revenue and earnings. A difficult statement to support, yet something that is well understood and generally agreed to in the industry.
How can a bureaucracy, built on the basis of command and control, keep up with the changes in the sciences that are developing exponentially faster? I suggest they can't and have suggested a new method of organization needs to be adopted. An organizational structure who's focus is the industry standard joint operating committee. The severity of this innovativeness capability in oil and gas is leading to a substantial failure in the supply of energy to the market. A serious and detrimental issue for one of, and possibly the most important primary industries, energy.
Dosi asserts two important qualifications to this discussion. That technology is a derivative of science and science is dependent directly upon the technology that defines it. We first discussed the theory of communicative action with Dr. Jurgen Habermas. Dr. Habermas theories were first published in the 60's and Dosi is tacitly reflecting these as pertinent to the science and technology in general. The best way to state this simply may be to impute a symbiotic relationship between science and technology.
Dosi notes an important point as well. That science usually spawns "a widening pool of potential technological paradigms." p. 1136.
Based on this information, Dosi then draws an extremely pertinent point about the science and technologies associated within an industry. The point arises out of the fact that the organizational structure has a limited or defined capacity of knowledge and understanding of both science and technology.
Dosi states the following;
"the idea that technological opportunities are paradigm-bound is also consistent with the historical evidence and interpretive conjectures... stemming from the gradual exhaustion of technological opportunities along particular trajectories." p.1137.
and,
"New paradigms reshape the patterns of opportunities of technical progress in terms of both the scope of potential innovations, and the ease with which they are achieved." p. 1138.
It is my assertion here the failure of the oil and gas firms to manage their technology and keep pace with the changes in science are now organizationally and paradigm constrained. They can not keep up to any of these changes.
What can only be described as a failure of industry is glossed over with the immediate response that their is lots of oil remaining. Well if that is the case then provide the market with its demands! There is plenty of oil left for the remainder of the century, however, at fundamentally different economic values then they are willing to acknowledge publicly. These economic values require that new scientific and technological paradigms be introduced to enhance the capacity of the industry. Why has this not happened?
It is my opinion that the management of these firms require time for their pensions and stock options to vest before they will even begin to address these issues. This is the failure that I attribute to the organizational mess that they have created. They are well aware of the problems, they just don't have solutions and are in no urgent financial need to get to work on these issues.
This latter point is evidenced in the fact that since 1997 the companies based in Calgary have tripled their annual capacity to drill wells. Despite this tripling of wells drilled, the provinces overall deliverability is down from 2003. Evidencing, in my opinion, that the level of creative thinking in finding more oil and gas is equal to the number of wells drilled. An industry that has no capacity to think outside of this capability due to the organizational constraints discussed.
As I visualize the industry, I see a large rat running ever faster in the wheel in anticipation that the faster it runs the quicker it will get there. The ability of the industry to stop and think, as opposed to do, is zero due to this level of activity. And as with the rat in a wheel ultimately meets its demise, a similar fate awaits Petro Canada.