Our Low Interest Environment
The same can be said for the business community. All investment decisions are based on the anticipated return and its performance in the marketplace. When secure investments provide no return, pretty much any kind of investment appears to make sense. This leads to the overproduction that is systemic in a disinflation and deflationary environment. One that low interest rates are attempting to avoid.
I want to make it clear that I don’t think low interest rates are what have lead to the systemic overproduction of the oil and gas commodities. Opec is certainly a constant that appears in the oil markets of today and of course back in 1986 through to this century. They had upwards of 10 million barrels of surplus capacity that was believed to be part of the reason for the low prices in 1986. I think however you have to look at the business model of the oil and gas industry, on an international basis, in order to find the real reason behind the systemic overproduction. And that business model is the high throughput production model. It takes significant infrastructure in order to be an oil and gas producer. These infrastructure costs are what drive the need for more production. In addition, the never ending demand for higher production volumes from the investment community is further application of the high throughput production model. The element of shale, on top of the inherent overproduction arising from the high throughput production model is the toxic destructive environment that demands a solution in both commodities.
Whether we agree on the aggravating causes of the price declines over the past history of the industry is probably unnecessary. We could all agree that shale is an aggravating factor that will not be handled without some intervention in the market in the short to mid term. Shale has changed the oil and gas business fundamentally. Moving it from commodities that are scarce to abundance in a material way. As a result what the Preliminary Specification seeks to do is to move the industry to our decentralized production model and away from the high throughput production. Turning the producer from a reliance on their administrative and accounting infrastructure, to a reliance on the industry based administrative and accounting infrastructure of the People, Ideas & Objects Preliminary Specification, our user community and our service providers. And therefore turning their infrastructure costs from fixed to variable in nature.
Making the change to the existing oil and gas producers is not something that is contemplated as being a possibility. Organizations don’t change, but people do. The bureaucracies that exist today are the same that began in the 1920’s, only accelerated by today’s computer technologies. The hierarchies useful life has ceased to exist in many of the industries that have been disintermediated. They are replaced by networks of people who are capable of dealing with the opportunities and issues in the specific industry. Changing a hierarchy into a network would require the energy equivalent of what we have in all of the shale based reservoirs today. You won’t see me volunteering for such a frustrating and difficult job as that. We are relying on the forces of creative destruction to make the change from the hierarchy to our networked world quickly and effectively through implementation of the Preliminary Specification. We should thank the producers for following our script so diligently to this point, failure has a distinct feeling, now if they would just step aside.
The Preliminary Specification and user community provides the oil and gas producer with the most dynamic, innovative, profitable and successful means of oil and gas operations. People, Ideas & Objects Revenue Model specifies the means in which investors can participate in these user defined software developments. Users are welcome to join me here. Together we can begin to meet the future demands for energy. And don’t forget to join our network on Twitter @piobiz anyone can contact me at 403-200-2302 or email here.