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The Peak Energy Debate (Read 123104 times)
perceptions_now
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #330 - May 17th, 2014 at 11:21am
 
Oil Production: An Indicator Of Future Economic Growth Prospects



Summary
    Low global economic expansion since 2008 can be linked to liquid fuel production growth. Trend will most likely continue.
    Global production of liquid fuels would have declined in 2013 without the US' increase of 1.2 mb/d, mainly on the back of shale oil, the effects of which will diminish.
    Healthier growth rates may only return when current relationship between global liquid fuels growth and economic growth is broken, and growth becomes less reliant on it.


The negative surprise that the US first-quarter GDP handed us was quickly rationalized as a mainly weather related event. One thing that we can be sure of regardless of the reason why it happened is that previous 2014 forecasts for US growth have to now be revised downward somewhat. There is little hope now after a stagnant first quarter of reaching the 3% growth range forecast by various institutions for the year.

Looking at the bigger picture in order to get a better understanding of the overall context, the fact that 2014 growth will have to be revised down should not come as a great surprise. The US and global growth have constantly been revised downwards since 2007. 2013 was seen by many as the year when the economic crisis was finally put behind us and we are now looking at a few years of decent, if not outstanding growth. The IMF forecasts global growth to reach 3.7% this year, and 3.9% in 2015. That is a significant increase from 2013, when the world economy grew about 3% as well as a break with the 2008-13 period, which saw global average yearly growth under 3%.

Reasoning behind expectation of further downward revisions

According to EIA data 2013, global liquid fuels production growth was 0.6%, or just under 0.6 mb/d. If we are to exclude US liquid fuels production growth of 1.2 mb/d, the world would have been in a production decline. For 2014, it expects a global production increase of 1.4 mb/d and 1.3 mb/d in 2014 and 2015, respectively. US production is once more expected to contribute to most of the increase with year-on-year gains for this year of 1 mb/d and 0.7 mb/d next year.

Aside from the two very prominent shale oil fields, there are very few bright spots to report in America's oil production regions. Alaska is in decline, the Gulf of Mexico is stagnated, while the onshore Permian in Texas is only inching up very slowly. There is some limited increase in liquids production coming from predominantly shale gas plays such as the Marcellus, but at the moment there is no field ready to take the place of Bakken and Eagle Ford as the main engines of production growth.

Aside from potential for increase coming from resolution of conflicts in places such as Libya or improving relations with Iran, I see very little potential for global growth in production.
In fact, countries such as Saudi Arabia are likely to favor lower production, not so much because they want to keep prices high or that they are evil as many would believe, but because they want to manage their fields with care and are aware that many of their aging giant fields can potentially be damaged through overproduction for prolonged periods of time. There are also many places in decline such as Mexico, the North Sea, Azerbaijan and others.
I think a very good gauge of where global production is headed is the performance of oil and gas giant multinationals that operate all over the world where there is oil and they are allowed to participate by governments. As I pointed out in my last article, companies such as Exxon Mobil (XOM), Chevron (CVX), Shell (RDS.A) (RDS.B) and BP (BP) are all experiencing production decline.

Effect on the economy
It is very unfortunate that over the past half decade or so, the media as well as economists preferred to focus mainly on public policy as the main factor affecting economic growth instead of analyzing the underlying fundamentals. Thus, the question of why we are not witnessing a return to growth rates in the 5% range as we have seen in previous post-recession recoveries was always answered through the lens of political and ideological partisanship. These explanations have no value in terms of providing useful insight, but are extremely popular with audiences given the increased ideological polarization of our society.

Given continued tightness of liquid fuel supplies, it is possible that we will only enjoy the kind of economic growth we had in the past and desire to have again when the current relationship will be broken.


http://seekingalpha.com/article/2221763-oil-production-an-indicator-of-future-ec...
============================================
In fact, there are also other major factors, which are also contributing to a slowing of Economic Growth.
In addition to a slowing of Oil Production, there are also Demographic & Climate Change reasons, which are affecting the Global Economy and the combined effect of the changes in these major Economic factors would strongly suggest that the current Economic Growth model is unlikely to return.

Put bluntly, the Economic Growth Fairy is now dying!
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #331 - Oct 10th, 2014 at 11:29am
 
On a US forum, this morning, a New Zealander posted the following chart & said -
Remember that old joke about Peak Oil.

...

My answer/retort to that, was as follows -
=======================================================
Of course, there is no such thing as Peak Oil?

That's why the Price of Oil Peaked at US$145 in July 2008, after being around US$10 a barrel, in 1999, THAT'S SIMPLY THE STANDARD WAY THAT "DEMAND/SUPPLY" ECONOMICS WORKS RIGHT??

All Products go up by nearly 1500%, in a 9 year timeline, when it's expected there will be ample Supply, Right???

I suggest, you all watch what happens, AS THE GLOBAL ECONOMY AGAIN HEADS DOWN OVER THE NEXT FEW YEARS AND DEMAND ALSO GOES DOWN , AS WILL THE PRICE OF OIL AND PRODUCTION WILL ALSO DECLINE, PARTIALLY BECAUSE THE NEWER LINES OF PRODUCTION WILL SIMPLY NOT BE VIABLE, AT THOSE LOWER PRICES!
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #332 - Oct 13th, 2014 at 11:01pm
 
perceptions_now wrote on Oct 10th, 2014 at 11:29am:
On a US forum, this morning, a New Zealander posted the following chart & said -
Remember that old joke about Peak Oil.

http://www.kiwiblog.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/oil-560x366.png

My answer/retort to that, was as follows -
=======================================================
Of course, there is no such thing as Peak Oil?

That's why the Price of Oil Peaked at US$145 in July 2008, after being around US$10 a barrel, in 1999, THAT'S SIMPLY THE STANDARD WAY THAT "DEMAND/SUPPLY" ECONOMICS WORKS RIGHT??

All Products go up by nearly 1500%, in a 9 year timeline, when it's expected there will be ample Supply, Right???

I suggest, you all watch what happens, AS THE GLOBAL ECONOMY AGAIN HEADS DOWN OVER THE NEXT FEW YEARS AND DEMAND ALSO GOES DOWN , AS WILL THE PRICE OF OIL AND PRODUCTION WILL ALSO DECLINE, PARTIALLY BECAUSE THE NEWER LINES OF PRODUCTION WILL SIMPLY NOT BE VIABLE, AT THOSE LOWER PRICES!

Is there any information on how accessible these proved reserves are?  Shocked Shocked Shocked
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*Sure....they're anti competitive as any subsidised job is.  It wouldn't be there without the tax payer.  Very damned difficult for a brainwashed collectivist to understand that I know....  (swaggy) *
 
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #333 - Oct 16th, 2014 at 2:12pm
 
Could The 'Shale Oil Miracle' Be Just A Pipe Dream?


Summary

1) Technological developments such as directional drilling and hydraulic fracturing have allowed the United States to significantly increase its production of crude oil from various tight oil plays.
2) This production suffers from numerous problems including very high costs and steep decline rates.
3) Few companies operating in these formations have made any money and nearly all are depending on friendly capital markets to survive.
4) Costs and decline rates appear to be getting worse, making it more difficult for these firms.
5) EIA projections show that it is unlikely that the United States will ever be a net exporter of oil.


For the past several years, investors and the general public have heard much about the "shale miracle," a revolution in energy production caused by horizontal drilling and fracking, technologies which resulted in huge increases in oil production from areas such as the Williston Basin and the Eagle Ford Shale.
Many advocates of this shale miracle state that this revolution promises to make the United States energy independent and even turn the country into an energy exporter. Unfortunately, there are a number of problems with shale oil production that could result in the shale miracle being more of a pipe dream than a truly realistic scenario.


There are several shale deposits in the United States, which are believed to contain very high amounts of oil. The most famous of these are the Bakken Shale formation in Montana and North Dakota and the Eagle Ford shale formation in South Texas.

The oil that is found in these formations is much more difficult to extract than the oil found in more conventional deposits such as those found in Saudi Arabia or the Permian Basin. This is due to the geological characteristics of the regions. In tight oil deposits such as the Bakken, oil is encased in low permeability rocks. In order to extract the oil, the rocks must be broken apart. This is a technique known as hydraulic fracturing. In addition, accessing this oil typically requires the use of directional drilling techniques, which is a blanket term used to describe drilling an oil well in any direction other than vertically.

As might be expected, the difficulty of accessing this oil results in these wells being significantly more expensive to drill than a more conventional oil well.

According to Morgan Stanley Equity research and the International Energy Agency, it costs $65 on average to produce one barrel of oil from North America's shale plays like the Bakken. This estimate is supported by other sources. This makes producing oil in these areas more expensive than producing anywhere else in the world except from tar sands and in the Arctic.
...

This necessitates relatively high oil prices, as that is the only way that the companies that operate in the Bakken can earn a profit.

Another problem with a tight oil well (as both the Bakken and the Eagle Ford are both tight oil plays and not oil shale) is that it has a very rapid decline rate. An oil well can only produce oil at a certain level for so long before this production level begins to decline. The decline rate is how much the well's production has fallen from its peak, expressed as a percentage. The decline rate of a directional oil shale well averages 69% in the first year and 94% in the second. Thus, by the end of the first year, a given shale oil well will only produce an average of 31% of what it did when it was first drilled. By the end of the second year, the well is only producing an average of 6% of what it did when it was first drilled.

Due to this, operators in the region are essentially forced to continuously drill new wells in order to maintain production, let alone expand it. This is a very capital-intensive process.
Another sign that the tight oil miracle may not be as great as advertised is the fact that several oil majors have been terminating their operations in the Bakken and Eagle Ford Shale and selling off their assets in the regions.
In fact, debt ratings service Standard and Poor's states that 75 out of the 97 American exploration and production companies that it rates are below investment grade.
Now that oil prices have begun to fall and are expected to decline further, these drilling operations will become even more unprofitable.


http://seekingalpha.com/article/2560725-could-the-shale-oil-miracle-be-just-a-pi...
======================================================
IF many of these "new Oil" Producers couldn't make money before, with Oil in the $90-100 plus range, then it would be expected that many will start to fail, as the WTi Oil Price is now in the low $80's and likely to head further South!

If/When these new producers start to fail, there are considerable Global ramifications!






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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #334 - Oct 16th, 2014 at 10:26pm
 
With Wti Oil futures now sitting at $78.84 -
http://quotes.post1.org/historical-crude-oil-price-chart/

There is a considerable question mark over the future of much of the "new oil" market, with much of that section of the market quickly becoming unprofitable!
...
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #335 - Oct 17th, 2014 at 3:27pm
 
Daze Of Peak Oil... Or At Least Peak Oil Production


The story of energy, particularly cheap and plentiful crude oil, has been the foundation of rapid economic global growth since WWII. The Global story of crude oil is integral to understanding the world of 2014. Crude oil matters so much because there is no readily available replacement for its energy and chemical uses and any likely eventual replacement will be at significantly higher costs.

Was 2005 the Peak for Cheap, High-Quality Oil?
Seems the world hit "peak conventional oil" or "peak high-quality, low-cost oil" about 2005 & 90%+ of all subsequent global supply increases to offset retiring low-cost, high-quality sources worldwide have been due to production gains coming from uneconomical and unsustainable US/Canadian "tight oil" and tar sands.

Peak oil is not the end of oil but instead as the name implies, the maximum output before the declines onset... it is marked by the rotation from high-quality, low-cost sources to higher expense, lower quality sources (requiring higher production costs in exploration, extraction, refining, etc.).

Breaking it down…
    '55 to '72 was the golden economic age in postwar America; the cost of energy was stable in a tight range, Debt to GDP fell from over 100% in '48 to 33% by '72.
...


    '72 to '80 sees the good work of the previous two decades reversed; energy prices skyrocket, US energy production begins a long fall, rising debt is masked by the Unified Budget accounting fraud, and US interest rates rise for the final prolonged period.
...

     No wonder the '80s and '90s were so good to the markets; Who remembers the price of oil fell consistently from 1980 until 1998 by a total of 68%, Fed's Fund Rate fell by 73%, and national debt doubled. Good times!!!
...

    But things turned nasty in the '00s; energy prices skyrocketed while production is moribund, interest rates bottom out at zero, and Debt to GDP returns to WWII levels.
...

And what would '14-'24 look like? Most likely continued declining oil production, higher energy costs, and more debt.

Oil Production Close-Up
Here's the strongest evidence of peak oil. Despite the massive price increases, the rise in global oil production since '98 has been anemic.
...

Global production added approximately 1% annually to production... the same amount that was added annually from '81 to '98 when energy prices fell 68%.

Or more pointedly, global production is barely able to offset the conventional production losses with new production... despite the growing demand and massive price hike which should draw all available production to the market.
...

The below chart tracks the rising price and production of global crude oil from 1950 til 2013. A 770% rise in price was met w/ a 780% production increase from '50-'01. However, since '01, a 290% price increase resulted in only a 15% production increase
...

How did US and Canada Increase Production?
Production growth in America is from "Tight Oil" while Canada is a combination of tight oil and tar sands.
...

How sustainable and profitable is this new "Tight Oil"?
This is not a sustainable business model, just like the same nonsense taking place in the broader stock markets as corporations buy back massive amounts of their stock to give the ILLUSION that everything is fine and BAU- Business As Usual will continue.

Not only are many of these oil and gas companies hiding the fact that their balance sheets are hemorrhaging debt, they also have a cozy situation with the Federal Government. Basically, the Fed's allowed them to defer more than half of their tax bill... and it's a lot of money. In a nutshell, the top 20 oil and gas companies still owe $16.5 billion (more than 50%) to Uncle Sam in tax revenue.
...

Conclusion –
It appears the world hit peak cheap, high-quality oil sometime in '05 and the fallout since has been spectacular financial chaos. Declining GDP "growth", money printing gone wild, ZIRP and NIRP activated, all since adequate supplies of newly available cheap energy failed to offset the declining conventional production. And the US / Canada low quality, high cost, unsustainable shale "miracle" signals the death throes of a global economy entirely dependent on cheap energy for growth and service of peak debt.

Shale oil and oil in general is finite and should be priced accordingly.

http://seekingalpha.com/article/2563915-daze-of-peak-oil-or-at-least-peak-oil-pr...
=====================================================
Energy, Demographics, Technology & Climate have been the main Economic movers & that will continue, just differently!
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #336 - Nov 5th, 2014 at 10:52am
 
http://www.marketwatch.com/investing/future/crude%20oil%20-%20electronic

...

WTi currently trading at US$77.19, which means large slices of Fracked US Oil & other "New Oil" is pretty much unprofitable & therefore a drop off in Supply can be expected from those New Supply sources!
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« Last Edit: Nov 5th, 2014 at 4:17pm by perceptions_now »  
 
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #337 - Nov 13th, 2014 at 10:00pm
 
http://www.nasdaq.com/markets/crude-oil.aspx?timeframe=10y

Wti Oil Price currently under $77, at $76.68!

I would suggest, it is likely the Price will continue to Decline, although I don't see getting down to the GFC lows of 2009.

That said, perhaps something around the $60 mark, could be possible?
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #338 - Nov 14th, 2014 at 11:46am
 
perceptions_now wrote on Nov 13th, 2014 at 10:00pm:
http://www.nasdaq.com/markets/crude-oil.aspx?timeframe=10y

Wti Oil Price currently under $77, at $76.68!

I would suggest, it is likely the Price will continue to Decline, although I don't see getting down to the GFC lows of 2009.

That said, perhaps something around the $60 mark, could be possible?


A substantial Decline overnight, WTi Oil now trading at $74.21!

Besides bringing down "somewhat" the price of Petrol, do you understand why Oil Prices are in Decline & the Global Economic/Security ramifications?

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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #339 - Nov 19th, 2014 at 6:45pm
 
perceptions_now wrote on Nov 14th, 2014 at 11:46am:
Besides bringing down "somewhat" the price of Petrol, do you understand why Oil Prices are in Decline & the Global Economic/Security ramifications?


Interesting. Do you think it will increase global security?
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See Profile For Update wrote on Jan 3rd, 2015 at 2:58pm:
Why the bugger did I get stuck on a planet chalked full of imbeciles?
 
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #340 - Nov 20th, 2014 at 1:17pm
 
MumboJumbo wrote on Nov 19th, 2014 at 6:45pm:
perceptions_now wrote on Nov 14th, 2014 at 11:46am:
Besides bringing down "somewhat" the price of Petrol, do you understand why Oil Prices are in Decline & the Global Economic/Security ramifications?


Interesting. Do you think it will increase global security?


Will Oil Pricing increase Global Security?
No!

Will Oil Pricing decrease Global Security?
Yes!



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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #341 - Nov 29th, 2014 at 11:49am
 
OPEC Refuses To Cut Production, Oil Plunges Off The Chart


The global oil glut, as some call it, is caused by the toxic mix of soaring production in the US and lackluster demand from struggling economies around the world. Since June, crude oil prices have plunged 30%. It drove oil producers in the US into bouts of hand wringing behind the scenes, though they desperately tried to maintain brittle smiles and optimistic verbiage in public.

But everyone in the industry - particularly junk bondholders that have funded the shale revolution in the US - were hoping that OPEC, and not the US, would come to its senses and cut production.

So the oil ministers from OPEC members just got through with what must have been a tempestuous five-hour meeting in Vienna, and it was not pretty for high-cost US producers: the oil production target would remain unchanged at 30 million barrels per day.

Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states were thus overriding the concerns from struggling countries such as Venezuela which, at these prices - and they're plunging as I'm writing this - will head straight into default, or get bailed out by China, at a price, whatever the case may be.

The US benchmark crude oil grade, West Texas Intermediate, plunged instantly. Even before the decision, it was down 30% from its recent high in June. As I'm writing this, it crashed through the $70-mark without even hesitating. It currently trades for $68.51. Chopped down by a full third from the peak in June.

It seems OPEC, or rather Saudi Arabia and some of the Gulf States, decided for now to live with the circumstances, to let the markets sort it out. High-cost producers around the world will spill red ink. Governments might topple. Junk bondholders and shareholders of oil-and-gas IPOs that have blindly funded the miraculous shale revolution in the US, lured by ever increasing hype, will watch more of their money go up in thick smoke.

And the bloodletting in the US fracking revolution will go on until the money finally dries up.


http://seekingalpha.com/article/2716495-opec-refuses-to-cut-production-oil-plung...
=========================================================
In fact, the WTi Oil Price has since slipped overnight again & is currently at $66.15

http://www.nasdaq.com/markets/crude-oil.aspx?timeframe=6m

It should be kept in mind that Global Demand is Down, US Production is UP, due to higher Cost of Production "New Oils", which must now be bleeding RED INK in many areas including investors & Governments, including the US Government which is providing massive "subsidisies" to these "New Oils"!

As I have said previously, it is quite conceivable that WTi Pricing may go to $60 a barrel or even lower and the Consequences of such actions would be quite substantial,on a Global scale, including the collapse of "New Oil" Production, particularly in the US & Canada, with many ramifications to follow! 

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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #342 - Nov 30th, 2014 at 2:45pm
 
A Few Quick Observations On Crude



Summary
There are other broad implications, both for high yield and for stocks.
I believe this crude crash, along with other commodities crashing, will lead to a negative impact on stock markets in general.


The defaults are coming
At the present levels, it doesn't matter if shale is profitable or not (as many are commenting on, lately). The fact is that every lending committee on every bank exposed to these things is going to turn the taps shut. No more credit, mostly new renewals, etc. Companies in this sector, which face the need to refinance large slugs of debt are going to be taken to the cleaners.

This also has a possible impact on the high yield markets.
There has been a tremendous explosion in investment in the crude sector in the U.S. and worldwide.

I'd expect the news of defaults to start hitting soon, as the main problem won't be a lack of profits (which should be gone, too) - the main problem will be the lack of refinancing as every finance institution will be seeking to reduce exposure at the same time.

Furthermore, since this might lead money to withdraw from the high yield sector - seeking to avoid these losses - the impact should then spread to high yield bonds outside the oil sector.

Economic and stock market implications?
It's not usual to see crude, iron ore, coal and other commodities break down so hard without there being some economic distress out there
. While the most affected industries (again, crude, iron ore, coal) each have industry-specific problems, namely excess supply problems,
the breakdown is still incredibly large indicating that demand must not be that healthy.


Furthermore, we should see a quick collapse in capex in the shale sector - as well as a wave of staff dismissals, etc, which will have a direct economic impact.

The breakdowns in several commodities are also surprising in that they could go to such lengths without demand kicking in and stabilizing prices. For me this has overall negative implications for the equity markets


Conclusion
At around $50, I'd actually turn a buyer even if fundamentals and speculative positioning remained unfavorable. At the present levels, however, I am just neutral with a positive long-term expectation that's not enough to commit to long positions.

I also expect a wave of defaults in the energy sector, mainly by shale drillers/explorers/producers,
leading to a significant negative impact on high yield bonds in general (though the defaults will obviously be concentrated in the oil sector, I believe this will lead to high yield seeing money fleeing, thus also affecting overall prices for other bonds).

Finally, I believe this might be the final straw that breaks the speculative stock market mania.


http://seekingalpha.com/article/2717015-a-few-quick-observations-on-crude?ifp=0
=====================================================
Normally, the Oil Price would reach a bottom & then rebound to higher levels.

However, THIS TIME IS DIFFERENT and it is different because Global Demographics will ensure that Demand does not bounce back this time, as it usually has, over most of the last 200 years or so
!


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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #343 - Dec 5th, 2014 at 3:06pm
 
New U.S. oil and gas well November permits tumble nearly 40 percent


Plunging oil prices sparked a drop of almost 40 percent in new well permits issued across the United States in November, in a sudden pause in the growth of the U.S. shale oil and gas boom that started around 2007.

Data provided exclusively to Reuters on Tuesday by industry data firm Drilling Info Inc showed 4,520 new well permits were approved last month, down from 7,227 in October.

The pullback was a "very quick response" to U.S. crude prices
, which settled on Tuesday at $66.88 CLc1, said Allen Gilmer, chief executive officer of Drilling Info.

New permits, which indicate what drilling rigs will be doing 60-90 days in the future, showed steep declines for the first time this year across the top three U.S. onshore fields: the Permian Basin and Eagle Ford in Texas and North Dakota's Bakken shale.

http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/12/02/us-usa-oil-permits-idUSKCN0JG2C1201412...
=====================================================
Let's wait & see, what happens over the next few months!

That said, new wells are the life blood of the shale market, as the wells have a very short lifespan, so IF new well applications go down by 40% or more, then the shale supply will dry up, quite quickly!
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Re: The Peak Energy Debate
Reply #344 - Dec 5th, 2014 at 3:28pm
 
Oil And The Global Slowdown


The world economy is slowing down and the authorities are fretting.

Japan, Italy, and Greece are all in recession. China is slowing down according to official statistics, and even more according to whispered accounts.

Germany, France and the Netherlands are all at stall speed.

According to the BLS, the United States is doing just great at nearly 4% growth for two straight quarters, but you wouldn't know that either from the quality of the few jobs being created (which is low) or from consumer spending (also low).

The worry, as always, has nothing to do with the central banks' concern for you, your job, your children, the actual prices you pay, wealth equality, or the future, and everything to do with the simple fact that the stability of the banking system absolutely depends on a steady stream of new loans.

I guess with the binary choices of growth or collapse before them it only makes sense for the current crop of central bankers to do whatever it takes to keep that system limping along, er growing, for as long as possible.

In 2008 and 2009, net credit creation was only slightly negative, but that was enough to very nearly cause the entire system of money and banking in the developed world to collapse.

Now after the most heroic period of interest rates forced to zero (ZIRP) and below (NIRP in Europe) and the grandest experiment with money printing in global history, credit growth is somewhat back on track but not enough to ease the banker worries or to justify their actions.

So the bankers continue to pump, jawbone, and panic at every slight downturn in financial market prices because that's all they have left in the world upon which they can hang their reputations.

The actual economy, the one that lives on Main Street, never really bounced back fully, at least not compared to past recoveries. Growth, jobs and incomes all were anemic compared to prior recoveries. Investment in new capital was and remains dead in the water.

Because oil is the main engine of growth, and we know that even with 2.5 trillion dollars of additional spending over the past 9 years the world is producing roughly the same amount of oil as ever. Why? Because depletion of existing reserves is being matched by new production.

Unless investment in oil production really accelerates from here, new production will be swamped by existing declines.

In the US we know that even under the best of circumstances shale oil, the one and only engine of increased oil production growth, will peak in 2020.

But these are no longer the best of circumstances and oil is now priced well below the actual cost to get most of the shale oil out of the ground:
...

As we can see in that chart, the only plays that are still viable at today's prices are the core areas of the Bakken and Eagleford plays, which should not surprise anybody. Those were the ones drilled first and hardest because they are the most economic.

The fun thing about the shale companies is that they are incredibly nimble and very sensitive to prices. They can stop drilling at any time. As soon as they do, the peak of shale production will be measured within a month.

While they have not stopped drilling, the speed of the pullback is incredible and drilling permits dropped by a whopping 40% in November alone as compared to October:

The bottom line, though, is that without growth in oil economic growth is hard to achieve. I'll go further and say it's impossible to achieve, at least under the old paradigm of consumption based growth.
If oil prices do not recover and quickly, the US shale miracle will rapidly turn into a shale bust. The decline rates on these wells are ferocious.
And with the loss of that fantasy will go the sky-high valuations we currently see for stocks and bonds. After all, the operative question always should be what is the value of these stocks and bonds in a world without growth?

To me the answer is simple; a lot less.

In short, we are now past the point where the next correction could be survived injury free. It's going to hurt.

http://www.peakprosperity.com/blog/89380/oil-and-global-slowdown
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Nuff said!
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