As was stated at the end of Yesterday's House hearing(I'm not sure who answered the question, I think it was Rep. Bartlett, but it might have been Hirsch) - this is too complex an issue to be able to provide an answer. We simply won't know until it happens.

Almost any visitor to this site with decent math skills who has read and digested the available information on the subject would be able to venture a guess that would be as good as anybody's.

There are simply too many factors that influence the equation. If you can predict where all the variables will be and what the equation itself will be in a year, then surely you can predict the price. Good Luck.

I agree, it is simply too complex to predict - not that I'm trashing attempts to understand it.  There is too much bad data and missing data.  In the end, we are left with using our best judgment - as we always are, really.  I don't believe all the tales of new liquid sources will bear fruit in the near term, or some ever, and I don't think I want some of them to (environmental costs).   My guess at this point is that we'll have a rocky time of it the next 10yrs, but that we probably will not see catastrophic collapse.  But we will certainly see changes.  I see major changes in our society and economy since the 1970s, and at lest some of that is attributed to the changing oil picture.  

On the other hand there is always the possibility of a few major events that could change everything - attacking Iran, coup in Saudi Arabia, or more likely something no one has anticipated.  And I figure the GOM will be continually battered by hurricanes - maybe not every year, but if it got hit hard every 3 it would prevent it from truly recovering.  How could one possibly translate this into a price per barrel?  When I look at the realm of reasonable scenarios, I see far more reasons for it to go up than I do for it to go down.  

Lastly, when I look at the energy, environmental, economic, and political situations both separately and in combination, it gives me no comfort in what our future holds.  And a collapse in one area could improve the situation in another, making prediction that much harder.

It most definitely is too complex to predict. Yet this is exactly why we should be doing risk management on the issue. Right now there appears to be zero risk management under consideration. Maybe someone should put a bug in Lloyds of London's ear about this. It might make a new insurance market and if that happened, then people might just sit up and take notice before we go gurgling down the drain.