Another way to read this: only 1/4 of the 99 GB they are claiming are proven reserves.
Yes.  Proven reserves are only 24 GB.

Someone who has read the actual report posted a synopsis at PeakOil.com:

http://www.peakoil.com/fortopic16642-0-asc-30.html

He describes it as "very disturbing reading indeed."

I put up a new thread for Kuwait with a quick linearization of the production data (which turns out to get about the right answer).
Man, every time an Emir dies, some new stuff hits the fan.

So the bottom line is that Kuwait was bullshitting the world about its reserves just like Sadam Hussein was bullshitting about having Weapons of Mass Destruction.

Kuwait's bull shit was so good that it fooled the Mother of All Bullshitters, Sadam, to go to war in hopes of cashing in on all that non-existant oil back in 1991.

Kuwait's bull shit was so good that it fooled the Father of the Ultimate Bullshitter, Geroge I father of George II, to go to war to stop Sadam from cashing in on the non-existant Kuwaiti oil. (George I got a small "honorarium" for coming to Kuwaits rescue. Not a bribe, an honorarium.)

Luckily for us, Simmons is all wrong about the rest of those straight shooters from the ME street. Other than Kuwait's Emir and Sadam of Iraq, all those other Middle East leaders are not  bullshitters. They're giving us the straight dope (or is it hemp?).   SA really does have the "proved" reserves that it has proven time and again it can tap into when the demand spikes.

The world is safe from bullshit.
Woo hoo.

Bullshitting is effective because most media and analysts lack  the ability for critical thought.  When SA annouces it really has 900 billion barrels of oil they should be laughed at instead of having such patent nonsense rebroadcast as if there was some plausibility to it.  There are no secret oil provinces in SA that have a few Ghawars waiting to be exploited.  This is based on decades of exploratory drilling and the fact that Ghawar sized fields would have been impossible to miss.  The existing fields have enough data about them to impose constraints on the total oil in the ground.