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I tried to summarise his numbers and came up with the table below (hope it becomes readable as it is posted)
It appeares as the decline rates in the presented table in said article has been derived from the IEA demand figures.
SUMMARY FOR THE PERIOD 2005 - 2010 Based on the article "Prices set firm, despite massive new capacity "Petroleum Review, October 2005
Cumulative demand increase 10,2 Mb/d
Cumulative depletion, 5 % 26,4 Mb/d
TOTAL NEW SUPPLIES REQUIRED 36,6 Mb/d
Cumulative supplies increases from non-OPEC 9,5 Mb/d
Cumulative supplies increases from OPEC 6,0 Mb/d
Cumulative additional supplies required 20,9 Mb/d
By using the numbers to generate a diagram it came out with a peak in 2004. I could of course have missed something, but it did not look right to me.
Rune in Norway
A better method would be to add up type II and III depletion which i figure at 2.5% to 3.5% per year.
Then you would get this:
Cumulative demand increase 10,2 Mb/d
Cumulative depletion, 2.5 % 11,8 Mb/d
Total new supplies required 22 Mb/d
Cumulative additional supplies 20.9 Mb/d
It is quite unlikely that we will peak before 2010. Possible yes but unlikely. We also have to count additional projects coming on-stream around 2009 and 2010.
A different depletion rate will obviously change the outcome.
Rune in Norway
A question I have, particularly for the insiders, is do we really know we've got at most of the deep water? Eg consider the US offshore which hasn't been surveyed for decades. I'm guessing seismic surveys in the sixties or seventies would not have looked for/found deep water oil. So how do we know there isn't a bunch of deep water oil, for example, off the continental slope by the big west coast rivers (Columbia, Sacramento, Colorado, etc). Or off the Atlantic edge of Europe?
The answer to your question is yes - we really have explored the most prospective deepwater areas, we have found most of what is expected to be found, and what is left is of substantially different quality than what has already been discovered. That does not mean that all the deepwater discoveries have been put on production yet. Many of these discoveries will be brought on stream in the next 5 years. However, despite record high oil prices, new deepwater discoveries are few and far between, and the ones you may have read about, you will find as time goes by, are not up to their initial billings.
For more info I have written about this stuff here:
http://beastsbelly.blogspot.com/2005/08/deep-water-basins-will-save-us.html
http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2005/10/7/4122/71046#50
http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2005/10/7/4122/71046#51
http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2005/10/7/4122/71046#64
However, the question is not whether there are potentially accumulations in these off limits areas that are attractive as investment opportunities for individual companies and investors. The answer to that is yes. But a more important question is whether there are areas of the planet that are 1) unexplored or underexplored; 2) currently off limits for exploration and development; and 3)considered to have enough prospectivity to add several million barrels per day to the global production mix. My personal answer to that is unequivocally no (ANWR not withstanding).
All of the areas outboard of the world's major river deltas have been explored. (The Mississippi, the Nile, the Congo, The Niger, the Amazon, the MacKenzie etc.). The biggest deepwater fields found to date are not much more than a billion barrels recoverable each. Some of these are forecasted to produce at 250,000 BOPD when they are fully up and running. So it will take 4 of the biggest ever found to fill a production hole of 1 MMBOPD. If demand is increasing by 2 million barrels per day, we have to be finding about 8 of these every year to fill this hole ( I know, I am preaching to the choir) even without regard to depletion. Have we as a global deepwater explorers missed this much? I doubt it.