Peak OilPeak oil is the point in time when the maximum rate of global petroleum extraction is reached, after which the rate of production enters terminal decline. The concept is based on the observed production rates of individual oil wells, and the combined production rate of a field of related oil wells. The aggregate production rate from an oil field over time appears to grow exponentially until the rate peaks and then declines, sometimes rapidly, until the field is depleted. It has been shown to be applicable to the sum of a nation’s domestic production rate, and is similarly applied to the global rate of petroleum production. Peak oil is not about running out of oil, but the peaking and subsequent decline of the production rate of oil. M. King Hubbert created and first used this theory in 1956 to
accurately predict that United States oil production would peak between
1965 and 1970. His logistic model, now called Hubbert peak theory, and
its variants have been shown Some observers, such as petroleum industry experts Kenneth S. Deffeyes and Matthew Simmons, believe the high dependence of most modern industrial transport, agricultural and industrial sy stems on the relative low cost and high availability of oil will cause the post-peak production decline and possible severe increases in the price of oil to have negative implications for the global economy. Predictions vary greatly as to what exactly these negative effects would be. If political and economic changes only occur in reaction to high
prices and shortages rather than in reaction to the threat of a peak,
then the degree of economic damage to importing countries will largely
depend on how rapidly oil imports decline post-peak. According to the
Export Land Model, oil exports drop much more quickly than production
drops due to domestic consumption increases in exporting countries.
Supply shortfalls would cause extreme price inflation, unless demand is
mitigated with planned conservation measures and use of alternatives. Pessimistic predictions of future oil production operate on the thesis that either the peak has already occurred, we are on the cusp of the peak, or that it will occur shortly and, as proactive mitigation may no longer be an option, predict a global depression, perhaps even initiating a chain reaction of the various feedback mechanisms in the global market which might stimulate a collapse of global industrial civilization, potentially leading to large population declines within a short period. Throughout the first two quarters of 2008, there were signs that a possible US recession was being made worse by a series of record oil prices. |
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to be descriptive with reasonable accuracy
of the peak and decline of production from oil wells, fields, regions,
and countries, and has also proved useful in other limited-resource
production-domains. According to the Hubbert model, the production rate
of a limited resource will follow a roughly symmetrical bell-shaped
curve based on the limits of exploitability and market pressures.
Various modified versions of his original logistic model are used, using
more complex functions to allow for real world factors. While each
version is applied to a specific domain, the central features of the
Hubbert curve (that production stops rising, flattens and then declines)
remain unchanged, albeit with different profiles.
