Oil price at record high – is this the beginning of the end?
With the BBC reporting that oil prices are staying near the record high set in September, the ‘peak oil’ debate has started again.
‘Peak Oil’ is the theory that we are nearing the economic limit of oil exploration and extraction, beyond which the cost of extracting the fuel will soar. Estimates of when the peak will occur range from now (Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas) to 2037 (US Govt advisors). Others reject the idea that peak oil is happening at all, such as Deborah White, senior energy analyst at Societe Generale in Paris (quoted by the BBC) who said “We don’t endorse the idea at all.”
The difficulty is that the oil & gas supply is a function of many different factors: politics (see Russia switching off Ukraine’s gas supply in 2005), economics, geology (where the gas & oil is and in what quantities) and technology (what was uneconomic last year could be economic today). Apart from the geology, these factors are interrelated, unpredictable and may combine in unexpected and sudden ways.
If it is happening, we will be forced to decarbonise our economies swiftly. The only problem is, we won’t probably know until long after it has started. If it isn’t, then we should do it anyway for climate change and security of supply reasons.
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