What is Peak oil?
"The term Peak Oil refers to the maximum rate of the production of oil in any area under consideration, recognising that it is a finite natural resource, subject to depletion."
--Colin Campbell
Technology and petroleum exhaustion: Evidence from two mega-oilfieldsPublication date: 2007-08-01 First published in: Energy Abstract: In this paper, we use results from the Hotelling model of non-renewable resources to examine the mainstream view among economists that improvements in recovery technology can offset declines in petroleum reserves. We present empirical evidence from two well-documented mega-oilfields: the Forties in the North Sea and the Yates in West Texas. Patterns of depletion in these two fields suggest that technology temporarily increases the rates of production at the expense of more pronounced rates of depletion in later years—in line with Hotelling's predictions. Insofar as our results are generalizable, they call into question the view of most economists that technology can mitigate absolute resource scarcity. This raises concerns about the capacity of current mega-fields to meet future oil demand. Published in: Energy, Volume 32, Issue 8, August 2007, Pages 1448-1454 |
Upcoming eventsPublication tagsPeopleKjell Aleklett, ASPO President Mikael Höök, ASPO Secretary Colin Campbell, ASPO's founder, ASPO Honorary Chairman |