Today, Robert Hirsch perseveres. According to him, it’s now obvious : we will soon face a decline of world black gold supplies.
In The Impending World Energy Mess (*), Robert Hirsch tries to make people listen to an alarm that he no longer is almost the only one to sound, as was the case in 2005.
An important detail : the foreword of the book was written by James Schlesinger, secretary of Defense under Richard Nixon et Gerald Ford, who then became the first secretary of Energy of the US history, under Jimmy Carter
Schlesinger and Hirsch are today the only government officials or ex-goverment officials in the United States that take the responsibility to cry wolf publicly.
Here is the first part of an interview with Robert Hirsch that we did in August near Washington, DC.
This first part deals with Robert Hirsch’s forecast about an imminent decline of world oil production.
The second part deals with what Dr. Hirsch considers as "a conspiracy" in Washington to keep the peak oil issue "quiet".
(*) The Impending World Energy Mess, by Robert L. HIRSCH, Roger H. BEZDEK & Robert M. WENDLING. [The three authors are associates in a small compagny dealing with energy information, MISI, Inc., based in Alexandria, VA]. Foreword by Dr. James R. Schlesinger, first U.S Secretary of Energy. Publication scheduled on October the 1st. Apogee Prime. 256 pages, $29.95.
Interview with Robert L. Hirsch (1/2)
[oil man] In the book that you are about to publish, your case is that ‘peak oil’ may happen very soon indeed. According to you, when might we be getting into trouble ? In ten years, in less than ten years ?
Let me begin with this : the background is the production. World oil production had been progressing and then it’s been flat, fluctuating, since the middle of 2004 : it's been on a ‘plateau’. The economic recession led to a decline in demand, but not much.
The world demand is going up again. It’s back to where it was before the beginning of the crisis in 2008.
Correct. And the oil production fluctuates in a band of 4 or 5 %. It’s not very big. I think that the world oil production cannot go higher than that.
What is your hypothesis ?
We will stay in this band, and within 2 to 5 years, world oil production will go into decline.
So you have in mind the same terrible scenario which has recently been put forward by the Pentagon, the Lloyd’s and Chatham House, and by the German army.
Roughly, yes.
The Department of Energy too mentions a fluctuating, or “undulating” plateau of the oil production. Are you talking about the same thing ?
The difference is that they say we will get to that plateau somewhere in the future. But we are already there ! And if you look at the data, there’s no question we’re there.
A decline of world oil production within 2 to 5 years… What would happen if you’re right ?
It’s going to be a mess, and all of a sudden it’ll be obvious.
According to you, what would be the pace of decline, once that decline starts ?
That’s a crucial question, because the decline rate is going to determine how much trouble we’re in. In the book we look at two decline rates : 2 % and 4 % a year. Clearly the smaller the decline rate is, the less difficult it will be to deal with. 4 % is really catastrophic. 2 % is going to be less difficult but still very difficult.
How difficult ?
In our 2005 report, we worked on a world wide “crash program”, which is the best that you can possibly do. You can’t go faster than that, so it’s a limiting case. With a worldwide crash program, it’s going to take you more than ten years to catch up, because the problem is running away from you ! If you’re in a race with another person, and that other person gets a head start, even if you manage to run faster than him, it may take a very long time to catch up.
What should we expect, before the world is able to catch up with the ‘peak oil’ issue ?
From a world standpoint, Growth Domestic Product will decline every year for over a decade, and could easily be down 20 or 30 % over this period of time. That’s what I mean when I say « catastrophic ».
Wherever you live, somebody has to get food to you. And modern farming is run by oil, because the tractors that plow the ground and plant the seeds, and do the harvesting, run on oil. And then you have to transport the food to some kind of processor, and again, oil takes the food from there to the consumer.
In 2008, when the price of the barrel of oil was above 130 dollars, there’s been hunger demonstrations in more that 20 countries all over the Third World. Do you believe that it is the kind of things that we have to expect a much larger scale and for many years ?
Yes. My background is physics. There’s a term that I love. Its called “non-linear”. Linear is like this (Dr. Hirsch draws a straight line in the air).
Non-linear is this, or that, or this, that, that (Dr Hirsch draws many lines and curves going into very different directions), and so many things feed back on other things, and so forth.
Getting in and to try to understand the problem in some kind of detail is I think impossible because it’s very non-linear : that will impact this, and that will impact that, and that will impact people.
And people may behave rationally, or they may strike and go out in the streets. There may be political chaos ! When that happens, the police have to get out and then, you know, wars may happen. It gets very messy.
Do you think that a developed country like the United States could face more trouble than a Third World country (developed countries rely a lot on oil, and no developed country relies more on oil than the US) ?
Yes. We’re in a lot of trouble, because we import so much oil, and because almost everything that we do depends on oil.
Canada is in a much better shape. They’re producing the oil sands, and they have a lot of it. They refine that heavy oil, and export it too.
But why won't all those heavy, deepwater or unconventional oils help solve the problem of the decline of conventional oil production ?
Let’s say I want to make unconventional liquids out of coal or gas, and that I do it as fast as I can. You know, worldwide crash program. Look at what happened in South Africa during the apartheid. They had a big problem with the embargo on oil products. They had one coal-to-liquid plant. They decided to build another one right next to it. They had the people there, they had no permitting problem, environmental issues, or anything like this. It took them three years to build something that produced a 100 000 barrels a day (b/d). That was a crash program for them.
It did not make a big difference for them : they still did not have enough liquid fuel to really run there economy, right ?
No. And you cannot go faster than that. It took them three years.
On the worldwide scale, you have to do the same thing everywhere simultaneously, and not for a mere 100 000 b/d, but for multiple millions barrels per day, per year ! That is the problem running away from you.
Here is the key point. Oil is not like this (he shows his I-phone) : this is tiny, it can change fast, you can make big changes in one year or two years. Energy is huge, there’s no way to do it otherwise, there’s just no way. It’s inevitably big.
Today, the only two places where it seems that we can still produce a lot of oil may be off the shores of Brazil, in very deep waters, and in the Arctic ocean. Won't it make a difference to drill deeper and deeper or in the North Pole ?
Let's hope so. We don’t know yet. We’re just getting into those things.
But one thing is very clear, and that’s how fast you can do it. And I’m not even talking about having an accident like the one that happened in the Gulf of Mexico. It takes a long time to find the oil, and then build something that can bring it out, and then drill the holes which you have to do.
So even going as fast as you can, you’re talking about 7 to 10 years to get a 100 000 b/d, which is the average production of a new oil field. That’s the coal-to-liquid plants in South Africa, or putting a significant number of more efficient cars on the road : it all takes time.
If we’re are correct in our book, and oil production goes into decline within 2 to 5 years, the world is going to lose. But there are going to be winners. And the winners will be the oil companies, because they’ll be drilling those deep holes, they’ll almost certainly be building all the coal-to-liquids, gas-to-liquid plants, and so forth. Because we have to have liquid fuels.
Some winners, but the world will « lose » ?…
Will the US be in trouble ? Yes. Will Russia be in trouble ? No. Russia has exports, it will get stronger. Will Russia want to continue to export ? If you were the tsar of Russia, and you see the price of oil going up because the production declines, you know that even if you reduce your exports, you will make as much money or maybe even more. You may want to save your oil.
The king of Saudi Arabia said something that sounded like this earlier this year.
Yes he said that a couple of times. And some people doubt that he’s serious… And not only that, but the Saudis have been lying about their oil reserves for a very long time.
What about the official figures on oil reserves of Saudi Arabia ?
Every year for over 15 years, they have been saying that they have 258, 262 billions barrels. That is NOT plausible.
Why is it not ?
Because they’re producing something like 3.5 billion barrels per year. That would mean that they’ve been finding roughly 3.5 billion barrels each year for 15 years. It’s statistically impossible.
You’re talking about finding something that is very elusive, and also the way discoveries take place is that you find the big fields first and then you find smaller ones.
So to say that you find exactly as much as you’re producing, is… the probability of that for two years may be 50, 60 %. The probability of that over 15 years is zero. It just cannot work that way.
What about the other oil producing countries, according to you ?
Well in OPEC they play games with each other on their official figures.
Look at Kuwait for instance. Back in the 80’s they went from 50 billion barrels of reserves up to a 100 billion barrels, and then they stayed on a 100 billion barrels. They’ve producing on a regular basis, and they are not finding much more oil. And then a couple of years ago some of their people said : “Well maybe it’s 50 billion barrels after all.” But the government shut everybody up.
[In 2004, Shell admitted that it had exaggerated its oil and gas reserves by 20 %.
Between 1985 and 1991, the main oil producing countries around the Persian gulf have on average multiplied by 1.9 the amount of their « proven » reserves, even though no significant fresh oil discoveries would justify this (as many oil experts consider [-M.A]).]