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TEST 6 – Sunset for the Oil Business
Match each statement with the correct person.
List of People
A
. Colin Campbell
B.
M. King Hubbert
C
. Kenneth Deffeyes
D.
Rene Dahan
E.
Michael Lynch
1.
has found fault in geological research procedure.
2.
has provided the longest-range forecast regarding oil supply.
3.
has convinced others that oil production will follow a particular model.
4. has accused fellow scientists of refusing to see the truth.
5.
has expressed doubt over whether improved methods of extracting oil
are possible.
The world is about to run out of oil. Or perhaps not. It depends whom you believe.
Members of Oil Depletion Analysis Centre (ODAC) recently met in London and presented technical
data that support their grim forecast that the world is perilously dose to running out of oil. Leading lights of
this movement, including Colin Campbell, rejected rival views presented by American Geological Survey
and the International Energy Agency (IEA) that contradicted their views. Dr Campbell even decried the
"amazing display of ignorance, deliberate ignorance, denial and obfuscation" by governments, industry and
academics on this topic.
So is the oil really running out? The answer is easy: Yes. Nobody seriously disputes the notion that
oil is, for all practical purposes, a non-renewable resource that will run out some day, be that years or
decades away. The harder question is determining when precisely oil will begin to get scarce. And
answering that question involves scaling Hubbert's peak.
M. King Hubbert, a Shell geologist of legendary status among depletion experts, forecast in 1956 that
oil production in the United States would peak in the early 1970s and then slowly decline, in something
resembling a bell-shaped curve. At the time, his forecast was controversial, and many rubbished it. After
1970, however, empirical evidence proved him correct: oil production in America did indeed peak and has
been in decline ever since.
Dr Hubbert's analysis drew on the observation that oil production in a new area typically rises quickly
at first, as the easiest and cheapest reserves are tapped. Over time, reservoirs age and go into decline, and so
lifting oil becomes more expensive. Oil from that area then becomes less competitive in relation to other
sources of fuel. As a result, production slows down and usually tapers off and declines. That, he argued,
made for a bell-shaped curve.
His successful prediction has emboldened a new generation of geologists to apply his methodology
on a global scale. Chief among them are the experts at ODAC, who worry that the global peak in production
will come in the next decade. Dr Campbell used to argue that the peak should have come already; he now
thinks it is just round the corner. A heavyweight has now joined this gloomy chorus. Kenneth Deffeyes of
Princeton University argues in a lively new book that global oil production could peak within the next few
years.
That sharply contradicts mainstream thinking. America's Geological Survey prepared an exhaustive
study of oil depletion last year that put the peak of production some decades off. The IEA has just weighed
in with its new “World Energy Outlook” which foresees enough oil to comfortably meet demand to 2020
from remaining reserves. Rene Dahan, one of ExxonMobil's top managers, goes further: with an assurance
characteristic of the world’s largest energy company, he insists: that the world will be awash in oil for
another 70 years. Who is right?
In making sense of these wildly opposing views, it is useful to look back at the pitiful history of oil
forecasting. Doomsters have been predicting dry wells since the 1970s, but so far the oil is still gushing
Nearly all the predictions for 2000 made after the 1970s oil shocks were far too pessimistic. Michael Lynch
of DRI-WEFA, an economic consultancy, is one of the few oil forecasters who has got things generally
right. In a new paper, Dr Lynch analyses those historical forecasts. He finds evidence of both bias and
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