It seems like everyone but me has read Nassim Taleb's book, The Black Swan. The concept of unforeseen, highly unlikely events has wormed its way into nearly every conversation lately. (The title is a reference to the fact that all swans were assumed to be white until black swans were discovered in Australia.)
Aside from the fact that I have a too-long reading list, perhaps I haven't read it because it's something about which I've already thought altogether too much. I seem to be one of those people who are predisposed to look for the outlier events, the exceptions to the rules.
Peak oil is a classic case of a black swan event. Nowhere in our history of modern economic theory or industrial civilization is there such an event, so the past will be no help to us as a guide to the future. Still, we act as though our theories are gospel, and our markets are wise. New and unforeseen events like peak oil are never priced in.
Only the few people with a predilection to look out for such things will see it, at first, while the madd'ing crowd dismisses peak oil as a hoax, and disregards the mountains of science and data with blithe assertions about their faith in the markets and technology. They'd rather believe wacky tall tales from an itinerant preacher who spent a little time in Alaska's oil fields but apparently never learned a thing about oil production than look at the hard data on oil production we do have. And they will continue to do so until precisely the moment at which the whole crowd has seen the proof and knows that it's true; that is, when the peak is well in the rear-view mirror and nobody has any doubt that the End of the Oil Age is upon us, and it's far too late to take effective action.
Only when oil prices blew past $120 this year did analysts like me get a little air time to talk about the science on peak oil and not be simply dismissed as "peak freaks" with some sort of presumed pathological desire to destroy the economy. And now, with oil prices dragging well below the trendline, our looming supply problem is no longer in focus at all, even as it quietly becomes more urgent. Nothing to see here, people, move along....
Unfortunately, as I discussed in my article last week, when the prices of oil and natural gas are as low as they are now, it no longer pays some companies to continue to produce it. The ones operating at the margin of profitability—the ones working the most difficult and marginal resources, with the highest cost structures—are simply getting priced out, laying down their rigs and cutting back on their expansion plans.
The contraction of new oil and gas development due to low commodity prices and difficulty in obtaining credit is setting us up for an "air pocket" in energy supply. When we hit that air pocket, somewhere around 2010, it will create an especially fearsome spike in oil prices.
A Massive Reality Disconnect
You wouldn't know that from watching the tape, though. Oil and gas, which are part of the very foundation of the real, physical economy, continue to get hammered by traders as if they were no different from any other wacky financial instruments we have invented. As oil finally dropped below $50 and stayed there, the whispers about $20 started going around. Vague fears of a reduced outlook for global oil demand, still not verified by the data, have caused oil prices to overshoot far to the downside.
It's as if traders either don't know, or simply don't care, that oil is already below the production cost in those marginal areas where essentially all of the growth in world oil production must come from (if any). If the chart says it could go back to $20, then they believe it could go back to $20.
Such thinking, confined by conventional wisdom and removed as it is from any sort of real world knowledge of petroleum geology, is not only wrong, it will also prove very costly to those to follow it.
On the other hand, one can go broke trying to tell the market what to think. If the market believes that oil's going to $20, then for a short time at least, it probably will. It doesn't pay to buck the trend.
What does pay is knowing when the turning point is about to happen, before the herd heads in a new direction.
We had one of those turning points at the beginning of 2005, when the decades-long growth trend in conventional crude oil production was finally broken. In 2005, oil hit the bumpy plateau at the top of its bell curve, where it has remained in the range of 74 mbpd. (Natural gas liquids, biofuels, unconventional oil, and other components make up the remainder that bring world "oil" production up to about 86 mbpd.) That's when oil prices sharply departed from their past trends, and shot from about $40/bbl to $147/bbl.
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Now we have a situation where oil is trading for under $50/bbl, but we know that the global marginal barrel production cost is about $65, that OPEC is signaling it wants to defend $70-75/bbl, and credible forecasts suggest that $100/bbl is the minimum needed to ensure future supply.
That means we have reached yet another massive disconnect between the trade and the reality. Before long, the pendulum will have to swing back the other way, and will probably overshoot to the high side.
Put another way, the markets are currently pricing the tail risk of peak oil by 2010 at approximately zero. The lack of adequate substitutes is also priced at zero. If somebody wants to help me make a CDS-like instrument, we can price that risk correctly and make a killing. But short of that, a long position in oil doesn't get much more attractively priced than it is right now.
A World Too Complicated
In a recent interview with PBS, Taleb noted that it only took a tiny bit more demand than there was supply to send prices skyrocketing this year for oil and agricultural commodities. Oil is priced at the margin of supply; the last, most expensive barrel essentially sets the price of the whole lot. That's what we should have been focused on, rather than engaging in a witch hunt for evil speculators.
Few seem to understand the deeply interwoven relationships between oil prices, oil supply, the value of the US dollar, and the health of the banking system and the broader markets. Taleb put it simply: "We live in a world that is way too complicated for our traditional economic structure. It's not as resilient as it used to be; we don't have slack; it's over-optimized."
It's is a point I have repeated often. With just-in-time inventory practices dominating every supply chain and every industry, an interruption in the flow of oil can have drastic consequences within mere days. Events like hurricane Katrina foreshadow what can happen: Power plants shut down, trucks stop rolling, shelves and tanks go empty. Much of our infrastructure is extremely vulnerable to energy interruptions, but that isn't priced in either.
What we build—or don't build—in energy has indirect but enormously important impacts on the financial markets. Without energy, we can't have economic growth. The feedback loop also runs the other direction: without a robust economy, we can't invest in the future of energy.
Monetary policy also has a huge but delayed effect on energy prices, and in time, energy prices feed back into monetary policy. It seems inevitable that the massive creation of money in response to the current credit crisis will eventually result in oil prices spiking again.
Only the next time that happens, totally contrary to conventional market wisdom and the very history of oil production, oil producers will not be able to increase production even with prices again at all-time highs. Simple depletion of mature fields, declining resource quality and quantity, an uncertain financial outlook, skyrocketing project costs, geopolitical tensions and the host of other factors I have documented in these pages will bring us to the peak of oil production sooner than our models projected.
Black swan events are far more common that we might think. The rapid unwinding of the enormous leverage in the financial markets this year was another black swan. The models never priced in everybody being on the same side of the trade in credit default swaps and CDOs, and they never imagined the sudden crash of the markets or the swath of destruction it would carve. History was no help in guiding us through the current crisis.
We also suffer from simple myopia. By focusing on the financial markets without seeing their connection to everything else, we have truly missed the point, which is that energy is the real economy, and money is merely an artificial representation of it. Consequently, twiddling with interest rates, and other measures that don't produce more energy or decrease demand for it, ultimately don't cure our problems at all.
Somehow, we have to start making our decisions on energy policy and the economy on a much longer time horizon, and with a much broader view of how all the parts fit together. It takes decades to make any significant changes in energy infrastructure, like replacing a significant portion of the vehicle fleet, or building electrified rail, or a long-distance transmission grid, or renewable energy systems.
Instead of focusing all our attention on how we might try to play the oil game into overtime, we need to start thinking about how we're going to cope with living on less than half our current energy budget by 2050.
If you only watch the rear-view mirror when driving, you're going to wreck. Yet that is exactly what we're doing with our energy supply planning, and exactly what the Street is doing with pricing future energy supply. It's time to put both eyes squarely on the road ahead, and watch out for that hairpin curve in 2010.
Until next time,
Chris
P.S. Staying ahead of the curve is the one strategy that any investor can use to secure and build their wealth. The trick is to anticipate the unexpected before the herd. My colleague Nick Hodge has found energy's "black swan" in wind. More importantly, he has 3 stocks lined up right now for Energy and Capital readers. Learn more about the Alternative Energy Speculator simply by clicking here.






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Obviously hydrocarbons represent a finite resource and will be used up eventually and presumably in general the best opportunities are exploited first. Thus subject to the counteracting impact of technology the cost tends to increase.
Clearly at some point production will peak. What you include as "oil" also makes a difference. Is shale oil oil? Is liquified natural gas oil? Is liquified coal oil?
But the really ignorant part that leads to those with half a brain having disdain for some of the peal oil snake oil salespeople is this idiotic notion that there is something special about having utilized half a resource as if one even could possibly know the size of a natural resource.
"...but we know that the global marginal barrel production cost is about $65 "
I don't think this is the CASH cost of production which is what counts here in the short term. If the average cost to get oil out of the ground is $65 including exploration and drilling and pipeline charges (in the same way that "it costs $850 million to discover a new drug"), much of that is a sunk cost, so to keep the spicket on and the oil and oil revenues flowing, I am fairly certain costs well less than $65 a barrel. Now okay, in the LONGER term people will stop looking for oil and if that is what you mean agreed. But in the short term the oil shale/tar sand plants may close down, but that might be about it and there again what counts is the cash cost of production as to whether prodcution keeps flowing or not. But what an opportunity we have for any company in the energy or alternate energy field with the cash to weather the storm, by 2010 or so +/-... investments today coud be money machines.
I have been receiving your articles for some time and agree with your premise that peak oil is fast upon the human parasites which infest the Earth. Although you indirectly indite the real problem the Earth has, far too damn many humans and you correctly peg the economic lunacy that the market is the driver for all economic good totally ignoring the vital function of energy, you join aforementioned loonies in the same church and pew. Your attention is focused on economic gain and from my perspective naught else. Current economic expertise is ignoring two major factors to a sustainable Earth; the one as you have correctly pointed out is energy and the other is stasis. I am amused by so called experts, you included, who would have no qualms about calling out someone who is grossly overweight as an ignoramus who obviously does not comprehend the detriment to one's health from over eating; thus overriding the stasis that a living entity requires for a healthy lifestyle. The Earth too is a living entity fashioned by the critters that have lived and currently live by and upon it's bounty. The Earth too requires stasis; unfortunately humans pressured by religious and nationalistic theologians to go forth and multiply and multiply and multiply and multiply ad infinitum are too ignorant to recognize, probably not all, that there are too damn many humans all hell bent on using as much of the Earth's resources as she/he can and having offspring of their own. Lest you think I am a bit too sanctimonious I have no biological children but have assisted in raising 5 stepchildren from two marriages. Since humans appear to not have the intestinal fortitude to control their populations it is my opinion that the Earth is fixing to do so. You give short shrift to global warming; however in the not too distant future it will make peak oil look like the good old days. Think you that the next intelligent critters to arise on the Earth will be pleased when they find that we used up as much of the Earth's easily obtained solar energy deposits, it's all solar except nuclear, as we could before the Earth had enough of us?
Unlike many of geologists and geophysicists, I believe that the USGS forecast for the near future is correct, because there is a great possibility to improve discovery rate as a result of technological progress in exploration methods.
Today, as it was decades before, oil companies drill mostly dry exploration wells. Drilling success rate doesnt overcome 25% on average. It means that three dry wells go to waste from each four drilled. It means also that discovery occurs too slowly today, but there is a highly productive exploration technologies (for example Seismo-electromagnetic - SEM) for detection of hydrocarbon deposits. It provides a success rate close to 75%. In other words, 3 productive wells for each dry well. Obviously with the technology like this world oil industry could make three times more oil discoveries then using conventional technology, and this technology won't need more investment,time-frame and so on compare to a conventional one. It would significantly mitigate world energy problems. (www.binaryseismoem.weebly.com)
Jack Enright
South Jersey
I concur with most of your analysis although I find the peak oil terminology irritating because it seems to imply that we are running out of the black gold. As the IEA report pointed out the main problem is spending to get oil out of the ground. This is compounded by the fact that most oil exploration is constrained by governments. The US for example prohibits offshore exploration in large parts of its territory. The point you made is already happening investment in exploration is slowing down with a barrell at $50 and will only pick up when it goes over $100. However, the time lag between starting a derrick and pumping the product will create a spike in price. The reason I find peak oil term irritating is that it suggest we are running out of oil. In fact when the price is high enough, not only will alternative energy sources will kick in but Silicon Valley will also develop a way to produce oil in the lab.
The IEA report clearly states that there is plenty of oil to be had for now. To me peak suggest panic which might happen and will spur investment in exploration and higher supply. i.e higher production invalidating the previous peak forecast.
This is a freaking good article.....and scary too.
Anyways, when reading history, it's always good to read it between the lines.
Thanks
Miguel
I agree with your thesis in general. Commodity markets are driving to below the cost of production across the board. Part of this is momentum, with the winners adding to short positions and the losers departing the playing field, part is a view that production cuts must be implemented in view of declining economic activity.
I think a distinction can be made between storable and non-storable commodities which the market is not making. This is a profit opportunity. I think metals, in particular precious metals, are in a different category than oil, because their consumption can be deferred and storage costs are low for refined product. 1 million dollars in platinum is 78 pounds, about the same as a bag of ready-mix concrete. 1 million dollars in refined diesel is 11,900 barrels. Imagine the relative difficult of taking delivery and you get my point. So, with multi-trillion $ deficits in the near future, and both commodities trading near the marginal cash cost of production for the more expensive marginal production, which is a better buy?
On another note, do you ever pay for contributing analysis?
Thank you. This article and others by you are well-written. You seem to care for everyone's well-being, your caring comes through in your writing.
I appreciate your thoughts and opinions.
Barry
At any rate, I had begun investing in oil/gas-related mutual funds in 1996; and until this catastrophic crash they did very well. A bad time for someone my age.
I was glad to hear Al Gore comment on the current futility of pushing "clean coal."
I hope you and your readers will contact our next administration on this matter. You finally have a chance of being heard. (I hope you voted for Obama.)
The future looks highly dicey with a collision of two, possibly three, perfect storms - energy depletion, global warming, and the economic fallout from the first two. (This is apart from standard human greed, indifference, and outright stupidity.)
An interesting number to follow will be the hugely fluctuating one of extraction from Canada's oil sands.
I took the ideas of many scientists the world has grown and finalized an ideology and experiment to end the global energy crisis with no greenhouse
gases-That was the easy part-now i find myself trying to gain FAITH of my fellowman to spread this story-WHY-
for i did everything alone-a garage scientists who is successful- and now i need to be proven correct- so i come upon the fantastic invention called the
net- invented after thousands of years- if not millions of the monkey race of man only to be ridiculed and bullied- like the jackasses that harassed
several teenagers to suicide-
what i have found is disgusting and the reason why innocence is raped killed and beaten- why man goes to war over and over again- YOU DESERVE IT-
Truly- as a scientists and observer- i have found the reason for mans madness at times- it is meant to be- to antagonize and harrass each other- hardly
any time to just relax in life- always on guard- WHY-
go live one day in nature and see how hard it is- technology is great and makes life far more stable- so get your head out your ass and understand there
are still many grandparents alive right now that remember when the automobile first came out- the refrigerator- the television- medicine for this
ailment and so forth-
and to this day half the children of the earth still die from simple drinking water untreated-
GET YOUR HEAD OUT YOUR ASS NOW BEFORE GLOBAL WAR BEGINS-
wars have always come and gone- a natural part of life to keep a civilzation the strongest- or die by your neighbors hands that keeps the torch brighter
than another to find answers-
and now in a century man declars war to end all wars forever since ww1-ONE CENTURY NOW-
when will it end-
I am your messenger- over one year i state these words- you will never give me an ear to listen or an eye to witness until i give you a miracle- for
part of your animal ways is giving someone attention ONLY after they do something for you-
CATCH 22
you care not to help me or investigate my science deeds because i say messenger of god- thus- only true solution will never be uncovered as YOU are an
ignorant and selfish creature that says you love god by majority in the world- yet- does nothing when a disciple asks for help-or anyone for truth- and
this is part of my message- i have much to say- and you will surely understand if total economy crumbles and you lose your jobs-and go off to war- for
many look for answers why afterwards-
but for first time in human history- a chance comes for peace without global war- your window closes very fast as the military pawns have been set and
iran russia pakistan and many others are ready-
ONLY a messenger can create peace between the nations without global war- but it seems man is still a savage monkey race-not children of god- thus- let
the lessons continue
Excellent article!
Thanks.