There is a lot to be said
here. The key to understanding the
present global economy is that the generally deft application of fiat monetary
expansion is capitalizing around 500,000,000 people (done) on top of the 500,000,000
already capitalized previously and it has been done inside one generation. It is also reasonable to expect an additional
1,000,000,000 to be capitalized over the next twenty years. During all this everyone else is been drawn
into the growing economy also and poor is quickly becoming much more survivable
most places.
Even when the expansion becomes
turbulent, it sorts itself out through the mechanism of compound interest
however uncomfortable that may make one feel.
However one does the numbers, we
are experiencing a massive increase in future commodity demand and this has
been reflected in a dramatic repricing of core commodities. Present pricing now reflects the green field
costs of launching new mines and finding new oil. Paid for mines are now reaping windfall
profits that are all been plowed back into major expansion.
So it is no particular surprise
that we have an apparent pricing bubble when applied against prior experience.
Yet it is also true that
commodity extraction outside the oil industry was outright depressed outside
the oil industry since the end of the postwar USA economic expansion in 1970
through 2000. Copper peaked in 1972 at
1.30 or so and fell back to .60 to .80 for the next thirty years while easy
cheap resources were fed into the markets, first from the developing world and
then from the former Soviet Union. That
is largely done now and new deposits need to be opened up.
New mining is feasible everywhere
at $4.00 copper and exploration is engaged everywhere now.
In oil we have come to understand
that the difficult oil can now be extracted at $100 per barrel. A massive global investment is underway to
provide as much oil as possible to support the ongoing great global
expansion. It is fair to say that
stresses aside that we are slowly succeeding.
The mere fact that the USA
and Canada
can actually see a scenario in which no oil will be imported is astounding and
reassures the rapidly developing rest that their own energy needs will not be
strangled.
As important, $100 oil makes
alternative energy sources quite practical and opens the door for outright
replacement in many applications. At the
same time, the advent of fuel free energy is truly eminent. The onslaught of fuel free energy will cut
oil production from the present 80,000,000 bpd to around 30,000,000 bpd and it
will be astonishingly fast.
All the technology is lining up
at the gate and is merely waiting for the starter's gun.
A Primer on Peak Oil
Edward Harrison
April 20th, 2012
I ran across three separate
articles on peak oil at well-regarded financial news sites today: The
Economist, The Financial Times and Le Figaro. I thought I’d give you a run down
of what they were saying and what it means for the economy and investing.
What is Peak Oil About?
Let’s start with The
Economist:
As the developed-world economy
tries to gain momentum, it faces a persistent headwind. The oil price remains
stubbornly over $100 a barrel, acting like a tax on Western consumers. Some
blame the high price on evil speculators—Barack Obama unveiled plans to
increase penalties for market manipulation on April 17th. But there is a
simpler explanation: that supply is inadequate to keep up with rising demand.
The concept of peak oil—the
idea that global crude production may be at, or close to, its limit—is far from
universally accepted. One leading asset manager talked recently of the world
being “awash with energy” because of the exploitation of American shale gas.
Nevertheless, oil is still the main fuel for cars and trucks. And crude output
(as opposed to alternatives such as biofuels and liquids made from gas) has
been flat since 2005.
A number of countries
(including Britain , Egypt and Indonesia ) have turned from net oil
exporters into importers in recent years. And although rich countries have
curbed their energy-guzzling a little, demand continues to surge in emerging
markets.
This has left the oil market
very vulnerable to temporary supply disruptions, such as the war in Libya .
This is a good synopsis of the
real issues for individual economies. Let me get into how the peak oil argument
is framed first before we look at what is happening. There are two versions of
the peak oil theory: the hard peak oil view and the soft peak oil view.
Hard peak. The esoteric
argument, derived from M. King Hubbard’s now undisputed prediction of peak oil
in the (lower-48) United States, is that half of all oil reserves were consumed
by 2005 or so and that means we have less than half left. According to King’s
analyses about the relationship between reserve discovery and production and
the rates of production decline in exploited oil fields, this would mean we
have hit the absolute peak of oil production globally. The point is
that no matter what happens, production from conventional oil sources will
not increase… ever. That’s what I would call the “hard peak oil” argument. This
argument is controversial.
Soft peak. The most relevant
argument is a bit more subtle – and this is the one the Economist
delves into. Here, it is not disputed that we will one day hit an absolute peak
when half of the world’s extractable oil reserves have been consumed. Nor is it
generally disputed that technology will be hard-pressed to increase production
levels when we have consumed half of the oil. What is important here is that
the cost of incremental supply exceeds the price at which demand destruction
kicks in. Put simply, we are now at a point where oil prices are so high
that if they go any higher, people cut back on consumption, threatening
recession. I call this the soft peak.
The Impact of Oil on the
Economy
Clearly, we have seen demand
destruction a number of times in the last 40 years. In fact, every global
recession in that time frame was preceded by oil shocks except the one after
the tech bubble. We have had four global recessions on the heels of an oil
price shock: in 1973, 1979, 1990 and 2008. So, the mechanism for how high oil
prices lead to demand destruction and recession – as well as social unrest – is
clear. The question is whether oil prices are high based on oil market fundamentals
that are consistent with the soft peak oil argument or whether the rise in oil
prices is due mostly to commodities speculation.
If you are a politician, you
don’t like demand destruction because that slows growth and makes you look
like you are presiding over a sluggish economy. The concept that these prices
are due to some controllable factor is therefore very compelling for
politicians and they will always act upon it. The Economist begins their
article describing Barack Obama’s plans to go after commodities market
manipulators for just this reason – high oil and commodity prices are
politically combustibleand President Obama’s plan is an attempt to defuse this
as an election issue come November.
Politicians of all stripes
will do whatever they can to tamp down these high prices. For example, in Argentina , President Cristina Fernandez de
Kirchner has complained bitterly about high prices and Argentina ,’s
new role as oil importer. Fernandez has blamed the country’s oil company YPF
for not increasing production. Her view is that the company’s Spanish owner
Repsol is a rent seeker bent on extracting wealth from the company without
adequately reinvesting in the Argentine economy. Recently Fernandez took
action, nationalising the company and has decided to seek partners to
exploit Argentine oil reserves, most likely China ’s CNOOC or Sinopec. But
clearly,peak oil could also explain Fernandez’s dilemma.
As for the speculation
argument, there is plenty of evidence to support it. Commodities have been
financialized, meaning they are readily available for purchase and sale as
financial assets via primary and derivative financial markets. That means that
the Fed’s zero rate policy causes investors in fixed income and annuities to
seek alternative investments in commodities and other financialized real assets
like precious metals. With commodities, Professor of Economics Randall Wray, of
the University of Kansas City at Missouri and a frequent Credit Writedowns
contributor, calls commodities speculation “The Biggest Bubble of All Time“:
An April report by
expert Jeremy Grantham looks at the last decade’s bubble in
commodities; Frank Veneroso expands upon that in a more recent report. Here’s
the elevator speech summary. Take the top 33 commodities that are globally traded—everything
from gold and oil to to rubber, flaxseed, jute, plywood, and something called
diammonium phosphate. Over the past 110 years, an index price of these 33
commodities has declined at an annual rate of 1.2% per year. (Sure there
are variations across the commodities—this is the average. And so much for
inflation hedges. Commodities prices fell—they did not keep up with inflation.
If you liked negative returns, commodities were a good bet.) Although demand
for these 33 commodities has increased a lot over the century, new production
techniques plus successful exploration has resulted in a declining price trend.
Further—and this is a bit
surprising—deviations from the trend follow a normal distribution (you learned
about this in high school; it is a bell curve with nice properties; chief among
these is the finding that about 68% of outcomes fall within one standard
deviation; about 95% fall within two standard deviations (once a generation);
and you’ve got just about a snowball’s chance in hell of finding outcomes that
are three or four standard deviations from the mean).
But what is more surprising is
that over the past decade, the price rises you find for these 33 commodities
are just about beyond the realm of possibility—2, 3, and 4 standard deviations
away from trend. It is a boom without any precedent. Quite simply, nothing even
close has ever happened before, in any market, including hi tech bubbles and
real estate bubbles.
Professor Wray’s conclusion:
speculative fervour is causing an asset price bubble in the commodities sector,
not just for oil alone.
Le Figaro: Hard Peak
Looking at the other side of
this, I saw in Le Figaro on peak oil and the controversy over oil
reserves. My translation of an excerpt from French is below, with a chart from
that article
…According to the USGS,
“undiscovered but technically exploitable” reserves total 565 billion barrels
for oil, and 158,760 billion cubic meters for natural gas. That is the
equivalent of seventeen years of world consumption in 2011 for oil and fifty
years for gas.
The U.S.
report took into account neither the reserves of the United States , subject of separate
studies, nor so-called unconventional resources like oil and gas from shale or
tar sands. The estimates are based on the study of the geology of 313 areas
across nine major world regions. three-quarters of the potential are
concentrated in four of them,South America, sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East
with North Africa and the Arctic . Adding
so-called proved reserves to those newly identified by the USGS would provide
sixty years of oil consumption at the level of 2011 consumption.
Biased data
A misleading picture, protests
Jean Laherrère, former head of exploration techniques at Total and president of
ASPO (Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas). This work is “not
scientific”, he condemns, citing estimates from the USGS in 2000, not verified
by facts, and reflects the ignorance of the authors about the realities of oil
exploration. Concerning oil, “public data are either political or financial,
and are mostly biased”, warned Laherrère in a note circulated at the Club of
Nice, a conference of energy experts in late 2010. As confirmation of these
criticisms, hardly had the USGS published its estimate when the U.S. Department
of the Interior congratulated it. In a statement released Wednesday, the agency
welcomed the visit of Secretary Ken Salazar to Brazil to forge energy
partnerships in this region among the world’s richest reserves of oil.
Without denying the
existence of huge reserves of oil and gas yet undiscovered , Laherrère and
many experts worldwide working for decades on the notion of “peak oil” (“peak
oil”, in English) recall that operated field production declines at 4.5 to 6.7%
per year. All while world demand rises. “The production has been roughly
constant over the past seven years despite an increase in crude prices by about
15% per year,” noted climatologist James Murray and economist David King in an
article published on Peak Oil in the scientific journal Nature (January
26, 2012).
Faced with uncertain numbers
but the inexorability of the underlying trend, seven experts including
Laherrère published a forum last month atlemonde.fr calling on
presidential candidates to anticipate an energy transition, otherwise ” it will
be chaotic” with “disastrous economic consequences.”
The Financial Times: Soft Peak
That’s the hard peak view. And
as I have said, it is controversial. The Financial Times takes up the soft
peak story:
It’s nothing new, this
questioning of what permanently higher oil prices means for world economic
growth. Gregor MacDonald, Chris Nelder andGail Tverberg are
just a few of those who’ve been dedicated to considering the economic effects
of an energy-constrained world. James Hamilton has been attempting to
bridge the gap between peak oilists and economist for years; his ‘How to talk
to an economist about peak oil‘ post (from 2005!) is a must-read.
[…]
The question of what that
impact will be, and how it will be managed, is much more interesting than straw
man arguments about when exactly the oil will “run out”.
I think that’s it exactly.
Even forgetting about the hard peak story, we can focus in on whether the soft
peak story explains much of the run up in oil prices and what impact this could
have over the longer term. It may be the case that peak oil explains much
of the increase in prices irrespective of speculative excess. In my view, then
the story about a “chaotic” energy transition with “disastrous economic [and
investing] consequences” would be the same.
This post originally appeared
at Credit Writedowns and is posted with permission.
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