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I am sure he also meant as the cost of crude rises, it becomes economical
vialbe to extract oil from less desirable and thus more expensive oil fields, such as many oil fields in the SW and the shale oil fields. If he didn't mean that, he should have. -- Reggie "RCE" wrote in message ... wrote in message oups.com... RCE wrote: wrote in message oups.com... RCE wrote: Again, stolen from another NG, the following is a portion of an article published in the "Economist". It seems to refute some of the Peak Oil doom and gloom arguments. --------------------------------------------------------------------------- There was an article in the latest Economist about this. Here's a little of it: As oil production slows, prices will rise up and down the futures curve, stimulating new technology and conservation. We might be running low on $20 oil, but for $60 we have adequate oil supplies for decades to come." ---------------- $60/bbl for "decades to come"? How far from the wastebasket does one need to stand to score 3 points with a paper wad? According to his theory, $100/bbl will add a couple of more decades of availability. RCE I don't know when that theory was expounded, but that $60/bbl oil lasted maybe a few weeks or months. Certainly not "decades". We're closing in on $80. Chuck, the author was not claiming that a certain price would last for decades. His point was that the higher the price, the longer remaining oil supplies will last. RCE |