Doug
Casey on Peak Oil
Interviewed
by Louis James, Editor, International
Speculator
Recently
by Doug Casey:
Syria and the Global RoboCop
L:
Doug, in our conversation
last week about Syria, we talked about implications for the
oil business, and you mentioned Peak Oil. That's a controversial
subject to some, and we've had questions about it. Care to comment?
Doug:
There shouldn't be any controversy, as the facts are clear and
there wouldn't be any, if so many people weren't so obstinate about
misunderstanding plain English. For instance, I was just reading
an article the other day, entitled Whatever
Happened to Peak Oil?, in which the writer comes across
as if not an idiot, then at least intellectually dishonest. He does
so first by his reference to an apocalyptic religious prediction,
where he implies that those who credit M.
King Hubbert's Peak Oil theory are like foolish religious fanatics,
as opposed to analysts of a possible geological reality, and second
and more important by showing a complete failure to grasp the
very simple essence of the Peak Oil argument.
L:
Which is?
Doug:
In essence, that there is a finite amount of conventional light,
sweet crude in the earth's crust. That statement may not seem like
a cosmic breakthrough, on its face. After all, if you have a 42-gallon
barrel of oil and you consume 21 barrels, it's simple arithmetic
that 21 barrels remain. On the other hand, wealth is something men
create, not something that they simply find. That philosophical
fact, however, doesn't really have much to do with Peak Oil theory.
This theory
is widely misunderstood, even by economically literate people, oddly
enough. Such people rightly point out that the world will basically
never run out of anything, as long as the market is free to set
prices. Decreased supply increases prices, which simultaneously
causes people to economize, and incentivizes new producers and new
alternatives to enter the field. That's absolutely true, but irrelevant
to Hubbert's point, which was strictly a geological one: The number
of conventional deposits of light, sweet crude in the US are finite,
and the search for them has been more thorough than anywhere else
in the world, and a documented decline in discoveries had to lead
to a documented decline in production of this particular kind
of oil.
Peak Oil is
a major reason why, in spite of a rapidly cooling global economy,
oil prices are still near historic highs, at over $95 a barrel.
In part, this is due to so-called "quantitative easing" i.e.,
money-printing but it's also clearly evidence of the essential
correctness of Hubbert's theory, which accurately predicted the
peaking of light, sweet crude-oil production in the US circa 1970.
It was not only technically daring, but occupationally and politically
dangerous in the '50s for Hubbert to forecast that the US, and then
world production, would go into decline. And he was right.
L:
Oil sands were not part of his consideration.
Doug:
Right. To my knowledge, he never said anything about oil sands,
shale oil, oil from coal, heavy oil from Venezuela, or deep ocean
drilling off the coast of Brazil or other places. He did not say,
and Peak Oil does not mean, that the world is going to run out of
oil. All he said was that the lowest-hanging fruit was picked
the production of that particular kind would go into permanent decline.
Technology is constantly pushing both production costs lower and
expanding economic supply. But the simple fact that the low-hanging
fruit is being depleted at an accelerating rate worldwide is simultaneously
pushing costs up. In fact, for many years especially the '0s and
'60s people discovered a lot more oil than the world produced.
But since 1980, the world has produced more oil than people discovered.
Petroleum geos believe there are about two trillion barrels of recoverable
conventional oil, and we now appear to have produced a bit over
half of it.
Unconventional
oil supplies of all types could easily be ten times as great as
the light, sweet crude supplies we're depleting but that's simply
not relevant to Hubbert's theory, which was a geological statement,
not an economic one.
L:
There's no real argument on this point, right? US light, sweet crude
production did peak, just as he foresaw.
Doug:
That's correct. And he also predicted that in about 2005-2010, light,
sweet crude production would peak globally and it has.
A lot of people
pooh-pooh Peak Oil saying, quite correctly, that we'll never run
out of oil. That's true partly because of the huge amounts of unconventional
oil available, partly because of constant improvements in technology,
and because of the basic economic arguments I mentioned earlier.
But again, these things are irrelevant to Hubbert's point and its
documented correctness.
The take-away
point from all this is that the cost of oil production has likely
found a new floor. Peak Oil doesn't mean we run out of oil only
that the cost of production, which now often runs about $40 per
conventional barrel and up to $80 per unconventional barrel, all-in,
is never going back down to where it was. Prices can never go back
to where they were either, because if they drop or are forced
by law below the cost of production, there won't be any production.
Even considering
the current economic downturn, which is in fact the Greater Depression
beginning, the developing world, especially the Chinese and Indians,
is going to be using a lot more oil. It's just going to have to
come more and more from higher-cost, unconventional sources. It's
worth noting that oil consumption in the developed world North
America, Europe, and Japan is flat and has been for years. The
growth in consumption and there will be growth is coming from
China, India, and the rest of the world, where 80% of the people
are.
L:
Is there really no chance of ever running out? Even the unconventional
stuff must be finite
Doug:
No or rather, it's an academic point. As a matter of basic science,
oil is really a simple chemical. It's just carbon, hydrogen, and
oxygen, all of which are common and abundant on our planet. We can
make oil in the lab now; and at high-enough prices, it would be
economic to make oil products in chemical plants, out of these three
basic elements. If
we're right about nanotechnology, the cost of synthesizing gasoline
and almost any molecules you can think of will drop to trivial levels
with no waste or byproducts.
L:
If we ever get cheap, programmable assemblers
Doug:
Even without that, they in particular Craig Venter, who is also
responsible for huge breakthroughs in sequencing the human genome
are already working on algae that make oil. There are lots of
technological fixes for this. It simply makes no sense to worry
about running out of oil in particular or fuel in general. It's
not going to happen.
L:
That doesn't stop the Mad
Max wannabes from citing Peak Oil as scientific proof that
The End is nigh.
Doug:
[Chuckles] Yes, there seem to be two schools of thought relating
to Hubbert's theory. Both are basically reflections of the psychology
of the people in question and have nothing to do with Peak Oil.
One group says the world is running out of oil completely the
"Mad Max" group you referenced. The other says Hubbert was wrong,
and we'll never run out of oil. Of course, they are right that we'll
never run out, but Hubbert was right about conventional light, sweet
oil which is basically what the world has run on for the last
century.
L:
Investment implications? People wonder if these more-expensive-to-produce,
alternative oil supplies are viable, and the answer is
Doug:
Yes. The answer is yes. But even that's no big deal, over the long
haul. Oil is the most compact, dense store of easily transportable
energy we have, making it ideal for vehicles today. Fifty years
from now, however, there will be a dozen cheaper and better technologies.
The chattering
classes have an innate and most regrettable tendency to become hysterical
over any possible problem most of them temporary, illusory, artificial,
or imaginary. Global
warming, overpopulation, immigration, food shortages, nuclear
power, drugs, genetically modified organisms they're all blown
up out of all proportion, just like the so-called energy crisis.
That's because hysteria leads to calls for political action, and
political action feeds power to the state and its minions.
The fact of
the matter is that most things are nonproblems... or absolutely
would be if the market was allowed to solve them.
L:
Sure just look at how far electric cars have come. Nobody wanted
them before, because something like a golf cart is simply not practical
for driving the kids to school, bringing home a cord of wood, or
driving across the country. Enter the Tesla
Roadster the thing can accelerate faster than my Corvette.
If it could go both as far and fast as my 'Vette, I might just buy
one. But that design is already several years old, and batteries
and electric motors keep getting lighter and more powerful. As they
get better, there won't be any point in governments forcing people
to buy electric cars they'll want them because they are better
cars. I've already seen free electric-charging stations at rest
areas between my house and Vancouver this could work for me.
Doug:
Exactly. Moore's
Law applies here too, though maybe at a different rate. As I
like to point out, there are more scientists and engineers alive
today than during all the rest of history combined and they are
busy doing things.
L:
So would you buy stock in Tesla Motors (Nasdaq: TSLA)?
Doug:
I might, but I don't know the company well enough. And the stock
market doesn't impress me as a bargain, either. Anyway, a great
idea doesn't always make for a great company. It's a pioneer, and
pioneers often wind up full of arrows. I leave that sort of thing
to Alex Daley and the Casey
Extraordinary Technology team.
L:
Other investment implications?
Doug:
Well, as I was just saying, oil prices have probably reached a new
plateau, based on the cost of production, which is driven by the
Peak Oil factor. Prices of raw materials cannot fall below the cost
of production, even with government price controls not for longer
than stockpiles last, anyway.
I think the
same argument applies for gold and silver and many other elements
and minerals, by the way.
L:
So are you buying oil stocks now, or are you looking for lower prices,
given your bearish view of the global economy in the near term?
Doug:
As with Alex and the technology stocks and you with mining stocks,
when it comes to particular oil companies, I follow whatever Marin
Katusa says in our
energy letters very carefully.
But I have
to say that the oil business is different from mining. Mining is
a tough and, in today's world, basically a crappy business. It's
unwanted, expensive, high risk, and has a myriad other problems.
They can be addressed, but they never go away. At least on technical
grounds, oil is a much easier business; you can see what you're
usually looking for with 3D seismic surveys and one drill hole can
both make your discovery and put it into production. Some of those
holes can deliver thousands of barrels of oil per day for years.
So, as far as the economics, science, and engineering goes, it's
a much better business than mining but for the same reasons, it's
become much more politicized. That makes government risk even greater
than mining.
At any rate,
my gut sense is that just like the junior mining stocks, junior
oil stacks are bouncing around near a bottom. And oil juniors are
almost as volatile as junior mining stocks.
L:
Well, whether it's in oil, technology, or metals exploration, when
you go from having nothing but an idea to having a discovery with
measurable value, the results for shareholders can be spectacular.
The change in value from nothing to something whatever that "something"
is can make for three- and four-digit percentage gains in days.
That's why we like these "most volatile stocks on earth," as you
call them.
Doug:
That's right. Speculating on a discovery in any of these fields
takes nerves of steel and a true contrarian mindset, but for those
who have the discipline, the results can be life-changing.
There are literally
thousands of these little venture companies you could bet on. You
have to be diligent ruthless, actually about narrowing the field,
which is what makes our "8
Ps" approach to separating the wheat from the chaff so important.
L:
The 8 Ps my mantra and my marching orders. Okay then, thanks for
the clarification on Peak Oil.
Doug:
My pleasure. See you next week at our upcoming
Carlsbad Summit. I look forward to spending time with many of
our readers there.
L:
Me too always fun. And for those who can't make it, we'll both
be at this year's New
Orleans conference.
Doug:
Well, speaking of other gatherings, there are efforts to start new
Casey phyles in Thailand and Tennessee. If any of our readers live
in those areas and are looking for like minds or if they live
somewhere else and would like to find or start a Casey group, they
can find out more by emailing [email protected].
L:
Very good. See you soon!
August
30, 2012
Doug
Casey (send him mail)
is
a best-selling author and chairman of Casey
Research, LLC., publishers of Caseys
International Speculator.
Copyright
© 2012 Casey
Research
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