An editorial in the Chronicle last September warned of peaking global oil production in this decade followed by an inevitable decline. If that were to happen, the US needs to invest heavily in developing alternative energy sources or be prepared to endure steep increases in the price of energy.
A study conducted by the US Department of Energy concurred with the editorial's conclusions.
The study, led by Robert Hirsch, affirmed that global spending on developing alternative energy sources should be $1 trillion per year to prevent the economy from being crippled by oil shortages and the resulting chaos. Considering that the study recommends a 20-year lead time, it might already be too late to prevent a crunch.
Hirsch predicts that oil production will certainly peak by 2020, if not in the next 5 years.
In fact, oil production does not need to peak for severe shortfalls in oil supplies to occur. Natural disasters like Hurricane Katrina, wars like the Israel-Hezbollah conflict, political unrest, government intervention, deteriorating equipment like in the case of the Prudhoe Bay field pipeline, accidents or any combination could interrupt the supply of oil.
The trend of dropping oil prices with the end of the vacation season is extremely temporary. ExxonMobil CEO Rex Tillerson predicts that world demand for crude ol will increase by 50 percent in the next 10 years. Demands from countries like India and China and the developing world will only go up.
Perhaps the report's most sobering conclusion is that the free market and private industry alone will not be able to avoid economic catastrophe from energy shortages. A policy for managing the transition from conventional crude oil to other energy forms is required to be set in place by the government.
If oil companies disagree, they need to make good by showing where all the oil to meet excess demand is going to come from, or come up with plans to develop alternative sources.
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