From: Spudboy100@aol.com
Date: Tue Aug 08 2000 - 10:08:46 MDT
Very cool article you have supplied us with. No surpise the the combination of the oligarchies that are the governments of the Gulf States., mixed in with the motivation of the USA based Oil Companies will go for all the market can bear. Now that this info becomes know and some non-OPEC oil sites come on-line, the prices will stablize-but that may not take effect until this "new" oil comes into the market place! Maybe 5 years?
In a message dated Tue, 8 Aug 2000 10:36:21 AM Eastern Daylight Time, "altamira" <altamira@ecpi.com> writes:
>
> Stolen from another list (I believe this originally came from _Scientific
> American_)
>
> Awash in Oil
> >
> > There's plenty of cheap oil, says the
> > U.S. Geological Survey
> >
> > The debate over this summer's skyrocketing gasoline prices-an issue
> > that has drawn the ire of both U.S. presidential candidates, Congress
> > and the Federal Trade Commission-obscures what may be a larger truth:
> > there's gobs of oil out there.
> >
> > In June, after a five-year study, the U.S. Geological Survey raised
> > its previous estimate of the world's crude oil reserves by 20 percent,
> > to a total of 649 billion barrels. The USGS team believes the largest
> > reserves of undiscovered oil lie in existing fields in the Middle
> > East, the northeast Greenland Shelf, the western Siberian and Caspian
> > areas, and the Niger and Congo delta areas of Africa. Significant new
> > reserves were found in northeast Greenland and offshore Suriname, both
> > of which have no history of production. "What we did is look into the
> > future and predict how much will be discovered in the next 30 years
> > based on the geology of how it gets trapped," explains [2]Suzanne D.
> > Weedman, program coordinator of the [3]USGS World Petroleum Assessment
> > 2000. "We also believe that the [oil] reserve numbers are going to
> > increase."
> >
> > Besides relying on geological surveys, the USGS also based its numbers
> > on changes in drilling technology that are making it easier to find
> > new supplies and to squeeze more oil out of existing fields. Petroleum
> > companies are flushing out oil with pressurized water and carbon
> > dioxide and using improved robot technology to construct offshore
> > drilling rigs in up to 3,500 feet of water. They are also conducting
> > three-dimensional seismic imaging of underground and underwater
> > fields.
> >
> > The idea of an expanding "reserve growth" of undiscovered oil isn't
> > shared by everyone. Colin J. Campbell, an oil industry analyst based
> > in Ireland, believes the USGS estimates are overly optimistic. "It's
> > only the low end of this scale that has any practical meaning; the
> > other end of the scale is a very bad estimate," argues Campbell, who
> > warned of an impending crunch, based on projections of current
> > production and reserves, in an article in Scientific American [[4]"The
> > End of Cheap Oil," March 1998]. Weedman says the USGS report is
> > documented with 32,000 pages of data. "We've looked at all the
> > information," she states, "and tried to predict on the basis of
> > science and not on past [oil] production."
> >
> > --Eric Niiler
> > _________________________________________________________________
> >
> > ERIC NIILER, a journalist based in San Diego, described the vanishing
> > biodiversity on Guadalupe Island in the August issue.
> >
> References
>
> 1. LYNXIMGMAP:http://www.sciam.com/2000/0900issue/0900scicit4.html#header
> 2. http://sofia.usgs.gov/people/weedman.html
> 3.
> http://www.usgs.gov/public/press/public_affairs/press_releases/pr1183m.html
> 4. http://dieoff.com/page140.htm
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