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What happened to crude oil production after the first peak in 2005?

What happened to crude oil production after the first peak in 2005?

The IEA (in Paris) proudly announced in its latest September 2018 Monthly Oil Market Report that global supplies (of liquids) have reached 100 mb/d in August, an impressive figure. What matters, however, is crude oil production, something the IEA does not show in its monthly reports (only OPEC’s crude oil production is given). We therefore look at data of the US Energy Information Administration EIA which go up to May 2018 at the time of writing this article.

As shown in Fig 1, it is clear that the world’s crude production had a distinctive kink in 2005 which looked like a peak at the time of the financial crisis 2008/09. So what has happened since then? How successful was money printing to rescue the oil production system?

World_crude_production_1994-May2018

In Fig 1, countries are stacked in the order given in Fig 2 where on the left we have countries which have declined since 2005 (red columns group A) and on the right we have countries which increased production after 2005 (green columns group B)

Crude_prod_changes_2005-May_2018

Group A
Countries where average oil production Jan-May 2018 was lower than the average in 2005. At the bottom is Mexico with the highest rate of decline. This group started to peak in 1997, entering a long bumpy production plateau at around 25 mb/d, ending – you guessed it – in 2005. This is down now to 16 mb/d, a decline of 700 kb/d pa (-2.8% pa).Decline-group_1994-May2018

Group B

Countries where average oil production Jan-May 2018 was higher than the average in 2005. At the top of the stack are Iraq and the US, where growth was highest. Group B compensated for the decline in group A and provided for growth above the red dashed line in Fig 1.
The 2018 data have not been seasonally adjusted.

In group B we have a subgroup of countries which peaked after 2005

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World outside US and Canada doesn’t produce more crude oil than in 2005

World outside US and Canada doesn’t produce more crude oil than in 2005

After a delay of several months the US Energy Information Administration has published the latest international energy statistics for October 2015

This is an opportunity to update crude oil graphs
http://crudeoilpeak.info/latest-graphs

Fig 1: World’s incremental crude oil production

How Fig 1 is created: for each country, the minimum production in the period Jan 2001 (original IPS start month) to October 2015 is taken (=base production) and deducted from the country’s total production, giving the incremental production which is then stacked in a way that allows to interpret which changes occurred. The stacking order is:

(a)    Base production
(b)   Countries with growing production
(c)    Countries with flat, peaking or declining production
(d)   OPEC and Middle East countries
(e)    Canada (mainly tar sands)
(f)    United States (mainly shale oil)

The numbers denote following events:

(1)   Venezuela strike
(2)   Iraq peak oil war
(3)   Saudi production declines
(4)   High demand for China Olympic Games
(5)   Iran sanctions introduced
(6)   Iraq reaches pre-war production level
(7)   US shale oil boom takes off

The red horizontal line is the maximum crude oil production level in May 2005 (the Katrina year). We can see that almost all additional oil produced now above that level is US shale oil. In other words: without US shale oil (which required cheap money from quantitative easing), the world would be in a deep oil crisis.

The grey line shows the September 2005 production level outside the US and Canada. The graph shows that the October 2015 production level is only slightly higher than in 2005, possibly within the accuracy of statistics.

We can therefore confidently say that growth of the world economy managed to make itself completely dependent on unconventional oil from the US and Canada.

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