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The AAPG/Datapages Combined Publications Database
AAPG Bulletin
Abstract
AAPG Bulletin, V.
1Manuscript received September 9, 1997; revised manuscript
received April 8, 1998; final acceptance May 28, 1998.
2U.S. Geological Survey, Federal Center MS 939, Denver,
Colorado 80225; e-mail: [email protected]
I wish to thank the following individuals: Donald L. Gautier, U.S.
Geological Survey, who first suggested the warehouse concept of resources
to me; Keith W. Shanley, Amoco Production Company, with whom I had several
discussions of recent trends in the petroleum industry; Kevin M. Pickup,
The Coal Authority (U.K.), who provided recent information on British coal
resources; and Duncan Millard, U.K. Department of Trade and Industry, for
providing data on British coal prices. The manuscript benefited significantly
from the reviews of Keith W. Shanley (Amoco Production Company), John B.
Curtis (Colorado School of Mines), Joseph R. Studlick, Jr. (UNOCAL), and
the following U.S. Geological Survey reviewers: Donald L. Gautier, James
W. Schmoker, Michael D. Lewan, Gordon L. Dolton, and Katherine L. Varnes.
This paper is published with approval of the director of the U.S. Geological
Survey, but the interpretations and opinions presented are mine, not those
of the U.S. Geological Survey, whose scientists have diverse opinions on
this and most other subjects.
Abstract
Examination of some energy resources with well-documented histories
leads to two conceptual models that relate production to price. The closed-market
model assumes that there is only one source of energy available. Although
the price initially may fall because of economies of scale long term, prices
rise as the energy source is depleted and it becomes progressively more
expensive to extract. By contrast, the open-market model assumes that there
is a variety of available energy sources and that competition among them
leads to long-term stable or falling prices. At the moment, the United
States and the world approximate the open-market model, but in the long
run the supply of fossil fuel is finite, and prices inevitably will rise
unless alternate energy sources substitute for fossil energy supplies;
however, there appears little reason to suspect that long-term price trends
will rise significantly over the next few decades.
Over the last 25 yr, considerable debate has continued about the future
supply of fossil fuel. On one side are those who believe we are rapidly
depleting resources and that the resulting shortages will have a profound
impact on society. On the other side are those who see no impending crisis
because long-term trends are for cheaper prices despite rising production.
The concepts of resources and reserves have historically created considerable
misunderstanding in the minds of many nongeologists. Hubbert-type predictions
of energy production assume that there is a finite supply of energy that
is measurable; however, estimates of resources and reserves are inventories
of the amounts of a fossil fuel perceived to be available over some future
period of time. As those resources/reserves are depleted over time, additional
amounts of fossil fuels are inventoried. Throughout most of this century,
for example, crude oil reserves in the United States have represented a
10-14-yr supply. For the last 50 yr, resource crude oil estimates have
represented about a 60-70-yr supply for the United States. Division of
reserve or resource estimates by current or projected annual consumption
therefore is circular in reasoning and can lead to highly erroneous conclusions.
Production histories of fossil fuels are driven more by demand than by
the geologic abundance of the resource.
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