Energy: Can We Run Out of Oil and Other Natural Resources?

Thomas Malthus

Over at the New York Times, resident libertarian-contrarian John Tierney has a column about a bet he took in 2005 with the late energy analyst Matthew Simmons. Simmons—the author of Twilight in the Desert: The Coming Saudi Oil Shock and the World Economy—was a prominent believer in peak oil, the theory that we’ve reached the end of the age of easily accessible petroleum reserves, and that the price of ever-scarcer oil would skyrocket in the future, with frightening consequences for the global economy. Tierney, though, had his doubts, influenced by his friend the economist Julian L. Simon—the leader of the Cornucopians, anti-Malthusians who believed that innovation and economics would always produce abundant supplies of energy and other resources. So Simmons and Tierney made a $5,000 bet in 2005 (when the price of oil was $65 a barrel), with Simmons predicting that the price of oil would be at least $200 a barrel in 2005 dollars by the end of 2010, and Tierney wagering that it would be lower than that.

For awhile Tierney looked like he’d made the wrong choice. During the boom years of 2006 and 2007, oil and other commodities climbed in price, with petroleum hitting nearly $$150 a barrel in the summer of 2008. But then the global economy crashed, and with it, the price of oil, which fell to below $50 by the end of 2008. Though the price of petroleum has recovered together with the worldwide economy this year, with oil now above $90, it’s still well below the level Simmons predicted. Though Simmons sadly died at age 67 this August, his colleagues ruled that Tierney (along with Julian Simon’s widow Rita, who bet $2,500) had won the wager.

To Tierney this is clear evidence that Simon and the other Cornucopians are right, and Malthusians like the ecologist Paul Ehrlich and the environmental scientist John Holdren (now the White House science adviser), are wrong. Even as the global economy and global population continues to grow, scientists and businesses find new sources of energy, new deposits of old energy and ways to make the resources we have stretch further:

It’s true that the real price of oil is slightly higher now than it was in 2005, and it’s always possible that oil prices will spike again in the future. But the overall energy situation today looks a lot like a Cornucopian feast, as my colleagues Matt Wald and Cliff Krauss have recently reported. Giant new oil fields have been discovered off the coasts of Africa and Brazil. The new oil sands projects in Canada now supply more oil to the United States than Saudi Arabia does. Oil production in the United States increased last year, and the Department of Energy projects further increases over the next two decades.

So is Tierney right that there will always be enough of everything we need? Certainly the Cornucopians have history on their side—at least so far. From Malthus on, pessimists have predicted that a growing world will run out of food or coal or oil, but that hasn’t happened yet, and on the whole life is getting better and better every day, at least materially. The Cornucopians have even won bets like this before—in 1980, Simon bet Ehrlich, Holdren and the environmental scientist John Harte that the prices of five metals would actually fall by 1990. Just like Tierney, Simon was right.

I have a lot of sympathy for Tierney and Simon’s position. Human beings are incredibly adaptable and incredibly innovative—that’s why life has gotten so much better materially for most of us. But just because they were right in the past doesn’t mean they’ll be right in the future, as Tierney’s liberal colleague Paul Krugman arguedt earlier this week. In a column called “The Finite World,” Krugman noted that even as the American economy remains in the doldrums, oil has become much more expensive, and overall world commodity prices are up a quarter over the past six months. On the surface that doesn’t make sense. Commodity prices should be connected to economic growth—the faster the economy grows, the more demand there is for oil or wheat or cotton, which is largely what happened to commodities during the runup to the 2008 bust. Yet with America barely out of a recession, prices are rising fast, and many analysts believe $100 plus oil is inevitable next year.

Some have argued that the rise is the result of speculators manipulating prices, or inflation due to excess money creation by central governments. But Krugman bats both those arguments away easily. What we’re seeing, he says, is the result of a once again rapidly growing developing world running up against resource limits. In the new global economy, you don’t need a strong U.S. to buoy commodity prices—a strong China is more than enough:

So what are the implications of the recent rise in commodity prices? It is, as I said, a sign that we’re living in a finite world, one in which resource constraints are becoming increasingly binding. This won’t bring an end to economic growth, let alone a descent into Mad Max-style collapse. It will require that we gradually change the way we live, adapting our economy and our lifestyles to the reality of more expensive resources.

But that’s for the future. Right now, rising commodity prices are basically the result of global recovery. They have no bearing, one way or another, on U.S. monetary policy. For this is a global story; at a fundamental level, it’s not about us.

The reality is that we are in uncharted waters. The world has never, ever seen anything like the rise of major developing countries like China and India—over a billion people growing into the middle class, demanding meat, cars, planes, electricity. Just because we proved smart enough to innovate our way out of periods of past growth doesn’t mean we’ll be able to handle a world with 9 billion plus people by 2050, most of them richer than now. We may already see that impact on the U.S., which will likely have to dig its way out of recession with the added burden of high energy prices thanks to healthy demand from the developing world.

And that’s just economics—there’s a deeper story here for the natural world. As the ecologist Carl Safina points out in his forthcoming book The View from Lazy Point: A Natural Year in an Unnatural World, the global economic growth that we’ve witnessed since the Industrial Revolution has come on the back of ecological destruction. Humans are richer, longer-lived and healthier, but rainforests have been destroyed, species have been driven to extinction and the oceans have been spoiled. The planet is not infinite, and its reasonable to wonder just how much we can take from it, just how many people Earth can support. “It’s like your spending the capital in your bank account,” Safina told me today. “While you spend down that capital, spending more than you’re earning, you’re living pretty well—until you get to the end.” We may be closer to that end then we think—and if that happens, high oil prices may be the least of our concerns.

Related Topics: Carl Safina, energy prices, John Tierney, Julian Simon, Malthusian, natural capital, oil, Paul Krugman, petroleum, Oil
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  • http://8020vision.com jaykimball

    There is some thought that the recession/depression was triggered by $140 per barrel oil. So perhaps as oil rises, it damages the economy enough that the economy collapses, along with demand for energy – oil prices fall back and we just keep repeating that until we create adequate oil substitutes – hopefully renewable, clean and green.

    That said, oil production does seem to be peaking. And governments do seem to be discreetly planning for peak oil scenarios. For an example, see the secret document leaked from the German Military, on peak oil:

    http://8020vision.com/2010/09/03/german-military-study-warns-of-potential-energy-crisis/

    I am with you Bryan. I think this century will be different from last. Last century was a time of abundance and growth with little regard to effect on the planet. It seems like this century will be defined by scarcity – oil, water, food, …

    China is growing fast, and that takes energy and raw materials. The global population is still expanding, and per capita income is increasing globally, enabling what Fareed Zakaria refers to as “The rise of the rest.” And as they rise, they want to consume like Americans did in the last century. That will not be possible. If the planet is a pie, the pieces need to get smaller as the number of slices increase. America’s slice will need to shrink too.

    Less is the new more.

    Jay Kimball
    8020 Vision

  • http://vaengineer.wordpress.com vaengineer

    Since I was quite young, many (many) years ago, I intiuitively understood that infinite growth was not possible on a finite planet. It is nice to see someone in the media bringing out this simple concept. Now, if we could only get our politicians to understand.

    Due to energy and resource constraints, we have a defacto steady state economy. Unless we realize this and stop the pipe dream of ‘after the recession when the economy picks up’ or ‘let’s stimulate the economy now and pay off the debt later with growth’, we will just keep digging ourselves in a hole. The first step would be for a public official to have the courage to state that consumerism is not the cure.

  • http://8020vision.com jaykimball

    Agreed. I suspect the market will force the reality before the body politic does the right thing. Prices will naturally inflate as demand exceeds supply. We are seeing that this very moment as oil, steel, copper, food commodities and water are all increasing in price.

    And even if the US political system embraces a finite world, we have India and China longing for the American lifestyle, increasing their consumer habits. For more on that see:

    http://8020vision.com/2010/06/27/china-the-next-superconsumer/

    Jay Kimball
    8020 Vision

  • http://vaengineer.wordpress.com vaengineer

    Good point. I will say however, that when the %$#@ hits the fan, China has a political system better able to react. Right now they are making efforts to reduce diesel consumption. Look how they implemented the one-child policy when it was needed. Their leadership tends to force their parental wisdom on the masses. Think about our democracy and how woefully inadequate it is for making tough decisions. Our special interest groups will be bickering right up to the point where we collapse.

  • http://8020vision.com jaykimball

    Hi vaengineer

    Well, I hear ya on the whole China benevolent dictator thing. That said, though they are moving fast on renewable initiatives and seem to have embraced that CO2 is a climate changer, they have plenty of initiatives that end up toxifying the nation and public health, slack standards for public safety, enormous pollution problems, massive dams that trash ecosystems, Tibet, Taiwan, governmental corruption, cronyism…

    It’s a mixed bag at best.

    Jay Kimball
    8020 Vision

  • http://mygrandkidsfarm.wordpress.com mygrandkidsfarm

    There are large amounts of untapped hydrocarbons remaining – and there always will be, since, not surprisingly, some are just too hard to extract. Here from that icon of sensationalist journalism, The Economist:

    “The key ratio is “energy return on energy invested”. Analysis by Tim Morgan at Tullett Prebon, a broker, estimates that oil discovered in the 1970s delivered around 30 units of energy for every unit invested. By itself this was well down on the returns from oil discovered in the 1930s, which were nearer 100-to-1. Current oil and gas finds, such as undersea reserves, may offer a return between 16-to-1 and 20-to-1. The return on sources such as tar sands and biofuels like ethanol are in the single digits.” Link

    So yeah, Canada is supplying the US (because, by the way, oil production the US peaked in the 1970s) by strip mining tarry-sand, steam cleaning it, then making synthetic oil from the goop that washes off at a cost of about US$70 per barrel – it takes lots of fuel and water to wash one barrel of oil off of 2 tons of what is basically asphalt.

    I understanding why people want to believe “they” will think of something, the potential impact of peak oil can be really scary to contemplate. Unfortunately, the media’s constant focus on the extremes in the debate do little to advance any understanding.

    Read TheOilDrum.com for the science and EnergyBulletin.net for everything else.

  • http://climatechangers.wordpress.com/ ashermiller

    Ding. Ding. Ding. You are absolutely right that EROEI is critical to how much energy we can afford to bring online. There is a ton of coal in the ground, for example (okay, billions of it), but that’s where most of it will stay.

    For those interested in getting a deeper assessment of EROEI, you will be interested to read a report written by Post Carbon Institute called “Searching for a Miracle,” that analyzes 18 energy sources based on EROEI and nine other criteria. The report can be downloaded as a PDF here: http://bit.ly/UfUeK

  • http://unitwan.wordpress.com unitwan
  • http://www.biodiversivist.com biodiversivist

    History is an unbroken chain of overpopulation, localized resource depletion, starvation, warfare and collapse.

    Resource depletion is a function of technology growth that can allow more extraction and less consumption. What happens is that depletion outstrips the technology growth that lets you find alternatives and efficiency.

    There are no laws of physics that state that human technological growth will always keep pace with resource depletion.

    The only thing new is that it may be global instead of local next time around.

    Biodiversivist.com

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