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Take a Peak

An interview with peak-oil provocateur Matthew Simmons

By Amanda Griscom Little
03 Nov 2005
Read more about: energy | interview | oil | all of these topics
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Matthew Simmons.
Matthew Simmons: he's more radical than he looks.
Matthew Simmons has been stirring up a lot of angst in energy circles this year. This well-connected industry insider has concluded that some of the world's largest oil beds may be on the verge of production collapse -- and he's willing to bet his much-vaunted career on it.

Author of the recently published Twilight in the Desert: The Coming Saudi Oil Shock and the World Economy, Simmons is founder of Simmons & Company International, an investment bank that handles mergers and acquisitions among energy companies, and counts among its clients Halliburton, General Electric, and the World Bank. A graduate of the Harvard Business School, he served as an energy-policy adviser to the 2000 Bush-Cheney campaign.

Conservative credentials aside, Simmons has been boggling the minds of people across the political spectrum with his recent prediction that the price of a barrel of oil could hit the high triple digits within a few years. To postpone economic meltdown, he says we should be drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and other hotly contested spots. At the same time, he's calling for a massive shift in energy policy, including radical improvements in efficiency, as well as a return to local farming and manufacturing. With his unconventional opinions, he's single-handedly reinventing the image of the post-oil energy crusader. He talked to Grist from his cell phone while dashing between energy lectures.




question Let's start with a brief overview of the premise and implications of Twilight.

answer I believe we are either at or very close to peak oil. If I'm right, then we have to assume that five or 10 years from now we'll be producing less oil than we are today. And yet we have a society that is expecting, under the most conservative assumptions, that oil usage will grow by at least 30 to 50 percent over the next 25 years. In other words, we would end up with only 70 percent of the oil we have today when we would need to have 150 percent. It's a problem of staggering economic proportions -- far greater than the temporary setback of a terrorist attack on energy infrastructure -- that could end up leading to more geopolitical fistfights than you can ever imagine. The fistfights turn into weapon fights and give way to a very ugly society.

Oil well.
Is the sun setting on the era of cheap oil?
question How did this thesis evolve?

answer The odyssey began in the early 1980s when I realized that my firm was threatened by a production collapse in the energy and oil-service business. I thought, "How on earth could this have happened without us even knowing?" I started doing some careful investigation into energy data. The more I studied, the more I started to realize that so many people who call themselves experts in the energy market, including government analysts, are in fact experts in their opinions and don't actually base a lot of it in actual data.

question Why? Because the relevant data are confidential?

answer Yes, what's publicly available is extremely vague. No major oil-producing companies or nations allow audits of the data on their reserves and production, which leaves the experts effectively playing a guessing game.

question If the data are concealed, on what evidence did you base your own conclusions?

answer I've spent years poring over hundreds of papers from the Society of Petroleum Engineers that have revealed fascinating clues. First I took an inventory of the top oil fields in the world, field by field. I was aghast to find that nobody had ever listed even the top 20 oil fields by name. I found that there are only about 120 oil fields in the world that produce half of the world's oil supply. The top 14 fields, which make up 20 percent of global supply, are, on average, over 53 years old. In Saudi Arabia, which harbors a quarter of the entire global supply, there are only five key fields producing 90 percent of their oil. They're all old.

Naturally I was very curious to find details on the condition and productivity of these fields. Two years ago I took a trip to Saudi Arabia on a government tour for business executives. They plied us with various data points that just didn't add up, even vaguely. I've since found evidence in the engineering papers indicating that the major Saudi fields are seriously at risk of reaching their peak, at which point they will begin to see their output decline.

question In this case, would Saudi Arabia's leadership collapse?

answer I want to steer away from discussing specifics of geopolitics in the Middle East because I really don't want to shift the focus away from the economics. It doesn't ultimately matter who rules Saudi Arabia. They can't change the maturity of their oil fields.

question You made a $5,000 bet with conservative New York Times columnist John Tierney that per-barrel oil prices will be at $200 in 2010. How did you arrive at this number?

answer Well, first of all, the $5,000 bet was essentially an effort to be provocative and wake people up to how cheap oil still is. I started a year ago saying that we need to prepare ourselves for triple-digit oil prices -- and I don't mean $100 per barrel, I mean high triple digits. Will it be by 2010? We don't have any idea. It could be by the winter of 2006.

Oil price will ultimately be set by demand and supply. Current oil prices are ridiculously cheap. People find that hard to believe, particularly now, but consider this: $65 a barrel translates to 10 cents a cup. Ten times cheaper than bottled water. People who think that this is a really high price need to have their heads screwed back on.

question You have an enormous amount, professionally, riding on the prediction that peak oil is nigh.

answer I'm basically betting my entire career.

question What evidence did you find of looming production limits?

answer Let's start with the plummeting rate of discovery of critical oil fields. The French Petroleum Institute did a major study a couple of decades ago about the distribution of oil fields by basin, which lends itself to a chessboard analogy. What happens with phenomenal regularity worldwide is that within about five years of moving into a new area of potential oil reserves, prospectors tend to find the queen first, which is the second-largest; within a handful of years they find the king; and then over the next decade you find the next eight to 10 lords. And once you've found the royal family, the rest of the hydrocarbon deposits you'll ever find are basically peons in size. Research overwhelmingly shows that all the royal families have been discovered.

question Can you describe your findings that most of the king- and queen-sized deposits are so old that they have to be injected with increasing amounts of water to produce the crude?

answer For decades, Saudi Arabia has been injecting water in each key oil field to keep reservoir pressure artificially high. The data show that Saudis are now injecting somewhere between 15 million and 18 million barrels a day of water to recover 8 million barrels a day of oil. This is not sustainable. Geologically speaking, the faster you produce a highly pressurized reservoir, the faster the reservoir pressure collapses. Conversely, the more gently you produce the field, the longer you can produce it at a steady rate, and the higher amount of oil you get out of the field.

question I suppose it's safe to assume we're not poised to go gently into the twilight of global reserves.

answer To put it mildly. What they are doing is rapidly depleting the high-quality, high flow-rate oil, so they'll be left with vast amounts of oil that just won't come out of the ground without massive water input or thousands and thousands of wells being drilled.

question What kind of response have you gotten to this book? I saw in a New York Times Magazine article by Peter Maass that Sadad al-Husseini, a former executive of state-owned Saudi Aramco, essentially corroborated your thesis.

answer Yes, he's a first-rate person. We've actually become quite good friends. I don't know to what extent I might have actually liberated him to speak more openly about the limits to Middle East oil. I think I've given quite a few Saudi insiders cover for being able to finally speak up and say, yes, that's actually what I thought, too.

In the U.S., the response within industry and among politicians has been overwhelmingly positive. About 10 people total have attacked the book, and my guess is that most of them have one commonality: a consulting client called Saudi Aramco.

question It boggles my mind that data on oil reserves can be concealed. Knowing when we're going to run out would seem as critical to global security as knowing who has weapons of mass destruction. Why isn't disclosing oil data a responsibility on par with disclosing WMDs?

answer It should be. The foreign minister of Saudi Arabia spoke at Rice University about five weeks ago and he said, "We're as transparent as anybody." And he's right. Until we force that same standard of disclosure on Exxon and Shell and BP, then I don't think there's any reason to expect Saudi Arabia to behave better. What I'm suggesting is the whole world needs to go to a new standard. The problem, of course, is this: In political and corporate worlds there are currently significant disincentives to be forthright about these risks. That's why we're going to have to have some sort of enforced mandate. It won't happen voluntarily.

question What would you advise the Bush administration to do?

answer Clamor for energy-data reform. That's the only thing the governments of the world can do this year. But they can't do it alone. I think the global mandate of how we have to attack this problem needs to be a very coordinated, central plan. We need to have international energy cooperation so we don't go into an accidental energy war.

question Have you discussed these ideas with President Bush?

answer I have met with the president quite a few times on energy, but not since coming to these latest conclusions. But I have spoken very openly with senior politicians from both parties, and key people are paying attention.

question I understand you are a strong proponent of allowing drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge and the outer continental shelf.

answer Yes, ASAP. There's nothing we can do to solve our problems, but everything we do that helps is a bridge to buy us time. Ultimately, we have to actually create some new forms of energy that don't exist today. Solar and wind are, of course, electricity, so not helpful near-term on the transportation front, which is the most intractable part of the problem. Biofuels need to be intensely examined, but corn-based ethanol is a scam because it requires such intensive oil inputs.

question What about the shift to hybrid engines and, ultimately, hydrogen?

answer There are some 220 million cars currently on the road in the U.S. alone. The problem with that concept, which so many people think is the way you end the energy war, is it will take 30 years to turn over the entire vehicle fleet. We don't have 15 or 20 years, much less 30.

We need to think on a grander scale. We have to find, for instance, far more energy-efficient methods of transporting products by rail and ship rather than trucks. We have to liberate the workforce from office-based jobs and let them work in their village, through the modern technology of emails and faxes and video conferencing. We have to address the distribution of food: Much of the food in supermarkets today comes from at least a continent or two away. We need to return to local farms. And we have to attack globalization: As energy prices soar, manufacturing things close to home will begin to make sense again.

question What do you do personally to reduce your energy footprint?

answer Very little, actually. I do have a new Mercedes diesel car that on the open road gets up to 50 miles per gallon. But in fact I'm one of the problems right now. I'm flying around the country giving too many energy talks. If I really wanted to say I'm going to be a personal crusader, I'd actually shut up and stay home.



Read more about: energy | interview | oil | all of these topics
Tools: print | email | discuss | write to the editor | subscribe | RSS
Amanda Griscom Little writes Grist's Muckraker column on environmental politics and policy and interviews green luminaries for the magazine. Her articles on energy and the environment have also appeared in publications ranging from Rolling Stone to The New York Times Magazine.
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simmons

He is right. Whether the peak in oil is this year or 2012, the physical fact of declining energy availablility for the planet will trump almost all other environmental concerns - this is the grand-daddy of ecological worries. Linked to carbon emissions but broader, peak oil will change our daily way of life.

Matthew Simmons has often said 'there is no Plan B'. I think a Plan B is a combination of turning our remaining fossil fuels into renewables at an increasing pace, and finding incentives, both top-down like fee-bates and 4 day work weeks and bottoms up like energy efficiency and sustainable lifestyles, that together will make a difficult transition in the Sustainability Revolution possible. The market is priced at the marginal barrel and therefore does not give you and I the correct signals of whats coming in a timely fashion- people should educate themselves on the intricacies of this issue in advance - education post peak will be much less relevant..

Societal Changes and Peak Oil

After following the issue of peak oil for about 5 years, I have yet to find anyone of authorithy discussing the societal ramifications of the peak oil phenomenon.  Matt Simmons comment of there being "No Plan B" is consistent with all of the research I have done.  However, this is not the first time a society has collapsed from losing the primary resource on which it was founded. Mankinds history is filled with failed attempts at civilization.  Each failure being marked by its own roadsigns just like the residue of its cultural apex.  As a society is forced to switch from one paradigm to another, as will be required in the switch from a petroleum based civilization to the post carbon world, a new social order must be created as well.  One would think that this transition phase must be marked with somewhat predictable impacts upon all social systems.    The known "social and economic indicators" would seem to be relatively predictable in their interaction and lend themselves to  predictions regarding the progression of the events in the transition.  In like manner as the Federal Reserves modification of the interest rates effect the economy in known predictable ways.

In reality there is a "Plan B", but we humans are not currently the ones formulating the plan.  Plan B will happen to us, whether we like it or not.  The course we have currently selected virtually insures us that it will be one that we definitely do not want.  For all of the prognostication and opinions ranging from the wildly optimistic to the most depressing doomsday scenarios, surprisingly little attention has been paid to the potential sequence of events as the transition unfolds.  The world as we know it will not come to an end overnight.  The transition will take time. Granted, not much time.  But it will not happen instantly.  As we begin the transition to the post carbon age, each successive year will see the fundamental structural dynamics of society altered from the year before.  Each step down the energy ladder will bring a new world order.  Just as the the upside of the ladder did, where we devised ever more and more clever uses for the slave labor we call oil.  However, in the case of powering down just the reverse will be true.  The continual question we will all face on a day to day and year to year basis is - "What modern convenience am I able and willing to eliminate at this time".  Followed by the necessity to make the same grueling decision the next year, and the year after that.  As an example it is speculated that we could see the price of oil at $100 and $200 a barrel.  Oil prices at this level would have dire economic consequences.  The question is - What are these consequences and their magnitude?  With all of the computer modelling capabilities we have available today, somebody should be attempting to put numbers to these facts to study the social and economic impacts.  

I have been struggling for years, with albeit little success, to get my wife to view the future in an unemotional way in order to attempt to make reasoned decisions in charting a path.  This experience has served to highlight to me how difficult it is to make the mental and emotional leap of facing the reality of a future without oil and to plan for it.  If there is any hope of surviving during the transition, much more detailed information is needed to fill in the blanks of a societal meltdown.  If we are all clear on the lifestyle toward which we are headed, it will help the transition.  Instead of each day feeling robbed of the timbers that form the framework of our life with oil, we would be in a better position to more gracefully accept the disintegration of the old paradigm.  Knowing in advance that things are changing in a predicted direction is at least more comforting than having no idea what is happening, why it is happening, or where our civilization is heading.  

I would like to see the requisite computer processing capabilities coupled with the knowledge of the experts on peak oil, economics, anthropology and others to attempt the impossible and chart the course into the new century.  We know from where we are starting.  We know to where we are heading.  We need only to connect the dots.

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