Articles

How long before the lights go out?
Posted on Thursday, February 4th, 2010

This article was first published in the Telegraph on 4 February 2010.

Bad news for energy consumers continues to come thick and fast. Bills have more than doubled in the last six years, and could rise a further 25% in the next decade according to a wide-ranging report published yesterday by Ofgem. But even more worrying was the watchdog’s analysis of Britain’s energy security – or lack of it.
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Who’s afraid of the tar sands?
Posted on Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

This article was first published in Ecologist on 8 December 2009.

Criticizing the Canadian tar sands used to be so simple. Environmentalists condemned them as a ‘climate crime’, while peak oilers argued they could never fill the gap left by conventional depletion. It turns out neither critique captures the full magnitude of the problem. In the light of the latest science, exploiting the tar sands threatens to damage not only the climate but also the long term fuel supply.
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Can non-conventional oil fill the gap?
Posted on Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

A version of this article was published in New Scientist on 3 December 2009.

The oil crisis is not dead, only sleeping, according to an emerging consensus. The price may have collapsed from last year’s all-time high of $147 per barrel to around $75 today, as the recession grinds away at demand for crude, but nobody expects that to last when the economy recovers.
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Crawford deal signed in oil, not blood
Posted on Sunday, November 29th, 2009

Sir Christopher Meyer, Britain’s former ambassador to Washington, mused last week that Tony Blair may have reached a secret deal with George Bush to topple Saddam Hussein a full year before the invasion took place.
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Last Oil Shock in Japan
Posted on Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

The Last Oil Shock has now been published in Japanese, and is available online in Japan.


Last Oil Shock in Portugal
Posted on Wednesday, November 25th, 2009

The Last Oil Shock has now been published in Portuguese, and is available online in Portugal.


Peak oil report exposes UK position
Posted on Thursday, October 8th, 2009

First published at The Ecologist, 8 October 2009.

There is a “significant risk” that conventional oil production will peak before 2020, and forecasts that delay the event beyond 2030 are based on assumptions that are “at best optimistic and at worst implausible”.
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BP’s ‘giant’ oil discovery would last three weeks
Posted on Tuesday, September 8th, 2009

BP announced the discovery of a ‘giant’ oilfield in the Gulf of Mexico last week, but what does it really amount to?
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Peak oil around 2030 says IEA
Posted on Thursday, August 27th, 2009

An article in the Independent caused a stir recently by claiming that the International Energy Agency’s chief economist Fatih Birol had predicted peak oil in ‘about ten years’ – a radical departure from the IEA’s position to date.
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The Economist strikes again
Posted on Friday, August 21st, 2009

Bill Emmott argued in the Times this week that the world’s oil supply problems are simply down to OPEC greed, dismissed peak oil as the work of “planetary gloomsters” and assured readers that the world is not running out.
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The great biogas bungle
Posted on Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

First published in The Ecologist on 4 August 2009, and Sustainable Business, October 2009.

When David and Ruth of The Archers decided to set up an anaerobic digester to make biogas from farm waste, they quickly ran into trouble. Intended to produce electricity for the national grid and heat for their poly-tunnels, the project was defeated by boardroom bust-ups and NIMBY protests led by local battle-axe Linda Snell.
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Iraqi oil gameshow loses the plot
Posted on Sunday, July 5th, 2009

A shorter version of this article was published in the The Independent on Sunday, 5 July 2009

The auction of Iraqi oil production licences last week was truly historic – not least because it was the first such exercise ever to be broadcast live on television.
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Global warming: send in the tanks
Posted on Thursday, June 18th, 2009

First published in the Guardian, 18 June 2009.

Forget expensive high tech silver bullets like nuclear fusion and carbon capture and storage, the solution to climate change lies in the humble electric immersion heater that sits in your hot water tank under the stairs.
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We’re in OPEC’s hands, but are they tied?
Posted on Sunday, June 14th, 2009

This article was first published in the The Independent on Sunday, 14 June 2009

BP famously ‘doesn’t do’ oil price forecasts. After 18 months in which crude has ricocheted from just under $100 per barrel to an all time high of $147, then down to less than $40, and now up to $73 again, you can see their point.
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Renewable supergrid by 2030
Posted on Sunday, June 14th, 2009

A short version of this article was published in the The Independent on Sunday, 14 June 2009

Europe could build an electricity supply based entirely on renewable energy by 2030, according to scientists making a presentation at the House of Commons this week.
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Still no UK energy policy
Posted on Sunday, April 26th, 2009

First published in the The Independent on Sunday, 26 April 2009

“All targets and no trousers” seemed to be the gist of the reaction from environmentalists to the Budget this week.
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Electric avenues
Posted on Sunday, March 29th, 2009

First published in the The Independent on Sunday, 29 March 2009

‘The future has not been cancelled,” quipped BP chief executive Tony Hayward in a bullish presentation about the company’s prospects recently.
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Green grid
Posted on Thursday, March 12th, 2009

A version of this article was published in New Scientist on 12 March 2009.

Thomas Edison might have relished the irony. Just as his most famous legacy, the incandescent light bulb, heads for extinction, his other great passion, direct current, is set to boom.
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Why $40 per barrel is no cause for complacency
Posted on Friday, February 20th, 2009

By David Strahan and Gary Kendall of SustainAbility

These days it is comforting to have one thing not to worry about. As the world teeters on the edge of a full-blown depression, and business is crushed between slumping sales and seized-up credit markets, at least the oil price is in retreat.
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Channel 4 News interview: London oil summit
Posted on Friday, December 19th, 2008

My interview on Channel 4 News on 19 December, about the London oil summit, can now be seen on You Tube. Click on ‘read more’. The segment starts about one and a half minutes into the recording.
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Radio 4 interview: why is the oil price plunging?
Posted on Saturday, December 6th, 2008

The oil price has fallen by 25% in a week, to around $40 per barrel, more than $100 lower than its all time peak in July. To hear my interview on Radio 4’s flagship Today programme this morning about the reasons for the collapse, and the likely outlook, follow the links below.
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Pipe dreams
Posted on Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

First published in the Guardian, 3 December 2008.

An old friend was once memorably described as a sixties liberal with Catholic guilt – you can just imagine the internal contortions. I got the same impression of grinding gears while reading the International Energy Agency’s latest long term forecast, the World Energy Outlook 2008, published last month.
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The end of the road for hydrogen?
Posted on Thursday, November 27th, 2008

A shorter version of this article appeared in New Scientist magazine on 26 November 2008.

Whatever happened to the hydrogen economy? At the turn of the century it was the next big thing, promising a Jetsons-style future of infinite clean energy and deliverance from climate change.
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Letter to the Energy Secretary
Posted on Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Dear Mr Miliband,

Congratulations on your recent appointment to the most important job in government.
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Why the oil price slump is bad news
Posted on Sunday, October 26th, 2008

First published in The Independent on Sunday, 26 October 2008

Once again Gordon Brown has energy policy all wrong. Even before OPEC announced an output cut of 1.5 million barrels per day, the prime minister had denounced the move as “absolutely scandalous”, fearing it would force the oil price higher just as the world slides into recession.
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Green fuel for the airline industry?
Posted on Thursday, August 14th, 2008

Published in New Scientist on 13 August 2008

IF YOU have become addicted to the fly-cheap philosophy espoused by budget airlines over the last decade, it could be time to rethink your travel plans.
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Oil price respite will be brief or unpleasant
Posted on Sunday, August 10th, 2008

First published in the Telegraph, 9 August 2008

With the oil price apparently in full retreat, it is tempting to breathe a sigh of relief.
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BP’s Russian roulette belies stance on peak oil
Posted on Sunday, June 22nd, 2008

First published in the Independent on Sunday, 22 June 2008

It must be increasingly lonely being Tony Hayward. As the oil price continues to soar there is a gathering consensus that global oil production is nearing some fundamental geological limits, yet BP’s chief executive continues to argue valiantly that the causes of the current oil shock are “not so much below ground as above it, and not geological but political”


Newsnight interview
Posted on Friday, June 6th, 2008

My interview on Newsnight on 30 May can now be viewed on You Tube, or below in this post – just click on ‘read more’.
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Oil: why Gordon doesn’t get it
Posted on Thursday, May 29th, 2008

First published in the Telegraph, 29 May 2008.

Even by the low standards if his government, Gordon Brown’s recent pronouncements on oil have been shockingly ignorant.
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What happens next?
Posted on Sunday, May 25th, 2008

First published in the Independent on Sunday, 25 May 2008

Never mind speculation, forget the weak dollar. To understand the soaring oil price you need only glance at figures from the US government which show that global oil production has been essentially stagnant – at just under 86 million barrels per day – since early 2005.
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Greenland oil estimates over-reported
Posted on Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

Letter to the Times

Sir, the Times incorrectly reported that Greenland has 47 billion barrels of ‘estimated oil reserves’ (‘Global warming could help Greenland to independence’, print edition, 7 May), which is wrong on two counts.
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How do you solve a problem like jet fuel?
Posted on Tuesday, May 6th, 2008

First published in Petroleum Review, May 2006.

Say what you like about Sir Richard Branson, but you cannot fault his willingness to suffer in the cause of a photo-opportunity.
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Don’t panic, it’s only the oil supply
Posted on Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

First published in the Telegraph , 3 May 2008

Polishing the portholes on the Titanic hardly does it justice. This week saw ministers giving an uncanny impersonation of Corporal Jones urging calm over the Grangemouth refinery strike; lorry drivers protesting in Park Lane over a two pence rise in fuel duty; and much righteous indignation over the level of profits reported by Shell and BP. All of which entirely misses the point.
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The Last Oil Shock is now available in paperback
Posted on Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Doh! I felt such a fool. While checking the manuscript of The Last Oil Shock for the new mass market paperback edition, available from 17 April, I noticed a real howler.
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Lump sums
Posted on Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

First published in the Guardian, 5th March 2008

For weeks South Africa has suffered rolling blackouts caused in part by a shortage of coal. Gripped by unusually bitter snowstorms, China recently banned coal exports for the next two months.
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Peak oil “opportunity”
Posted on Sunday, March 2nd, 2008

Peak oil is not a threat but an opportunity to force through the policies needed to combat climate change, according to London Mayor Ken Livingstone.
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Branson: nuts to peak oil
Posted on Sunday, February 24th, 2008

Sir Richard Branson today claimed aviation could be made “truly sustainable” at the launch of test flight fuelled in part by coconut oil. But the Virgin boss conceded that meaningful supplies of alternative fuel might not be available before the advent of peak oil, which he said could happen within six years.
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Biofuel without tears, but how much?
Posted on Thursday, February 21st, 2008

(Podcast) Biofuel can be produced without clearing rainforest, raising CO2 emissions or displacing food production, according to the chief executive of D1 Oils, the British company pioneering oil from jatropha curcas in the developing world. And according to Elliott Mannis, the fuel could even work out cheaper than damaging first generation biofuels.
Read more »


Oil constraints to cause “huge recession”
Posted on Thursday, February 21st, 2008

(Podcast) The world will have to suffer a deep economic downturn before serious attempts are made to kick the oil habit, according to the chairman of PFC Energy, the Washington based oil consultancy.
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Peak oil and the seismic silver lining
Posted on Saturday, February 9th, 2008

First published in International Hydrographic & Seismic Search Magazine, February 2008

The launch of International Hydrographic & Seismic Search Magazine raises an interesting question: have the publishers taken leave of their senses?
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BP to “put lights out” on North Sea
Posted on Wednesday, February 6th, 2008

BP chief executive Tony Hayward stressed the company’s commitment to the North Sea during its results press conference yesterday, saying it would continue to produce there “until we put the lights out”.
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Coal prices triple as supply crisis deepens
Posted on Monday, February 4th, 2008

(Podcast – update) Coal prices are predicted to hit $300 per tonne this week, a threefold rise that eclipses even the most bullish forecasts made just a few days ago.
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Coal prices could double again
Posted on Friday, February 1st, 2008

(Podcast) All of a sudden coal, so long the Cinderella of fossil fuels, is not just in demand but in desperately short supply.
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Triple digit oil price regardless of peak
Posted on Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

(Podcast) The real value of oil is “way, way, way above $80” according to a leading analyst.
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Norwegian gas will go to highest bidder
Posted on Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

(Podcast) Britain can expect no favouritism from Norway as the European gas market tightens over the next decade. Norwegian supplies will be allocated on a strictly commercial basis, according to Deputy Minister of Petroleum and Energy Liv Monica Stubholt.
Read more »


Supergrid could provide 30% of Europe’s electricity
Posted on Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

(Podcast) A high voltage electricity grid connecting countries from the North Sea to the Bay of Biscay could provide almost a third of Europe’s power by 2030, according to the company behind the idea.
Read more »


The great coal hole
Posted on Thursday, January 17th, 2008

First published in New Scientist, 17 January 2008

There used to be a joke about taking coal to Newcastle but these days the laughing stock is getting the stuff out.
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See no peak: letter to the Financial Times
Posted on Thursday, January 3rd, 2008

Just as the Financial Times’ news coverage of oil was beginning to improve (“Oil watchdog reworks reserves forecasts”, 27.12.07), Lex goes and spoils it with a truly shoddy analysis: “Peak no evil” (03.01.08) rehearsed all the old myths that have been comprehensively debunked in recent years.
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The limits to reserves growth
Posted on Tuesday, December 18th, 2007

(Podcast) Reserves growth in existing oilfields is largely illusory and will not put off the date of peak oil, according to BP’s former Chief Petroleum Engineer.
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IEA to blame for $100 oil spike – Groppe
Posted on Tuesday, December 11th, 2007

(Podcast) When the oil price soared to over $99 per barrel earlier this year, the cause was not surging demand, nor speculation, nor even impending peak oil, but a forecasting error by the International Energy Agency.
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Surfing the ultimate peak
Posted on Saturday, December 1st, 2007

First published in Surfer’s Path, November 2007

The two longboards jammed between the hull and the wheel-house seem oddly superfluous. Two miles out in the bay, and sheltered from the choppy Gulf of Mexico by the sandbar of Galveston, the murky green water slaps gently against the hull of our tiny Boston whaler, glinting in the early morning sun. On the face of it the chances of a wave are minimal.
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$100 oil and British energy policy built on sand
Posted on Saturday, November 24th, 2007

First published as $100 oil: the terrible truth in the Guardian, 24 November 2007

As the price of crude oil sets new records almost daily, the British government remains stunningly complacent. With the $100 barrel looming, the prime minister’s website blithely proclaims “the world’s oil and gas resources are sufficient to sustain economic growth for the foreseeable future.” Officials refuse to define what is meant by “foreseeable”, but it is clear they suffer from extreme myopia or worse.
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Localise and go organic to avert post-peak famine – Heinberg
Posted on Thursday, November 22nd, 2007

(Podcast) Agriculture must localise and convert to organic production methods without delay if the world is to avoid famine, according to a leading thinker on peak oil.
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The unpalatable truth: $100 oil is just for starters
Posted on Friday, November 9th, 2007

First published in the Evening Standard, 9 November 2007

With the markets hypnotized by the approach of $100 oil, analysts are pointing the finger at all the usual suspects: speculators, the OPEC bogeyman, the weak dollar, soaring consumption in China and India, and geopolitical tensions. All play a part but the real cause is altogether less palatable. The world is running short of oil, and this time it is likely to be permanent.
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“Supply crunch” is not peak oil – IEA
Posted on Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

There is no contradiction between the International Energy Agency’s forecast of long term oil supply growth to 2030 and a “supply crunch” by 2015, according to its chief economist Fatih Birol. Mr Birol insisted today that the short term crisis would not be caused by a fundamental shortage of oil but by entirely man-made factors.
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Total boss on why oil production will never top 100 mb/d
Posted on Friday, November 2nd, 2007

Christophe de Margerie has a reputation for forthright views and blunt speaking, but this week the chief executive of Total excelled himself by dismissing the IEA’s oil production forecasts as unrealistic, while coining an aphorism worthy of Donald Rumsfeld.
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IEA reviews reliance on USGS resource estimates
Posted on Wednesday, October 31st, 2007

(Podcast) IEA chief economist Fatih Birol has told lastoilshock.com that the agency will review its use of resource estimates from the United States Geological Survey, in a move that seems certain to prompt a major downward revision of its long term oil production forecast.
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Oil reserves over-inflated by 300bn barrels – al-Huseini
Posted on Tuesday, October 30th, 2007

The world’s proved reserves have been have been falsely puffed up by the inclusion of 300 billion barrels of speculative resources, according to the former head of exploration and production at Saudi Aramco, and this explains the industry’s inability to raise output despite soaring prices.
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Oil has peaked, prices to soar – Sadad al-Huseini
Posted on Monday, October 29th, 2007

(Podcast) Sadad al-Huseini says that global production has reached its maximum sustainable plateau and that output will start to fall within 15 years, by which time the world’s oil resources will be “very severely depleted”.
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1200 days to peak oil
Posted on Wednesday, October 24th, 2007

(Podcast) There are only 1200 days to go until global oil production reaches its all-time peak, according to the editor of the Petroleum Review. Worse, says Chris Skrebowski, the chances are the crisis will break even sooner.
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Peak oil means peak economy – Hirsch
Posted on Thursday, October 18th, 2007

(Podcast) When global oil production peaks, the economy is likely to shrink in direct proportion to dwindling fuel supplies, says Dr Robert Hirsch of the thinktank SAIC.
Read more »


Slippery slope
Posted on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007

By David Strahan. First published in the Guardian, 3 October 2007.

The Irish chapter of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil could hardly have wished for better. On the first day of its recent conference in Cork, the oil price obliged by striking a new all-time high. And in the following days it struck three more in a row.
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Private industry conference finds much less oil
Posted on Friday, September 28th, 2007

(Podcast) A secretive gathering some of the world’s biggest oil companies has concluded the industry will discover far less oil than officially forecast, according to an executive who attended the event, meaning global oil production may peak much sooner than many expect.
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CO2 flooding could yield 2mb/d – eventually
Posted on Thursday, September 20th, 2007

(Podcast) For a senior oilman Gareth Roberts holds some fairly unusual views: peak oil is coming soon; crude oil is too precious to burn as transport fuel; and Big Oil should be investing massively in alternative energy.
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WEC predicts oil peak in 10-20 years
Posted on Wednesday, September 19th, 2007

(Podcast) In a sign of just how rapidly peak oil is moving into the mainstream, a report from the World Energy Council has forecast that conventional oil production will peak in the next ten to twenty years. But in an interview with Lastoilshock.com, WEC Secretary General Gerald Doucet insisted that the transition would be “managable” and that total world energy supply would nevertheless double by 2030.
Read more »


Irish energy minister says oil rationing “common sense”
Posted on Tuesday, September 18th, 2007

(Podcast) Ireland’s Minister for Communications, Energy and Natural Resources has claimed that some form of energy rationing system would be a “common sense approach” to the twin challenges of peak oil and transport carbon emissions.
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We are all peakists now – Schlesinger
Posted on Monday, September 17th, 2007

(Podcast) Former US Energy Secretary Dr James Schlesinger today claimed that the intellectual arguments over peak oil had been won, and that in effect ‘we are all peakists now’.
Read more »


Oil industry ’sleepwalking’ into crisis
Posted on Sunday, September 16th, 2007

By David Strahan and Andrew Murray-Watson. First published in the Independent on Sunday, 16 September 2007

Lord Oxburgh, the former chairman of Shell, has issued a stark warning that the price of oil could hit $150 per barrel, with oil production peaking within the next 20 years.
Read more »


Interview with Lord Oxburgh
Posted on Sunday, September 16th, 2007

The former chairman of Shell will issue a stark warning about the world’s oil supply at a conference in Ireland later this week. Lord Oxburgh expects that global oil demand will outstrip supply within twenty years as production hits plateau, and that the oil price may well hit $150 in the long term. He accuses some in the industry of having their heads “almost in the sand” about oil depletion, and concludes “we may be sleepwalking into a problem which is actually going to be very serious and it may be too late to do anything about it by the time we are fully aware”.
Read more »


Why Dick changed his mind
Posted on Saturday, August 18th, 2007

By David Strahan

In a widely viewed You Tube clip, taken from a C-Span interview conducted in 1994, Dick Cheney argues persuasively that the United States was right not to topple Saddam Hussein during the first Gulf War. He cites the potential disintegration of the country and the risk of American casualties as good reasons for the decision not to take Baghdad. So what was it that changed his mind by the turn of the century? An acute awareness of impending peak oil.
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Open letter to Duncan Clarke
Posted on Wednesday, August 15th, 2007

Dear Duncan,

I suppose advocates of peak oil should be flattered that they are now taken seriously enough for someone to launch such a laboriously researched attack as The Battle for Barrels: Peak Oil Myths & World Oil Futures.
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British energy policy is a dangerous farce
Posted on Tuesday, July 24th, 2007

By David Strahan.

A year ago Tony Blair declared in the Energy Review that securing a ‘sustainable, secure and affordable energy supply is one of the principal duties of government’. He was right. But under New Labour energy policy has veered from criminal to farcical. And with the recent reappointment of Malcolm Wicks as Energy Minister that farce is ready to transfer from Whitehall to the West End stage.
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Why BP and Shell are bound to merge
Posted on Sunday, July 15th, 2007

By David Strahan. First published in the Independent on Sunday, 15 July 2007.

BP and Shell are finally about to merge. That’s if you believe the tittle-tattle in the Square Mile. Of course rumours that the two giant companies might wed are hardly new and have been the stuff of bankers’ fevered imagination for years. But there is now an increasingly compelling case why the two energy groups should be integrated.
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Why Iraq was all about peak oil
Posted on Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

By David Strahan. First published in the Guardian, 26 June 2007.

Even as one of the principal architects of the Iraq war washes his hands of the whole bloody mess there is still only a remarkably vague understanding of the real reason behind the invasion.
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Exxon boss calls end of non-OPEC growth by 2010
Posted on Friday, June 22nd, 2007

Big beasts of the oil jungle don’t come much bigger than Rex Tillerson, in London last week to give a speech at Chatham House. Usually at such events the bigger the beast the duller the platitudes, but during questions afterwards the CEO of ExxonMobil made some significant remarks that underscored the tightness of oil supply outlook, and effectively predicted the end of non-OPEC oil production growth by 2010.
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Why the Middle East matters
Posted on Friday, June 1st, 2007

Letter to Prospect, June 2007.

Edward Luttwak’s argument that the Middle East doesn’t matter (The Middle of Nowhere, Prospect, May 2007) is bunk. While some of his points about the chronic Israel-Palestine problem ring horribly true, his willful denial of the real significance of the wider region, and of Iran in particular, is astonishing. To coin a phrase, it’s the oil, stupid.
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What Stern really got wrong
Posted on Wednesday, May 16th, 2007

By David Strahan. First published in Prospect, 16 May 2007

In one sense Stern’s conclusions were entirely predictable. He set out to answer the same brutally simple question posed by Dick Turpin: your money or your life. And now that climate change so clearly has a pistol at the head of our species, there could only be one answer – irrespective of cost.
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Why it isn’t over yet for Lord Browne
Posted on Sunday, May 6th, 2007

By David Strahan. First published in the Independent on Sunday, 6 May 2007.

Is it possible that Lord Browne’s humiliation is not yet complete? It may be hard to credit in a week when he was forced to resign with immediate effect – at a personal cost of £15m – after lying in a witness statement about a lover he met through a male escort agency.
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Who’s afraid of oil depletion?
Posted on Thursday, April 5th, 2007

By David Strahan. First published in the Ecologist, April 2007.

What is it about climate change campaigners and peak oil – the two words you almost never hear them utter? The idea that global oil production will soon go into terminal decline ought to be a godsend; it makes the kinds of things they have been lobbying for all the more urgent and compelling. Yet most of the big NGOs continue studiously to ignore the idea.
Read more »


Why running out of oil could make climate change worse
Posted on Tuesday, March 27th, 2007


By David Strahan. Published at the BBC’s Green Room, 30 March 2007.

It is becoming increasingly clear that global oil production will soon go into terminal decline with potentially devastating economic consequences. Although the idea of ‘peak oil’ has traditionally been ridiculed by the industry, now even some of the world’s most senior oilmen concede the case.
Read more »


The treacherous traverse of Hubbert’s Peak
Posted on Sunday, March 25th, 2007

By David Strahan. Published as ‘Climate Criminals’ in Summit, Spring 2007.

Mountaineers are a special class of climate criminal. We clearly have a particular moral duty to protect the icy landscapes we enjoy, and most of us like to think of ourselves as environmentally responsible. But the reality is rather different.
Read more »


In praise of the United States Geological Survey
Posted on Sunday, March 25th, 2007

By David Strahan. Published in Geoscientist, and Petroleum Review, April 2007.

When it comes to estimating the scale of oil and gas resources, the United States Geological Survey has a reputation of coming up with some very large numbers.
Read more »





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