(In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section
107, this material is distributed without profit to those
who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the
included information for research and educational purposes.)
World oil crisis looms
21
April 2004 - The oil
industry has been gripped by scandal since Royal Dutch/Shell
twice this year downgraded its proven oil reserves
by 20 per cent, or nearly 4bn barrels. Shell may not
be alone.
Other companies and even
governments have hyped up the estimates of how much
oil they have, which is a vital factor in measuring
their economic health. If exaggeration proves to be
widespread, it would have an immense impact on the
Middle East, whose economic weight is almost totally
dependent on oil and natural gas.
Geologists and analysts
have been saying for some time that estimates of global
oil reserves may be dangerously exaggerated. If you
take oil prices currently at around US$37 a barrel,
the highest for nearly 15 years, US petrol prices at
record levels and you add terrorist attacks and diminishing
supplies, you have a recipe for inflation and economic
slowdown. The question of reserves becomes a much more
important factor.
Earlier this month, The
New York Times reported that internal documents and
other data indicated that Shell had over estimated
its proven oil reserves in Oman by as much as 40 per
cent. But that seems to have been done because everyone
hoped that the latest drilling techniques would reach
more deposits than in the past and merit upgrading
the estimates of reserves.
The Oman estimates were
based on assessments made in May 2000 by a senior Shell
executive who was subsequently fired. He was among
several executives who were said to have known about
the unrealistic estimates of reserves and to have done
nothing about it.
If the exaggeration is
confirmed, the estimate of recoverable oil will have
to be lowered. That is bad news for Oman, which claims
reserves of 5.4bn barrels and is heavily dependent
on oil and gas exports but it is also bad news for
the world as a whole.
As the world's natural
resources shrink and global warming changes the environment,
competition for unimpeded access to them has intensified
and will continue to do so. About four-fifths of the
world's known oil reserves lie in politically unstable
or contested regions.
351 of 810
words
[End of Jane's non-subscriber
extract.]
http://www.janes.com/business/news/fr/fr040421_1_n.shtml