Russia is far from oil's peak
by F. William Engdahl
27-09-07
The good news is that panic scenarios about the world running out of oil
any time soon are wrong. The bad news is that the price of oil is going to
continue to rise. "Peak Oil" is not our problem. Politics is. Big Oil wants
to sustain high oil prices. US Vice President Dick Cheney and friends are
all too willing to assist.
On a personal note, I've researched questions of petroleum since the first
oil shocks of the 1970s. I was intrigued in 2003 with something called the
Peak Oil theory. It seemed to explain the otherwise inexplicable decision by
Washington to risk all in a military move on Iraq.
Peak Oil advocates, led by former BP geologist Colin Campbell and Texas
banker Matt Simmons, argued that the world faced a new crisis, an end to
cheap oil, or Absolute Peak Oil, perhaps by 2012, perhaps by 2007. Oil was
supposedly on its last drops. They pointed to soaring gasoline and oil
prices and to the declines in output of the North Sea, Alaska and other
fields as proofthey were right.
According to Campbell, the fact that no new North Sea-size fields had been
discovered since the North Sea in the late 1960s was proof. He reportedly
managed to convince the International Energy Agency and the Swedish
government. That, however, does not prove him correct.
Intellectual fossils?
The Peak Oil school rests its theory on conventional Western geology
textbooks, most by American or British geologists, which claim oil is a
"fossil fuel", a biological residue or detritus of either fossilized
dinosaur remains or perhaps algae, hence a product in finite supply.
Biological origin is central to Peak Oil theory, used to explain why oil is
only found in certain parts of the world where it was geologically trapped
millions of years ago.
That would mean that dinosaur remains became compressed and over tens of
millions of years fossilized and were trapped in underground reservoirs
perhaps 1,200-2,000 meters below the surface of the Earth. In rare cases, so
goes the theory,huge amounts of biological matter should have been trapped
in rock formations in the shallower ocean regions such as in the Gulf of
Mexico or North Sea or Gulf of Guinea. Geology should be only about figuring
out where these pockets in the layers of the earth, called reservoirs, lie
within certain sedimentary basins.
An entirely alternative theory of oil formation has existed since the early
1950s in Russia, almost unknown to the West. It claims that the conventional
US biological-origins theory is an unscientific absurdity that is unprovable.
They point to the fact that Western geologists have repeatedly predicted
finite oil over the past century, only then to find more, lots more.
Not only has this alternative explanation of the origins of oil and gas
existed in theory, the emergence of Russia as the world's largest oil and
natural-gas producer has been based on the application of the theory in
practice. This has geopolitical consequences of staggering magnitude.
Necessity the mother of invention
In the 1950s, the Soviet Union faced "Iron Curtain" isolation from the West.
The Cold War was in high gear. Russia had little oil to fuel its economy.
Finding sufficient oil indigenously was a national-security priority of the
highest order.
Scientists at the Institute of the Physics of the Earth of the Russian
Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Geological Sciences of the Ukraine
Academy of Sciences began a fundamental inquiry in the late 1940s: Where
does oil come from?
In 1956, Professor Vladimir Porfir'yev announced their conclusions: "Crude
oil and natural petroleum gas have no intrinsic connection with biological
matter originating near the surface of the Earth. They are primordial
materials which have been erupted from great depths."
The Soviet geologists had turned Western orthodox geology on its head. They
called their theory of oil origin the "abiotic" theory -- non-biological --
to distinguish it from the Western biological theory of origins.
If they were right,oil supply on Earth would be limited only by the amount
of organic hydrocarbon constituents present deep in the Earth at the time of
the planet's formation. Availability of oil would depend only on technology
to drill ultra-deep wells and explore into the Earth's inner regions. They
also realized that old fields could be revived to continue producing,
so-called self-replenishing fields. They argued that oil is formed deep in
the Earth, formed in conditions of very high temperature and very high
pressure, like that required for diamonds to form.
"Oil is a primordial material of deep origin which is transported at high
pressure via 'cold' eruptive processes into the crust of the Earth,"
Porfir'yev stated. His team dismissed the idea that oil is biological
residue of plant and animal fossil remains as a hoax designed to perpetuate
the myth of limited supply.
Defying conventional geology
The radically different Russian and Ukrainian scientific approach to the
discovery of oil allowed the USSR todevelop huge gas and oil discoveries in
regions previously judged unsuitable, according to Western geological
exploration theories, for the presence of oil. The new petroleum theory was
used in the early 1990s, well after the dissolution of the USSR, to drill
for oil and gas in a region believed for more than 45 years to be
geologically barren -- the Dnieper-Donets Basin in the region between Russia
and Ukraine.
Following their abiotic or non-fossil theory of the deep origins of
petroleum, the Russian and Ukrainian petroleum geophysicists and chemists
began with a detailed analysis of the tectonic history and geological
structure of the crystalline basement of the Dnieper-Donets Basin. After a
tectonic and deep structural analysis of the area, they made geophysical and
geochemical investigations.
A total of 61 wells were drilled, of which 37 were commercially productive,
an extremely impressive exploration success rate of almost 60 %. The size of
the field discovered compared to the North Slope of Alaska. By contrast, US
wildcat drilling was considered to have a 10 % success rate. Nine of ten
wells are typically "dry holes".
That Russian geophysics experience in finding oil and gas was tightly
wrapped in the usual Soviet veil of state security during the Cold War era,
and was largely unknown to Western geophysicists, who continued to teach
fossil origins and, hence, the severe physical limits of petroleum. But
slowly it begin to dawn on some strategists in and around the Pentagon well
after the 2003 Iraq war that the Russian geophysicists might be on to
something of profound strategic importance.
If Russia had the scientific know-how and Western geology did not, Russia
possessed a strategic trump card of staggering geopolitical import. It was
not surprising that Washington would go about erecting a "wall of steel" --
a network of military bases and anti-missile shields around Russia to cut
its pipeline and port links to Western Europe, China and the rest of
Eurasia.
English geographer and geopolitician Halford Mackinder's worst nightmare --
a cooperative convergence of mutual interests of the major states of
Eurasia, born of necessity and need for oil to fuel economic growth -- was
emerging. Ironically, it was the blatant US grab for the vast oil riches of
Iraq and, potentially, of Iran that catalyzed closer cooperation between
traditional Eurasian foes, China and Russia, and a growing realization in
Western Europe that their options too were narrowing.
The peak king
Peak Oil theory is based on a 1956 paper by the late Marion King Hubbert, a
Texas geologist working for Shell Oil. He argued that oil wells produced in
a bell-curve manner, and once their "peak" was hit, inevitable decline
followed. He predicted that US oil production would peak in 1970. A modest
man, he named the production curve he invented Hubbert's Curve, and the peak
as Hubbert's Peak. When US oil output began to decline in about 1970,
Hubbert gained a certain fame.
The only problem was, it peaked not because of resource depletion in the US
fields. It "peaked" because Shell, Mobil, Texaco and the other partners of
Saudi Aramco were flooding the US market with dirt-cheap imports from the
Middle East, tariff-free, at prices so low California and many Texas
domestic producers could not compete and were forced to shut their wells.
Vietnam success
While the US oil multinationals were busy controlling the easily accessible
large fields of Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iran and other areas of cheap,
abundant oil during the 1960s, the Russians were busy testing their
alternative theory. They began drilling in a supposedly barren region of
Siberia. There they developed 11 major oilfields and one giant field based
on their deep abiotic geological estimates. They drilled into crystalline
basement rock and hit black gold of a scale comparable to the Alaska North
Slope.
They then went to Vietnam in the 1980s and offered to finance drilling costs
to show that their new geological theory worked. Russian companyPetrosov
drilled in Vietnam's White Tiger oilfield offshore into basalt rock some
5,000 meters down and extracted 6,000 bpd of oil to feed the energy-starved
Vietnam economy. In the USSR, abiotic-trained Russian geologists perfected
their knowledge and the Soviet Union emerged as the world's largest oil
producer by the mid-1980s. Few in the West understood why, or bothered to
ask.
Dr J.F. Kenney is one of the only Western geophysicists who has taught and
worked in Russia, studying under Vladilen Krayushkin, who developed the huge
Dnieper-Donets Basin. Kenney told me recently that "alone to have produced
the amount of oil to date that [Saudi Arabia's] Ghawar field has produced
would have required a cube of fossilized dinosaur detritus, assuming 100 %
conversion efficiency, measuring 19 miles [30.5 km] deep, wide and high." In
short, an absurdity.
Western geologists do not bother to offer hard scientific proof of fossil
origins. They merely assert their belief as a holy truth. The Russians have
produced volumes of scientific papers, most in Russian. The dominant Western
journals have no interest in publishing such a revolutionary view. Careers,
entire academic professions are at stake, after all.
Closing the door
The 2003 arrest of Russian Mikhail Khodorkovsky, of Yukos Oil, took place
just before he could sell a dominant stake in Yukos to ExxonMobil after a
private meeting with Cheney. Had Exxon gotten the stake, it would have had
control of the world's largest resource of geologists and engineers trained
in the abiotic techniques of deep drilling.
Since 2003, Russian scientific sharing of knowledge has markedly lessened.
Offers in the early 1990s to share knowledge with US and other oil
geophysicists were met with cold rejection, according to American
geophysicists involved.
Why then the high-risk war to control Iraq? For a century, US and allied
Western oil giants have controlled world oil via control of Saudi Arabia or
Kuwait or Nigeria. Today, as many giant fields are declining, thecompanies
see the state-controlled oilfields of Iraq and Iran as the largest remaining
base of cheap, easy oil.
With the huge demand for oil from China and now India, it becomes a
geopolitical imperative for the United States to take direct military
control of those Middle East reserves as fast as possible. Cheney came to
the job of vice president from Halliburton Corp, the world's largest
oil-geophysical-services company. The only potential threat to that US
control of oil just happens to lie inside Russia and with the
now-state-controlled Russian energy giants.
According to Kenney, Russian geophysicists used the theories of brilliant
German scientist Alfred Wegener fully 30 years before Western geologists
"discovered" Wegener in the 1960s. In 1915, Wegener published the seminal
text The Origin of Continents and Oceans, which suggested an original
unified landmass or Pangaea more than 200 mm years ago that separated into
present continents by what he called continental drift.
Up to the 1960s, supposed US scientists such as Dr Frank Press, the White
House science adviser, referred to Wegener as "lunatic". Geologists at the
end of the 1960s were forced to eat their words as Wegener offered the only
interpretation that allowed them to discover the vast oil resources of the
North Sea.
Perhaps in some decades Western geologists will rethink their mythology of
fossil origins and realize what the Russians have known since the 1950s.
In the meantime, Moscow holds a massive energy trump card.
F. William Engdahl, author of A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics
and the New World Order, Pluto Press Ltd. To contact:
www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net .
Source: Asia Times Online
www.atimes.com
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