The two big stories of our day are
(1) Our economic problems:
The inability of economies to grow as rapidly as they would like, add
as many jobs as they would like, and raise the standards of living of
citizens as much as they would like.
Associated with this slow economic
growth is a continued need for ultra-low interest rates to keep
economies of the developed world from slipping back into recession.
(2) Our oil related-problems:
One part of the story relates to too little, so-called “peak oil,” and
the need for substitutes for oil. Another part of the story relates to
too much carbon released by burning fossil fuels, including oil, leading
to climate change.
While the press treats these issues as
separate stories, they are in fact very closely connected, related to
the fact that we are reaching limits in many different directions
simultaneously. The economy is the coordinating system that ties
together all available resources, as well as the users of these
resources. It does this almost magically, by figuring out what prices
are needed to keep the system in balance—how much materials of which
types are needed, given what consumers can afford to pay.
The
catch is that the economic system is not infinitely flexible. It needs
to grow, to have enough funds to (sort of) pay back debt with interest
and to make good on all the promises that have been made, such as Social
Security.
Energy use is very closely tied to economic growth.
When energy consumption becomes slow-growing (or high-priced—which is
closely tied to slow-growing), it pulls back on economic growth. Job
growth becomes more difficult, and governments find it difficult to get
enough funding through tax revenue. This is the situation we have been
experiencing for the last several years.
We might
think that governments would be aware of these issues and would alert
their populations to them. But governments either don’t understand
these issues, or only partially understand them and are frightened by
the prospect of what is happening. The purpose of my writing is to try
to explain what is happening in terms that people who are used to
reading the Wall Street Journal or Financial Times can understand.
I
am not an economist, so I can’t speak to the question of what
economists are saying. I do know that what economists say tends to
change from time to time and from researcher to researcher. For example,
in 2004, the International Energy Agency prepared an analysis with the
collaboration of the OECD Economics Department and with the assistance
of the International Monetary Fund Research Department (Full Report, Summary only).
That report said, “. . . a sustained $10 per barrel increase in oil
prices from $25 to $35 would result in the OECD as a whole losing 0.4%
of GDP in the first and second year of higher prices. Inflation would
rise by half a percentage point and unemployment would also increase.”
This finding is consistent with the issues I am concerned about, but I
expect that not all economists would agree with it. Oil prices are now
around $100 per barrel, not $35 per barrel.
The Tie of Oil and Other Forms of Energy to the Economy
Oil
and other forms of energy are used to power the economy. Historically,
rises and falls in the use of oil and other types of energy have tended
to parallel GDP growth (Figure 1).
There
is disagreement as to which is cause and which is effect—does GDP
growth lead to more oil and energy demand, or does the availability of
cheap oil and other types of energy power the economy? In my view, the
causality goes both ways. Oil and other types of energy are needed for
economic growth. But if people cannot afford oil or other types of
energy products, typically because they don’t have jobs, then energy use
will drop. And if oil prices drop too low, we will be in real trouble
because oil production will stop.
How Oil Limits Work
People
tend to think of limits as working in the same manner as having a box
with a dozen eggs. Once the last egg is gone, we are out of luck. Or a
creek dries up from lack of rainfall. The water is no longer available,
so we have lost our water source.
With the benefit of the economy,
though, limits are more complicated than this. If we live in today’s
economy, we can purchase another box of eggs if we run short of eggs,
assuming markets provide eggs at a price we can afford. If the creek
runs dry, we can figure out a different approach to getting water, such
as buying bottled water or hiring a tanker to get water from a source at
a distance and bringing it to where it is needed.
Oil limits are a
kind of limit we often hear concerns about. Being able to drill oil
wells at all and refine the oil into products of many kinds requires a
complex economy, one that can educate engineers working in oil
extraction and can build paved roads, pipelines, and refineries. The
economy needs to be able to produce high tech equipment using raw
materials from around the world. Thus, there must be an operating
financial system that allows buyers at one end of the globe to purchase
materials from the other end of the globe, and sellers to have the
confidence that they will be paid for contracted products.
If a
company wants to extract oil, it can almost always figure out places
where this theoretically can be done. If a company can gather together
all of the things it needs—trained workers; enough high tech extraction
equipment of the right type; enough pollution-fighting equipment, to
prevent oil spills and spills of radioactive water; and leases on land
where drilling is to done, then, in theory, oil can be extracted.
In
fact, the big issue is whether the extraction can be done in a
sufficiently cost-effective manner that the whole economic system can be
supported. Even if the cost of extraction “looks” fairly cheap, such as
in Iraq, or in some of the older installations elsewhere in the Middle
East, the vast majority of the revenue that is generated from oil
extraction (often as much as 90%) goes to support the government of the
country where the oil is extracted (Rogers, 2014).
This revenue is needed for many purposes: desalination plants to
provide water for the people; food subsidies, especially when oil prices
are high because food prices will tend to be high as well; new ports
and other infrastructure; and revenue to provide jobs and programs to
pacify the people so that the government will not be overtaken by
revolt.
A major issue at this point is the fact that most of the
easy-to-extract oil is already under development, so companies that want
to develop new projects need to move on to locations that are more
difficult and expensive to extract (Bloomberg, 2007).
According to oil industry consultant Steven Kopits, the cost of one
major category of oil production expenses increased by an average of
10.9% per year between 1999 and 2013. In the period between 1985 and
1999, these same expenses increased by 0.9% per year (Kopits, 2014) (Tverberg, 2014).
When
production costs are higher, someone loses out. It is as if the economy
is becoming less and less efficient. It takes more people, more energy
products, and more equipment to produce the same amount of oil. This
leaves fewer people and less energy products to produce the goods and
services that people really want, putting a squeeze on the economy. The
economy tends to grow less quickly because part of the goods and
services available are being channeled into less productive operations.
The situation of the economy becoming less and less efficient at producing oil is called diminishing returns.
A similar problem exists with fresh water in many parts of the world.
We can extract more fresh water, but it takes deeper wells. Or we have
to ship in water from a distance, using a pipeline or trucks. Or we need
to use desalination. Water is still available but at a higher
per-gallon price.
Diminishing Returns is Like a Treadmill that Runs Faster and Faster
There
are many ways we can reach diminishing returns. One easy-to-illustrate
example relates to mining metals. We usually extract the
cheapest-to-extract ores first. An important cost consideration is how
much waste material is mixed in with the metal we really want–this
determines the ore “grade.” As we are gradually forced to move from
high-grade ores to lower-grade ores, the amount of waste material grows
slowly at first, then dramatically increases (Figure 2).
We know that this kind of effect is happening right now. For example, the SRSrocco Report indicates
that between 2005 and 2012, diesel consumption per ounce of refined
gold has doubled from 12.7 gallons per ounce to 25.8 gallons per ounce,
based on the indications of the top five companies. Such a pattern
suggests that if we want to extract more gold, the price of gold will
need to rise.
The economy is affected by all of the types of
diminishing returns that are taking place (oil, fresh water, several
kinds of metals, and others). Even attempting to substitute “renewables”
for nuclear and fossil fuels electricity production acts as a type of
diminishing returns, if such substitution raises the cost of electricity
production, as it seems to in Germany and Spain.
If the total
extent of diminishing returns is not very great, increased efficiency
and substitution can act as workarounds. But if the combined effect
becomes too great, diminishing returns acts as a drag on the economy.
Oil Increases are Already Higher than the Economy Can Comfortably Absorb
For
oil, we can estimate the historical impact of increased efficiency and
substitution by looking at the historical relationship between growth in
GDP and growth in oil consumption. Based on the worldwide data
underlying Figure 1, this has averaged 2.0% to 2.4% per year since 1970,
depending on the period studied. Occasional years have exceeded 3%.
The
problem in recent years is that increases in the cost of oil production
have been much higher than 2% to 3%. As mentioned previously, a major
portion of oil extraction costs seem to be increasing at 10.9% per year.
To make this comparable to inflation adjusted GDP increases, the 10.9%
increase needs to be adjusted (1) to take out the portion related to
“overall inflation” and (2) to adjust for likely lower inflation on the
portion of oil production costs not included in Kopits’ calculation.
Even if this is done, total oil extraction costs are probably still
increasing by about 5% or 6% per year—higher than we have historically
been able to make up.
According to Kopits, we are already reaching a point where oil limits are constraining OECD GDP growth by 1% to 2% per year (Kopits, 2014) (Tverberg, 2014). Efficiency gains aren’t happening fast enough to allow GDP to grow at the desired rate.
A
major concern is that the treadmill of rising costs will speed up
further in the future. If it is hard to keep up now, it will be even
harder in the future. Also, the economy “adds together” the adverse
effects of diminishing returns from many different sources—-higher
electricity cost of production, higher metal cost of production, and the
higher cost of oil production. The economy has to increasingly struggle
because wages don’t rise to handle all of these increased costs.
As
one might guess, when economies hit diminishing returns on resources
that are important to the economy, the results aren’t very good.
According to Joseph Tainter (1990), many of these economies have collapsed.
Why Haven’t Governments Told Us About these Difficulties?
The
story outlined above is not an easy story to understand. It is possible
that governments don’t fully understand today’s problems. It is easy to
focus on one part of the story such as, “Shale oil extraction is rising
in response to higher oil prices,” and miss the important rest of the
story—the economy cannot really withstand high oil (and water and
electricity and metals) prices. The economy tends to contract in
response to a need to use so many resources in increasingly unproductive
ways. We associate this contraction with recession.
We
have many researchers looking at these issues. Unfortunately, most of
these researchers are focused on one small portion of the story. Without
understanding the full picture, it is easy to draw invalid conclusions.
For example, it is easy to get the idea that we have more time for
substitution than we really have. Financial systems are fragile. The
world financial system almost failed in 2008, after oil prices spiked.
We are still in very worrisome territory, with many countries continuing
a policy of Quantitative Easing and ultra low interest rates. We may
have only a few months or a year or two left for substitution, not 40 or
50 years, as some seem to assume.
Of course, if governments do
understand the worrisome nature of our current situation, they may not
want to say anything. It could make the situation worse, if citizens
start a “run on the banks.”
The other side of the issue is that if
governments and citizens don’t understand the full story, they may
inadvertently do things that will make the situation worse. They
certainly won’t be looking long and hard at what collapse might look
like in the current context and what can be done to mitigate its
impacts.
http://theenergycollective.com/gail-tverberg/357761/oil-limits-and-economy-one-story-not-two
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