Estimating World Oil Reserves: What Factors Influence the Varying Estimates?

  • Thread starter zoki85
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In summary: I didn't hear anything about scientific or seismology methods for evaluating current or potential oil reserves.
  • #1
zoki85
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How are they estimated?
What methodologies experts use for that?
Some say they will last for up to 50 years,some say for only 15 years.
The opinions differ.
 
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  • #2
You can fairly easily and accurately estimate the volume of existing reservoirs from seismic surveys. But you then need to make assumptions about how much of it you can extract and what effect new extraction technolgies would have.
Then looking for new fields is a bit more specultive, you can do surveys which show there are similair features under the atlantic as under the North Sea and then say - if they contain the same amount of oil and are 10x bigger then there is 10x as much oil as in the North Sea. Do the same for oil sands etc..
Then there is the question of consumption / extraction technology / extraction cost.
If consumption goes up we have less oil, but then demand goes up so it is worthwhile expoiting more expensive sources such as oil sands. As price goes up it becomes worth investing in new technology to both find oil and extract it - so supply goes up.

Then there's politics. If you are a green campainger you pick the most conservative estimates of available reserves and assume the worst estimates of growth in demand to get 15years. If you are a car maker you pick the opposites.
The oil industry is notorious for overstating it's known reserves - partly this is just human nature, everybody on the exploration teams wants to give good news to his manager, the layers of management all want to give good news to their superiors - so reserves get exagerated. Then the board just flat out lies to the investors.
 
  • #3
It is clear to me why car industry is unethical about
these issues ,and why Greenpeace advocates the most pesismistic
prognosis.
But I was more interested to hear about scientific and
seizmology methods for evaluating current and potential
oil reserves of the planet.
Well the problem is I didn't hear that such studies
are fairly easily done or accurate !
Can you provide reliable links or something?
 
  • #4
Don't have any specific links about reserve mapping.
It wasn't that companies are necessarily unethical - it's just that there are a lot of factors multiplied together and each factor has a wide range of uncertainty.

Reserves are listed with large number of significant figures for the volume then a designination such as likely/probable/possible. So it's hard to be certain about how much there is - it's one of those areas where you are asked "tell me exactly how much stuff there is out there - that we haven't found yet!"
 
  • #5
I heard on the lecture I attended to,an interesting claim .
That factual reserves of oil are much bigger than firstly thought.
Maybe,they should suffice for next 100 years but will
they ever be commercially exploited is questionable.
They are located too deep (in Earth core) or hard to reach.
Claim made by an expert.
He doesn't work for General Motors :-)
 
  • #6
Can you imagine how much exploration has taken place in Uganda and Burundi compared to say Texas and Kuwait? This question is tough to answer considering the pure politics involved and that OPEC mandates its members change their reserves inorder to change their quotas.
 
  • #7
Plastic Photon said:
Can you imagine how much exploration has taken place in Uganda and Burundi compared to say Texas and Kuwait?

That's one of the reasons the questions regarding estimates are so intriguing.
 

1. What are oil reserves?

Oil reserves refer to the total amount of oil that is estimated to exist in the Earth's crust. These reserves are typically measured in barrels or gallons and are considered a finite resource.

2. How are oil reserves calculated?

Oil reserves are calculated by geologists and oil companies using various methods, such as geological surveys, drilling tests, and seismic imaging. These methods help determine the quantity and quality of oil present in a particular area.

3. How much oil is left in the world?

The exact amount of oil left in the world is difficult to determine, as it is constantly changing due to new discoveries and extraction. However, according to the 2020 Statistical Review of World Energy by BP, there are approximately 1.7 trillion barrels of proven oil reserves remaining.

4. Which countries have the largest oil reserves?

Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, Canada, and Iran are currently the top four countries with the largest proven oil reserves. However, there may be other countries with significant oil reserves that have not been fully explored or extracted yet.

5. Will we run out of oil?

It is predicted that the world's oil reserves will eventually be depleted, but it is difficult to determine when this will happen. The rate of consumption and the discovery of new reserves will play a significant role in determining when we will run out of oil. Many scientists and experts suggest that we should begin to transition to alternative energy sources to reduce our dependence on oil before it runs out.

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