Can non-conventional oil hope to fill the looming energy gap? David Strachan investigates.
Geoscientist 20.02 February 2010
The oil crisis is not dead, only sleeping, according to a gathering consensus. The price may have collapsed from the 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 once the economy recovers. Analysts Goldman Sachs predict oil will cost $95 by the end of 2010, while Deutsche Bank forecasts $175 by 2016. The International Energy Agency (IEA), the OECD’s energy watchdog, also predicts a “supply crunch” around the middle of the next decade.
Yet there is no shortage of oil – at least not underground. Conventional crude is substantially depleted, with estimates of 1.2 trillion barrels of proved reserves remaining. But conventional reserves are dwarfed by a whole range of non-conventional resources, such as the Canadian tar sands, oil shale, and synthetic liquid fuels made from gas or coal, which according to the IEA expand the total oil resource to nine trillion barrels (see graph). And so far the non-conventionals are almost entirely untouched. So how could there possibly be an oil supply crunch, let alone peak oil, any time soon?
The trouble is, non-conventionals are so called for a reason, and traditionally need large inputs of energy, water and money to get out of the ground and turn into anything useful like diesel or jet fuel. As a result, non-conventional oil production currently amounts to less than 1.5 million barrels per day (mb/d), of a total 85mb/d.
But now a clutch of emerging technologies promise to solve some of those problems and allow non-conventionals to be produced much more cheaply with far less energy and water. According to Julie Chan, VP Finance at E-T Energy, a Canadian company developing a way to produce bitumen from the tar sands by sending an electric current through the reservoirs, “Canada could eclipse Saudi Arabia”. So are non-conventionals about to ride to the rescue, and confound the peak oil doomsayers for decades to come?