This prospect would not be so bleak were it not that similar trends are
now becoming manifest around the globe. The three main oil-producing
regions are Opec, the former Soviet Union, and the rest of the world.
According to papers presented at the latest annual meetings of the
Association for the Study of Peak Oil, Opec's future production is
expected to peak in 2020 at about 40-45m bpd. Under-production in the
former Soviet Union in the 1990s has been followed by a new surge in east
Siberia and Sakhalin. Together with new discoveries in the Caspian, this
will yield a peak of about 10m bpd in 2010.

Combining the models for Opec, the former Soviet Union and the
remaining 40 or more major oil-producing countries puts ultimate world oil
recovery - past and future - at some 2,200bn barrels, with production
peaking at about 80m bpd between 2010 and 2020. To this may be added
non-conventional oil and other liquids brought into commercial production
by the rising price as oil becomes more scarce. These include oil from
coal and shale, bitumen and derived synthetics, heavy and extra-heavy oil,
deep-water oil, polar oil and liquids from gas fields and gas plants.
These sources, though at very much greater cost, could provide an ultimate
recovery of about 800bn barrels and might peak in 2050 at around 20m bpd.
But the combined model suggests a peak from all sources of about 90m bpd
around 2015.
Today we enjoy a daily production of 75m bpd. But to meet projected
demand in 2015, we would need to open new oilfields that can give an
additional 60m bpd. This is frankly impossible. It would require the
equivalent of more than 10 new regions, each the size of the North Sea.
Maybe Iraq with enormous new investments will increase production by 6m
bpd, and the rest of the Middle East might be able to do the same. But to
suggest that the rest of the world could produce an extra 40m barrels
daily is just moonshine.
These calculations place the coming oil crunch some time between 2010
and 2015, perhaps earlier. The reserves in the world's super-giant and
giant oilfields are dwindling at an average rate of 4-6 per cent a year.
No more big frontier regions remain to be explored except the north and
south poles. The production of non-conventional crude oil has already been
initiated at enormous cost in Venezuela's Orinoco belt and Canada's
Athabasca tar sands and ultra-deep waters. Yet no major primary energy
alternative can replace oil and gas in the short-to-medium term.
The implications of this are mind-blowing, since oil provides 40 per
cent of all traded energy and no less than 90 per cent of transport fuel.
But not only are the motor vehicle and farming industries dependent on
oil, so is national defence. Oil powers the vast network of planes, tanks,
helicopters and ships that provide the basis of each country's armaments.
It is hard to envisage the effects of a radically reduced oil supply on a
modern economy or society. Yet just such a radical reduction is staring us
in the face.
The world faces a stark choice. It can continue down the existing path
of rising oil consumption, trying to pre-empt available remaining oil
supplies, if necessary by military force, but without avoiding a steady
exhaustion of global capacity. Or it could switch to renewable sources of
energy, much more stringent standards of energy efficiency, and a steady
reduction in oil use. The latter course would involve huge new investment
in energy generation and transportation technologies.
The US response to this dilemma is very striking. The National Energy
Policy report prepared by Dick Cheney, US vice-president, in May 2001
proposed the exploitation of untapped reserves in protected wilderness
areas within the US, notably the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge in
north-eastern Alaska. The rejection of this extremely contentious proposal
forced President George W. Bush, unwilling to curb America's ever-growing
thirst for oil, to go back on White House rhetoric and accept the need to
increase oil imports from foreign suppliers.
It was a fateful decision. It means that, for the US alone, oil
imports, or imports of other sources of oil, such as natural gas liquids,
will have to rise from 11m bpd to 18.5m bpd by 2020. Securing that
increment of imported oil - the equivalent of total current oil
consumption by China and India combined - has driven an integrated US
oil-military strategy ever since.
There is, however, a fundamental weakness in this policy. Most
countries targeted as a source of increased oil supplies to the US are
riven by deep internal conflicts, strong anti-Americanism, or both. Iraq
is only the first example of the cost - both in cash and in soldiers'
lives - of facing down resistance or fighting resource wars in key
oil-producing regions, a cost that even the US may find unsustainable.
The conclusion is clear: if we do not immediately plan to make the
switch to renewable energy - faster, and backed by far greater investment
than currently envisaged - then civilisation faces the sharpest and
perhaps most violent dislocation in recent history.
The writer was UK environment minister from 1997 to June 2003