The oil peaks.There is increasing evidence that the world has reached, or will soon reach, the worrisome condition known as peak oil (see "The Outlook on Oil," feature, January/February 2006). As Michael Klare reports in The Nation, such mainstream sources as the National Petroleum Council (NPC 1. (complexity) NPC - NP-complete. 2. (architecture) NPC - Next Program Counter. ) and the International Energy Agency (IEA IEA International Energy Agency IEA International Environmental Agreements IEA International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement IEA Institute of Economic Affairs IEA Inferred from Electronic Annotation IEA International Ergonomics Association ) are sounding the alarm about the difficulties of meeting the expanding petroleum demand, IEA predicts that world oil consumption will rise from 86 million barrels per day Barrels per day (abbreviated BPD, bbl/d, bpd, bd or b/d) is a measurement used to describe the amount of crude oil (measured in barrels) produced or consumed by an entity in one day. in 2007 to 96 million by 2012, driven in part by the voracious appetites of India and China. That oil will have to come mostly from increasingly unstable parts of the world, where there's a reluctance to commit large investments. As NPC puts it, in a report co-authored by former ExxoMobil CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. Lee Raymond, "There are accumulating risks to continuing expansion of oil and natural gas production from the conventional sources relied upon historically." Adding to investor unease is the specter of global warming, which even without peak oil is making petroleum a risky long-term proposition. New findings show that the Greenland ice sheet Greenland Ice Sheet Single ice cap, Greenland. Covering about 80% of the island of Greenland, it is the largest ice mass in the Northern Hemisphere, second only to the Antarctic. is melting far more rapidly than was initially understood. CONTACT: International Energy Agency, (011)33-1-40-57-65-00, www.iea.org; National Petroleum Council, (202)393-6100, www.npc.org. |
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