UK government held secret peak oil talks
The UK government has been holding secret talks to assess the potential impact of peak oil, according to reports, suggesting that it is seriously concerned about the issue.
According to reports in the Observer newspaper, the Department of Energy and Climate Change (DECC), the Bank of England, and the Ministry of Defence participated in talks over the issue.
Documents, obtained by the newspaper under the Freedom of Information Act, revealed that the departments believe the government's policy on peak oil is " not quite right" and needs to "take account of climate change and put more emphasis on reducing demand and also the fact that peak oil may increase volatility in the market".
DECC, which has been asking industry leaders for their views on peak oil, refused to release details about current policy discussions, in spite of having written privately that secrecy around the topic is "probably not good".
Peak oil, a phenomenon first posited by Shell geoscientist Marion King Hubbert, suggests that oil production will reach a maximum level, after which point it will go into decline. The concept has been controversial, with industry commentators varying wildly on the timing of the peak.
Airline magnate Richard Branson predicted an oil crunch within five years in February, while others, particularly the International Energy Agency, have predicted sustained production for several decades more. Some experts even believe oil production may have already peaked and oil prices have only been kept low over the past few years as a result of the global recession.
In February this year, the UK Industry Taskforce on Peak Oil and Energy Security – a group of companies including Virgin, Scottish and Southern Energy and the StageCoach Group – released a report criticising the UK government for not taking peak oil seriously.
The report called on the UK government to prepare for peak oil, which it said could have economic, political and social impacts from as early as 2015.
The group is now preparing a follow up report, which is expected to be released in October and will assess how the BP oil spill in the Gulf and the resulting cuts in anticipated output from deepwater oil rigs will impact global production and potentially lead to oil supplies peaking even earlier.
In the US, the Joint Operating Environment within the Department of Defense, published a report on peak oil in February warning that peak oil could have an effect within a few years.
It warned that "a severe energy crunch is inevitable without a massive expansion of production and refining capacity", adding that "by 2012, surplus oil production capacity could entirely disappear, and as early as 2015, the shortfall in output could reach nearly 10 MBD [Millions of Barrels per Day]".
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