(by Dr. Louis Arnoux)
Recently, Saudi Aramco, the world largest
oil exporter, has acknowledged that Ghawar, the world largest oil
field, is in decline. The news went mostly unnoticed except in the
specialised media. OK, so the Saudi have a bit of bother, so what? In
fact, this piece of news is extremely important. Previously the oil
world had been led to believe that Ghawar was producing over 5 Million
barrels/day (Mb/d).[1] As part of its fund-raising, Aramco has disclosed
that it is in fact down to 3.8Mb/d.
THE END OF THE OIL GIANTS: And What It Means
GUEST POST: By Dr. Louis Arnoux
The meaning of this news snippet takes a bit of explaining. What the specialised media did not emphasise is what follows:
When giant oil fields go into decline, they usually decline abruptly. Ghawar’s
decline is ominous. It was discovered in 1948 and until recently
represented about 50% of the oil crude production of the Kingdom of
Saudi Arabia (KSA). Ghawar is representative of some 100 to 200 giant
oil fields. Most of them are old. The most recently discovered giants
are of a diminutive size compared with those old giants.[2]
Read more: https://srsroccoreport.com/the-end-of-the-oil-giants-and-what-it-means/
No comments:
Post a Comment