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ピークオイルコミュの石油メジャーの見解

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Dr. Kさんに教えて頂いた、シェルとトタルのCEOのピークオイルを認めるような発言。

石油メジャー大手の現役の責任者が、このような発言をする事は極めて異例で、注目に値すると思い、トピックを立てます。



トタルCEO
CHRISTOPHE DE MARGERIE
エコノミスト紙
2008.1.10

"Last year he declared that the world would never be able to increase its output of oil from the current level of 85m barrels per day (b/d) to 100m b/d"

http://www.economist.com/people/displaystory.cfm?story_id=10496503


シェルCEO
Jeroen van der Veer
2008.1.22
「Shell Energy Scenarios」と題して、全ての従業員宛にメッセージ。

"Shell estimates that after 2015 supplies of easy-to-access oil and gas will no longer keep up with demand"

http://www.theoildrum.com/node/3548#more


その後、少し調べましたら、WSJ(ウォールストリートジャーナル)2007.11.9の記事によると、トタルのde MARGERIE氏が07.10.31のIEAの会議で近い発言をしていた事がわかりました。

"Mr. de Margerie said production by 2030 of even 100 million barrels a day will be “difficult.”"


この記事では、コノコフィリップス(ConocoPhillips)社のCEO、James Mulvaも

“I don’t think we are going to see the supply going over 100 million barrels a day…."

と同様の発言をしています。


この記事には、他にも注目の発言がいくつかあります。ネット上では全文入手は有料ですので、まあ多分大丈夫だろうということで、全文貼付けておきます。


The Wall Street Journal: Oil Officials See Limit Looming on Production
By RUSSELL GOLD and ANN DAVIS
November 19, 2007; Page A1
A growing number of oil-industry chieftains are endorsing an idea long deemed fringe: The world is approaching a practical limit to the number of barrels of crude oil that can be pumped every day.
Some predict that, despite the world’s fast-growing thirst for oil, producers could hit that ceiling as soon as 2012. This rough limit ― which two senior industry officials recently pegged at about 100 million barrels a day ― is well short of global demand projections over the next few decades. Current production is about 85 million barrels a day.
The world certainly won’t run out of oil any time soon. And plenty of energy experts expect sky-high prices to hasten the development of alternative fuels and improve energy efficiency. But evidence is mounting that crude-oil production may plateau before those innovations arrive on a large scale. That could set the stage for a period marked by energy shortages, high prices and bare-knuckled competition for fuel.
The current debate represents a significant twist on an older, often-derided notion known as the peak-oil theory. Traditional peak-oil theorists, many of whom are industry outsiders or retired geologists, have argued that global oil production will soon peak and enter an irreversible decline because nearly half the available oil in the world has been pumped. They’ve been proved wrong so often that their theory has become debased.
The new adherents ― who range from senior Western oil-company executives to current and former officials of the major world exporting countries ― don’t believe the global oil tank is at the half-empty point. But they share the belief that a global production ceiling is coming for other reasons: restricted access to oil fields, spiraling costs and increasingly complex oil-field geology. This will create a global production plateau, not a peak, they contend, with oil output remaining relatively constant rather than rising or falling.
The emergence of a production ceiling would mark a monumental shift in the energy world. Oil production has averaged a 2.3% annual growth rate since 1965, according to statistics compiled by British oil giant BP PLC. This expanding pool of oil, most of it priced cheaply by today’s standards, fueled the post-World War II global economic expansion.
On Oct. 31, Christophe de Margerie, the chief executive of French oil company Total SA, jolted attendees at a London conference by openly labeling production forecasts of the International Energy Agency, the sober-minded energy watchdog for industrialized nations, as unrealistic. The IEA projects production will grow to between 102.3 million and 120 million barrels a day by 2030. Mr. de Margerie said production by 2030 of even 100 million barrels a day will be “difficult.”
Speaking Clearly
This is “the view of those who like to speak clearly, honestly, and [are] not just trying to please people,” he bluntly declared. The French executive said many existing oil fields are being depleted at rates that will damage their geologic structures, which will limit future output more than most people allow. What’s more, some nations endowed with large untapped pools of oil are generating so much revenue from their current production that they feel they don’t need to further develop their fields, thus putting another cap on output.
Earlier this month, James Mulva, the chief executive of ConocoPhillips, echoed those conclusions in a speech at a Wall Street conference: “I don’t think we are going to see the supply going over 100 million barrels a day…. Where is all that going to come from?” He questioned whether the industry has enough support services and people to execute projects to add that much oil production.
Even some officials from member states of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, which has long insisted on its ability to supply the world with fuel for decades hence, are breaking ranks and forecasting limits. The chairman of Libya National Oil Corp. said at the same London conference the world will have difficulty producing more than 100 million barrels a day.
A former head of exploration and production at Saudi Arabia’s national oil company, Sadad Ibrahim Al Husseini, has also gone public with doubts. He said in London last month that he didn’t believe there were enough engineers or equipment to ramp up production fast enough to keep up with the thirsty global economy. What’s more, he said, new discoveries are tending to be smaller and more complex to develop.
Many leaders of the industry still dismiss the idea that there is reason to worry. “I am no subscriber to the theory that oil supplies have already peaked,” said BP’s chief executive, Tony Hayward, earlier this month in a speech in Houston.
Exxon Mobil Corp. Chief Executive Rex Tillerson has said that if companies had better access to the world’s oil reserves, production would increase and prices would go down. “Sufficient hydrocarbon resources exist to play their role in meeting this growing global demand, if industry is allowed to access them,” he said in a speech this month. If access were granted, Exxon Mobil believes the industry would be able to raise fuel production to meet demand in 2030 of 116 million barrels a day.
The oil industry has long been beset by doom-and-gloom scenarios, which so far haven’t panned out. “The entire oil industry in the late 1970s was convinced the price [of oil] would be $100 by 1990 and we would need huge oil shale mines” to exploit oil locked away tightly in rock, says Michael C. Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research Inc. Of course, that didn’t happen, as discoveries ushered in new eras of low-priced oil in the mid-1980s through the late 1990s.
U.S. government experts are optimistic ― to a point. The Energy Information Administration, the data arm of the Energy Department, forecasts world oil production will hit 118 million barrels a day by 2030. But the agency warns that its prediction might not pan out if resource-rich nations such as Venezuela and Iraq don’t invest enough in their operations.
“We know that the world is not running out of energy resources, but nonetheless, above-ground risks like resource nationalism, limited access and infrastructure constraints may make it feel like peak oil just the same, by limiting production to something far less than what is required,” said Clay Sell, deputy secretary of energy, in a speech in October. Resource nationalism refers to tightening state control of oil fields to achieve political aims, often by restricting outsiders’ ability to develop the oil for world markets.
‘Undulating Plateau’
Two or three years ago, it was far more common for oil analysts and officials to trumpet the potential of new technology to harvest more oil. In a report last year, Cambridge Energy Research Associates, a prominent adviser to energy companies, made the comforting prediction that oil production could reach 110 million barrels a day by 2015, and “more than meet any reasonable high growth rate demand scenario we can envisage” up to that date. Because of progress being made in extracting oil through new methods, CERA said it found “no evidence” there would be a peak in oil flows “any time soon.” In a later report, CERA said world oil production won’t peak before 2030 and that even when it does, production will resemble an “undulating plateau” for one or more decades before declining gradually.
Oil companies have seen several years of bull-market prices, and thus of trying to produce more. This has given their executives a better sense of what is and isn’t possible.
One limit: Many people think most of the world’s giant fields already have been discovered. By 1970, oil-industry explorers had discovered 10 giants that could each produce more than 600,000 barrels a day, according to Matt Simmons, chairman of energy investment banking firm Simmons & Co. International. Exploration in the next 20 years, to 1990, yielded only two. Since 1990, despite billions in new spending, the industry has found only one field with the potential to top 500,000 barrels a day, Kazakhstan’s Kashagan field in the Caspian Sea. And Mr. Simmons notes it is proving expensive and difficult to extract.
Big strikes are still possible. This month, Petróleo Brasileiro SA announced a deep-water find off Brazil’s Atlantic coast that appears to be the largest discovery since Kashagan.
But some of the most promising geological formations are in locations that are inhospitable, for reasons of geography or, especially, politics and strife. Output from Iraq’s rich fields is unlikely to grow much until security improves and outside investment returns. The future of Iranian and Nigerian production is likewise clouded by geopolitical and local instability.
Labor and construction bottlenecks also are making it difficult to develop proven fields. One of the largest obstacles is the booming commodity markets themselves: The prices of raw materials used in oil-field platforms and equipment has escalated. And during the years of low or moderate oil prices in the 1980s and 1990s, companies didn’t develop enough geologists and other skilled workers to supply today’s needs. “Years of underinvestment in new talent have led to a limited and aging pool of skilled workers,” noted Andrew Gould, the CEO of oil-service giant Schlumberger Ltd., last month.
High oil prices have also led to steep cost inflation for drilling rigs and other equipment. Costs have soared so much that the industry is falling behind in the investment needed to sate expected future demand. To meet demand forecasts of 90 million barrels of oil a day in 2010, the industry needed to have spent $350 billion on drilling and producing in 2005, argues Larry G. Chorn, chief economist of Platts, the energy and commodities-information division of McGraw-Hill Cos. But the International Energy Agency estimates that spending on oil-field production in 2005 came to only about $225 billion, he says.
A failure to spend enough in the past few years “may have already put the industry behind the spending curve,” Mr. Chorn says. As a result, he predicts “temporary shortages over several years, causing debilitating price spikes.”
Compounding the problem: Most of the world’s biggest fields are aging, and production at them is declining rapidly. So, just to keep global production at current levels, the industry needs to add new production of at least four million daily barrels, every year. That need is roughly five times the daily production of Alaska, with its big Prudhoe Bay field ― and it doesn’t assume any demand growth at all.
Rate of Decline
Mr. Simmons scoffs at estimates that production from proven fields will decline only 4.5% a year. He thinks a more realistic rate of decline is 8% to 10% a year, especially because modern technology actually succeeds in depleting fields faster.
If he’s right, the industry needs to add new daily production of at least eight million barrels ― 10 times current Alaskan production ― just to stay even.
Mr. Simmons thinks the world needs to shift its energy focus from climate change to more immediate concerns. “Peak oil is likely already a crisis that we don’t know about. At the furthest out, it will be a crisis in 2008 to 2012. Global warming, if real, will not be a problem for 50 to 100 years,” he says.
Oil executives who believe a production ceiling is coming are making plans to stay relevant in a world where oil production is constrained.
Mr. de Margerie said at Total’s annual meeting this spring that the company was “looking into” nuclear-industry investments and had hired nuclear experts to help make strategic decisions. ConocoPhillips recently said it was considering building a commercial-scale plant to turn plentiful U.S. coal into natural gas.
Soaring energy prices have breathed new life into projects targeting “nonconventional” oil, such as that trapped in sand or shale. But these sources can’t be tapped nearly as quickly or inexpensively as the big oil finds of the past.
Vivid Example
Canada’s massive oil-sands deposits, which hold the largest oil reserves after Saudi Arabia’s, offer a vivid example. They contain an estimated 180 billion barrels of oil. But after years of intensive development and tens of billions of dollars of investments, the sands are producing only a little more than 1.1 million barrels of crude a day. That’s projected to reach three million a day by 2015. The oil deposits are so heavy that companies must either mine them or slowly steam them underground to get the oil to flow out of the sand.
Randy Udall, co-founder of the U.S. chapter of the Association for the Study of Peak Oil and Gas, has written that these unconventional oil supplies are like having $100 million in the bank, but “being forbidden to withdraw more than $100,000 per year. You are rich, sort of.”
As these uncertainties mount, there is growing hope that Saudi Arabia, which has about 20% of the world’s oil reserves, would ride to the rescue if needed. Saudi Aramco, the national oil company, has embarked on an ambitious plan to increase its daily production by 30%, or three million barrels, early next decade, and thus reclaim the title of top producer from Russia. But Mr. Al Husseini, the former Saudi oil executive, now an independent consultant, said others aren’t doing as much, leaving the world entirely dependent on Saudi Arabia to provide extra capacity.
“Everyone thinks that Saudi Arabia will pull us out of this mess. Saudi Arabia is doing all it can,” he says in an interview. “But what it is doing, in the long run, won’t be enough.”
Write to Russell Gold at russell.gold@wsj.com and Ann Davis at ann.davis@wsj.com

コメント(20)

カナダの大手石油会社「Talisman エネルギー」の、社長兼 CEO を退任したばかりの Dr. Jim Buckee 氏が、ABC ラジオの電話インタビューにこたえて、“ ピークオイルはまさに今か、ないしは非常に近い “ と語ったとか。

Energy Bulletin
http://energybulletin.net/39656.html

シェル CEO の、先日の “ 容易に入手できるオイルの終わり “ の予測宣言が引き金になって、またゾロ、という感じですかね。
「環境問題、温暖化問題とピークオイル」トピ の96-97(長いので2分割)に関連する分析を書きました。
King.Hubbertは確か、シェルでしたよね?
『ピーク・オイル・パニック』( 益岡賢他訳 ) の Jeremy Leggett が言います。

“ なぜ、化石燃料の使用を減らす必要があるのか ? “

“ 我々には再生可能かつ有効な、全てのエネルギー市場の爆発的な成長が必要だ “
http://www.theoildrum.com/files/20080324%20Time%20&%20Fortune%20mags.pdf

これを、“ シェル “ がスポンサードしています ? !
シェルは結構いい会社だと思っています。

その根拠は、とっても牽強付会かもしれませんが(笑)。

「出現する未来」
http://www.amazon.co.jp/exec/obidos/ASIN/4062820196/arclampjp-22/
これは、このままのシナリオでは地球は破滅すると感じている3人の著者が、それぞれ深い内的体験を通して、新しい未来と人間の意識の可能性に気づいたひとたちのネットワークが世界中で立ち上がりつつあること、そしてそのネットワーク自体がひとつの生命であるというような内容です。
「シンクロニシティ」
http://www.7andy.jp/books/detail?accd=31960406
ジャワースーキーの自伝的中で、シンクロニシティが個人の知性を超えて、大いなる知性へと人々をつなげていく過程を体験的に書いています。

この2冊の共・著者、著者であるジャワースキーが、かつてシェルの戦略的シナリオプランのチーフも務めています。
各国が分離対立を深めている危機的シナリオと各国が協調して新しい地球世界を切り開いていくシナリオです。
彼が関ったのは1990代のシナリオプラニングですが、シェルがその後、ピークオイルのことをシナリオに取り入れて、経営戦略を考えているでしょうし、そうすると、真剣にポストピークオイルの時代を、人類的視点で考えていることは十分考えられます。

あと、ついでに。

最近、「不都合の真実」の翻訳者で、福田首相の地球温暖化懇談会のメンバーにもなっている枝廣淳子さんと少し仕事をしているのですが、彼女もピークオイルのことは知っています。彼女は2012年ぐらいではないかと考えています。
以前、彼女に、政府にピークオイルのことは伝えましたかと聞いたら、一応伝えたけれど、あまり深刻には取っていないようだったと返事をもらいました。
それが3月のことで、その後、彼女は、懇談会で首相に何度か会っているので、その後のことは、今度、6月8日に会ったときに聞いてみたいとも思っています。因みにレスターブラウンさんにも会います。(枝廣さんがレスターさんにインタビューする企画です)
もし、ピークオイルのことで、枝廣さん、レスターさんに伝えたいことがあったら、何とかしたいと思っていますので、みなさん、よろしくお願いします。





米上院司法委、原油高で公聴会・石油メジャー首脳から聴取

 【ワシントン=米山雄介】米上院司法委員会は21日、原油高について公聴会を開き、石油メジャー5社の首脳を含む各社の役員から原油価格高騰の理由などについて聴取した。同委メンバーからは原油高を追い風にした業績の急拡大や、多額の役員報酬に批判が集中し、メジャー側は防戦に追われた。

 公聴会に出席したのはエクソンモービルやコノコフィリップスなどメジャー5社の社長や副社長。新興国の需要増や米国内での精製能力の限界などについて説明し、理解を求めた。

 レーヒー司法委員長(民主)は「ブッシュ大統領は『石油業界に友人がいるので、価格を低く抑えられる』と自慢していたが、実際にはその友人が原油高で恩恵を受けているだけだ」と述べ、ブッシュ政権と石油業界との関係を批判した。(10:47)
http://www.nikkei.co.jp/news/kaigai/20080522AT2M2201G22052008.html
枝廣淳子さん
5月最新刊
「エネルギー危機からの脱出」
まだ途中までしか読んでいませんが、ピークオイルについての本です。
http://www.bk1.jp/product/02983506

webでもピークオイルについて発言しています。
http://eco.nikkei.co.jp/column/edahiro_junko/article.aspx?id=MMECc3000022052008

ご参考までに。

taoさん

書籍の紹介はこちらです。
http://mixi.jp/view_bbs.pl?id=11737196&comm_id=1322211
よろしくお願いします。
トタルが、ピークオイルは2020年までに起きるから、原子力に力を入れるというロイターの報道

Total sees nuclear energy for growth after peak oil
Mon Nov 10, 2008 3:22pm EST

By Simon Webb

DOHA, Nov 10 (Reuters) - French oil and gas giant Total (TOTF.PA: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) is targeting nuclear energy to drive growth long after oil and gas output peak, a top executive said on Monday.

"In the future, energy demand will be constrained by tight supply," Arnaud Chaperon, Total's senior vice president for electricity and new energies, said in a presentation to a nuclear energy conference in Qatar.

"Oil and gas will still play a big role in the energy balance. But in the electrification of the world economy, nuclear will play a major role, together with the development of solar and other renewables ... That is why Total is very interested in developing nuclear and renewables."

Global oil output was likely to peak toward the end of the next decade, while gas would follow a decade or so later, he said. Total executives had said previously they expected global oil production to level off just short of 100 million barrels per day around 2020, up from current output of about 85 million bpd.

Total believed it could leverage its experience building megaprojects in the energy industry to take a foothold in the nuclear industry, Chaperon said.

In the Middle East, Total also had good relationships with governments of oil and gas producing countries that could help facilitate projects to build nuclear plants, he said.

"We have expressed interests, we are building experience, working on our strategy, and one day we'll move," Chaperon told Reuters later.

"It's very complex, but the more we get into it the more we see we can bring something. It's easier to convert oil and gas experts into nuclear than the other way round."

Earlier this year, Total said it would join forces with French energy producer Suez (LYOE.PA: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and French nuclear reactor maker Areva (CEPFi.PA: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) to compete for a contract to develop a nuclear power plant in the United Arab Emirates. Total holds a 1 percent stake in Areva.

The UAE aimed to have the first nuclear power plant up and running by 2017, he said on Monday.

Total was concentrating its efforts in renewable energy in solar power, Chaperon said.

"Nuclear and solar are the two areas we'd like to develop. Those are the two areas we feel we can add value." (Reporting by Simon Webb; editing by Walter Bagley)

© Thomson Reuters 2008. All rights reserved. Users may download and print extracts of content from this website for their own personal and non-commercial use only. Republication or redistribution of Thomson Reuters content, including by framing or similar means, is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Thomson Reuters. Thomson Reuters and its logo are registered trademarks or trademarks of the Thomson Reuters group of companies around the world.

http://www.reuters.com/article/marketsNews/idUSLA60620320081110
再びトタルのピーク発言です。

・8900万バレル/日以上は生産できない
・経済危機と価格下落により2015年までに少なくとも400万バレル/日は減産する
・今年は2008年レベルまで落ちる


Total says oil output near peak

By Carola Hoyos in London

Published: February 15 2009 23:37 | Last updated: February 15 2009 23:37

The world will never be able to produce more than 89m barrels a day of oil, the head of Europe’s third largest energy group has warned, citing high costs in areas such as Canada and political restrictions in countries like Iran and Iraq.

Christophe de Margerie, chief executive of Total, the French oil and gas company, said he had revised his forecast for 2015 oil production downward by at least 4m barrels a day because of the current economic crisis and the collapse in oil prices.


He noted that national oil companies, which control the vast majority of the world’s oil, and independent producers, which play a key role in finding new sources, were “substantially limited in their ability to fund investments in the current [financial] environment”.

Oil prices have fallen from a record $147 a barrel in July to about $35 a barrel on Monday, with the world consuming 84m barrels of oil a day. This year oil consumption is expected to fall from 2008 levels.

Mr de Margerie warned that the glut of oil caused by the dramatic reduction in demand would be short-lived and that, in spite of the economic crisis, in the long-term demand would remain constrained by supply. Three years ago, the International Energy Agency expected consumption and production to hit 130m b/d by 2025. It has since dropped its forecast to a little more than 100m b/d by 2030.

Delays and cancellations in projects to extract oil from Alberta’s tar sands and Venezuela’s Orinoco belt – both expensive and environmentally difficult operations in which Total is active – will cut 1.5m b/d of supply that would have come on stream had oil prices remained strong. The rest of the revisions from Total’s mid-2008 estimates came from the more pessimistic view of the political situation in Iran and Iraq, which hold the world’s second and third largest oil reserves.

Meanwhile, Mr de Margerie now expects a faster decline in production at older fields, such as those in the North Sea. At lower price levels, companies will find it harder to justify the greater cost of keeping such fields pumping.

Total’s chief executive has long been an outspoken advocate of maintaining investment, rather than repeating the mistakes of previous cycles by cutting costs so much that the industry is unable to meet global demand when economies recover. But he is also in the midst of trying to renegotiate contracts in Canada and is considering further investments in Venezuela.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2009
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/d25b8d2c-fb97-11dd-bcad-000077b07658.html?nclick_check=1
トタルはアレバとフランス政府と組んで原発に手を出していますから、暗にそれを意味しているのでしょう。

石油生産の危機を煽りつつ、石油で培った中東とのコネを活かし、政府と一体となってアレバの原発を中東に展開していくという戦略でしょう。
“We are running the risk of another oil crisis when demand outstrips supply around 2014 or 2015. There won’t be enough oil and gas by the middle of the next decade.”
-- Christophe de Margerie, CEO of Total

Total Says 2014/2015 Hydrocarbon Demand Could Outstrip Supply
Tara Patel, Bloomberg, 11 Sep 2009

http://www.leparisien.fr/economie/total-n-est-ni-un-outil-politique-ni-une-ong-11-09-2009-634441.php
シェル、純利益52.4%減=原油価格下落など直撃−09年決算 −時事通信社−
http://www.jiji.com/jc/c?g=int_30&k=2010020400955


英・オランダ系石油メジャーのロイヤル・ダッチ・シェルが4日発表した2009年決算は、売上高が前期比39.3%減の2781億8800万ドル、純利益が52.4%減の125億1800万ドルとなった。原油価格の下落などが響き、大幅な減収減益。原油の在庫評価などを除いた利益(CCS)は68.7%減だった。
しょうへいへいさん

 「原油価格の下落などが響き」ということは「バレル28ドルだった頃と比べて生産コストが倍増以上に増加した」ということですよね。
daiさん

コメントありがとうございます!

>「原油価格の下落などが響き」ということは「バレル28ドルだった頃と比べて生産コストが倍増以上に増加した」ということですよね。

僕もそう思います。
2009年のWTIが平均すると大体60ドル弱だったことも考えると、「倍増以上」は間違いないのではないかと思っています。
オイルメジャー(これも死語?)になろうとしている?、ペトロブラスが、12月のプレゼンテ―ションで2010年ピークを表明していたことが分かりました。

World Oil Capacity to Peak in 2010 Says Petrobras CEO
http://www.theoildrum.com/node/6169

元のプレゼン資料
http://www2.petrobras.com.br/ri/pdf/usp_01-12-09.pdf

ペトロブラス 2010年に世界の原油生産がピークアウトすると表明
http://blogs.yahoo.co.jp/yada7215/58699332.html


2009年の1月に、「3年おきに、現在のサウジアラビア一ヶ国分の原油生産量の追加が必要だ。」と主張していたのに、そのわずか一年後には「2年おき」に変わっています。
ぬりさん
 興味深いグラフですね。今ある油田とその増進開発、それに今ある開発計画を加えたものなので、精度は高そう。

 2030年の石油価格は、これから立案され開発される油田のコストで決まるということか。
daiさん


根拠は不明ですが、プレソルト等の深海油田・ガス田の採掘にコストがかかるので、石油価格が高騰するのを望み、煽っているという見方もできると思います。

また、ペトロブラスが抱えている埋蔵量の魅力を説いて、投資を募っているのでしょう。


石油会社がこうした図を示すことは珍しいですね。


昨日のもったいない学会で、石井先生が引用されていたようです。

いやあ、世の中すっかりtwitterですね。
ぬりさん

○ 現在の生産量を維持しようとすれば、価格は鰻登り。

○ リーズナブル(たとえば70〜140ドル?)な価格で推移するには、消費量が着実に減少する必要がある。

 という、価格・生産量の上限・下限の幅の中で推移するという予測があたっているかどうかが気になっているところです。
 この幅の中であれば、誰がどういう戦略を立てて結果がどうなるか、といったところまでは、私にはわからないし、そこを予測するつもりもありません。おおまかな傾向くらいは考えますが。
(あ、このコミュの予想には、あくまでも「ごっこ」で参加してます)

 たとえば、今、電力においてフィードインタリフが一つの焦点になっています。成立するなら、小水力(や風力、地熱)の買い取り価格は、20円台〜30円くらいになると思いますが、普及に伴って価格が低下するとしても、化石燃料の燃料代の方が上ってきて、結果的に20円/kWhくらいまで下がったところでそれ以上下げる必要がなくなるかもしれない、などと考えています。2015〜2020年頃の予想。
 20円/kWh というのは、一昨年夏の石油高騰で、DD原油がバレル110ドルになったころの、原油焚き火力の燃料代です。

p.s.
 Twitter は、完全に落ちこぼれてます。どうやって使うの?
もうちょっとシンプルな言い方を考えてみました。

○ 消費量が減らなければ、価格は上がり続ける
○ 価格が一定なら、生産量は下がり続ける

 このようにわかりやすく整理していいものなのかどうなのか、というところです。

 そして、そのように整理できたとすると、

・では、2つの境界線の間で、どのような道をたどるのか、
・どのような道をたどるのが望ましいのか、
・どのような政策が道筋にどのような影響を与えるのか、

といったところが問題になってくるわけです。

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