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World has tapped just 18 percent of global oil supplies, Saudi executive says
VIENNA, Austria - The world has tapped
only 18 percent of the total global supply of crude, a leading Saudi oil
executive said Wednesday, challenging the notion that supplies are petering
out.
Abdallah S. Jum’ah, president and CEO of the state-owned Saudi Arabian
Oil Co., known better as Aramco, said the world has the potential of 4.5
trillion barrels in reserves - enough to power the globe at current levels
of consumption for another 140 years.
Jum’ah challenged oil ministers and petroleum executives at an OPEC
conference in Vienna to step up exploration “and leave the minimum
amount of oil in the ground.”
“The world
has only consumed about 18 percent of its conventional potential,”
Jum’ah said, contending that should lay to rest fears that the world
is in danger of being tapped out within a few decades.
Many experts estimate that the planet’s recoverable oil resource is
at least 3 trillion barrels and potentially more than 4 trillion barrels.
If global consumption rises about 2 percent a year from today’s levels
of about 85 million barrels a day, they say, the low end of that range would
only be enough to last until roughly 2070.
Rex W. Tillerson, the chairman of Exxon Mobil Corp., said world demand for
oil will increase by 50 percent in the next decade.
“When nations threaten to stop this flow, it stops economic progress
worldwide,” Tillerson said.
Industry leaders have gathered this week to take stock of new challenges
at the conference sponsored by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries.
Earlier this week, the 11-nation cartel agreed to leave its current production
target of 28 million barrels a day unchanged, but made clear it would keep
close tabs on falling oil prices and consider a possible cut in its output
quota before the end of the year.
Crude prices have tumbled to five-month lows and have dropped by more than
$12 a barrel since hitting record highs in mid-July. Analysts say a combination
of ample supplies and an easing of political tensions such as the cessation
of hostilities in Lebanon and progress in talks on Iran’s suspect
nuclear program have driven prices lower.
“When prices are high, passions can run high,” Tillerson said.
“Economic nationalism may gain in popularity” at the expense
of developing global markets and the world economy, he said.
“The new era we face, like all of the previous ones, is not an era
of easy oil - nor will it be an era of easy answers. But it can be an era
of continued economic advancement,” he said.
Jum’ah challenged explorationists to find enough new oil resources
to add 1 trillion barrels to world reserves over the next 25 years, saying
new technology and higher recovery rates would make it possible to hit that
target.
Already, he noted, drilling is now going on as deep as 10,000 feet below
the Gulf of Mexico and 7,000 to 8,000 feet elsewhere. Experts say a newly
discovered petroleum pool beneath the Gulf of Mexico eventually could yield
anywhere from 3 billion to 15 billion barrels.
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