Post-Peak Mexico

Each year brings fresh updates to the body of peak oil research but I thought the recent An Explanation of Oil Peaking, R.W. Bentley, University of Reading 2009 was particularly good reading. Bentley does such a good job of explaining in direct terms a simple model for peak oil, without excluding any of the attendant complexity. (This would be a very good introduction for someone new to the subject). I especially liked his articulation of how the total production arc for, say a country or a region, is a sequence composed of the largest fields eventually giving way to many smaller fields. That description made me think of the post-peak production profile of the United States, with its long-life extension at levels well below the 1971 peak. And, it also brought to mind Mexico.

The chart you see here includes the latest updated production, provided just today by PEMEX. Total crude oil for the month of December comes in at 2.590 mbpd. This is a slight uptick to November’s 2.553 mbpd. Of course, the real story in the chart is that Mexico can never, and will never, get back to its peak year of 2004. The fact that the country’s oil minister(s) has been claiming it would, over the past five years, is actually kind of sad. And if you read Bentley’s paper you’ll understand more fully the reasons why.

Now that Mexico has lost its largest oilfield, Cantarell, which did a fast crash over 3-4 years and is the central thrust behind the above chart it’s now likely that Mexico’s crude oil production will tail off at a gentler decline rate. If Cantarell became inoperable for some reason then a new, fast leg down in supply would of course unfold. But, barring such an occurrence my guess now would be that much of the acute phase of the decline is over. Or, about to be over.

As Mexico moves into the chronic phase of its decline you will hear about new technologies, new discoveries, and increased production from some existing fields. Perhaps Mexico will even change its constitution, and allow western exploration companies to enter with their engineers and high-tech equipment. No doubt the Mexican government will claim, just like poorly written journalism here in the States often claims, that these developments have a chance to meaningfully lift production. Again, the data shows that’s simply not the case at all. For the explanation, read Bentley.

-Gregor

chart: by www.gregor.us using data from EIA Washington.

  • john

    Gregor—Ku Maloob Zap–now producing about 800k b/d will probably collapse at a rapid rate beginning in 2010. It is a smaller sister to Cantarel, and has been rpoduced exactly the same way, including a recent boost via nitrogen injection. Pemex, and the Mexican political leadership decide to overproduce KMZ to offset some of the decline from Cantarel. Now, they will begin to pay for that decision, with output from KMZ declining 150k to 200k per year for the next 3-4 years.

  • gscottl

    I keep reading, and inclined to believe, that we are at peak oil and will see declines in production going forward. I also look at our over leveraged world and believe deflating assets will be the trend over the next few years. Who wins the price battle declining production or deflating assets.

  • http://realityzone-realityzone.blogspot.com/ REALITYZONE

    Of course Mexico has peaked. And yes i do believe they will privatize what is left of their oil production. The West, and the IMF will make sure of that. IMO; Saudi Arabia has also peaked. I believe the West knew this in 2000. The secret Cheney Energy council also knew this. Well we all know what happened next. It is not only good enough to control the oil fields, they now want to control the flow of oil. That is why these global [choke points] are now coming into play.

  • gregor.us

    Thankyou. Meanwhile PEMEX is out with fresh field by field numbers and Canatarell fell another 6.35% in December to a new low of 527688 barrel per day. Do you have a start-zone for when you think KMZ begins its crash?

  • john

    Pemex gave a tour to a group sponsored by Deutsch Bank 2.5 years ago. Pemex was planning some bond sales so we got full-on tour of facilties in gulf from headquarters at Ciudad del Carmen. Head of Pemex production for the region was quite open about situation and Pemex plans, shifting drilling and Nitrogen injection capacity from Cantarrel to KMZ. He admitted that KMZ was as old as Cantarrel in terms of production start-up. Reservoir virtually identical, brecia(fractured limestone) but crude heavier and more viscous, and would have a lower recovery rate. Oil in place less than one-third of Cantarrel. At 800k b/d, Pemex has pushed KMZ harder than they did Cantarrel, and decline will be even steeper. Plateau will end this year(2010).

  • chrisarkenberg

    Hmm… interesting to compare this chart to the rise of violence in Mexico's narcoinsurgency. Almost an inverse mirror.

  • gregor.us

    Exactly!

    G

  • chrisarkenberg

    Hmm… interesting to compare this chart to the rise of violence in Mexico's narcoinsurgency. Almost an inverse mirror.

  • gregor.us

    Exactly!

    G