Turmoil Impacts Output Outlook

Americans Face Increases at Gasoline Pumps

Editor's note: As global oil prices soar to unprecedented levels Americans face increases at gasoline pumps this topic was much discussed — and often debated — during the recent AAPG Annual Meeting in Dallas.

Nowhere were the assessments and opinions more on display than during and after the All-Convention Luncheon, which featured a provocative talk by Amy Myers Jaffe. She talked with the EXPLORER after her speech about the international oil situation, as did international oil expert Thomas O' Connor.


Turmoil Impacts Output Outlook

The Middle East, like all areas that are touched by or depend on the oil industry, will continue to go through major changes, according to AAPG All-Convention Luncheon speaker Amy Myers Jaffe.

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Editor's note: As global oil prices soar to unprecedented levels Americans face increases at gasoline pumps this topic was much discussed — and often debated — during the recent AAPG Annual Meeting in Dallas.

Nowhere were the assessments and opinions more on display than during and after the All-Convention Luncheon, which featured a provocative talk by Amy Myers Jaffe. She talked with the EXPLORER after her speech about the international oil situation, as did international oil expert Thomas O' Connor.


Turmoil Impacts Output Outlook

The Middle East, like all areas that are touched by or depend on the oil industry, will continue to go through major changes, according to AAPG All-Convention Luncheon speaker Amy Myers Jaffe.

For starters, she said the current political unrest in the Middle East has prompted oil companies to reduce investments in the region.

"We're moving into a time when we're going to see greater democratization and debate in the Muslim world," she said of the post-September 11 era.

She predicted that Iraq's daily production is unlikely to rise above 2.5 million barrels a day in 2005, due to the country's difficult transition to democracy.

"An opening to private investment in Iraq would promote steadier growth in oil production rates," she said, "but it remains uncertain whether the Iraqi people will choose this option."

Citing an oil crisis in Venezuela, Myers Jaffe predicted that Africa will continue to contribute the biggest, reliable growth in global oil supply. She suggested that political issues in Latin America, including Mexico's constitution, will discourage growth in oil production.

Calling Canada the "unsung hero," she predicted its "quiet growth" and advancements in technologies required to tap the unconventional resources contained in Alberta's oil sands.

Myers Jaffe described how renewable energy and new technologies to produce unconventional resources will achieve cheaper energy and environmentally sustainable growth for Americans.

"The line between conventional and non-conventional resources has blurred," she said. "I think we will see more companies turning to unconventional resources to make up the gap in supply."

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