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Oil Dependency Climbs As Supply Rises And Prices Fall

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Headlines around electric cars and carbon policy suggest our oil dependency is on a slippery downward slope. Recent data from 2016 suggests the opposite: our worldwide addiction is getting stronger.

Oil consumption versus economic activity (GDP) measures the energy "intensity" or "dependency" of our lifestyles to the wonder-fuel we love to hate. A steepening upward slope implies greater dependency and vice versa.

Before 2000 it took about 550 B/d to lubricate a change of $US 1 billion of global GDP growth. Higher oil prices from '02 to '13 lessened our dependency to 240 B/d through efficiency and substitution. Post the 2014 price crash we're back up to guzzling 360 B/d for every extra billion dollars of petroleum-fuelled economy.

Gasoline demand is up, because people are driving more kilometers. And 50 million new petroleum vehicles (net of retirements) are hitting the road per year; over 30 million in Asia alone. Petrochemical demand is solidly correlated with economy.

Why are we surprised? When a product gets cheaper people use more.

By Peter Tertzakian for Oilprice.com

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Peter Tertzakian

Peter is an economist, investment strategist, author and public speaker on issues vital to the future of energy. He has clocked over 30 years of… More

Comments

  • Naomi - 22nd Jun 2017 at 2:09am:
    Shale methods unlocked a trillion bbl of oil locked in stripper wells. The holes are dug. The pipe to refinery is laid. Bring on the frackers and harvest the loot.
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