"Soviet oil production was completely irresponsible and was designed to produce as much oil as possible in the short-term, without regard to the long term viability of oil wells."
I recommend a study on macroeconomics re your assertion. I have read both CIA reports from 1977 (ER 77-1014) and later 1991 analysis regarding Russia oil production. Reagan and Casey knew what they were doing when thry got the Saudi to ehlp bring down the USSR's main export inflows - while they were engaged in a winlesss war in Afghanistan. You need to think more stratgically about these issues, as that is what oil is all about. In the meantime I recommend that you persue these 3 articles.
As for the non-OPEC to OPEC "crossover event" with respect to OPEC dominance, please double click the first gragh, but I suspect it we be 2006-7 instead of 2010...
http://wolf.readinglitho.co.uk/mainpages/oilwars.html#(As for Central Asian production way up - what oil fields are you referring to and where are the facts to support that assertion?...)
http://www.peakoil.net/Newsletter/NL33/Newsletter33.html(See article #244)
Smoking Gun: The CIA’s Interest in Peak Oil
"The American oil peak signalled the end of an era: from that point on, the US would become increasingly dependent on imports—and this dependence would entail serious costs, as became apparent with the Arab OPEC oil embargo of 1973, which sent the US economy into a tailspin. (2) Clearly, CIA analysts in 1977 understood the importance of the American oil peak and believed that a peak of petroleum production in the USSR would have similar or even graver consequences for that nation.
This much is clear and indisputable. Less clear is what was done with the information. Soon after assuming office in 1981, the Reagan Administration abandoned the established policy of pursuing détente with the Soviet Union and instead instituted a massive arms buildup; it also fomented proxy wars in areas of Soviet influence, while denying the Soviets desperately needed oil equipment and technology. Then, in the mid-1980s, Washington persuaded Saudi Arabia to flood the world market with cheap oil. Throughout the last decade of its existence, the USSR pumped and sold its oil at the maximum possible rate in order to earn foreign exchange income with which to keep up in the arms race and prosecute its war in Afghanistan. Yet with markets awash with cheap Saudi oil, the Soviets were earning less even as they pumped more. Two years after their oil production peaked, the economy of the USSR crumbled and its government collapsed.
Did the Reagan administration base its Cold War strategy on the CIA study, in the expectation that a Soviet Union economically weakened by oil depletion would collapse if pushed hard on other fronts?
That question is mostly of historical interest. But the Agency’s focus on the phenomenon of oil peaks has important implications for the present. For the past decade, oil experts have been debating when global oil production will peak...."
****Artilce #2*****
http://www.peakoil.net/Newsletter/NL31/Newsletter31.htmlCountry Assesment - Russia
(please see article #212 - current depletion rate of Russia is 3%, but a 2nd peak is quite possible, but I recommend you look at the graghs before you make wild claims no supported by geological findings.)
"....In fact, the Soviet explorers proved to be highly efficient being able to apply scientific methods, free of commercial constraints. Boreholes were drilled for geological information, and Russian explorers pioneered the geochemical breakthrough that identified the source rocks and generating belts. Accordingly, discovery at least in sub-Arctic Russia peaked around 1960, the corresponding peak of production following in 1987. Exactly how much was found is hard to know, because the Soviet classification of reserves ignored commercial constraints. Decline curve analysis shows that the reported reserves of most Russian fields have to be reduced by about 30% to obtain realistic estimates. Production crashed on the fall of the Soviets, but is now growing under the new capitalists, in part making good the production that would have already been secured but for the dislocations accompanying the fall of the Soviet regime. Accordingly, we may expect a second peak around 2010."
****article #3******
http://www.peakoil.net/Newsletter/NL35/Newsletter35.htmlCountry Assessment - Mexico
"Mexico is here assessed to be capable of producing a total of 50 Gb to 2075, giving a midpoint of depletion in 1999, some fourteen years after what appears to be a premature actual peak in 1985. Production now stands at about 3.2 Mb/d, being subject to a fairly high depletion rate of 5% a year.
Oil consumption is running at about 1.8 Mb/d meaning that the country will become a net importer by around 2010, assuming no increase in demand. By 2050, production will have fallen to about 400 kb/d, which may imply a massive reduction in population, given the central role of oil in an already fragile economy and the dependency of urban dwellers on food transport. The Rio Grande threatens to be tough frontier."
*******
"Your business about "proven" oil reserves is largely bogus."
I know all about what Kuwait did in 1986, and what happened with other OPEC members over the next 4 years. OPEC reserves are Enron- like "politcal" numbers, with many experts suggesting they are 50% inflated, including Saudi Arabia (google search for Matthew Simmons - who has done the best research on Saudi issues). However, I study technical data (I have read Colin Campbell's latest book which may not yet avaliable in the US), and here's a sampling of my ressearch on these subjects...which will be my own upcoming book...
http://www.ratical.org/ratville/CAH/RRiraqWar.html#p2b(the Peak Oil gragh should prove useful, enjoy!)