Abstract

Geological constraints are considered in the context of a Hotelling type extraction-exploration model for an exhaustible resource. It is shown that such constraints, in combination with initially small reserves and strictly convex exploration costs, can coherently explain bellshaped peaks in natural resource extraction, and hence U-shapes in prices. As production increases, marginal profits (marginal revenues less marginal extraction cost) are observed to decline, while as production decreases, marginal profits rise at a positive rate that is not necessarily the rate of discount. A numerical application of the model to the world oil market shows that geological constraints have the potential to substantially increase the future oil price. While some non-OPEC producers are found to increase production in response to higher oil prices induced by the geological constraints, most producers’ production declines, leading to a lower peak level for global oil production.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call