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Fossil Fuel Use Trends and Peak Oil

Environmental Science
StudyPulse

Fossil Fuel Use Trends and Peak Oil

Environmental Science
01 May 2026

Fossil Fuel Use Trends and Peak Oil

Understanding how fossil fuel consumption has changed over time — and why it cannot continue indefinitely — is central to evaluating the need for a sustainable energy transition.

Global Energy Consumption Trajectory

Era Key Trend
Pre-Industrial (<1800) Energy from biomass, wind, water, animal power
Industrial Revolution (1800–1900) Coal becomes dominant — powers steam engines, manufacturing
Early 20th century (1900–1950) Oil rises — internal combustion engine; petrol era begins
Post-WWII boom (1950–2000) Rapid growth in all fossil fuels; electrification; natural gas expansion
2000–present Continued fossil fuel use; renewable growth accelerating; global CO$_2$ still rising

Rates of Change

  • Global primary energy consumption has grown approximately 30-fold since 1800
  • Fossil fuels have provided ~80–85% of global primary energy throughout the 20th century and into the 21st century
  • Per capita energy use in wealthy nations is stabilising but remains ~5–10× the global average
  • China and India have driven most of the growth in fossil fuel use since 2000
  • Global coal consumption peaked ~2013 and has fluctuated; natural gas and oil continue to grow

The Concept of Peak Oil

Peak oil is the point in time when global (or regional) oil extraction reaches its maximum rate, after which it inevitably declines as reserves are depleted.

Hubbert’s Peak Model

American geologist M. King Hubbert (1956) proposed that oil production from any given region follows a bell-shaped curve:

  1. Discovery phase: Large reserves found; production grows rapidly
  2. Plateau: Production maximised as extraction technology is optimised
  3. Peak: Maximum extraction rate reached (approximately when half the total reserve is extracted)
  4. Decline: Remaining oil is harder and more expensive to extract; production falls

$$\text{Production}(t) = P_{max} \cdot \text{sech}^2\left(\frac{t - t_{peak}}{k}\right)$$

(A bell-shaped logistic curve)

Historical application: Hubbert correctly predicted that US lower-48 oil production would peak around 1970 (it did). However, he did not anticipate unconventional oil (tight oil, oil sands, deep-water drilling) extending production.

‘Conventional’ vs. ‘Unconventional’ Oil

Type Description Energy Return on Investment (EROI)
Conventional oil Easily extracted; flows under own pressure or simple pumping ~20:1 historically; declining
Tight oil (fracking) Hydraulically fractured shale formations ~5–10:1
Oil sands (tar sands) Bitumen extracted from sands; energy-intensive processing ~3–5:1
Deep-water oil Deep ocean wells; high technology cost ~10–15:1

EROI (Energy Return on Investment): Ratio of energy produced to energy consumed in extraction. As EROI declines, more energy must be invested to get less energy out — economically and environmentally less favourable.

Has Global Peak Oil Occurred?

This remains debated:
- Conventional oil production peaked around 2005–2006
- Unconventional sources (US tight oil boom from fracking, ca. 2010–2015) pushed global production to new highs
- Some analysts argue demand peak oil (demand falling due to electric vehicles and renewable energy) is a greater constraint than supply

Key principle regardless of timing: Oil is a finite resource — a peak and eventual decline is inevitable. The question is not if, but when, and what the world does in the transition period.

Implications of Peak Oil and Fossil Fuel Depletion

Impact Description
Price volatility As remaining reserves become harder to extract, prices increase
Energy security Nations dependent on imports face strategic vulnerability
Economic disruption Industries built around cheap fossil fuels face structural change
Environmental Accessing more marginal reserves involves greater ecological risk (deep-water drilling, Arctic extraction)
Climate urgency A fossil fuel supply peak may come too late to prevent dangerous climate change — demand reduction through policy is needed sooner

Connection to Sustainability Principles

  • Intergenerational equity: Burning finite fossil fuels depletes a resource that future generations cannot use
  • Efficiency: Declining EROI means greater environmental disruption per unit of energy
  • Conservation of ecological integrity: Extracting marginal reserves poses increasing risks to sensitive ecosystems

VCAA FOCUS: ‘Peak oil’ refers specifically to the maximum rate of production, not the total quantity remaining. It does not mean oil is ‘running out tomorrow’ — it means the rate of extraction cannot increase indefinitely. Draw and annotate a Hubbert curve to demonstrate understanding.

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