I know the answer to your questions HVACctrl, but it points in the opposite way of a conspiracy theory. The people who benefit form saying oil is running out are the renewable energy lobby.
The value of an oil company is measured by its booked reverses (like zdas I have signed off reserves estimates, and that experience is why I moved from reservoir engineering to well engineering!!). If you underbook your reserves, you are devaluing your company, which is generally bad (it will adversely affect your share price, possibly make you a takeover target, affect your borrowing capabililty, and maybe make it harder to prequalify for liscense applications or large projects). It is also illegal under SECC and London Stock Exchange rules and the Sarbanes Oxely act. Also, for the big multinationals, the US is a small part of their global portfolios, and many places (the UK for example) tax production rather than reserves.
Look at what happened to Shell when it had to admit to deliberately underbooking it's reserves by as much as 25%- the shares took a big tumble, many of the board of directors were sacked, the Royal Dutch bit effectivley ceased to exist, and there was a massive crow eating session withte finacial markets to try and restore their confidence in Shell's management (and rest of us had a good laugh - as Shell do have a reputation for being an arrogant, impolite company).
What a lot of teh peak oil guys seem to forget is that as zdas says, reserves estimate have an explicit economic consideration in them. You can have a certain amount of reserves at $20/bbl and much more reserves at $50/bbl without doing any extra exploration, or using new technology or anything. I know my company is still basing all their economics and reserves on $25- $20 oil (everyone's been burnt before by the price cycle and no-one wants to f**k it up again). Also the API/SECC yellow book rules for reserves estimates are quite conservative in their definitions of proved, probable and possible reserves- probabilistic methods (ie Monte Carlo simulations) aren't allowed, so internal company reserves estimates can often be larger than the certified published reserves estimates.