Re: Iran to stop pricing oil in U.S. dollar
Who would regard the below collection of news, in any critical frame of mind, as suggesting there was NOT A LARGER ISSUE than the futures markets, or the CURRENCY IN WHICH OIL IS PURCHASED, right now?
Why is that net suggestion of all the below articles NEVER DISCUSSED HERE, while inflation and the futures and dark, conspiratorial, collusively locked up currency gambits are discussed and dissected ENDLESSLY as primary drivers of the energy markets, with enthusiastic and supremely academic precision?
Why does no-one on this website even note the peculiarly insular quality of thought which suggests "New York" and "London" can "TAKE DOWN" the below described global shortages being reported - at their presumed all-powerful manipulative will?
In the face of the accumulation of below listed articles, which argument is the RED HERRING - inflation derived shortages, or primary oil exporting nations which cease exporting in only 5 years ????
Are these web pages a forum where people can flourish their debating skills, or a place where we can get a grip on the most urgent issues of the day ????
______________________
JUL 30 Big Oil spends more, pumps fewer barrels (Reuters)
Excerpt: Exxon Mobil Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc and BP Plc posted falling second-quarter output, even though they plan up to a total of $61 billion in 2007 capital spending, up 5.5 percent from 2006.
JUL 27 Mexican Company Predicts End of Oil (Prensa Latina)
Excerpt: Petroleos Mexicanos (PEMEX) announced that oil reserves may run out in seven years... Even if heavy investments were made now, new oil fields would take from six to eight years to be ready and, consequently, Mexico may have to import oil to satisfy the internal market, it warned.
JUL 25 $100-a-barrel oil may be only a few months away (International Herald Tribune) Excerpt: John Kilduff of the New York office of the futures trading firm Man Financial said, "We're only a headline of significance away from $100 oil. The unrelenting pressure of increased demand has left the market a coiled spring."
JUL 25 China consumes record amount of oil in first half (China View)
Excerpt: China's consumption of apparent crude oil and refined oil products hit a record high in the first half of the year, totaling 173.03 million tons and 106.112 million tons respectively, up 6.8 percent and 9.6 percent on the previous year.
JUL 24 Russian oil output to plateau until 2020 - EconMin (Reuters)
Comment: In our opinion, without a continuing rise in Russian oil production, imminent Peak Oil is all but assured.
Excerpt: Russian oil production will remain largely unchanged until 2020, the Economy Ministry said on Tuesday, broadly confirming the country's existing energy strategy and the outlook by the International Energy Agency.
JUL 22 Slope production drops faster than estimated (Alaska Journal of Commerce) Excerpt: Alaska North Slope oil and gas fields declined 12.5 percent in production of crude oil and natural gas liquids last year, according to an analysis by the state Department of Revenue... The drop in production is higher than estimates by both industry and the state.
JUL 18 CIBC World Markets now foresees US$100-a-barrel oil by end of 2008 (Canadian Press) Excerpt: The investment banking division of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (TSX:CM) predicts "new record highs of US$80 a barrel
JUL 17 US oil may hit $95 if OPEC does not hike output: Goldman (Reuters)
Excerpt: U.S. crude price could top $90 a barrel this autumn and hit $95 by the end of the year if OPEC keeps oil production capped at current levels, Goldman Sachs said in a report issued on Monday.
JUL 16 Potential Energy Crunch May Bring Other Fuels to Fore (Wall Street Journal) Comment: Last week the IEA, this week the oil industry. Both seem to be finally acknowledging the reality of Peak Oil.
Excerpt: World oil and gas supplies from conventional sources are unlikely to keep up with rising global demand over the next 25 years, the U.S. petroleum industry says in a draft report of a study commissioned by the government.
JUL 10 IEA Forecast Underlines Oil, Gas Supply Worries (Wall Street Journal)
Excerpt: "Oil and gas price pressures look set to remain in the coming years," the IEA report said. "Slower-than-expected [gross-domestic-product] growth may provide a breathing space, but it is abundantly clear that if the path of demand doesn't change on its own, it may well be driven to change by higher prices," the report said.
JUL 9 IEA sees oil supply crunch looming (Washington Post)
Excerpt: World oil demand will rise faster than expected to 2012 while production lags, leading to a supply crunch, the International Energy Agency said on Monday... "The results of our analysis are quite strong," said Lawrence Eagles, head of the IEA's Oil Industry and Markets Division. "Something needs to happen." "Either we need to have more supplies coming on stream or we need to have lower demand growth."
( QUESTION : Due to China and India manifestly obviously entering unstoppable growth inflexion curves - what if NEITHER adjustment happens? - THIS IS THE I.E.A. WARNING US ! )
JUL 4 Oil Trades Near 10-Month High on U.S. Gasoline Supply Concern (Bloomberg) Excerpt: Flint Hills shut a hydrocracking unit at its 300,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Corpus Christi, Texas, on July 2 because of a leak on an air fin exchanger, according to a report on a state Web site. The company wouldn't say whether the unit had been returned to service. Valero Energy reported flaring of chemicals at its 340,000 barrel-a-day Corpus Christi refinery the same day. Coffeyville Resources LLC's plant in Coffeyville, Kansas, was shut indefinitely July 2 because of flooding from the Verdigris River.
JUL 3 UK oil output shortfall raises fears of dependence on Russia (Guardian Unlimited) Excerpt: The energy industry warned today that government targets of keeping Britain's oil and gas production at 3m barrels a day by 2010 look like being missed.
JUN 27 Sans l'or noir irakien, le marché pétrolier fera face à un "mur" d'ici à 2015 (le Monde) Comment: translation here: Excerpt: The numbers are very simple, there's no need to be an expert. Within 5 to 10 years, non-OPEC production will reach a peak and begin to decline, as reserves run out. (Comment by chief economist of the IEA)
JUN 27 IEA Official: Uncertainties May Hurt Oil (United Press Intl)
Excerpt: Fatih Birol, chief economist of the Paris-based agency, identified four key uncertainties in the sector: China and Chinese economic growth; the future of international oil companies; data on oil field decline rates; and the evolution of oil price elasticity.
JUN 27 IEA chief economist: High oil prices here to stay (Reuters)
Comment: Acknowledgement of Peak Oil perhaps?
Excerpt: Oil prices are unlikely to fall far from today's near record levels of around $70 and any move in the longer term is more likely to be upwards, the International Energy Agency's chief economist said on Wednesday.
JUN 22 Robust Oil Demand Fuels Prices (Wall Street Journal)
Excerpt: The International Energy Agency, which monitors oil markets on behalf of industrialized nations, is forecasting average global oil demand of 86.1 million barrels a day this year, up 2% from last year. That is twice as fast as the 0.9% growth recorded in 2006, compared with 2005.
JUN 21 Pemex Says May Oil Output Falls 6.6% From Year Ago (Bloomberg)
Excerpt: Cantarell, the world's third-largest oil field, produced 1.58 million barrels per day, a 15 percent decline from 1.86 million barrels daily in May last year. May's daily production at the offshore field was lower than 1.59 million barrels in April.
JUN 21 OPEC might not increase production in coming months: Badri (Petroleumworld) Excerpt: OPEC Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri hinted Tuesday that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries might not boost oil production in the coming months, saying that market fundamentals were currently balanced.
JUN 18 Shell withdraws permit for work on federal oil-shale lease (Salt Lake Tribune) Comment: We believe extracting oil from shale is too energy intensive to ever be a viable solution to Peak Oil. Excerpt: The oil, or kerogen, is locked in layers of hard rock, and the technology for affordably heating and extracting the liquid is still evolving. Shell's process of baking it in the ground is an alternative to previous methods that mined and brought the rock to the surface to cook in a furnace. Shell is experimenting with creating a "freeze wall" underground by circulating to freeze adjacent areas to keep groundwater away from the melted oil.
JUN 14 World oil supplies are set to run out faster than expected, warn scientists (The Independent) Excerpt: ... scientists led by the London-based Oil Depletion Analysis Centre, say that global production of oil is set to peak in the next four years before entering a steepening decline which will have massive consequences for the world economy and the way that we live our lives.
JUN 12 IEA sees higher world oil demand, ups pressure on Opec (Reuters)
Excerpt: In its June monthly report, the adviser to 26 industrialised countries lifted its forecast for 2007 growth in world oil demand to 1,7-million barrels per day or 2%, up 200,000 barrels per day from the previous forecast.
JUN 1 BP May Lose Project To Russia Power Grab (Wall Street Journal)
Excerpt: As the Russian government has tightened its grip over strategic oil-and-gas assets in recent years -- effectively nationalizing one of the country's biggest oil producers and forcing foreign investors to cede control of projects to Russian state companies -- opportunities for international oil giants have withered.
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
Who would regard the below collection of news, in any critical frame of mind, as suggesting there was NOT A LARGER ISSUE than the futures markets, or the CURRENCY IN WHICH OIL IS PURCHASED, right now?
Why is that net suggestion of all the below articles NEVER DISCUSSED HERE, while inflation and the futures and dark, conspiratorial, collusively locked up currency gambits are discussed and dissected ENDLESSLY as primary drivers of the energy markets, with enthusiastic and supremely academic precision?
Why does no-one on this website even note the peculiarly insular quality of thought which suggests "New York" and "London" can "TAKE DOWN" the below described global shortages being reported - at their presumed all-powerful manipulative will?
In the face of the accumulation of below listed articles, which argument is the RED HERRING - inflation derived shortages, or primary oil exporting nations which cease exporting in only 5 years ????
Are these web pages a forum where people can flourish their debating skills, or a place where we can get a grip on the most urgent issues of the day ????
______________________
JUL 30 Big Oil spends more, pumps fewer barrels (Reuters)
Excerpt: Exxon Mobil Corp., Royal Dutch Shell Plc and BP Plc posted falling second-quarter output, even though they plan up to a total of $61 billion in 2007 capital spending, up 5.5 percent from 2006.
JUL 27 Mexican Company Predicts End of Oil (Prensa Latina)
Excerpt: Petroleos Mexicanos (PEMEX) announced that oil reserves may run out in seven years... Even if heavy investments were made now, new oil fields would take from six to eight years to be ready and, consequently, Mexico may have to import oil to satisfy the internal market, it warned.
JUL 25 $100-a-barrel oil may be only a few months away (International Herald Tribune) Excerpt: John Kilduff of the New York office of the futures trading firm Man Financial said, "We're only a headline of significance away from $100 oil. The unrelenting pressure of increased demand has left the market a coiled spring."
JUL 25 China consumes record amount of oil in first half (China View)
Excerpt: China's consumption of apparent crude oil and refined oil products hit a record high in the first half of the year, totaling 173.03 million tons and 106.112 million tons respectively, up 6.8 percent and 9.6 percent on the previous year.
JUL 24 Russian oil output to plateau until 2020 - EconMin (Reuters)
Comment: In our opinion, without a continuing rise in Russian oil production, imminent Peak Oil is all but assured.
Excerpt: Russian oil production will remain largely unchanged until 2020, the Economy Ministry said on Tuesday, broadly confirming the country's existing energy strategy and the outlook by the International Energy Agency.
JUL 22 Slope production drops faster than estimated (Alaska Journal of Commerce) Excerpt: Alaska North Slope oil and gas fields declined 12.5 percent in production of crude oil and natural gas liquids last year, according to an analysis by the state Department of Revenue... The drop in production is higher than estimates by both industry and the state.
JUL 18 CIBC World Markets now foresees US$100-a-barrel oil by end of 2008 (Canadian Press) Excerpt: The investment banking division of the Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (TSX:CM) predicts "new record highs of US$80 a barrel
JUL 17 US oil may hit $95 if OPEC does not hike output: Goldman (Reuters)
Excerpt: U.S. crude price could top $90 a barrel this autumn and hit $95 by the end of the year if OPEC keeps oil production capped at current levels, Goldman Sachs said in a report issued on Monday.
JUL 16 Potential Energy Crunch May Bring Other Fuels to Fore (Wall Street Journal) Comment: Last week the IEA, this week the oil industry. Both seem to be finally acknowledging the reality of Peak Oil.
Excerpt: World oil and gas supplies from conventional sources are unlikely to keep up with rising global demand over the next 25 years, the U.S. petroleum industry says in a draft report of a study commissioned by the government.
JUL 10 IEA Forecast Underlines Oil, Gas Supply Worries (Wall Street Journal)
Excerpt: "Oil and gas price pressures look set to remain in the coming years," the IEA report said. "Slower-than-expected [gross-domestic-product] growth may provide a breathing space, but it is abundantly clear that if the path of demand doesn't change on its own, it may well be driven to change by higher prices," the report said.
JUL 9 IEA sees oil supply crunch looming (Washington Post)
Excerpt: World oil demand will rise faster than expected to 2012 while production lags, leading to a supply crunch, the International Energy Agency said on Monday... "The results of our analysis are quite strong," said Lawrence Eagles, head of the IEA's Oil Industry and Markets Division. "Something needs to happen." "Either we need to have more supplies coming on stream or we need to have lower demand growth."
( QUESTION : Due to China and India manifestly obviously entering unstoppable growth inflexion curves - what if NEITHER adjustment happens? - THIS IS THE I.E.A. WARNING US ! )
JUL 4 Oil Trades Near 10-Month High on U.S. Gasoline Supply Concern (Bloomberg) Excerpt: Flint Hills shut a hydrocracking unit at its 300,000 barrel-a-day refinery in Corpus Christi, Texas, on July 2 because of a leak on an air fin exchanger, according to a report on a state Web site. The company wouldn't say whether the unit had been returned to service. Valero Energy reported flaring of chemicals at its 340,000 barrel-a-day Corpus Christi refinery the same day. Coffeyville Resources LLC's plant in Coffeyville, Kansas, was shut indefinitely July 2 because of flooding from the Verdigris River.
JUL 3 UK oil output shortfall raises fears of dependence on Russia (Guardian Unlimited) Excerpt: The energy industry warned today that government targets of keeping Britain's oil and gas production at 3m barrels a day by 2010 look like being missed.
JUN 27 Sans l'or noir irakien, le marché pétrolier fera face à un "mur" d'ici à 2015 (le Monde) Comment: translation here: Excerpt: The numbers are very simple, there's no need to be an expert. Within 5 to 10 years, non-OPEC production will reach a peak and begin to decline, as reserves run out. (Comment by chief economist of the IEA)
JUN 27 IEA Official: Uncertainties May Hurt Oil (United Press Intl)
Excerpt: Fatih Birol, chief economist of the Paris-based agency, identified four key uncertainties in the sector: China and Chinese economic growth; the future of international oil companies; data on oil field decline rates; and the evolution of oil price elasticity.
JUN 27 IEA chief economist: High oil prices here to stay (Reuters)
Comment: Acknowledgement of Peak Oil perhaps?
Excerpt: Oil prices are unlikely to fall far from today's near record levels of around $70 and any move in the longer term is more likely to be upwards, the International Energy Agency's chief economist said on Wednesday.
JUN 22 Robust Oil Demand Fuels Prices (Wall Street Journal)
Excerpt: The International Energy Agency, which monitors oil markets on behalf of industrialized nations, is forecasting average global oil demand of 86.1 million barrels a day this year, up 2% from last year. That is twice as fast as the 0.9% growth recorded in 2006, compared with 2005.
JUN 21 Pemex Says May Oil Output Falls 6.6% From Year Ago (Bloomberg)
Excerpt: Cantarell, the world's third-largest oil field, produced 1.58 million barrels per day, a 15 percent decline from 1.86 million barrels daily in May last year. May's daily production at the offshore field was lower than 1.59 million barrels in April.
JUN 21 OPEC might not increase production in coming months: Badri (Petroleumworld) Excerpt: OPEC Secretary-General Abdullah al-Badri hinted Tuesday that the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries might not boost oil production in the coming months, saying that market fundamentals were currently balanced.
JUN 18 Shell withdraws permit for work on federal oil-shale lease (Salt Lake Tribune) Comment: We believe extracting oil from shale is too energy intensive to ever be a viable solution to Peak Oil. Excerpt: The oil, or kerogen, is locked in layers of hard rock, and the technology for affordably heating and extracting the liquid is still evolving. Shell's process of baking it in the ground is an alternative to previous methods that mined and brought the rock to the surface to cook in a furnace. Shell is experimenting with creating a "freeze wall" underground by circulating to freeze adjacent areas to keep groundwater away from the melted oil.
JUN 14 World oil supplies are set to run out faster than expected, warn scientists (The Independent) Excerpt: ... scientists led by the London-based Oil Depletion Analysis Centre, say that global production of oil is set to peak in the next four years before entering a steepening decline which will have massive consequences for the world economy and the way that we live our lives.
JUN 12 IEA sees higher world oil demand, ups pressure on Opec (Reuters)
Excerpt: In its June monthly report, the adviser to 26 industrialised countries lifted its forecast for 2007 growth in world oil demand to 1,7-million barrels per day or 2%, up 200,000 barrels per day from the previous forecast.
JUN 1 BP May Lose Project To Russia Power Grab (Wall Street Journal)
Excerpt: As the Russian government has tightened its grip over strategic oil-and-gas assets in recent years -- effectively nationalizing one of the country's biggest oil producers and forcing foreign investors to cede control of projects to Russian state companies -- opportunities for international oil giants have withered.
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