Sunday, August 6, 2006 11:19:07 AM
oil, israel, war
Take this!:
http://www.energybulletin.net/18904.htmlAt the ASPO conference a well-connected industry insider who wishes not to be directly quoted told me that his own sources inside Saudi Arabia insist that production from Ghawar is now down to less than three million barrels per day, and that the Saudis are maintaining total production at only slowly dwindling levels by producing other fields at maximum rates. This, if true, would be a bombshell: most estimates give production from Ghawar at 5.5 Mb/d.
My source, a highly respected oil industry consultant, goes on to advise me that "If true, it is not unexpected, and it means that the two largest producing fields in the world are crashing. BTW, the Saudi stock market crashed earlier this year because of heavy insider selling by the Saudi royal family. Ghawar + Cantarell crashing means explosive increases in oil prices."
So, if you look at the prospect of $200 oil, the Chinese cutting supply deals with Iran, and the Russians buying them nuclear development materials, it means that Iran (which will be putting out about 5% of the entire world's energy supplies as Cantarell and Ghawar production collapses will become an even more strategic asset. The clock is running on an energy-driven die-off and the neocons and a lot of others know the hour is late and, as energy banker Matthews Simmons has said so many times, the West doesn't have a "Plan B."
Saturday, May 13, 2006 3:41:48 PM
oil
Nashuatelegraph.com - The virulently anti-American and oil-rich government of Iran is moving toward establishing an oil market denominated in euros, the currency of most of the European Union. Petroleum is currently priced in dollars around the world.
This change may not be implemented anytime soon, but if it were, it could have deep effects – leading central bankers to convert some dollar reserves into euros, possibly causing a run on the dollar.
Monday, May 1, 2006 9:36:57 PM
bolivia, energy, oil
President Evo Morales ordered soldiers to immediately occupy Bolivia's natural gas fields Monday and threatened to evict foreign companies unless they sign new contracts within six months giving Bolivia majority control over the entire chain of production. Bolivia has South America's second largest natural gas reserves after Venezuela, and all foreign companies must turn over most production control to Bolivia's cash-strapped state-owned oil company, Yacimientos Petroliferos Fiscales Bolivianos, Morales said.
Wednesday, April 19, 2006 10:49:24 AM
oil
Motorists have been warned to brace themselves for the £5 gallon as the price of crude oil surged to another record high.
Chancellor Gordon Brown will point to instability in the Middle East and soaring global demand as factors in soaring prices.
Fears of a US strike on Iranian nuclear power stations - to prevent them creating nuclear weapons - has helped propel prices to a new high.
US crude reached $73 a barrel - the highest price since New York's NYMEX launched crude oil trading in 1983. Prepare for $100 a barrel.
Tuesday, March 21, 2006 12:53:23 PM
oil bourse Iran
Iran denied Monday media reports that it was to open a euro-based oil exchange.
"We have no information on opening an oil exchange in the free economic zone on Kish Island [southern Iran]"....
The exact date of the oil exchange opening on Kish Island is still unknown.
Some media reported Monday that oil would be traded exclusively in the European currency at the Iranian exchange.
Experts said the transition to euro from dollar in payments for oil could cause a default of the U.S. currency. All oil deals are currently made in dollars, allowing Washington to maintain permanent demand for the national currency.
Thursday, March 9, 2006 10:47:44 AM
peak, oil, energy, crude
...
Peak Oil is an issue that refers to the point at which world oil production peaks and declines. This decline causes oil to become increasingly expensive and scarce will be a time punctuated with war, famine, and lots of death.
Many countries' productions have already peaked and it is merely a matter of time before total world production does. It's not "if" but "when".
We are not going to discover any new oil wells that will hold the peak off for very long.
Relying on the market to save us from this is not going to work. Waiting until the actual peak before we start to invest heavily in alternative fuels is not going to work either.
For more, google "Peak Oil".