Current Oil Price
Moderator: Peak Moderation
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
This Telegraph article makes interesting reading.
We can wish.There is also the prospect of pecuniary punishment from President Obama’s team, which has grown increasingly frustrated with BP’s inability to stop the leak. In return for the bad publicity, it could well end the industry’s $36.5bn in tax breaks and hand subsidies over to eco-friendly wind or biofuel projects.
I experience pleasure and pains, and pursue goals in service of them, so I cannot reasonably deny the right of other sentient agents to do the same - Steven Pinker
This is looking like a major deflationary slide.
Oil at $67.50 and both sterling and euro at new recent lows to the dollar.
If I was wearing a tin hat I would say that TPTB (ie the IMF et al ) sense blood and want to punish Europe (and by association the UK) in 'shock doctrine' style.
More likely, they simply have set off another round of unstoppable betting on failure which becomes a self fulfilling prophesy.
Or maybe they know that peak oil is here, and are simply managing the decline of the western world economies in a series of planned partial collapses.
OK tin hat off again.
Oil at $67.50 and both sterling and euro at new recent lows to the dollar.
If I was wearing a tin hat I would say that TPTB (ie the IMF et al ) sense blood and want to punish Europe (and by association the UK) in 'shock doctrine' style.
More likely, they simply have set off another round of unstoppable betting on failure which becomes a self fulfilling prophesy.
Or maybe they know that peak oil is here, and are simply managing the decline of the western world economies in a series of planned partial collapses.
OK tin hat off again.
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- Posts: 1939
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Milton Keynes
I'm not quite sure of where the interests of the US lie vis-a-vis the Euro. A weak Euro means that the only reserve currency is the dollar, which is good for the US given that it has a lot of borrowing to do.RalphW wrote:This is looking like a major deflationary slide.
Oil at $67.50 and both sterling and euro at new recent lows to the dollar.
If I was wearing a tin hat I would say that TPTB (ie the IMF et al ) sense blood and want to punish Europe (and by association the UK) in 'shock doctrine' style.
More likely, they simply have set off another round of unstoppable betting on failure which becomes a self fulfilling prophesy.
Or maybe they know that peak oil is here, and are simply managing the decline of the western world economies in a series of planned partial collapses.
OK tin hat off again.
However, if the dollar is the only safe haven, that means a relatively strong dollar which makes it harder for the US to export its way to growth. And without that, the US can't get out of its predicament.
Generally, I think that investors have realized that shifting debt from the private to the public hasn't got rid of the debt. So, the problem remains unsolved. Too much has been promised, and it can't all be honoured. The drag of all this debt will prevent us from growing out of the problem, so there won't be growth, and we won't need that much oil,
Peter.
Does anyone know where the love of God goes when the waves turn the seconds to hours?
- biffvernon
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Gosh! You guys don't think anybody is actually planning anything, do you? More like we're all just flotsam in the chaotic maelstrom where short term trend prediction of all economic indicators are impossible.
The only certainties are that all economies will de-carbonise or die (and then die anyway 'cos of global warming).
The only certainties are that all economies will de-carbonise or die (and then die anyway 'cos of global warming).
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- Posts: 1235
- Joined: 28 Nov 2008, 10:49
I suggest you read everything you can and make your own mind up. Everybody on here and other sites all have their own individual view of what is likely to happen in the near and far future but most people believe that the next 20 years will not be like the last and not as prosperousmarky10 wrote:Hi all, I stumbled across the Peak oil crisis by accident after my friend
told about the film collapse .
Are we really reaching the end of industrial civilisation?
- biffvernon
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Yes.marky10 wrote:Hi all, I stumbled across the Peak oil crisis by accident after my friend
told about the film collapse .
Are we really reaching the end of industrial civilisation?
Just can't be sure it's this Tuesday.
Welcome to the forum, marky10.
(By the way, this sticky thread is mostly for price related comments, like "Ooo, up to $75 again".)
- biffvernon
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Interesting stats here about the UK price of petrol.
In terms of percentage increase over 5 years 2010 is way ahead of any year since 2001 at 40%. That's above the increase in 2008 which was only 33%.
The year's not out yet but so far things seem unlikely to change significantly - at least in terms of price reduction.
This high cost at the pumps must be pushing the UK towards another recession I'd have thought.
In terms of percentage increase over 5 years 2010 is way ahead of any year since 2001 at 40%. That's above the increase in 2008 which was only 33%.
The year's not out yet but so far things seem unlikely to change significantly - at least in terms of price reduction.
This high cost at the pumps must be pushing the UK towards another recession I'd have thought.
- biffvernon
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- RenewableCandy
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