Current Oil Price
Moderator: Peak Moderation
-
- Posts: 6595
- Joined: 07 Jan 2011, 22:14
- Location: New England ,Chelsea Vermont
- biffvernon
- Posts: 18538
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Lincolnshire
- Contact:
- biffvernon
- Posts: 18538
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Lincolnshire
- Contact:
Another article warning about US debt default risk in fracking industry in the Telegraph: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/news ... waits.html
This graph needs it's $80 line dropping to $75 now, putting a big part of the industry in trouble.
This graph needs it's $80 line dropping to $75 now, putting a big part of the industry in trouble.
- frank_begbie
- Posts: 817
- Joined: 18 Aug 2010, 12:01
- Location: Cheshire
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
An excuse for a US invasion? What a novel idea!frank_begbie wrote:Now if we could just have another 9/11, we'll have a great excuse to invade Saudi Arabia
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
There is no one oil price where shale oil or any individual oil well becomes 'uneconomic'. Each well has unique characteristics, and each one is drilled, fracked, pumped or abandoned by an imperfect set of decisions using incomplete data relating to financial risk against future gain and will involve many financial, legal, scientific and downright criminal factors weighed on against another, before a human being comes down on a decision which has as much to do with how good lunch was.
The financial factors will also be manipulated at a higher political level, resulting in behind the scenes interventions, in what is seen to be in the best short term interests of the human beings making the decisions.
All this machination and blind prejudice is 'the invisible hand of the market'.
Shale drilling is just beginning to shows signs of tailing off, but that may just be the usual winter slowdown kicking in. It will be a few months before we can separate signal from the noise.
edit
It is not just Shale that is hurting
http://peakoil.com/production/shell-may ... -oil-slump
The financial factors will also be manipulated at a higher political level, resulting in behind the scenes interventions, in what is seen to be in the best short term interests of the human beings making the decisions.
All this machination and blind prejudice is 'the invisible hand of the market'.
Shale drilling is just beginning to shows signs of tailing off, but that may just be the usual winter slowdown kicking in. It will be a few months before we can separate signal from the noise.
edit
It is not just Shale that is hurting
http://peakoil.com/production/shell-may ... -oil-slump
- biffvernon
- Posts: 18538
- Joined: 24 Nov 2005, 11:09
- Location: Lincolnshire
- Contact:
Still sliding... WTI now $73.69
Automatic Earth continues busily http://www.theautomaticearth.com/the-20 ... explained/
Automatic Earth continues busily http://www.theautomaticearth.com/the-20 ... explained/
- emordnilap
- Posts: 14815
- Joined: 05 Sep 2007, 16:36
- Location: here
Source“Everybody is trying to put a very happy spin on their ability to weather $80 oil, but a lot of that is just smoke,” Dan Dicker, president of MercBloc, said in an interview with Bloomberg. “The shale revolution doesn’t work at $80, period.”
Yet...
The shale revolution and the end of peak oil fears
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
-
- Posts: 1868
- Joined: 14 Mar 2009, 11:26
Yet more analysis from TAE: The Price of Oil Exposes the True State of the Economybiffvernon wrote:Still sliding... WTI now $73.69
Automatic Earth continues busily http://www.theautomaticearth.com/the-20 ... explained/
Ilargi wrote:We should be glad the price of oil has fallen the way it has (losing another 6% today as I write this). Not because it makes the gas in our cars a bit cheaper, that’s nothing compared to the other service the price slump provides. That is, it allows us to see how the economy is really doing, without the multilayered veil of propaganda, spin, fixed data and bailouts and handouts for the banking system.
It shows us the huge extent to which consumer spending is falling, how much poorer people have become as stock markets set records. It also shows us how desperate producing nations have become, who have seen a third of their often principal source of revenue fall away in a few months’ time. Nigeria was first in line to devalue its currency, others will follow suit.
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools - Douglas Adams.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-30223721
The price of oil slumped after the Opec oil producers' cartel decided not to cut output at its meeting in Vienna.
Opec's secretary general Abdallah Salem el-Badri said they would not try to shore up prices by reducing production.