Oil's 2019 Milestones
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- ReserveGrowthRulz
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Oil's 2019 Milestones
Last edited by ReserveGrowthRulz on 17 Jun 2020, 03:00, edited 1 time in total.
- BritDownUnder
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LNG exports have certainly benefited Australia being the third highest export earner after iron ore and coal. If the politicians had been able to correctly negotiate royalty deals the value would have been even higher.
Certainly a very interesting decade and no sign of peaking in oil prices any time soon although geopolitics is more of a driver for that. With all the progress in energy from renewables probably, demand will decline faster than supply.
Interestingly, today is two and half decades to the day of the Oklahoma City bombing. Now there's a real anniversary to remember.
Certainly a very interesting decade and no sign of peaking in oil prices any time soon although geopolitics is more of a driver for that. With all the progress in energy from renewables probably, demand will decline faster than supply.
Interestingly, today is two and half decades to the day of the Oklahoma City bombing. Now there's a real anniversary to remember.
G'Day cobber!
- ReserveGrowthRulz
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This is the 30th year of the modern peak oil claims.
Last edited by ReserveGrowthRulz on 17 Jun 2020, 03:00, edited 1 time in total.
- BritDownUnder
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Another date for me to put in my diary. Incidentally, today is Hitler's birthday.ReserveGrowthRulz wrote:And here is another. This is the 30th year of the modern peak oil claims, starting with Colin Campbell's global peak oil claim for 1990.BritDownUnder wrote: Interestingly, today is two and half decades to the day of the Oklahoma City bombing. Now there's a real anniversary to remember.
How is Dr Campbell doing these days anyway?
G'Day cobber!
- ReserveGrowthRulz
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Can't say I know.BritDownUnder wrote:Another date for me to put in my diary. Incidentally, today is Hitler's birthday.ReserveGrowthRulz wrote:And here is another. This is the 30th year of the modern peak oil claims, starting with Colin Campbell's global peak oil claim for 1990.BritDownUnder wrote: Interestingly, today is two and half decades to the day of the Oklahoma City bombing. Now there's a real anniversary to remember.
How is Dr Campbell doing these days anyway?
Last edited by ReserveGrowthRulz on 17 Jun 2020, 02:59, edited 1 time in total.
- ReserveGrowthRulz
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That forum is still alive?PS_RalphW wrote:Dr Campbell was still alive at 87 18 months ago. There is a piece about him on peakoil.com
Last edited by ReserveGrowthRulz on 17 Jun 2020, 02:59, edited 1 time in total.
- BritDownUnder
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I hope you do a 2020 milestones as well.
This post from Reuters shows a lot of data about how shale has benefited a lot of rural counties. One has to be rather jealous of a man who gets, or rather used to get, more than $100,000 per month in royalties from oil extraction from his land.
Sadly, in the UK, and Australia too, unlike the US the government gets all mineral revenues.
This post from Reuters shows a lot of data about how shale has benefited a lot of rural counties. One has to be rather jealous of a man who gets, or rather used to get, more than $100,000 per month in royalties from oil extraction from his land.
Sadly, in the UK, and Australia too, unlike the US the government gets all mineral revenues.
G'Day cobber!
- ReserveGrowthRulz
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Some governments just don't want their folks defending themselves, nor owning their own mineral rights.BritDownUnder wrote:I hope you do a 2020 milestones as well.
This post from Reuters shows a lot of data about how shale has benefited a lot of rural counties. One has to be rather jealous of a man who gets, or rather used to get, more than $100,000 per month in royalties from oil extraction from his land.
Sadly, in the UK, and Australia too, unlike the US the government gets all mineral revenues.
Last edited by ReserveGrowthRulz on 17 Jun 2020, 02:59, edited 1 time in total.
- BritDownUnder
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In the case of the Australian government oil and gas royalties the answer is nothing. They don't collect any royalties as the large multinational oil and gas companies pleaded poverty.ReserveGrowthRulz wrote:Goodness knows what a mineral rights owner might do with the money!
Now an on shore Texas shale deposit is somewhat different to an Australian conventional gas deposit but I would think it unlikely that a Texas mineral rights owner would allow drilling to go ahead of there were no possibility of royalties below $80 per barrel oil.
Whatever you think about shale you cannot argue with this graph and the effect on the US trade deficit.
Much better to have royalties going into the US rather than to foreign governments who could possibly spend it on inciting terrorism, developing hypersonic missiles or potent new neurotoxins.
G'Day cobber!