Page added on December 24, 2008
If you don’t understand what is going on with the price of gasoline and demand for the world’s oil supply, then join the club.
Analysts, pundits, government officials, oil ministers, oil executives, and oil traders are all over the board in trying to explain what is happening and more importantly what is going to happen. Some are saying that $30 oil will be with us until the economy recovers while others are talking of a spike to $200 in 2009.
We are currently finishing out an extraordinary year. For several years now, oil prices have been moving steadily higher. They passed $100 a barrel around New Year’s and moved on to peak at around $147 in July. By late spring much of the world was in turmoil. Politicians were out in force, bashing speculators, environmentalists, OPEC, additions to the Strategic Petroleum Reserve and you name it. Airlines and car sales were collapsing. The President flew off to Saudi Arabia where he personally appealed to the King to send us more oil. The King held a big oil conference and promised to do what he could.
Then, in mid-July, the great oil panic came to a screeching halt. While several explanations have been offered for this turnabout, I believe the start of the Beijing Olympics the most proximate cause. If 2008 has been hard on America it has been traumatic for China. In the first half of the year the Chinese endured a great earthquake, major snowstorms, and a nationwide panic over readiness to put on the Olympics. All this, of course, was accompanied by some of the worst air quality on earth.
For six months China was in an oil-buying frenzy trying to compensate for lost production during the quakes and storms, and ensuring that there would be no fuel shortages during the Olympics. To clean up the air, Beijing banned half the cars and trucks in and around the capital from operating and shut down every industrial enterprise that contributed to air pollution for hundreds of miles around the Olympic sites. The plan worked, but China’s oil imports plummeted and the greatest oil price plunge in history began.
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