Page added on December 22, 2014
The stunning plunge in oil prices – almost 45% since June – has roiled the global oil markets; creating new winners and losers almost overnight. It has also unlocked a number of potential problems and opportunities we would be wise to consider.
In our consumer-based economy, savings at the gas pump provide a direct stimulus to the economy – freeing up a reservoir of new discretionary dollars to fuel the economy. Indeed, SUV and small truck sales are skyrocketing (How soon we forget how quickly gas prices can go up) and fuel-intensive sectors – like airlines – are enjoying record profits.
For others, falling oil prices are not so good. Geopolitically, it has been a disaster for oil-exporting countries; Russia, Iran, Venezuela and others are all getting clobbered. Shale oil producers – with fracking and horizontal drilling costs that far exceed OPEC’s cost for extracting conventional crude oil – are also starting to retrench.
The disconnect between Wall Street and Main Street is growing. While lower pump prices are a bonanza for Main Street, Wall Street and investors in energy and related junk bond sectors are getting edgier by the day – their concerns exacerbated by a stagnant global economy that is dragging down oil demand and putting oil prices into a free fall.
Ironically, Wall Street has hyped one of the drivers, the shale oil “revolution,” as our ticket to energy independence and catalyst for our emergence as the new Saudi Arabia of oil. Seems they forgot that not all oil is created equal; that shale oil depletes rapidly and is infinitely more expensive to extract than the conventionally drilled oil the Saudis have in abundance. The shale oil they so aggressively hyped as a panacea may, indeed, be a placebo in disguise – or worse.
While our shale oil production surge (See: Oil’s Unsustainable Surge) has created a temporary oversupply – exacerbated in part by a stagnant global economy and falling oil demand – we should use this reprieve as an opportunity to prepare for the future. Here are six things we can do:
It’s hard to say how long oil prices will remain low, but history has shown it takes little to trigger and unleash a chain reaction of volatility and higher prices. If gas prices today seem too good to be true, they probably are – so let’s savor the lower prices now while planning for the future.
– R. Michael Conley, Transition Voice
– See more at: http://transitionvoice.com/2014/12/cheap-oil-just-keeps-on-coming/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TransitionVoice+(Transition+Voice)#sthash.wUsk85Ru.dpuf
5 Comments on "Cheap oil just keeps on coming"
Kenz300 on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 12:24 pm
The last rise in the price of oil to $147 set in motion many diverse conservation measures. Auto makers increase fuel efficiency and now many new auto get over 40 mpg compared to 12 mpg of the past. Home energy efficiency programs were instituted which helped home owners reduce their monthly energy costs. Many consumers are walking more, bicycling more and taking mass transit more. The electric powered automobile is alive and doing well. Almost every major auto producer has come out with an electric vehicle. Ethanol, biodiesel and biofuels are now a growing part of the fuel supply around the world. Air transport is using biofuels.
Energy use is becoming more efficient and more diverse. These will continue despite the temporary drop in oil prices. In the long run oil prices will rise. Depletion continues……… the cheap, easy stuff is being used up every day……
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Despite Cheaper Gas, Public Transit Ridership Is Up, Trade Group Reports – NYTimes.com
http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/22/us/despite-cheaper-gas-public-transit-ridership-is-up-trade-group-reports.html?emc=edit_th_20141222&nl=todaysheadlines&nlid=21372621&_r=0
J-Gav on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 12:52 pm
“Happy days are here again …” And then ‘Poof,’ they’re gone.
This writer seems to understand that dynamic, which makes his article readable.
eugene on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 1:18 pm
I figure a slowing/stagnating global economy is the cause of over supply and shale just added a bit to that. I, particularly, enjoy economists who appear, to me, to live in an ivory tower with massive sweeping statements/predictions with little grounding in the real world. Frankly, I put the “efficiency” folks in the same barrel. It’s called I have a hopeful agenda I’m promoting. When examined in detail (a rare commodity) a lot of “efficiencies” aren’t so efficient after all. But it’s all in the game so to speak. Personally, I figure some magic solution will appear to solve all the problems of a planet (in the middle of nowhere) with a rapidly growing population consuming every damn thing they can lay their hands on.
It is nice to read an article that makes some sense for a change.
JuanP on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 3:38 pm
Population, population, population! As long as the human population keeps growing by around 80 million every year, all other measures will only delay the inevitable crash causing even more damage in the end.
The road to hell is paved by people with good intentions like the writer. That is one of the reasons I’m proud to be a mean MF.
Harquebus on Mon, 22nd Dec 2014 4:54 pm
Modern agriculture is the process of turning fossil fuels into food. Growing populations while depleting resources? It can only end badly.