by vtsnowedin » Fri 19 May 2017, 14:59:27
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('onlooker', 'b')ut current real numbers say we are not there yet --And how do you know that? You have your own model meticulously analyzing the energetic/thermodynamic status of Oil? If so I pray you show us. Hills group is using EIA data but then rigorously subjecting it to their analysis. Otherwise, your barrel counting is a moot point
LOL
Their "Rigorous analysis" Has (what is it exactly?) 40 odd percent of crude oil entering a refinery being consumed inside the refinery to refine the other 60 percent. That is totally at odds with reality where the only crude consumed inside refineries is still gas and petroleum coke used for catalyst and the volumes of those are almost perfectly balanced by refinery gains.
So Shorties numbers are off by a factor of 40 percent. That's really rigorous .LOL
For my "model" Let us consider light tight oil fracked in the US. At $70/bl and up things were perking along nicely and drillers were making profits. Then the Saudi's opened up the taps (stupidly) and dropped the price below $40, companies that were nothing but fracking LTO started to lose money and go bankrupt , drilling activity nose dived and production began to decline. Now the price has risen to more then $45 and today passed $50. Drilling activity has increased and LTO production is increasing.
My very sophisticated model now predicts that the break even point for light tight fracked oil lies somewhere between $45 and $50 today and prices will average between $45 and $60 as long as LTO can fill the gap between conventional oil production ,+ the heavy oils ,+ dilbit and demand.