by ralfy » Sat 04 Nov 2017, 22:46:05
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ROCKMAN', 'r')alfy - That's exactly my point: all that you mention have been a part of the "D" for at least the last 35+ years. In fact name one situation post PO that we haven't experienced in the last several decades: high/low oil prices, drilling booms/busts, consumer demand growing/declining, political stability/turmoil in oil exporting countries, etc. And I'm not talking subtle changes but large swings of the pendulum.
Why I keep and will keep pounding the same point: the date of GPO will be of little practical significance.
Oil consumption for EU, Japan, and the US started dropping in 2003 while that for the rest of the world started rising significantly. (See the link on peak demand.)
Per capita consumption for the former dropped but continues to rise steadily for the latter.
This may have to do partly with the rise of the global middle class, which in 2009, consisted of around 1.8 billion people, but by 2020 is expected to reach 3.2 billion, and almost 5 billion ten years later. (See the link on a global middle class.)
A much bigger concern involves basic needs for the global population, which in terms of per capita ecological footprint has been exceeding biocapacity. (See the link on ecological footprint.)
Thus, the world will need the equivalent of one more earth in order to ensure basic needs of just the current population. To maintain a growing global middle class that even oil companies need to pay for their debts plus profit, even more. How to do that given flat oil production per capita since 1979 will be a challenge, not to mention the point that the same population will keep rising to around 9-11 billion.
Finally, the first article shared earlier states that one reason why more are keen on using the yuan for oil trade is because China is now the top importer of oil.
Thus, all of these events took place only after 2001. There are more, like Saudi plans to sell shares of their oil company and an oil industry with around $2 trillion in debt. They remain and continue to affect the global economy even if GPO does not take place.