by rkerver » Fri 07 Oct 2005, 18:33:00
MrBill wrote
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')eople like to deride traders, but try it sometime. You think the products are in short supply and there is adequate crude due to reduced refining capacity, but then demand falls and all of a sudden you have ample spare capacity, record high imports and the gov't s intention to release SPR capacity at will and the market falls 20-25% in a little over a week. Laugh all you want, but those are real losses. So unless you have a small, piddly position, it hurts... Hindsight is 20/20, but it looks a lot different when I have to decide this morning whether at $62.00 we are in a Friday afternoon correction higher or looking to test channel support at $60?
My heart goes out to all the traders are taking a beating. Your right about there being
adequate crude due to reduced refining capacity. See the follwing, by Steve Andrews, ASPO-USA, 15 Sep 2005:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')... Rita causes record damage to oil rigs...
Sadad al Husseini, recently retired head of exploration and production for Saudi Aramco, offered very insightful comments during an interview...
Oil capacity today is not production limited but rather processing limited.That is to say, the DOE reports the world's refining capacity has leveled at around 83 mmbd for some time and refinery expansions are slow and costly....
Given the current outlook in terms of global exploration and development, the rate of investments in the oil value chain, energy prices, and the prevailing legal and political investment climate, I believe oil production will level off at around the 90 - 95 mmbd by 2015. This plateau can be sustained beyond 2020 at continuously higher oil prices and with rapid improvements in overall energy efficiencies throughout the world.
A rapid global refinery expansion program that eventually matches an increasing oil demand rate of 1.5 - 2.0% per year cannot be achieved before 2015 at the earliest and is highly improbable in any case.
Therefore my answer is: under the current circumstances and outlook, oil is likely to peak at a 95 mmbd plateau by 2015 and can then be sustained well beyond 2020 at increasing real oil prices.
that there's a lot of congressional impetus for new refineries to be built. And they'll try to forget the necessary real message about efficiency.