General discussions of the systemic, societal and civilisational effects of depletion.
by joewp » Thu 30 Nov 2006, 01:52:26
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Tyler_JC', 'T')hursday May 19th, 2011 at roughly 11pm Eastern Standard Time.
But we won't know untill Friday May 20th, 2011 at around 6am because the papers don't arrive untill then.
The announcement that will give it away will consist of the following headline located on page 11. "OPEC authorizes 100% production for the next quarter"
I thought they've already done that.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('
Opec to carry on pumping full blast after Vienna talks', '
')Mar 8, 2006
OIL CARTEL Opec will agree to continue pumping at full tilt when it meets in Vienna today, writes Jane Padgham.
With oil prices back within striking distance of record highs, and supply disruptions in Nigeria and Iraq, analysts said Opec has no choice but to keep the taps turned to maximum.
US crude was today down 13 cents at $61.45 a barrel, compared with a record high of $70.85.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('
Opec remarks may pump oil price', '
')Sunday, 22 May, 2005
Venezuelan Oil Minister Rafael Ramirez said the oil cartel should consider cutting output to guard against a "collapse" in the cost of crude.
His Iranian counterpart Bijan Zanganeh said Opec was pumping at full capacity, well above daily output limits.
I think people are getting too much reassurance from this relatively low price(even though it's up almost 12% in less than two weeks). Keep in mind that KSA was pumping at 9.5mb/d earlier this year and their production declined to near 9mb/d
while oil prices were climbing and before any OPEC "cuts". Also, the lack of hurricanes allowed the usual lower demand "shoulder season" to occur normally this year. In the meantime, as the EIA reports show, inventories of refined products are going below the 5-year averages ahead of the high demand winter season.
Some people speculate these recent OPEC cuts are supplying cover for unexpected natural depletion, especially in light of KSA's reduction of production earlier this year. If this is true, then we have indeed peaked, and this current small run-up in prices will accelerate into the new year and take out the old record. If the US has just a normal winter this year, prices could go even higher.
Others say there's new projects coming on line next year and in subsequent years that will increase production, but the real question is, will they be a net addition after considering Cantarell's 14% depletion, Burgan and the other depleting fields and provinces, like the North Sea?
Time will tell, but I definately think we hit at least a "mini-peak" last year.