by DantesPeak » Sat 20 Jan 2007, 12:08:33
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ith the 30% fall in the price of oil to US$50 a barrel comes the inevitable global ideological free for all over the causes, impacts and general significance of the decline. The scale of the decline pretty much puts peak oil theorists out of commission, especially since the real price of oil in constant dollars is now lower than it was through much of the 1980s--hardly what you would expect in a world allegedly heading into an oil supply crisis.
The next big oil-price push
Terence Corcoran, Financial Post
Published: Saturday, January 20, 2007
Canada.Com National PostPO out of commission? Is PO really a price theory? Must the price of oil go continually higher as the downslope of oil production starts?
Although after reading further through this article, the author presents 'the other side of the story', the implication is that a new theory is needed to explain what is happening in the markets.
The oil markets focus daily on US inventories and prices – but do US oil/product inventories actually reflect the true supply/demand of world inventories? - or is it that the US, being at the top of the US dollar regime, financial trading systems, and at the helm of many international energy companies (at least for now) will always (or most always) have adequate inventories until we are well past PO if the US stays on top?
Mentioned in this article is an earlier article from the Wall Street Journal – which jumped on the declining oil consumption bandwagon (available free at the link below). [I also posted this on the IEA thread].
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'H')igh prices prod developed world to curb oil use
Friday, January 19, 2007
By Bhushan Bahree, The Wall Street Journal
Mild winter weather has something to do with it. So does heavy selling by financial funds. But a largely overlooked factor in the recent plunge in oil prices may portend an end to the multiyear rise in crude: For the first time in years, the developed world is burning less of it.
Fresh data from the International Energy Agency show oil consumption in the 30 member countries of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development fell 0.6 percent in 2006. Though the decline appears small, it marks the first annual drop in more than 20 years among the OECD countries, which drain close to 60 percent of the 84.4 million barrels of oil used globally each day. Industrialized nations' demand tiptoed into negative territory in 2002, but the dip was so slight that it registered as flat.