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THE US Fossil Fuel Stockpiles Thread (merged)

A forum for discussion of regional topics including oil depletion but also government, society, and the future.

Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby Duende » Tue 22 Apr 2008, 17:31:20

Gandalf the White wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')eo-political Peak Oil - 1940? point at which scarcity begins driving international relations


I'm not convinced we've seen geo-political peak oil yet. With all the oil held by the nationals, that one could be the final shoe to hit the floor.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby jlw61 » Tue 22 Apr 2008, 17:50:49

What an interesting idea. Thanks!

First the superspike... while a hurricane can really cause havoc, they usually only mess things up for a few days or a weak. Yes, there have been some recent exceptions, there always are, but typically a hurricane rips through and things are back up in a few days.

So a hurricane is possible but it would be so much more effective to couple that some other event. Such events could be a new front on the war, people suddenly figure out this PO thing and go ape, a big refinery fire, a terrorist incident, a sudden drop off of oil production due to depletion, Saudi Arabia finally admitting Ghawar has peaked and they won't be able to exceed current production levels, ever. I don't forsee a superspike this year without at least two mid to long term events happening close together.

Second, will a super spike signal the arrival of 'practical peak oil'...

The short answer is 'maybe'.

The long answer is 'maybe'.

Remember there are a lot of people working very hard, trying to become the next Bill Gates by inventing some sort of gasoline replacement. While I do not think much of their short term success and am somewhat suspicious now of their long term success, miracles do happen. With that said, a superspike could simply be some of the above stated factors coming together or it could be the public finally allowing the idea of peak oil to sink in and take a moment from their telly to contemplate the ramifications. If that happens, yeah, that's it.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby americandream » Tue 22 Apr 2008, 18:04:14

Lets not forget the Olympic Games in China. That's bound to have an effect on Chinese fuel needs.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby BigTex » Tue 22 Apr 2008, 18:34:06

If you look at the direst predictions from the 2003-2005 period, they described a "super spike" scenario (usually political/military events) as taking oil all the way in the $60 range, maybe even briefly into the $70s.

So what a "super spike" looks like depends on where you are standing.

$120 a barrel sure looks like a super spike, given how quickly we've gotten here. Also, the fact that there has been no significant international political or weather event driving it is cause for a lot of concern, I think.

It can always go higher, but $120 feels a little frothy. I think $100 is probably the floor from here on.

I think it will be a while before we break $160.

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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby bodigami » Tue 22 Apr 2008, 19:42:50

I think the superspike, if it happens, will be €100 ($160 by the time it happens)... but this is just a guess.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby dorlomin » Tue 22 Apr 2008, 20:02:59

I was convinced the floor was $90 :) I am still sure that once everyone burns through there hedging and credit that airlines and consumers will start dropping out of the market and dropping the price. That and people buying smaller cars.

On the otherhand eportland is going to be a kick in the proverbials. There economies are flush with money, or would be if they did not have the dollar chained round there currencies necks.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby cube » Tue 22 Apr 2008, 22:01:54

Why don't we just keep things simple and just call it "peak oil".

5 years ago being a PO believer was not a sexy thing to be; 90% of everybody laughed at you. The naysayers said PO was a 100 years away or we'd all be driving electric cars by then. It's nice to be vindicated. IMHO I think the reason why words like "political peak oil" is being tossed around so much these days is because the naysayers were WRONG and they just have trouble admitting it. So they feel compelled to backpeddle by inventing new words. Sheeesh! Why can't people just admit it when they are wrong? I'd have more respect for them.

I won't name any naysayers: you guys all know who you are. :roll:
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby Ryno » Tue 22 Apr 2008, 23:48:09

Consider this: every dollar in crude oil price represents about 2.4 cents. So a superspike of a mere $250 means another $2.88 added to the price of finished products like gasoline, diesel. So that puts the US at around $6.40 a gallon on gasoline. Still lower than almost all of Europe today. We will certainly see some demand destruction at that price, but I think only enough to bring us closer to European numbers. But even at that level, we probably won't reach the Euros on consumption because we simply don't have the mass transit infrastructure, or the close proximity of work, home, family, as is the case in Europe.

Of course it would be myopic to look at the situation purely from an Ameri-centric vantage, so what about the rest of the world? Non subsidized developing nations will be hardest hit. They're already grappling with high food costs, so the little bit of disposable income will not go far and they will flee from their cars in droves. Latin America and most of the far east and eastern Europe will be hit hardest. I can easily see a 3 or 4 million bbl/day drop in consumption from those countries if we hit $250 oil. Then you've got China, India, and the Middle East that subsidize oil. Won't matter to the consumer what oil costs so long as the governments are picking up the tab. But those nations, particularly India and China, will not stand for long, forking out tens or hundreds of billions of dollars in subsidies each year. They'll have to eliminate or at the very least, reduce subsidies.

So, long story short, I think we'll see sufficient global demand destruction at $250 to lower consumption 5 to 10% That gets through year 2 or 3 of the post-peak world. Further out, we'll need higher prices than that to adequately destroy demand to levels of greater than 10%. Confounding factors as we get much past 2 or 3 years out will be: a) global economic health (or lack of) and b) any reasonable, suitable sort of replacement fuel that may be able to usurp current petroleum based transportation fuels.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby alokin » Wed 23 Apr 2008, 00:18:42

maybe there won't be a lot of summer driving season this year at least in the US?
A superspike won't be that bad as it makes people wake up, and maybe change habbits organize their lives in a different way etc.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby perdition79 » Fri 25 Apr 2008, 02:54:25

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('alokin', 'm')aybe there won't be a lot of summer driving season this year at least in the US?
A superspike won't be that bad as it makes people wake up, and maybe change habbits organize their lives in a different way etc.


I think there will be more of a summer driving season. Americans in the middle class used to fly the family down to some tourist trap like Orlando for a week, rent a car and waste money on hotels, amusement parks, and theme restaurants.

With the purse strings tightened, the debt-laden middle class will pile into the minivan or SUV and head for a national park, Aunt Edna's house, etc. Gasoline consumption might be higher this summer because the road trip vacation is cheaper.

Even a peasant like me will drive to visit relatives, probably in the fall. Why spend $310 on a plane ticket to Detroit, and $40 on an airport shuttle to Ann Arbor, when I can just drive straight through in a day for $160?
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby TreebeardsUncle » Mon 05 May 2008, 02:02:49

Actually, don't think we will be seeing superspikes.

There are 4 variations superimposed onto the oil price behavior.

1 is the business cycle in which recessions occure every 9 years or so these days.

2 is the annual variation with the oil stocks climbing in late winter through early summer, becoming very volatile in July, and then declining into the fall.

3 is the investment cycle which runs around 20 years. The late 80's through the early 00's were a period of very low investment.

4 is the ramp up (not a spike!) due to the effects of peak oil. When world production peaks we will see a sharp increase in the slope of the price increase in oil. That will be an inflection point.

People frequently have difficulty in noting upward trend-lines when they are superimposed on oscillatory behavior (See global warming.)

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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby yesplease » Mon 05 May 2008, 02:24:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', '$')120 a barrel sure looks like a super spike, given how quickly we've gotten here. Also, the fact that there has been no significant international political or weather event driving it is cause for a lot of concern, I think.
I think it isn't considered a super-spike because the only groups getting shafted are those who hold dollars. The rest of the world has seen an increase, but not nearly as much as we have seen, thanks to the fiscal policies of our government.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby MD » Mon 05 May 2008, 05:33:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('yesplease', ' ')The rest of the world has seen an increase, but not nearly as much as we have seen, thanks to the fiscal policies of our government.


right...the rest of the world has tripled in price while we have quadrupled...no super spike there.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby yesplease » Mon 05 May 2008, 06:01:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MD', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('yesplease', ' ')The rest of the world has seen an increase, but not nearly as much as we have seen, thanks to the fiscal policies of our government.


right...the rest of the world has tripled in price while we have quadrupled...no super spike there.
Well, lets see, the dollar has dropped from ~108 in 2002 to ~72 recently IIRC. All told, with a strong dollar like we've seen in the past, oil would only be ~$70-80/bbl and the prices of it's refined products would be a lot lower. From $20/bbl around 2000, that's a 3.5-4 fold increase with a strong dollar, and 6 fold increase with a strong dollar, so not quite a 3:4 ratio, more like 3.75:6 ratio. A difference of $40-50/bbl thanks to the current administration's fiscal policy seems pretty significant, don'tcha think?

Also, I thin a super-spike requires the price increase to be over some relatively small time frame, so the ~$15/bbl average increase we've seen yoy may preclude even the current high price of $120/bbl from being a spike. Otoh, if it jumps to ~$250/bbl in a few months, I'm pretty sure it's a large enough jump over a small enough time period to be considered a super-spike.
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby alokin » Fri 09 May 2008, 00:36:31

The oil is pegged to the dollar. Isn't it that a super spike in the crude price would sweep lots of money into the US and keeping the economy afloat? There would be a reduction as gasoline prices would eat up a part of this national income.
Isn't it like this: most of the bush administration have their hands deeps in the oil business and gain if the oil price increases?
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Re: Coming Oil Price Superspike

Unread postby Gandalf_the_White » Fri 09 May 2008, 03:12:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('alokin', 'T')he oil is pegged to the dollar. Isn't it that a super spike in the crude price would sweep lots of money into the US and keeping the economy afloat? There would be a reduction as gasoline prices would eat up a part of this national income.
Isn't it like this: most of the bush administration have their hands deeps in the oil business and gain if the oil price increases?


First of all they have to keep telling you supplies are adequate even if they are not because that would exacerbate the problem if you thought we were going to see shortages say around Memorial Day, you might go out and hoard gas bringing it on sooner.

At any rate. Why has the dollar declined? This is an important thing to consider? Because the dollar and oil are a coupled system. I am going to claim that scarcity is driving oil higher, which is driving the dollar lower since a weak dollar correlates to inflation at home. I'm not saying there are not other factors, but I do believe that all of those factors are driven in one way or another by our foolhardy implementation of very wasteful oil technologies as far back as the 40's. We burned the stuff like it was without limit.

Our addiction to it was plain from the start, we drank it, and rubbed it on our skin, and sprayed it on our fields, and eventually made everything we desired out of it. Therefore we find ourselves being out-competed by China and India and Europe, all of whom either dealt differently with their dependence on oil, or got into the market later when they had to pay more of a premium. In short being the early bird in petroleum and not being wise in how we dealt with a finite resource made us like those stupid kids in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. We can't inherit the factory because we were just too gluttonous, selfish, imprudent, and disrespectful of our parent cultures, who warned us to live quiet and peaceful lives as close to God as possible.

If the dollar had stayed strong, oil would be $70?

Is it possible that oil priced in dollars could become relatively more scarce and the currency itself not lose value against other currencies? I am going to argue that it could not because as I said above the coupling of the dollar and oil means that the US dollar faces pressures driven by that commodity as well, it is not just a one way street.

Is it like this?

Relative scarcity drives oil prices upward. Oil going to the US is now more costly at every step in it's development as a resource. This touches thousands of nodes in the US supply chain for commodities, eating away at discretionary income and profit margins all by itself. Now wage stagnation sets in because companies do not give raises when profit margins are falling. Therefore consumer confidence begins to lag which is the engine of growth for the US economy, raising fears of a recession. A recession would cause demand for dollars to go down domestically, and with no growth in oil supplies there is no demand growth that way, therefore the market is flooded with dollars that have to decrease in price just a little more, feeding back into oil prices for everyone, but felt most keenly by us because we depend on oil in a very imprudent way. We have gutted our mass transit systems and crated cities that require an automobile to get to work, shopping, recreation all of it.

The Euro-buyers do not feel it as strongly because they are already paying twice as much as we are due to very high taxes. have the greatest mass transit systems in the world except perhaps for Japan and protect their currency with high interest rates at the expense of spectacular growth. By planning to grow more slowly and wisely they are by tenths and hundreths slowly out competing America, beating us at our own game. We showed them how to get started and they are going to show us how to finish. The clever Europeans already accepted a tax that is helping them avoid the kind of foolhardy dependence on oil we have in America.

Therefore, at some point, it will be much better for the US to let loose the strangle hold we have on oil denomination and let an International Bourse emerge with a basket of currencies for denominating oil. Demand for the dollar will drop, but it will be a drop we control and the Fed can enact policies to rebalance the dollar against other regional currencies ahead of producing a currency union for North America which can then start reaping similar advantages as the Europeans now do. First of all a North American Union will be the largest single market on earth and would stand a chance of balancing the unbelievable economic clout of Europe within a decade or so. America business would get a massive growth incentive because we would absorb into American labor markets legally, tens of millions more Latin Americans willing to work at lower wages. This would increase profitability for companies while restructuring labor markets in way more true to the realities of a global marketplace. American workers would be displaced, but the resulting strength of the Amero would offset lower wages much more than simply keeping America closed and paying already overpaid laborers a small pecentage more. Globalization is a future that we cannot avoid so long as there is a global energy market. This drives it all. Peak oil will not destroy global energy markets, it will only alter the politics and treaties that seek to secure those resources for one's own country. This will drive a rapid unification of financial systems and trading blocs across the globe in the next few decades. Since energy is already being seen, not as a locally owned commodity but as a legacy of the earth for all citizens we cannot go back and suddenly nationalize oil and gas.

Some countries would probably do much better for themselves if they did this however, rather than doing nothing. New Zealand, Russia, Iran, Venezuela. All could benefit from viewing their oil reserves as first and foremost a guarantee of prosperity for their domestic markets by building full cycle infrastructure for themselves and adopting a European style growth model. After the domestic need is satisfied the country could then determine within it's hopes for it's own citizens how much of the resouce to make available on the global market.

As I said some countries would do very well for themselves this way. But I do not believe that such opportunity actually exists because of the position that the US is in. The US ceases to exist as a world power if it does not get millions of barrels of oil a day from overseas. The armies cannot fight, the planes cannot fly, the ships cannot project power around the globe without abundant supplies of cheap oil.

America has only a few options and must begin moving very soon in one of several mutually exclusive directions to deal with it's energy problem. If we miss the boat, a US powerdown is not just a possibility it is a certainty in just a few decades. We cannot run today's America on coal and natural gas. We cannot compete for any fossil fuels in a global market when our infrastructure is so keenly vulnerable to price shocks and our import habits so addictive that we expose ourselves to a possible 50% shortfall due to politically unstable areas of the world.

We have to do something, and one of those somethings is to try to become part of a bigger market, the North American Union. This will preferred by the business class and the investment class who will desire the path to change that offers the best chance to preserve the power they have. It is easier, as we learned, to offer an E85 vehicle than to retool your entire assembly lines to build electric vehicles. TPTB are only being pragmatic when they seek the most profitable path from energy crisis to global economy.

Not quite a rant, but some things that I think I see. I am humble by Paul when he said 'He who thinks he knows something, does not know anything yet as he ought.' I keep seeking.
I return to you now at the turning of the tide.
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Re: Australian peak oil related investments.

Unread postby solarpoweredlasers » Sat 10 May 2008, 00:38:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('solarpoweredlasers', '
')My next purchases besides accumulating more of the above will probably be EMR (oil) at 11c although i'll have to hold for at least 6 months to see any decent return


:) Ok so it was 5 months, not 6.. it hit 21c a couple of days ago and i've made 109% :).. would have been a lot more but the operator of one of their big drills has delayed till August otherwise i'd be sitting on a *massive* pot of money from the options. Cruel fate.. Oh well the results of a drill will be in within the next few days and it'll hopefully go up another 5c-10c if it's successful depending on how crazy people get and exactly how successful the drill is and i'll make out more than ok. I didn't get into URO/PAX.. or ARQ.. I waited until PCL drifted down a little further before getting in so am sitting on 22% on that.

Got out of BPT for a profit.. Got out of DYE for a small loss but overall profit but am looking at it again now it's drifted down into buyable levels.

CVN and CNM have are still very good to me. GDY has been roughly sideways..

Going to try EGO for a small pre results profit at 1.7c.. try and sell as soon as it hits 2.4 or somthing... about it really..

Whole portfolio has done about 60% in the past 6 months... good time to be in oil... if you've had the right entry and exit points of course.
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estimate of maximum oil price

Unread postby diemos » Fri 16 May 2008, 01:09:52

80e6 barrels/day x 120 dollar x 365 days = 3.5T$/year to pay for world oil production.

The CIA factbook lists world GDP as 54T$/year so 6.5% of world GDP goes to pay for oil.

At $1800/barrel the entire world economic output would be handed over to the owners of oil in exchange for their black gold so that's the theoretical maximum that the price of oil could reach. (in constant dollars ignoring inflation/deflation).

I'm going to assume that the world polity will not tolerate more than about 20% of world GDP being handed over to the current owners of the oil before that oil is redistributed by force so I'll guess that oil won't go above $360 in constant dollars without a world war.
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Re: estimate of maximum oil price

Unread postby Micki » Fri 16 May 2008, 03:57:39

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')t $1800/barrel the entire world economic output would be handed over to the owners of oil in exchange for their black gold

That is also assuming world economic output remains constant.
It is reasonable to expect output to drop as price goes up.
Max price should, using this logic, therefore be below $1800.
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Re: estimate of maximum oil price

Unread postby thylacine » Fri 16 May 2008, 05:06:52

I'm not sure how valid or not the 20% GDP is as a trigger for war, but it's certainly an interesting way of looking at the issue.

I found this site: Mr Dowlings interactive table of the nations of the world , cut and pasted the data into excel and had a look at what sort of pain various countries are in.

At $125 per barrel: Singapore (29%); Cuba (24%); Jordan (18%).

At $200 (possible spike this year?): Syria (24%); Belarus (26%)

The ones to keep an eye on are the non-oil-producing nations, shelling out large chunks of GDP and that sit adjacent to oil producers. Countries like Egypt, Syria, Jordan, Israel, Lebanon?
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