Page added on February 9, 2009
1. Production and Prices
2. The Eventual Rebound
3. Venezuela
4. Briefs
1. Production and Prices
The ongoing tension between bad economic news and OPEC production cuts resulted in a virtual stalemate last week. Oil started the week just above $40 a barrel and finished where it started with very little movement in between. Even a jump of 7.2 million barrels in the US crude inventory did little to move prices. Threats by various OPEC oil ministers to cut production further at the mid-March meeting continued last week as prices stubbornly refuse to move higher despite a series of cuts beginning last fall. Last week OPEC reported that it received an average of $41 per barrel of oil. […]
2. The Eventual Rebound
There is growing recognition that cheap ($40 a barrel), plentiful oil is not going to last forever, and when the price rebound comes, it could be violent. A Merrill Lynch research report released last week notes that un-replaced oil depletion could result in a cumulative decline of global oil production on the order of 30 million b/d by 2015. […]
3. Venezuela
The situation in Venezuela apparently took a turn for the worse last week and may be coming to a head. A US firm that says it is owed $100 million for drilling services is having difficulty in renegotiating new contracts and is threatening to pull out its drilling rigs. Local unions claim to have taken control of 2 rigs that were about to be moved. The company denies that their rigs have been commandeered, but say they have stopped drilling at two sites due to the contract problems. […]
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