OPEC says it’s lost control of oil prices
Cartel producers say they can’t keep up with strong global demand. ‘This is their claim. But the fact of the matter is that nobody knows what their capacity is.’
— Sen. Ron Wyden
Dem. – Oregon
Cartel producers say they can’t keep up with strong global demand. ‘This is their claim. But the fact of the matter is that nobody knows what their capacity is.’
— Sen. Ron Wyden
Dem. – Oregon
It is implicit in Malthus’s writings that uncontrolled population growth, failing “moral restraint”, would stall near the natural limits of the food supply. Like many who have commented on population growth, Malthus did not understand overshoot.
Over the past two years, though, oil markets have been sending a clear message, reinforced during the past two months as prices have surged as high as $55 a barrel.
The gnawing concern about Hubbert’s Peak, the theory that worldwide oil production may be in permanent decline, is colliding with increased demand from emerging markets such as China. The result is an oil market that defies convention.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries agreed to increase production for the fourth time in less than a year. “What will happen after the OPEC meeting is that they will all be producing at capacity,” said Kenneth Deffeyes
Conservative Congressman Roscoe Bartlett, Chairman of the Projection Forces Subcommittee of the Armed Services Committee, gave an hour long presentation on Peak Oil to the US Congress on Monday. This is the full transcript.
In a monthly report released last week, the IEA cut its forecast for non-Opec supply growth by 175,000 barrels per day (bpd) to 910,000 bpd, pointing to prolonged disruptions in Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) producers and lower expectations for Russia.
A succinct introduction to concept of Peak Oil, from a mainstream energy publication, with focus on the technical aspects rather than the wider implications.
““Understanding depletion is simple. Think of an Irish pub. The glass starts full and ends empty. There are only so many more drinks to closing time. It’s the same with oil.” – Colin J. Campbell
“Oil prices will rise through 2008 and stay high thereafter as demand increases and concern mounts that global production is nearing its peak,” according to analysts at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. (March 8, 2005)
When Lehman Brothers admits oil is peaking on Bloomberg, its time to fasten your seatbelts. The ride is going to be rocky.
The Stone Age didn’t end because we ran out of stone; we found something better, we replaced stone with iron but this transition took centuries. This time according to Dr Hirsh we have about a decade if we are lucky and a replacement for oil is yet to be identified.
The NY Times discovers Peak Oil! The article begins:
“If the cost of energy skyrockets, are the suburbs doomed? Would Long Island, already paying among the highest fuel and electricity rates in the country, become an unsustainably expensive place to live?”
The US dollar’s status as the world’s main reserve currency is under threat as Asian banks back away from the superpower’s ballooning twin deficits.