Australia: High oil price threatens economy
A recurring question has taken on new urgency in recent weeks – how far can oil prices climb before the world’s economies, Australia included, begin to buckle under the stress?
A recurring question has taken on new urgency in recent weeks – how far can oil prices climb before the world’s economies, Australia included, begin to buckle under the stress?
Record-setting natural-gas and oil prices are tag-teaming to create a winter of discontent for most households. Yet you can protect yourself through your investments and home improvements.
IHS Energy claim that the current oil ‘demand crunch’ is primarily geopolitical – not geological – in nature, while the long term energy outlook is promising.
Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said Monday his government will look into ways to lessen the country’s dependence on crude oil.
High oil prices haven’t damped demand or spurred extra production, forcing the world to rely more on OPEC’s oil, the producer group said Monday.
Crude oil prices, which rose to a record US$55 a barrel in New York on Friday, may increase further and peak at US$75 a barrel, said Bernard Dan, president of the Chicago Board of Trade, the second-biggest US futures market.
Shell is reconsidering decades old technology to attempt to produce liquids from shale oil in the US.
Britain faces winters of blackouts and energy price hikes because of a looming crisis in generating capacity, a power and engineering industry union warns.
Someone asked Bush what he’s going to do about energy policy with worldwide oil reserves predicted to peak. Bush said: “I’m going to push nuclear energy, drilling in Alaska and clean coal. Some nuclear-fusion technologies are interesting.” He mentions energy from “processing corn.”
If someone sitting in air-conditioned comfort in one part of the world believes that what happens in Iraq or Nigeria, Venezuela or Colombia doesn’t affect him or her, Sonia Shah’s Crude: The Story of Oil takes that little daydream and shakes it up.
Recession is something rarely announced by politicians – it does not sound too good. And elections are often based on economic well-being, so to tell the nation that a recession is here, or coming, does not bode well for those in office.
With uncertainties increasing about supplies of natural gas and oil, nuclear energy is making a powerful global comeback, prompting concerns about atomic terrorism in the post-Sept. 11 era.