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Keyword: peakoil

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  • Politics and Peak Energy – Have we Reached the Tipping Point

    03/22/2010 5:35:12 PM PDT · by bananaman22 · 4 replies · 206+ views
    OilPrice.com ^ | 03/22/2010 | John Howe
    Economic success, growth, and an affluent (happy) consumer lifestyle directly depend on an abundance of inexpensive energy. Conversely, the quantity and type of energy consumed can have a very adverse effect on the surrounding environment and world ecological balance. It then follows that politics, the subject of governing civilized societies, is also directly dependent on the common denominator of energy, just at a time that we are facing the imminent and terminal decline of our prime energy source, oil, and ultimately all finite fossil fuels. Yet, the advocates of different positions, for instance, climate change (man made or not), or...
  • The U.S. No Longer Controls the Price of Oil in a Peak Oil World

    03/20/2010 12:45:18 PM PDT · by bananaman22 · 28 replies · 566+ views
    OilPrice.com ^ | 03/20/2010 | Gregor MacDonald
    Back in the days when US oil demand controlled the price of oil, a massive recession in the United States would have sent oil to 12.00 dollars a barrel. That era, which ended last decade, was defined by ongoing spare capacity in OPEC, low-cost oil in Non-OPEC, and nascent demand for oil in the developing world. That was then, and this is now. And so it’s rather quaint that the energy analysts from that previous era still gather each week on American financial TV, to discuss the inventories at Cushing, Oklahoma. Inventories at Cushing, Oklahoma? The US has been removing...
  • Debunking the Myth of Peak Oil - Why the Age of Cheap Oil is Far From Over

    03/17/2010 11:46:56 AM PDT · by bananaman22 · 13 replies · 621+ views
    OilPrice.com ^ | 17/03/2010 | Dennis Edison
    If I may, I would like to rebut or add a little objectivity to the flood of “Peak Oil” articles circulating around. When I see another crisis looming in the balance, and dramatized articles that warn of the “Dangers of Peak Oil,” I must question the validity or how this will effect the world, the USA, and you and I personally, and if indeed a crisis is at hand. As for world oil, if you ask the right questions, there are several new technologies/methods/alternatives and new finds that can easily supply enough hydrocarbon fuel for the next century or more....
  • There Will be No Economic Recovery as the Era of Cheap Oil Comes to an End

    03/09/2010 9:40:33 AM PST · by goldenwings · 20 replies · 212+ views
    OilPrice.com ^ | 08/03/2010 | Chris Nelder
    When oil crossed $120 a barrel for the first time in May 2008, oil cornucopians knew they were in trouble. Prices had quadrupled in just five years, yet had failed to bring new production online. Regular crude had flatlined around 74 million barrels per day (mbpd). The case for peak oil was looking stronger with every new uptick in crude futures. The following month, prominent peak oil critic and cornucopian Daniel Yergin of IHS-CERA changed his stance: The peak oil threat would be neutralized by peak demand. Gasoline consumption had peaked in the U.S. and Europe, he argued, due to...
  • Mexico Oil Politics Keeps Riches Just Out of Reach

    03/09/2010 7:41:48 AM PST · by Willie Green · 9 replies · 174+ views
    New York Times ^ | March 8, 2010 | CLIFFORD KRAUSS and ELISABETH MALKIN
    VENUSTIANO CARRANZA, Mexico — To the Mexican people, one of the great achievements in their history was the day their president kicked out foreign oil companies in 1938. Thus, they celebrate March 18 as a civic holiday. Yet today, that 72-year-old act has put Mexico in a straitjacket, one that threatens both the welfare of the country and the oil supply of the United States. The national oil company created after the 1938 seizure, Pemex, is entering a period of turmoil. Oil production in its aging fields is sagging so rapidly that Mexico, long one of the world’s top oil-exporting...
  • Peak Oil and the Investment Landscape: A Look at the Potential Winners and Losers

    02/19/2010 11:39:41 AM PST · by Bookworm22 · 19 replies · 412+ views
    OilPrice.com ^ | 19/02/2010 | Paul Larson
    Last month, I explained in an article how and why the world is approaching a worldwide peak in oil production sometime in the next decade. Although there are large implications throughout the economy, I want to say upfront that I do not think this will bring on Armageddon. Oil prices that are significantly higher than earlier in our lifetimes will bring about great change, yet I firmly believe that our economy has the ability to successfully adapt. Despite the strong headwind oil scarcity will create, I am still an optimist. I have structured this article by segmenting the "winners" and...
  • Drillgate: Secretary Salazar's Cover-Up

    02/08/2010 5:50:44 PM PST · by Kaslin · 14 replies · 1,136+ views
    Investors.com ^ | February 8, 2010 | INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY Staff
    Energy The administration asked for public comments on a plan to expand offshore drilling. When they came in 2-to-1 in favor, the Interior Department sat on the news. Time for a "Texas tea" party? When you ask for public comment on a major policy issue, at some point you should make the results public, not hide them until you can figure out a way to spin the public reaction to support a conclusion you've already drawn. On its last business day in office, the Bush administration published a proposed draft of a five-year plan to lease areas in the Atlantic...
  • American Grain Harvest Impact On Agri-Food Prices

    02/01/2010 8:06:13 PM PST · by blam · 6 replies · 358+ views
    The Market Oracle ^ | 2-1-2010 | Ned W Schmidt
    American Grain Harvest Impact On Agri-Food Prices Commodities / Agricultural Commodities Feb 01, 2010 - 01:48 PM By: Ned_W_Schmidt The North American Agri-Food harvest is either complete, or almost complete. We say that as much of the corn crop remains still in the field due to being wet, frozen, or covered with snow and ice. For all the best efforts of those involved in the Global Warming Scam, the winter of 2009-10 has been far more powerful than their now clearly questionable documentation would have suggested. Despite the weather, the North American 2009 harvest appears to have been good, with...
  • '06-'07 oil consumption levels will never return, IEA predicts

    01/28/2010 9:58:31 AM PST · by thackney · 5 replies · 265+ views
    Calgary Herald ^ | Jan 28, 2010 | Reuters
    Oil use in rich industrialised countries will never return to 2006 and 2007 levels because of more fuel efficiency and the use of alternatives, the chief economist of the International Energy Agency said on Thursday. The bold prediction, while made previously by some analysts, is significant because the IEA advises 28 countries on energy policy and its oil demand forecasts are closely watched by traders and policymakers. "When we look at the OECD countries -- the U.S., Europe and Japan -- I think the level of demand that we have seen in 2006 and 2007, we will never see again,"...
  • The Economy Has Six Months to Live

    01/12/2010 5:44:06 PM PST · by NewJerseyJoe · 5 replies · 1,034+ views
    Voice in the Wilderness ^ | 1/12/10 | James Howard Kunstler
    The economy has about six months to live. Especially the part that consists of swapping paper certificates. That’s the buzz I’ve gotten the first two weeks of 2010, and forgive me for not presenting a sheaf of charts and graphs to make the case. Just about everybody else yakking about these thing on the Web provides plenty of statistical analysis: Mish, The Automatic Earth, Chris Martenson, Zero Hedge, The Baseline Scenario… They’re all well worth visiting. Bank bonus numbers are due out any day now. The revolt that I expected around the release of these numbers may come from a...
  • John Kilduff: Oil To $100 In The Next Six Months

    01/12/2010 11:36:08 AM PST · by blam · 21 replies · 731+ views
    The Business Insider ^ | 1-12-2010 | Graham Winfrey
    John Kilduff: Oil To $100 In The Next Six Months Graham Winfrey Jan. 12, 2010, 1:45 PM Last week, we reported that former CIBC World Markets Inc. chief economist, Jeff Rubin had predicted the price of oil to reach $100 by the end of 2010. On Monday, CNBC contributor John Kilduff sliced Rubin's prediction in half, claiming that oil will hit $100 a barrel in the next six months, thanks in part to a humming Chinese economy, Business And Media reports. When Kudlow asked whether the U.S. should look to windmills in the Nantucket sound to provide a new power...
  • Oil Won’t Last Forever – What happens when it runs out?

    01/08/2010 3:28:38 PM PST · by Faketan · 70 replies · 1,628+ views
    Oilprice.com ^ | 08/01/2010 | Claude Salhani
    One nagging question that the industrial world has been asking itself since the discovery of the first oil well is what happens when the wells begin to run dry. The answer is relatively simple to imagine. We had a dry run, so to speak, when Dubai’s economy tanked a few years ago. And although the causes of Dubai’s ills and ails were financial and not oil related, the drama which unfolded gave us a watered-down version of what might transpire if and when the oil wells stop producing. But before we run the Armageddon tape that the world will stop...
  • Abiotic Synthesis Of Methane: New Evidence Supports 19th-Century Idea On Formation Of Oil

    12/20/2009 2:40:22 PM PST · by SeekAndFind · 55 replies · 2,252+ views
    Science Daily ^ | 11/2009
    Washington, D.C. are reporting laboratory evidence supporting the possibility that some of Earth's oil and natural gas may have formed in a way much different than the traditional process described in science textbooks. Their study is scheduled for Nov./Dec. issue of ACS' Energy & Fuels, a bi-monthly publication. Anurag Sharma and colleagues note that the traditional process involves biology: Prehistoric plants died and changed into oil and gas while sandwiched between layers of rock in the hot, high-pressure environment deep below Earth's surface. Some scientists, however, believe that oil and gas originated in other ways, including chemical reactions between carbon...
  • Titan's Surface Organics Surpass Oil Reserves on Earth

    11/30/2009 10:29:59 AM PST · by Halfmanhalfamazing · 71 replies · 2,144+ views
    NASA ^ | February 13th, 2008
    Saturn's orange moon Titan has hundreds of times more liquid hydrocarbons than all the known oil and natural gas reserves on Earth, according to new data from NASA's Cassini spacecraft. The hydrocarbons rain from the sky, collecting in vast deposits that form lakes and dunes. ... Cassini has mapped about 20 percent of Titan's surface with radar. Several hundred lakes and seas have been observed, with each of several dozen estimated to contain more hydrocarbon liquid than Earth's oil and gas reserves. The dark dunes that run along the equator contain a volume of organics several hundred times larger than...
  • Big Oil – A Look at The World’s Most Powerful Companies

    11/26/2009 9:25:58 AM PST · by staffjam · 9 replies · 434+ views
    Oilprice.com ^ | 16/11/2009 | OilPrice.com
    A detailed look at the largest Oil Companies, how they operate and who the major players in the field are. The Oil Companies take a lot of Flak, but are they as bad as you think? Companies like ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP and Royal Dutch Shell now produce only 10% of the world's oil and gas and hold a mere 3% of its reserves. Big Oil’s primary “Movers & Shakers” according to “The Financial Times,” are: Aramco of Saudi Arabia, CNPC of China, Gazprom of Russia, NIOC of Iran, PDVSA of Venezuela, , Petrobras of Brazil, as well as Petronas of...
  • New Techniques Oil Companies are Using in Drilling for Oil

    11/26/2009 7:42:35 AM PST · by staffjam · 5 replies · 434+ views
    Oilprice.com ^ | 25/11/2009 | OilPrice.com
    Can New technology divert a potential Oil Crisis? We take a look at the latest technology and techniques being used by Oil Companies in the field of Oil Drilling. With our dwindling supply of fossil fuels, oil drillers are finding themselves in great demand and as their techniques become more sophisticated Oil Fields are lasting longer and producing more of the black stuff. I suppose the first order of business would be to mention the continual fine tuning and innovative advances that are taking place almost daily within the technology of “Three Dimensional Seismic Imaging. For those with their head...
  • Power To Spare (Palin vs. Biden on energy)

    11/05/2009 4:53:14 PM PST · by raptor22 · 3 replies · 702+ views
    Investor's Business Daily ^ | November 5, 2009 | IBD editorial staff
    Leadership: As Palin jousts with Biden on energy independence, the government reports that we lead the world in energy reserves. From oil to gas to coal, we are sitting on prosperity. So why are we importing anything? One of the interesting sidelights of the NY-23 race was an exchange on energy independence between Vice President Joe Biden and the former governor of energy-rich Alaska, Sarah Palin. Biden, who came in to campaign for Democrat Bill Owens, was reminded of the issue of energy. "The fact of the matter is that Sarah Palin thinks the answer to energy was 'Drill, baby,...
  • Foolishly Choosing Bears Over Barrels

    10/26/2009 5:25:31 PM PDT · by Kaslin · 3 replies · 826+ views
    IBD Editorials ^ | October 26, 2009 | INVESTORS BUSINESS DAILY Staff
    Ecology: The administration creates the mother of all protected habitats for a species whose numbers have increased since Al Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth." It's our hopes for energy independence that are drowning. When filmmaker Phelim McAleer, whose documentary "Not Evil Just Wrong" takes apart the myths of global warming, got to ask Gore a question at the annual conference of the Society of Environmental Journalists, McAleer brought up the nine critical errors in Gore's film "An Inconvenient Truth." A British court two years ago listed them and said they must be righted before the film could be shown in schools...
  • Energy forecaster turns peak oil theory on its head

    10/09/2009 2:02:07 PM PDT · by thackney · 7 replies · 660+ views
    Calgary Herald ^ | October 8, 2009 | Shaun Polczer
    James Burkhard, IHS CERA's global oil director, is a self-described "peakist." But it's not what you might think. Whereas most adherents to peak oil theory believe petroleum production has plateaued and will fall back down, driving up oil prices, Burkhard sees the situation somewhat in reverse, with global oil demand peaking and falling off as developed countries become more efficient with how they use oil and require relatively less of it. Not even the seemingly insatiable appetites of countries such as China and India can reverse the trend, he said in an interview Thursday. "The long-term rate of oil demand...
  • A California 'Black Gold' Rush

    09/29/2009 8:52:35 AM PDT · by raptor22 · 13 replies · 1,492+ views
    Real Clear Markets ^ | September 29, 2009 | IBD staff
    Energy: An amazing number of oil finds have been made this year, including the biggest in California in 35 years. If the world is running out of oil, why do we keep finding more of it? The mantra of the anti-drilling crowd has been that oil companies like to sit on their leases and the oil in the ground, hoping to drive up the price. They should use the leases they have or lose them, these critics say. They also like to add that the world is running out of oil so it doesn't matter anyway. Occidental Petroleum hasn't been...