My only regret is that I can only drive one car at a time!
Are we actually rooting for higher oil prices?
Man, up is down, left is right, the sky is bright green.
There’s nothing they can do. Forces bigger than them. And Saudi Arabia knows it.
Na , Obama is keeping OPEC afloat with under the table Tax payer funds
What makes anyone think they aren’t meeting? Oil may be dropping to kill the competition from the US and drop the Ruble. Who knows?
How much of the world’s wealth has been wiped out?
I think they had a while back.
They were hopelessly split, and that’s why the prices began to tank.
Saudi is trying to run the maverick oilers of the USA out of business. Looks like they can go lower in price and stay in business than Saudi thought they could.
The Times of London reported on Monday that OPEC was âon the verge of claiming victoryâ in light of low prices and U.S. crude futures closing down 96 cents at $28.46.
Ryan Lance, chief executive officer of ConocoPhillips, told an OPEC conference in June that U.S. shale and natural gas producers would withstand the cartelâs painful tactics.
â[Shale oil] is here to stay,â Lance said in Vienna, Austria, June 4, 2015. âThe shale industry is like a sprinter, very agile. They run, they win, they stop and rest, and they do it again.â
Robert McNally, president of oil consultant Rapidan Group in Washington, echoed that sentiment.
âWe are in the early innings of a long game,â McNally said June 4, Bloomberg reported.
American oil output soared in recent years to 14 million barrels per day as a result of fracking technology and natural gas finds. Saudi Arabia is the worldâs second-largest oil exporter at 11.6 million barrels per day.
http://www.wnd.com/2016/01/opecs-energy-war-with-u-s-draws-blood/#0GVjufMofxQ35DXh.99
Venezuela Said to Request Emergency OPEC Meeting in Letter
Venezuela wrote to fellow OPEC producers requesting an emergency meeting as the collapse in oil prices hurts the groupâs most vulnerable members, according to five people with knowledge of the matter.
The letter was sent to the 12 other members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, the people said, asking not to be identified as the document isnât public.
Venezuela has repeatedly called for OPEC members to meet as slumping oil prices sap government revenue. De facto leader Saudi Arabia, which has insisted it wonât cut production unless non-OPEC exporters cooperate, signaled again on Jan. 17 that it will stick to its strategy of defending market share.
Oman Offers to Slash Oil Production If OPEC Follows Suit
Oman wants to slash oil production in order to staunch the price slide and ease the supply glutâbut it wonât move before OPEC does.
Itâs a story weâve heard before. None of the 12 OPEC countries are willing to take a hit on production unless the others take a hit first, but non-OPEC Oman is reeling from the financial consequences.
Oman has had to borrow $1 billion to make up for low oil prices. And there is a lot to make up for considering that four-fifths of the governmentâs revenue comes from oil and gas exportsâand its 2015 budget was calculated against $85 oil.
On Monday, Oman said it would cut production by 5 percent to 10 percent in order to stabilize the market, but the ball is still in OPECâs court.
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-Oil/Oman-Offers-to-Slash-Oil-Production-If-OPEC-Follows-Suit.html
OPEC says oil markets will begin to rebalance in 2016
Oil prices remained below $30 a barrel Monday but the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries is optimistic the market will start to rebalance itself this year as weak prices take their toll on production outside the cartel.
âAfter seven straight years of phenomenal non-OPEC supply growth, often greater than 2 million barrels a day, 2016 is set to see output decline as the effects of deep capex cuts start to feed through,â the producer group said in its closely-watched monthly report.
Though OPEC acknowledges more than 2 million barrels a day of new projects are still planned to go ahead this year, the organization still expects non-OPEC output to fall by almost 700,000 barrels a day in 2016 as the effects of lower capital spending are felt.
The U.S. is expected to see the biggest decline in production, with output forecast to fall by nearly 400,000 barrels a day, but OPEC said places like Canada, the North Sea, Latin America and parts of Asia are also particularly vulnerable, with all projects in Canada now below cash cost.
OPECâs oil production, on the other hand, remains elevated, despite declining by 200,000 barrels a day last month, according to secondary sources. The groupâs output â including newly reinstated member Indonesia â fell to 32.2 million barrels a day in December led by lower production in Nigeria, Saudi Arabia and Iraq. The groupâs output still remains above the anticipated demand for its oil though, which OPEC sees rising by 1.7 million barrels a day to 31.6 million barrels a day this year.
Read: Oman says itâs prepared to slash oil output
Meanwhile, the lifting of sanctions against Iran this weekend is expected to add still more oil to the mix in the coming months.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/opec-says-oil-markets-will-begin-to-rebalance-in-2016-2016-01-18
OPEC predicts cut in U.S. production
Iran’s increase in oil supply has mixed effects
OPEC’s prediction of a steep drop in crude production this year temporarily buoyed oil prices Monday, even though analysts expected markets to crumple as Iran starts selling crude to oversupplied international buyers for the first time in years.
Iran vowed to bring 500,000 barrels a day into the market as international sanctions were lifted over the weekend. But an expected free fall in prices never materialized after OPEC predicted that other producers, especially those in the U.S., would scale back production, which could boost prices that have fallen more than 70 percent since the summer of 2014.
But in today’s unsettled and often contradictory oil markets, even forecasts of a reduction in supplies can’t be taken as a sign the downturn that is squeezing Houston’s oil industry will end any time soon. Signals of a decline in U.S. shale production picking up steam could give the Saudi-led Organization of Petroleum Exports Countries confidence to ride out the bust without making the deep production cuts that could spike prices within months.
Without cuts by OPEC, which produces roughly 40 percent of the world’s crude, U.S. oil companies will struggle through “a one to two-year grind” of stagnant prices, said Morgan Downey, author of “Oil 101” and an oil trader. It’ll be up to oil producers outside OPEC - especially the United States - to go through the painful process of curbing oil production to lift prices.
Yes. HOld a meeting and cut production... so then we can up production here...
Heh, they want more $26 oil. Give it to them.
OPEC has been dismantled.